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NAEB NEWS LETTER . ♦ May 15, 1941 Page 6 HOW ABOUT THOSE DaTa 7 What transcription services and transcriptions are you using? Or, are you going to tell? 01%,did you fail to see the request in the May 1 issue of the News Letter? Or, have you been too busy to answer? DEFENSE FOR DEMOCRACY ON WNVC You*11 find interesting the foreword in the May-June issue of programs for WNYC, You''11 also find an innovation on the center spread - the urograms outlined hour by hour and day by day* If you don 1 1 have a copy drop i note to Novik and he 1 11 be glad to send you a copy, SUCCESSFUL RADIO interference CONFERENCE AT ILLINOIS, A„ James Ebel, Chief engineer of WILL, assisted by staff members of the University’s Electrical Engineering Department, engineered a successful Radio Interference Conference on the Illinois campus, May 10, More than 200 persons from eight states and the District of Columbia were in attendance, ^ine technical discussions in which 15 outstanding speakers participated were presented to those attending. The bancuet speaker was Dr„ L, P. Wheerer, Chief of Technical Information Service, Engineering Department, Federal Communications Commission, AROUND THE RADIO CIRCUIT Articles in the May issue of AROUND TIIS RADIO CIRCUIT include: "The Mountains Come to Radio,” by Elmer G, Sulzer; Portland Public Schools and Radio , ,f by Hazel Kenyon; f New York City h as Problems of Its Own," by James F, Macandrew; *Transcription Library Service for Rocky Mountain Region, by Robert B. Hudson, British Columbia School Broadcasts,” by Kenneth Caple, and others, TEXAN ON EDUCATION AND RADIO Austin • Texas, Sixty-five pox cent of Texas farm homes have radios but only 8 per cent of the farm boys and girls use 'them to tune in on educational broadcasts, a University of Texas radio research expert claims. Instilling "dial-consciousness” into Texas school boys and girls rill be one of the future school teacher's moat important functions, Dr. A. L. Chapman, director of the University’s Bureau of Research in Education by Radio, declared. ••One of the most important needs today of meet listening communities- big or small—is an awareness of where the better programs can b„ found," he said. "Newspaper radio logs are not sufficient. Kith recent surveys revealing that Texas 91 teen-age farm youth prefer hill-billy music to all other forme of radio entertainment combined.