We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.
Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.
-5- the audience of educational programs in about the same proportion as they held in the sample* Also from the study it was indicated that the audience for educational radio pro¬ grams is normally composed of a disproportionate number of persons in the “1*0 or more 1 * age category, and that this ratio cannot be permanently affected by promotion for adult programs. TWO NAEB MEMBERS—WNYC AND WFUV—COMMENDED BY "NEW YORK TIMES 11 RADIO CRITIC Jack Gould, New York Times radio critic, took occasion to compliment two NAEB active members in a recent article in his daily column in the Times, “Radio and Tele¬ vision.” Mr. Gould wrote: ' A long-overdue drive to advance frequency modulation radio, which, in the New York area in particular, offers a listener an almost sublime escape from routine-broadcasting drivel, is scheduled to be started next month /January/ by the set manufacturers and FM broadcasters. The initial promotion efforts are to take place in rather widely scattered points—North Carolina, Wisconsin and Washington, D. C.—but there are other evidences of increasing interest in FM on a broader basis. Significantly, the Radio Corporation of America, which wields a strong in¬ fluence in set manufacturing circles and in recent years understandably has been somewhat preoccupied with TV, has brought out an excellent combination FM and standard receiver. With TV set sales having subsided in recent months, apparently there is at least an even chance of the FM field enjoy¬ ing more attention. w WNYC Music Mentioned Actually, Hie attractions of FM for the discriminating listener in New York have increased rather than lessened with the advent of TV. For what never has been generally understood is that many of the types of programs for which a substantial minority of listeners have been pleading already exist in generous quantity on FM. Fine music? There is an abundance to be found on FM. Not only are all the programs of WQXR and WNYC duplicated on FM, with its far greater freedom from interference and superb fidelity of reproduction, but there are also WFDR and WABF, FM outlets only, with a wide choice of classical fare. After WNYC signs off at 11 P. M., its FM affiliate goes on for four more hours with music. Believe it or not, the millenium for many a listener is to be had on FM, too. Station KE2XCC, the experimental station of Major Edwin H. Armstrong, inventor of the modern FM system of broadcasting, plays music—popular, light and classical—hour after hour without so much as a word spoken. Another station, WGHF, is the outlet of "Storecasting” during the daytime hours, which means there’s music and plugs for grocery products. In the evening hours it provides virtually straight restaurant music.