Heinl radio business letter (July-Dec 1930)

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BUSINESS LETTER BRIEFS Among those attending the brilliant debut ball, of Miss Helen Earaes Doherty, daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Doherty of New York at the Mayflower Hotel in Washing¬ ton last week were M. H. Aylesworth, of the NBC, and Mrs. Aylesworth, who were accorded a place at the head of the grand march led by Vice President Curtis and Mrs. Gann. During the evening a program was presented by Miss Jessica Dragonette and the Cities Service Cavaliers who were brought to the Capital for the occasion. They were intro¬ duced to the audience by Herluf Provensen, WRC announcer. Three changes in the personnel of the Radio Commission staff have been effected. Lyle E. Hughes, Washington attorney, has been appointed assistant to Chairman ' Char le s McK, Saltzman; Karl 0. Smith, law clerk in the District Municipal Court, has been named to succeed Arthur Scharfeld, resigned, on the legal staff; and A. W. Bowman, of San Francisco, has filled the vacancy caused by the resignation of Eugene Cogley from the en¬ gineering division. Mr. Cogley has become assistant to Philip G Loucks, recently appointed managing director of the National As¬ sociation of Broadcasters. The Majestic Hour will be cancelled over the Columbia Broadcasting System after the first of the year. The refrigeration talks by Ida Bailey Allen will be continued, however. The report that Majestic will use electrical transcription is unconfirmed. The London and Northeastern Railway Company's dining car express has been equipped with the first broadcast radiotelephony system in England. The validity of the South Carolina tax on radio receiving sets has just been argued in a specially consti¬ tuted threejudge district court sitting at Columbia. • -9