Heinl radio business letter (July-Dec 1946)

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He ini Radio News Service 7/3/46 TRADE NOTES • t • • • • • • • • • • Although, twenty or thirty reporters were present the meeting at which James C. Petrillo, President of the American Fed¬ eration of Musicians spoke at St. Petersburg, Fla., Petrillo upon his return to Chicago, denied to a United Press reporter that he had threatened to call a strike against^ the major networks if the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the Lea Bill, mm **mm mm mm mm — —• mm The American Society of Composers, Authors a.nd Publishers has issued new rate schedules for carnivals and amusement parks with the following comment: "During the war ASCAP was unable to completely cover the carnival and amusement parks, due to man-power shortage and travel restrictions. With the return of its man-power from the Services and an enlarged field staff, the Society is making a concentrated drive to properly license carneys and amusement parks according to the new rate schedule. " The National Park and Planning Commission of Washington, D. C. has declined to endorse construction of a frequency-modulation station in Fbrt Totten Park. Application for the station had been filed by Theodore Grainik, of the American Forum of the Air. The Commission’s stand was based on its policy of opposing use of park land for other than park purposes. Foremost among the Bendix radio models to be heard at the Summer market of the American Furniture Mart in Chicago July ® 20th, is a new ffl table radio and an FM radio-phonograph of the most advanced electrical design. Developed in the research and engineering laboratories at the main 3endix Radio plant in Baltimore , Maryland, the new ^endix Radio FM is said to provide the ultimate in FM tone realism. Although, a.s recently announced, the Bendix Aviation Cor¬ poration has been licensed to build color television receivers under license from Columbia Broadcasting System, Bendix will not be showing video instruments at the Mart. "We have not frozen on television receivers for the home as yet", said L. C. Truesdell, Bendix Radio and Television Sales Manager, "We have them in the laboratory stage ready for the time that the public will be prepared to accept television. The Eastern Association of Fire Chiefs at their conven¬ tion in New York City last week passed a resolution to urge the Federal Communications Commission to ban radio stations broadcast¬ ing fire alarms until apparatus has had time to get there or until the immediate emergency conditions are over. Rex Palmer, first Director of the British Broadcasting Corporation* s London station at Savoy Hill in the early twenties, has been appointed Controller of German Broadcasting in the British Zone,