Broadcasting Telecasting (Oct-Dec 1957)

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TRADE ASSNS. continued WONDERFUL BUY!! GETS YOU ALL OF KDLO Aberdeen — Huron *— Watertown s. KPLO * Pierre — Winner — Chamberlain NEBRASKA MINN. IOWA KEL 0 LAND KEL-O-LAND is people . . . over a million of them. And counties ... 93 of them in four states. It's retail sales . . . well over a billion dollars annually. And Joe Floyd hands you all of KEL-O-LAND in one terrific package, one wonderful single-market buy! KDLO KEZL.O Aberdeen Huron Watertown CHANNEL CBS ABC NBC 3 Sioux Falls CHANNEL Pierre Winner Chamberlain CHANNEL 6 KEL-O-LAND'S new, big radio voice is KELO-AM KELP Radio's 1.032 ft. Tower 13,600-Watt Power, Eqv. JOE FLOYD, President EVANS NORD, Gen. Mgr. LARRY BENTSON V.P. Gen. Offices Sioux Falls, S. D. Represented by H-R In Minneapolis: Bulmer & Johnson, Inc. Page 76 • November 18, 1957 SDX Report Notes Ups, Downs Of Broadcasters in Access Fight The successes and failures of broadcasters in gaining access to court rooms and legislative proceedings during the past year were noted last week in the report of the Advancement of Freedom of Information Committee of Sigma Delta Chi. The professional journalistic fraternity met last week in Houston, for its annual convention attended by some 400 newsmen from all over the nation. The report also mentioned instances in which working relations between newspaper reporters and radio-tv newsmen "did not always reflect harmony." It specifically referred to instances in Los Angeles and New York where newspapermen refused to allow recorders and tv cameras to be set up at news conferences and pool interviews. The SDX committee urged that "every effort be made locally to iron out such difficulties in order that freedom of access may prevail for the entire news profession." V. M. Newton Jr. of the Tampa (Fla.) Tribune is committee chairman. In an interview last week in Houston, Sol Taishoff, editor and publisher of Broadcasting and outgoing president of Sigma Delta Chi, declared Russia's sputnik successes apparently have not loosened Uncle Sam's tongue. He charged that the fight facing all media is one for access to all news. "When the government can get away with concealing news," he added, "then lesser entities — local governing bodies, police and union officials — are encouraged to take the people's business behind closed doors." New Orleans AMA to See SP Officials of Precon Inc. (formerly Experimental Films Inc.), New Orleans, will demonstrate a point-of-sale device utilizing subliminal perception at the Nov. 26 luncheon meeting of the Greater New Orleans chapter, American Marketing Assn., according to Eric Lunau, chapter president. Co-inventors of the SP device, H. C. Becker, electronics engineer and professor of experimental neurology at Tulane U. Medical School, and Dr. R. E. Corrigan, psychologist with the Human Factors Analysis Group of Douglas Aircraft, will conduct another demonstration at a news conference following the AMA luncheon. A. Brown Moore, president of Precon, will speak to AMA members on other aspects of subliminal perception. WSAB Arranges Governor's Tv Talk To take directly to the people of the state of Washington his views on the controversial issue of state institutions, Gov. Albert D. Rosellini requested the Washington State Assn. of Broadcasters to arrange statewide television coverage for an address. The governor's talk was aired Nov. 7 on more than a half-dozen stations serving all tv markets in the state. The correctional institutions, mental hospitals and other facilities under the State Department of Institutions have been much in the public eye in recent months, with Broadcasting