Programs, Correspondence, 1968, January-July (1968)

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- 23 - poverty areas and in the inner-city ghetto projects, as I have pre¬ viously shown. Yet, there is no place where social and political scientists can be trained to utilize the communications media are and effectively in the situations in which they/will be wording. • Industry: Management and industry over the past decade have been the leaders not only in using sophisticated communications media in their operations: production, distribution, sales, administration-- but, as well, in their- actual training programs. There is no substantial central source for industry communications training, research, experimentation, development of new techniques, conference center or convention service planning and facilities. . Federal Government Agencies have begun to make more and more use of communications. The Civil Service Commission recently established a new Bureau of Training, including a Division of Training Technology, which will set up and conduct training programs using educational communications, for government personnel^jp C^he Federal Interagency Broadcast Committee, (consisting of thirty- one federal agencies) concentrates on cooperative programs and information exchange, including grants/contracts techniques, production approaches, and bibliographic storage, retrieval and distribution in f all audio and visual areas. It has no central source for research, informal training, formal course work, experimentation and application, or consultation in these areas. Many agencies are engaged in providing trained people in instructional communications, domestically