NAEB Newsletter (December 1, 1966)

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r Salary dependent on experience. Dec 4 Producer-Director for university-affiliated station, midwest. For evening pro¬ graming, documentaries. MA with writing background desired, others given consideration. Minimum salary $6,000. Open Jan. I. Dec 5 Producer-Director for same station as above. Basic staff job, general program¬ ing. Minimum salary $6,000. TEACHING Nov 24 Academic appointment with a state university in NE. To develop advanced non-lab broadcasting courses on undergraduate level in research, theory, his¬ tory. Ph.D. with prof., assoc, prof. rank. Salary open. Fall, 1967. Nov 31 Dual position with a state university in midwest. Academic appointment teach¬ ing courses in radio-TV; TV producer-director position. Ph.D. desired. Salary and rank determined by individual's qualifications. 9 or 12 month position. Open Jan. I. Nov 34 Academic appointment for Ph.D. (or near) with Broadcasting Area of Speech Dept., midwestern univ. To teach undergraduate, graduate courses. Rapidly growing graduate program. Opportunity for supervising special programing of univ. radio station if interested. Salary open. Beginning second semester or fall, 1967. Nov 36 Program Director/Instructor for a leading west coast college, Div. of Tele¬ communications. To teach beginning broadcasting courses, specifically radio production. To assume responsibility for supervising, programing established FM station having varied program schedule. Department also operates ETV, CCTV facilities. Dec 10 Academic appointment with state college in NE. To teach and assist in de¬ velopment of broadcasting program at undergraduate, graduate levels. Ph.D. (or near) in broadcasting, communications preferred. Extensive experience in radio/TV industry, including active broadcast research desirable. Salary and rank open, dependent upon qualifications. September, 1967. OTHER Nov 23 News Director for university radio station in NE. Opportunity for qualified person to teach broadcasting courses. M.A. required. Position open summer, 1967. Salary open. Nov 38 A-V Specialist, multi-media, knowledge of story-boarding, slide production, CCTV, motion pictures, some knowledge of equipment. Large pharmaceutical company in N.J., near NYC. $9,000+ to start depending on experience. Ex¬ cellent fringe benefits. Good opportunity for professional growth. Nov 39 Director for CCTV. Professional to head presently employed technical staff. New facility currently for video taping, observation of classes. Will be util¬ ized later for instruction. Opportunity for some teaching. Wide salary range depending on experience and education. Minimum requirement, M.A. with three years of teaching experience. Dec 2 Experienced General Manager to direct school-affiliated ETV station in mid¬ west. Responsible for total management of operation. Seek an organizer, knowledgeable in PR & Dev., to assist in securing community support. Salary open, dependent on experience. Open now. Dec 6 Operations Manager for university-affiliated radio station. Opportunity for teaching. Supervision of student personnel plus some production/announcing duties. Salary ranges upward from $6,000. Open now. Credit Courses Offered Five N. Y. Outlets Five educational television stations in New York are carrying three telecourses this se¬ mester with credit being given by six of the state university institutions in addition to Kingsborough Community College of the City University of New York. The stations involved are WNED-TV, Buffalo; WXXI, Rochester; WCNY-TV, Syracuse; WMHT, Schenectady, and WNYC-TV, New York. The courses are Eye on the Universe, History of Latin America I, and History of Latin America II. In addition to Kings¬ borough, the State Universities at Albany, Syracuse, Oswego, Brockport, Genesco and Buffalo have selected students enrolled in the program which they may watch at home for academic credit. Current plans call for the state universities to continue the courses during the next semester which starts in February. 2500 MC Channel Dedicated A 2500 megacycle TV channel to serve some 240,000 students in the Diocese of Brooklyn, N.Y., was dedicated recently at Bishop Ford High School there. The Brooklyn Diocesan four-channel system is reportedly the largest educational tele¬ vision system in the world. At the dedi¬ cation ceremony, Rev. John J. Culkin, SJ, director of Fordham University’s Film Study Center, exhorted educators to make maximum use of TV as a teaching tool. “Our age demands an all-media literacy. ... a student equipped for anything less is culturally deprived. ... all media have something to offer. All media should be taught in schools,” Father Culkin said. News Notes Winners in the Sigma Delta Chi annual college press contest numbered 27 students as well as college publications in this year’s competition. In the radio-television field, the following students were honored: for radio reporting, Edward W. Pierce, Uni¬ versity of Nevada, and John Ledingham, Ohio State; for television reporting, John Lindsay, Washington State University, and Douglas Caldwell, Ohio University; for ra¬ dio or TV newswriting or commentary, Mark Hall, San Jose State College, and Wendell Anschutz, University of Kansas; for radio or TV public service in journal¬ ism, Richard Mayk, Charles Bierbauer and Kenneth Bredenberg, Pennsylvania State University, and Edward Yeates, Univer¬ sity of Utah. WRVR, New York, N.Y. plans to broad¬ cast a live folk music festival on January 7 from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m. The festival will be held in the theatre of the Riverside Church and will highlight various schools, influences and varieties of folk music. A Film Study Conference will be held at Fordham University, New York, July 5- 8 at the school’s Lincoln Square campus. Discussions, screening and analysis, dem¬ onstrations and how-to sessions will be fea¬ tured at the four-day meetings which will be scheduled in the afternoons and evenings to accommodate teachers enrolled in sum¬ mer courses. The fee for the conference is $30. A special fee of $20 has been set for college undergraduate and high school stu¬ dents. The Georgia ETV network continues to gain momentum. Three new transmitter antennae were completed in a six-week pe¬ riod. They are WABW-TV, Pelham, WACS-TV, Dawson, and WCLP-TV, At¬ lanta. The stations are scheduled to begin broadcasting by the end of this month bringing the total Georgia ETV operation to eight stations. All are owned and oper¬ ated by the State Department of Educa¬ tion with the exception of the University of Georgia’s WGTV-TV, Athens-Atlanta. New Directions in Education, produced by and presented over the Georgia ETV net¬ work, has received the New York Interna¬ tional Film Festival Bronze Medal. The film was shot throughout the state to show various stages of progress in Georgia edu¬ cation. More than 40 national educational or¬ ganizations met recently in Washington at a conference of the National Center for School and College Television to discuss possible satellite communications in schools. The purpose of the meeting was to brief educators on the nature of the satellite sys¬ tem proposed by the Ford Foundation and to enlist their aid in determining the inter¬ est of schools in satellites. A series tracing drama from Ancient Greece to the present time has begun on WNYC-TV, New York, N.Y. Audio tapes are being heard on WNYC. The 90 one-half hour programs are telecast three times a week. The series was produced by Dr. Dave Berkman, coordinator of communications media, Kingsborough College. Maine women in the working world were featured in a recent telecast on WMEB- TV, WMEM-TV and WMED-TV, Uni¬ versity of Maine ETV Network, Orono. The show was produced in cooperation with American Association of University Women. The program provided an opportunity for discussion of the pros and cons of women DECEMBER, 1966 3