cited reference, The Department of Agriculture, Victoria, ran a talk-back programme, "Phone the Farm Panel", over radio station 3GL, Geelong, between April 1971 and August 1972. The station's receiving area corresponds closely with the Department's Port Philip extension district, The experience suggested that urban listeners participate in such programmes more than do rural ones, and women more than men, which may be explained by the differing nature of their occupations. The exercise gave the extension officers involved valuable publicity and experience.
Kim, I.C. (author / Seoul National University, Graduate School of Mass Communication, Seoul, Korea) and Seoul National University, Graduate School of Mass Communication, Seoul, Korea
Format:
Conference paper
Publication Date:
1973
Published:
International
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 23 Document Number: B02383
Notes:
#149, Harold Swanson Collection, Singapore : Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Center, 1973. 10 p. Paper presented at the Regional Conference on Communication and Change in Rural Asia; 1973 August 26 - September 3; Asian Mass Communication Research and Information Center, Bangalore, India
Hull, William L. (author), Kester, Ralph J. (author), Martin, William B. (author), and Center for Vocational and Technical Education, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Format:
Report
Publication Date:
1973-03
Published:
USA
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 38 Document Number: B04295
Notes:
Includes Foreword, Table of Contents, Summary, and Conclusions, Implications, and Recommendations, Columbus, OH : Center for Vocational and Technical Education, 1973. 62 p. (Research and Development Series No. 89)
Full Title: Un monde demagogique ... ou le danger des mass-media et des idees toutes faites qu'ils repandent, notamment dans l'eventualite d'une crise energetique ! = A demagogic world, or the danger of the mass media and the ready-made ideas they spread, notably in the eventuality of an energy crisis in agriculture, Phase I