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- 6 - WFUV Language Lessons Does a listener favor cultural programs apart from music? A housewife may be delighted to learn that instead of a soap opera she can take her pick on FM of lessons in Italian, Spanish, French, Russian or German. WFUV, owned by Fordham University, offers them on successive mornings at 11:30 o’clock. WFUV also enlists its faculty members for talks in the sciences, literature and art, and many of them are excellent indeed. In covering local dinners and meetings, WFDR usually shows more enterprise than all the standard radio outlets put together. Books, discussion of the dance, liberal commentary and poetry? A careful perusal of Hie FM programs over a few days will turn up these, too. . . . For those who want them, of course, the network radio shows also are avail¬ able on FM in New York. But for additional programs to provide for more balanced listening, exploring the FM dial is an experience that is not only rewarding but also relaxing. NEW KUOM AND WOSU BULLETINS PLUG NAEB TAPE NETWORK The lead story in the winter quarter bulletin issued by the University of Minnesota station KUOM is deleted to the tape network. The inside cover page, headed "KUOM Salutes the NAEB Tape Network , 11 states: If you have been a fairly regular listener to KUOM during the past two years, you may have noticed a significant increase in top-level programs originating outside of Minnesota. From New York you have heard the voices of world-famous authorities in many fields of interest via the stimulating, thought-provoking Cooper Union Forums. From New York too come the witty, urbane commentaries of David Randolph on Music for the Connoisseur. From the famed Iowell Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council in Boston, you have heard challenging documentary programs concerned with a wide variety of human problems. From London, KUOM listeners can now hear the finest radio drama in the world, produced by the British Broadcasting System for its outstanding World Theatre series. Correspondingly, listeners in other parts of the nation will soon be hearing programs originating from the University of Minnesota—programs produced at KUOM—which best represent the contribution of our state to the welfare of the nation as a whole. This revolutionary new development in educational broadcasting has been made possible through the creation of the NAEB Tape Network, a cooperative radio organization operated by the National Association of Educational Broadcasters for its 75 member stations throughout the United States. The Network pro¬ vides for the mutual exchange of the finest programs of its member stations. It also procures and distributes programs from other agencies engaged in the production of radio material of serious purpose and mature content. The NAEB Tape Network is founded on the simple belief that the use of radio exclusively for entertainment and the selling of merchandise is a serious waste of a major national resource. In addition to these uses, radio broad-