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4, GOLFERS, pleas© note that the day before the opening of the conference has been eet; aside for your pleasure® Jo© Wright has challenged all comers. Carl Menzer will be on hand Thursday, too. The 18-hole golf course and recreational area at Ames is located less than a city block from the College Armory. Par is 70, 35 for each nine. The total yardage of the course is 4945. There are 5 bridges on the course, three over .Squaw Greek and two over Clear Creak. 30 sand- traps, most of them merely for decorative purposes, are spotted throughout the course. The course fee is ordinarily $1, but by getting a guest permit from Professor Griffith you will b© entitled to play for 40 cents, a faculty rate. HOTEL rates at the Sheldon-Munn run from #1.50 to #3.50 for a single room and from #2.50 to #5.50 for a double room. The more expensive rooms are air-conditioned. The Memorial Union has some rooms which will be made available to NAEB members. The rates are: single rooms #1.60 and |2. 50; two in a room, double bed $3£ and two in a room, twin beds, #2.50 and #3.80'. WHAT DO YOU DO? Harold Engel, NASS Vice-President and Public Relations Director for WHA, raises some fine points for thought in his comments regarding proposed formulation of aims and purpose a for NAEB. Read them and let*s have your reactions at the convention! "Your letter, in which you refer to the objectives and scop© of the NAEB NEWS LETTER, brings up a point we need to discuss at our con¬ vention in September. We should raak© it reflect the program of the Association. . » but first we need to know what that program is. ^Personally, it seems that the News Letter should serve, as its name indicate®, to keep members in touch with matters in which they have a common interest. It should record the achievements and fail¬ ures of the members in their efforts to carry on. It should, also, be a clearing house for the many personal Items which help us to become 'setter acquainted. "In considering a program for next year I favor consideration of a more aggressive plan of publicizing the work being done by educational stations. You have only to look at the propaganda campaign being carried on by the 31 industry® to entrench the ® American System 9 to know that it is aimed at an ultimate commercial monopoly. There is no place In the American system for non-commercial station®. That means the elimination of our stations. . unless we get; busy and tell our ©id® of the story. *If you 9 ve read the press stories, listened to the promotional radio blurbs and program© on the air (Magic Key, etc.5, seen the efforts to sail teachers on the American system idea, listened to the speeches by broadcasters, and read between the lines in some proposed legisla¬ tion you know that we are facing a tough proposition. What are w® going to do about %t% Something, 1 hope. W X doubt favor militant tactics, but 1 am tired of seeing our stations take it lying down. Let*s figure out a way to defend ourselves. .We don®t have the money on >ur side, but we do have the merits. We can help the right people to say the right things at the right time. • • and all benefit by the publicity. *