Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 200 Document Number: C26084
Notes:
Has been digitized and added to University Library Medusa Repository - Collection Agricultural Communications Documentation Center Multimedia Collection, Repository ACES (Funk) Library, Presentations during the 1969 convention of the National Association of Farm Broadcasters in Chicago, Illinois, November 29, 1969., Taped excerpts from a panel discussion that involved these farm broadcasters: Robert Miller, WLW, Cincinnati, Ohio; Paul Barger, KWWL, Waterloo, Iowa; Derek Rooke, WMC, Memphis, Tennessee; Dewey Compton, KTRK, Houston, Texas; Roddy Peeples, Voice of Southwest Agriculture, San Angelo, Texas; Ray Wilkinson, Tobacco Network, Raleigh, North Carolina; Dink Embry, WHOP, Hopkinsville, Kentucky; Arnold Peterson, WOW, Omaha, Nebraska; Royce Bodiford, KGNC, Amarillo, Texas; and Maynard Speece, WCCO, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
USA: Federal Communications Commission, Washington, D.C.
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 154 Document Number: C25052
Notes:
Retrieved December 12, 2006., FCC 06-172. 6 pages., Commission finds that RFD-TV is acting like a commercial enterprise instead of a noncommercial entity with an educational mission, in terms of airing the Superior livestock auctions.
Retrieved July 5, 2006., Author describes the development of radio, using an Ohio community as an example, and looks ahead. "Just as the arrival of radio into rural Appalachia addressed an individual community, the arrival of Web radio could result in the increase of communal listening habits in underdeveloped regions without radio stations."
Hilliard, Robert L. (author) and Keith, Michael C. (author)
Format:
Book
Publication Date:
2005
Published:
USA: Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale, Illinois.
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Document Number: C24025
Notes:
242 pages., Authors examine how "the short-term financial gains from consolidation in radio have resulted in the demise of local radio services to individual communities, concomitantly resulting in the not-so-long-term possible demise of radio itself."
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 158 Document Number: C25732
Notes:
Via MAP web site. 1 page., "Given the tremendous need for access to spectrum throughout America - in rural, suburban, and urban environments - it is critical that the Commission foreclose use of white spaces only where engineering tests prove there is a genuine risk of harmful interference."