Foundations, Ford, 1959 (1956-1959)

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44 operate an FM station, closed circuit TV, etc., have proved to be some of our most useful services. The demand for nearly all of these publica¬ tions has exceeded our anticipations and reflects the value that they have had for member stations as well as institutions and groups planning new stations. We believe that the publications issued by the NAEB since 1951 represent the most complete source of reference materials available in the field of educational broadcasting and that they have played an important role in the recent growth of the movement. We intend to continue publish¬ ing as many reports, surveys, and other materials of this nature as is possible under our present budget limitations. Committee Activities One of the long-term strengths of the NAEB, as compared to other organizations operated more entirely as staff groups, is the amount of work done each year by its officers, board and committee members, all of whom serve without remuneration out of a sense of loyalty to an association they helped to create , and in the election of whose officers, and in the deter¬ mination of whose policies and operation they have a voice. It is obvious that the small staff of the NAEB could not match the output of the larger staffs of other organizations in the field. The visible output of NAEB com¬ mittees, based on this voluntary principle, is very great. Thousands of man-hours of some of the best minds in the movement are consumed in association planning; in planning and screening programs for the NAEB Radio Network; in helping to plan and manage workshops and seminars and selecting participants for them; in selecting those to receive scholar-