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62
FILM AND RADIO GUIDE
Volume XII, No. 8
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Health Films YOUR CHILDREN'S EARS • YOUR CHILDREN'S EYES YOUR CHILDREN'S TEETH
These films ore particularly suitable for parents and teachers. Amusing animated diagrams explain the physiology of the organs treated and the films stress the advantages of simple, common-sense health precautions which can easily be taught to children.
Educational Films ACHIMOTA • FATHER AND SON A MAMPRUSI VILLAGE
During recent yeors, the people of Africa have made such great strides forward# that It has become a major undertaking to record th'eir rapid progress. These films are the first to show the development of social# educational and administrative standards in the native villages.
These films are on loan from fhe following offices of
BRITISH INFORMATION SERVICES
An Agency of the British Government
30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York 20, N.Y. • 10 Post Office Square, Boston 9, Mass. 360 North Michigan Ave., Chicago 1, III. • 391 Sutter St., San Francisco 8, Calif. 907— 15th Street, N. W., Washington 5, D. C.
BRITISH CONSULATES: Detroit ■ Houston ■ Los Angeles ■ Seattle
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editor, regarding the condition of King George V, then gravely ill. This broadcast, made on December 4, 1928, cost a mere $75 in toll charges, but it brought the wrath of the A. T. & T. down on her head because of a rule forbidding the broadcasting of
telephone conversations.
It was not until WMAQ joined NBC in 1931 and made Miss Waller its educational director in the NBC Central Division that she began to devote most of her time to the field of education in radio. Since then she has developed, in addition to the
University of Chicago Rouvd Table, such programs as Music and American Youth, the National Music Camp broadcasts from Interlochen, Mich., the High-School Studio Party — presented in cooperation with the Radio Council of the Board of Education of Chicago, Student Opinion, an ad lib discussion program for high-school youngsters, Parent-Teacher Association programs, and the American Medical Association’s programs.
As public-service director of the NBC Central Division, Miss Waller is responsible for all cultural programs, such as opera pickups, in the division ; for all talks, except political ones; for all outside lecture pickups, for all women’s activities, and for all children’s programs. As the representative of NBC at annual meetings and conventions in these particular fields, she is one of the most widely-traveled executives in radio, having visited broadcasting centers i n Italy, Germany, and Great Britain, as well as all the larger cities in the U. S. A.
Her hobbies are books, i)hotography, the theater, and good music in that order. She has always had great energy and unusually good health. She lives with her mother and her sister in Evanston, 111. As a “career woman,’’ wholly devoted to her work, she has had absolutely “no time for romance.”
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July 1, 1946