American television directory (1946)

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Dinsdale, A. First Principles of Tele¬ vision. London: 1932. Dunlap, Orrin E„ Jr. The Outlook for Television. New York: Harper & Bros., 1932. Dunlap, Orrin E., Jr. The Future of Television. New York: Harper & Bros., 1942. Dunlap, Orrin E., Jr. Radio’s 100 Men of Science. New York: Harper & Bros., 1944. DuPay, Judy. Television Showman¬ ship. Schenectady: General Electric Co., 1945. Eckhardt, George H. Electronic Tele¬ vision. Chicago: GoodheartWilcox Co., 1936. Eddy, Capt. William C. Television: The Eyes of Tomorrow. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1945. Felix, Edgar H. Television, Its Meth¬ ods and Uses. New York: McGrawHill Book Company Inc., 1931. Fink, Donald G. Engineering Elec¬ tronics. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company Inc., 1938. Fink, Donald G. Principles of Television Engineering. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., 1940. Fink, Donald G. (Ed.) Television Standards and Practise. Selected papers from the proceedings of the National Television System Commit¬ tee and its panels. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1943. Goldsmith, Alfred M. and A. C. Lescarboura. This Thing Called Broad¬ casting. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1930. Harding, C. F. The Purdue University Experimental Television System. Lafayette, 1939. Hathaway, K. A. Television: A Prac¬ tical Treatise. Chicago : American Technical Society, 1933. Hatschek, Paul. Electron-Optics. (Translated by Arthur Palme.) Bos¬ ton : American Photographic Publish¬ ing Co., 1944. Hubbell, Richard F. 4000 Years of Television. New York: G. P. Put¬ nam’s Sons, 1942. Hubbell, Richard F. Television Pro¬ gramming and Production. New York: Murray Hill Books, Inc., 1945. Hutchinson, R. W. Television-up-toDate. London: University Tutorial Press, 1937. Hylander, C. J. and Robert Harding, Jr. An Introduction to Television. New York: Macmillan Co., 1941. Kellock, H. Television. Washington: Editorial Research Reports, 1944. Kerby, Philip. The Victory of Tele¬ vision. New York: Harper & Bros., 1939. Lane, Henry Milton. The Boston Post Book on Television. Boston: Boston Post, 1928. Lawrence, J. Off Mike. New York: Essential Books, 1944. Lee, Robert E. Television: The Revo¬ lution. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1944. Legg, Stuart and Robert Fairthorne. Cinema and Television. London: Longmans Green & Co., 1939. Lewis, E. J. G. Television (Diction¬ ary). New York: Pitman Publishing Co., 1936. Lohr, Lenox, R. Television Broadcast¬ ing. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1940. Maloff, I. G. and D. W. Epstein. Elec¬ tron Optics in Television. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1938. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept, of Electrical Engineering. Ap¬ plied Electronics. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., March, 1943. Columbia Broadcasting System: “Postwar Shortwave, FM, and Tele¬ vision.” 1944. 28p. Statement of Paul W. Kesten before FCC on frequency allocations. “Prewar vs. Postwar Television.” 1944. 16p. Some questions and answers for advertisers and advertising agencies. “A Statement of Some Television Facts.” August, 1941. 8p. CBS policy. “A Ten-League Stride Has Been Taken Toward Better Postwar Television.” August, 1944. 6p. CBS pi'oposal for higher television standards. Recom¬ mendations of Interdepartmental Ra¬ dio Advisory Committee. “Television.” April, 1944. 16p. Oppor¬ tunities and problems. “Television Comes of Age.” 1944. 12p. Reprint of article in The Nation, July 29, 1944, by Alan Barth. Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, Inc.: “Linking Department Store Merchan¬ dising with Local Television Opera¬ tion.” 1944. (Out of print.) “Optical Notes for The Television Cam¬ eraman.” Harry C. Milholland. 1945. “Planning Your Television Station.” 1945. “The Economics of Television.” 1945. “Time, Tubes and Television.” 1944. Farnsworth Television and Radio Corporation: “Bulletins No. 1-6.” 1940 on. “The Story of Electronic Television.” 1944. General Electric Company: “Electronics.” 1942. “Instructors Manual — Industrial Elec¬ tronics Course.” “Intra-Tel Systems — Television by Wire for Department Stores.” 1945. “Preview of The Future — Chef-Boy-ArDee Television Programs.” June, 1945. “Radio Broadcasting Postwar.” 1943. “Television as A Career,” James D. McLean. 1943. “Television at WRGB.” 1944. “Television Broadcasting Postwar.” Meyers, I;. M. Electron Optics. Lon¬ don: Chapman & Hall, 1939. Mills, J. Today and Tomorrow. New York: D. Van Nostrand, 1944. Moore, Stephen (Ed.) New Fields for the Writer. New York: National Library Press, 1937. Moseley, Sydney A. and H. J. B. Chappelle. Television Today and To¬ morrow. London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd., 1940. Moseley, Sydney A. and H. McKay. Television: A Guide for the Ama¬ teur. London: Oxford University Press, 1936. Pender, Harold and Knox Mcllwain (Eds.) Electronic Communication and Electronics. New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 1936. “Your Coming Radio and Television Receivers.” 1945. National Broadcasting Company: “Frequencies for Television,” Niles Trammel. Statement before FCC. “Television Dollars and Sense.” 1945. “Television’s First Year.” Program¬ ming at NBC. Radio Corporation of America: “Address on Television at Television Broadcasters’ First Annual Meeting,” David Sarnoff. 12p. 1944. “Advance of Television.” “A Television Broadcasting Studio.” “A Television Transmitter Building.” “Collected Addresses and Papers on The Future of The New Art and Its Recent Technical Developments.” Vol. I, 1936; Vol. II, 1937. “Electronics in Industry.” 1941. “Into Unseen Worlds.” 1941, 1942. “Locating The Television Studio.” “Opening a New Merchandising Era for Department Stores.” “Opportunities in Radio and Electronics for Returning Servicemen,” David Sarnoff. 1945. “Progress and Promise.” 1944. “Questions and Answers. What Is Tele¬ vision and What It Does.” 1945. “Theater Television : Handbook for Pro¬ jectionists.” Miscellaneous: “Present and Impending Applications to Education by Radio and Allied Arts.” (Rev., July, 1936.) National Advisory Council on Radio in Educa¬ tion: New York. Bulletin No. 5. 87p. “The Use of The Electron Microscope.”, R. B. Barnes, C. J. Burton, and T. C. Tochow. American Cyanamid Com¬ pany, Stamford, Conn. 1942. “Television and Motion Pictures,” Dr. Lee de Forest. Reprinted from a se¬ ries of articles in The Hollyxvood Reporter. “First Yearbook of the Television Broadcasters Assn.” and “Proceed¬ ings of the First Annual Conference, New York, Dec. 11-12, 1944.” IMPORTANT BROCHURES 133