Heinl radio business letter (July-Dec 1944)

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12/5/44 Z. C. Barnes and Carl Haverlin, Sales Manager and Station Relations Manager respectively of the Mutual Broadcasting System, were elected Vice-Presidents in charge of Sales and of Station Rela¬ tions at the network’s Board meeting in New York, Edgar Kobak, Mutual President and General Manager, announced on his closed circuit con¬ ference call to member stations Monday. Mr, Barnes is a former Vice-President of Outdoor Advertis¬ ing, Inc, Mr. Haverlin was Vice-President of Broadcast Music, Inc. , after serving 14 years at KFI and KECA in Los Angeles, James L. Fly, former FCC Chairman was one of the eight major witnesses who testified before the Chicago University Commis¬ sion in the Freedom of the Press. The 1944-45 annual HMA membership list and trade directory has gone to press and copies soon will be sent to all members, govern¬ ment officials, the radio press and many other interests. A peak MA membership is recorded, the largest in more than a decade, including a 25 per cent increase during the last year. The third concert of the Woman’s Symphony orchestra next Monday night in Orchestra hall, Chicago, will present world premieres of two compositions and the presence of the two composers, both Chicagoans, The audience will hear for the first time "Romance”, by Inez Riddle McDonald (Mrs, Eugene F, McDonald, Jr.), who is a talented pianist, and whose earlier composition, "Cancion", will be included on the program. The concert also will mark the first performance of John Alden Carpenter’s "Dance Suite" since that composition, originally written for the piano, was orchestrated. New developments in electronics, air transportation and automobile design, as well as the creation of improved materials for textile, food and construction uses, will demand a large increase in trained technical personnel according to "Vocational-Technical Training for Industrial Occupations", a survey report published by the United States Office of Education reports. The report may be purchased from the Superintendent of Docu¬ ments, U, S. Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C. for 40/. A vast new postwar market for electron tubes, far exceeding the prewar demands of radio and communications, will be found in manu¬ facturing and processing industries as a result of increasing uses of electronic power and electronic controls, according to L. W, Teegarden General Manager of the Tube and Equipment Department of the RCA Victor Division, Radio Corporation of America. The rated power represented by a single order recently re¬ ceived by RCA for power oscillator tubes for electronic power heating, Mr. Teegarden said, was equal to the combined rated power of all radio stations in the United States, XXXXXXXX 16