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A E B NEWSLETTER NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EDUCATIONAL BROADCASTERS 14 GREGORY HALL URBANA, ILLINOIS NAEB TO PRESENT SESSIONS AT COLUMBUS INSTITUTE Two clinics on instructional uses of television and radio will be sponsored by the NAEB on opening day of the Institute for Education by Radio-Television in Columbus, Ohio, May 12-15. A luncheon program featuring a distinguished speaker is also planned for May 12 as a third event organized by the NAEB Utilization Committee under the chairmanship of Gale R. Adkins. The two clinics, scheduled as simultaneous meet¬ ings, will concentrate on actual problems encoun¬ tered in the use of television and radio for instruc¬ tional purposes. John Henderson will conduct the radio clinic, and Clair Tettemer will be in charge of the television session. The Monday luncheon, which drew a capacity crowd last year, will be the only general NAEB luncheon at the 1958 Institute. Because it is sche¬ duled for the opening day of the Institute, those planning to attend are urged to send in reservations to NAEB Headquarters. A deposit is not needed for the reservation. The luncheon is set for 12:15 p.m. with the afternoon sessions beginning at 2:30. GRANTS-IN-AID APPLICATIONS DEADLINE NEARS Applicants for 1958 program grants-in-aid are remind¬ ed that the deadline for receipt of applications at NAEB Headquarters is May 1, 1958. Since announce¬ ment of the project was made earlier this year than last, the deadline is correspondingly earlier. These grants-in-aid are part of a three-year plan of support for educational radio programming spon¬ sored by the ETRC and NAEB. The general theme of the plan is “The Twentieth Century American.” Necessary information concerning topics and pro¬ cedures for prospective grant applicants may be ob¬ tained from Headquarters. NAEB Newsletter Vol. XXIII, No. 4 April, 1958 NAEB Newsletter, a monthly publication issued by the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, 14 Gregory Hall, Urbana, III. $5 a year, edited by Jane Lombard. NAEB DISTRIBUTES "DECLARATION OF CONSCIENCE" The NAEB network facilities have provided people of this country with their first opportunity to hear a broadcast of Dr. Albert Schweitzer’s “Declaration of Conscience.” Although Dr. Schweitzer’s text has been broadcast by all other major free nations of the world, as far as it is known, until this time the United States, Soviet Union, and Communist China were the only major nations which did not broadcast it. NAEB has distributed a half-hour tape-recorded reading of the Declaration as a special program of¬ fering to its network member stations in the United States, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico for an estimated listening audience of 40 million. This reading was done by Dr. Emory Ross at station WNYC, New York. Stations were also provided printed texts of the Declaration, made possible by the Saturday Review which first published it in this country. Dr. Schweitzer’s Declaration is an appeal to peoples of the world to realize the implications of nu¬ clear warfare and experimentation. His statement was read last April 24 over Radio Oslo and released to all nations under the auspices of the Nobel Prize committee. —NAEB— 1