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COLUMBIA TO GIVE SETTING AT GENEVA Frederic William Wile to| Present Delegates to Arms Conference. the meeting international re- broadcast program to be carried by WMAL and associated Columbia Broad- casting System stations. In Geneva to report the proceedings | for Columbia, Mr. Wile will give a st nary of the preliminary events and ii uce several of the outstanding dele- | onferer These include i . Archbishop Viscount Cecil, one of the lead- ing members of the British delegation, and Senor Don Salvador de Madariaga, the first Ambassador appointed to Washington by the republ ment of Spain after the last April. Miriam Hopkins, screen star, will ap- ar as guest artist in the California Melodies program. William Hargrave, Vera Van and the Bachelors' Quartet aiso will take part PICTURE of the stage being set in Geneva for the World Dis- | rent Conference will be | today by Frederic d delegates to in an Grand Opera Presentation. Bruno Walter will conduct the New Network Radio Artists Featured in Week’s THE SUNDAY AR, WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY 31 e Outstanding Program BR"'SH INVEN"]R SINGERS AND DRAMATIC STARS TO BE HEARD OVER COLUMBIA AND NATIONAL BROADCASTING CHAINS. | 1932—PART FOUR MAY WORK IN U. 5. 9 10 10: J. L. Baird Plans Television Experiments Through Station WMCA. | 1 i 11 11 124 BY ROBERT MACK. i OHN LOGIE BAIRD, British tel-| evision wizard, who in 1928 as-| J ting images across the Atlantic| by television, may carry forward his visual radio experiments in the United States. | Arrangements have been made by Baird with Station WMCA, in New York City, to install and maintain a television station, to be operated in| conjunction with the broadcasting sta- | tion, contingent upon Federal Radio| Commission approval of an applica- tion to that end. Radio Pictures, Inc., of New York, now occupying the ex- perimental radio facilities sought by the WMCA-Baird combination, pro- tested against the application at recent hearings, but a favorable report b: been submitted to the commission by | one of its examiners and now is pend- | Cannot Hold License. | As a British subject, Baird cannot | himself hold a radio license of any|; | WMA :00—Evensong se: 5:00- 5:30—Wardman Park Orchestra, :30—Grand Ope 00 Today on the Radio (AUl programs scheduled for Eastern Standard Time.) 475.9 Meters. 630 Kilocycles. 00a—Land o' Make Believe. 00a—Columbia Church of the Afr. 30a—"The Money Game,” by Sir Norman Ange! 00a—Children’s Ho 15a—Watch Tower Service, 30a—Voice of St. Louis. 00m—Rebroadcast from Geneva; ad- dress by Prederic Willlam Wile and delegates to the World Disarmament Conference, Church of the Alr. at the crgan. New York Philharmonic Sym- phony Orchestra ice from Washing- ton Cathedral. ~Real Folks. 00—“Science Serving the Consum- * by Dr. Julius Klein, 15—Melody Speedway. 30—Rybb’s Novelty Orchestra. 5—Manhattan_Sercnaders World's_ Greatest Cata- by F. A. Mitchell- k University Chorus. Your Child,” by Angelo Patri. y Theater Orchestra. 30—Adventuring with Count Von Luckner dna Hopper'’s Variety Show. 30—Ernest Hutcheson, pianist. WRC 3156 Meters. 930 Kilocycles. 8:00a—Melody Hour. :00a—Children’s Hour. 10:00a—Mexican Typica Orchestra. 10:30a—Clyde Doerr and his Saxophore Octet, 00a—Neapolitan Days. 30a—Maj. Bowes and his Capitol. family.” 30—Tales of the Emerald Isle. 00—"Congressional Waste,” by Rep? > Hart of Michigan. 15—Program by Automotive Trade Association b 11: s Orchestra. Sunday Bright Spots. character in this country, and for that 00—The Gauchos conshine and Honeysuckle. Jayne King's Orchestra. 3:30—Dr. S. Parkes Cadman. 00—Correct time 01—Rebroadcast from Germany; ad- dresses and music. 30—Tree Hour. 30—Circle program, featuring Mme. Erne: 30—National Education Association program; music and speeches. :00—National Jubilee Singers, 15—“Hunted,” by Angela Kier Play- ers :30—Club of the Alr. 00—Rubinof’s Orchestra, with Ed- the News in the y Willlam Hard, from 15—Album of Familiar Music. Musical Come - y program RTHUR JARRETT (left), tenor, popular Columbia artist, who is now presenting five programs a week. In the center is Jane Carpenter, pianist, a new- tet comer to radio. She is to contribute to several Columbia broadcasts each week. Jim and Marion Jordan (right), who write and present the rural reason he entered into a co-operative arrangement with the American-owned firm. | hilh: ) hy oreck: -Musical Arf York Philharmonic Symphony Orches- 7 : : tra in its weekly concert. The guest 12:00—Weather forecast. L | 30—California Melodies. ‘ 0la—-Eddie Duchin's Orchestra ‘ soloist will be Gregor Platigorsky. He will play the solo part in Haydn's “D Major Cello Concerto.” The orchestra will feature the overture “Lenore” of | Beethoven. An abridged version of Verdi's “Rigo- letto,” prepared by Howard Barlow, will be the grand opera presentation at 6:30 o'clock. The cast is made up of & group of prominent Columbia_artis and includes Adele Vasa, Barba Maurel and Theo Karle. The colorful overture to Rossini's “Barber of Seville” will feature the Roxy concert at 9 o'clock. The orches- tra also will play “Two Lyric Pleces for Strings” by Grieg and the prelude and mazurka from Delibes’ “Coppelia.” WRC and other National Broadcast- ng Co. stations have scheduled two internati one originating ! ng an address by m Hard, and the other in Ger- y. In the latter therc will be a on European conditions by Ernst he German Polit- lections by Hei one soloist of the | State Opera Co Schumann-Heink Guest. Schumann-Heink t in the Circle program _in- “Die _Lorelei,” he Night,” “Danny God, to Thee.” program 13 ot g service of the Epip! WJSV has la s clude ches' 8 rec con Milar 1 and Bari Milan sta r_construction, 75,000 watts, the of the American- r WMAL, 00; speeches and music from Germany, WRC, 4:01; am Hard, in Geneva, WRC, 9:00. SPEECHES. *Congressional Waste,” b; tive Hart of Mic] Representa- . WRC, 1:00 Consumer, in, WMAL, 7:00. (CAL. CLASSI ilh Sy rmonic Symphony Or- yi Mme. Schu- mann-Heink, WRC, 5:30; Roxy Theater Orchestra, WMAL, 9:00. VARIETY. Sisters, WOL, 1:30; th E DRAMA. and Honeysuckle, WRC, eal Folks, WMAL, 5:00; Club Air, WRC, 7:30; “Hunted,” 7:15; Adventuring with €ount von Luckner, WMAL, 9:30. HIGH LIGHTS ELSEWHERE. Symphony Orchestra AL, WBZ, WWNC tenor—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and WBZ $:30—Garden Party; Tito Schipa. tenor — WJZ, WBAL, WLW, WMAQ and WJR. 4:00—Travelogues: Malcolm La Prade, narrator—WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, KDKA and WLW. 4:00—Sermon by Rev. Charles E. Coughlin of the Church of the Flower—WOR, WGR, A sketch “Smackout” on an N. B. C. network. | tion, | engineers NEW REALLOCATION STARTS TOMORROW Commercial and Experimen- tal Channels Changed by Radio Commission. BY MARTIN CODEL. LL in one fell swoop, & Sweep- ing reallocation of the com- mercial and experimental chan- nels of the ether—all the wave- lengths except those employed for broadcasting purposes—goes into effect at 3 am. tomorrow by order of the Federal Radio Commission. Though the program waves best known to the public at large are not affected, the reallocation, nevertheless, is fully as |important to the vast majority of users of radio channels under governmental franchise as was the historic broadcast | reallocation of November, 1928 Where the broadcast reallocation meant that listeners everywhere had to change their dial settings for accus- tomed reception, this new revision of short and long wave assignments means that point-to-point, transoceanic, avia- amateur, television and other diotelegraphic and radiotelephonic ervices must comply with new operat- ing conditions and in many cases must to new wavelengths, The altered set-up puts into effect | the new so-called frequency “toler- ances” or separations between radio channels of one-tenth of one per cent, lieu of the old standard of two- nths of one per cent, thus, in effect, ncreasing the number of channels be- tween 10 and 28000 kilocycles from 1814 to 3,025. This narrower spacing of wavelengths is the result of advanced g technique and is in accord with the recommendations of the In- ; | ternational Technical Consulting Com- mittee on Radio Communications which met in Holland in 1929. Higher Standard Set. Doubling of the number of channels does not, however, mean that the way is opened for a new rush to acquire short and long waves. It means simply that commercial and experimental sta- tions of all classes must adhere to a new and higher standard of operation; in the transoceanic group of channels it means that the United States will now have only about 35 per cent of the channels registered with the Bern Bu- reau of the International Telegraphic Union, where it formerly had 70 per cent, All waves except those between 550 and 1,500 kilocycles, the broadcast band, are affected. Television, which is ex- pected to become an adjunct of pres- ent sound broadcasting, swaps a set of channels with aviation and secures the 1,550-kilocycle channel for its sound accompaniment. This means that ex- isting radio receivers for the most part can tune in the voices that will ac- company images broadcast on the short waves. Between 10 and 550 kilocycles, gener- ally called the long-wave band, chan- nels are reallocated to fixed Govern- ment, maritime, State police and air- craft stations, without any substantial changes from present assignments ex- cept for the more rigid channeling system. Between 1,500 and 6,000 kilo- cycles, known as the continental short- wave band, the number of frequencies is increased from 639 to 974, and they are reassigned to fixed Government, maritime, police, television, amateur, aviation, experimental and miscellane- ous services. New International Limit. In the 1,500-6,000 kilocycle band, the | commission has reserved 1,600 to 1,700 kilocycles for television instead of the present 2,850-2.950 band, which must | be vacated in favor of aviation. The new band, however, is regarded as more favorable to visual broadcasting, espe- cially in view of its proximity to the broadcast band. The 1,550-kilocycle channel’s reservation as the “sound track” for television is generally accept- able to all concerned, even though it means that the old 1,604-kilocycle chan- nel must be relinquished to other EW broadcasting stations continue to go into opera- | tion along the Mexican border, sending out pro- grams in both English and Span- ish and leading to more interfer- ence in the wave lengths used by American and Canadian stations. With Senator Dill raising the is- sue in the Senate, where he in- tends shortly to introduce a reso- lution calling upon the State De- partment to explain its attiude of apparent indifference toward the problem and to prepare to call Mexico into a treaty-making con- |terence, it is likely that the sub- | ject will be very much in the fore- front of radio in the months to c | ported to have gone into opera- |tion along the Mexican border is | XEFD, located about halfway b tween Tia Juana and Agua Cali- |ente, within a few miles of the | | border. Operating with 300 watts, it has gone on the 1,020-kilocycle channel, which is an American clear channel licensed to KYW, Chicago, with 10,000 watts. Inter- ference reports are not yet avail- able, but the station, while licensed, to a Mexican corpora- tion, is obviously designed to cover the Southern California territory. Another high-power ‘stauon also is reported building in Tia Juana. Villa Acuna, just across the | border from Del Rio, Tex., where {it has its main studios, has been |in operation several months on 735 Kkilocycles, halfway between the Canadian clear channel of 730 kilocycles, assigned to CKAC, Montreal, and the American clear channel of 740 kilocycles, as- signed to WSB, Atlanta. Operat- ing with a licensed power of 75,000 watts, it power station on the Continen and is already interfering on the two adjacent channels. At Juarez, opposite El Paso, is XEQ, operating with 1,000 watts 750 kilocycles, which is the clea. channel now assigned to WJR, Detroit, recently increased to 10,000 watts to override interfer- ence. At Reynosa, just opposite McAllen, Tex., is XED, operating on 965 Kkilocycles with 10,000 | watts. On 960 are five Canadian stations and on 970 are KJR, Seattle, with 5,000 watts, and WCFL, Chicago, with 1,500 watts. These are the border stations others are supposed to be in course of construction. Among tions, there are others which have “squatted” directly or near United States-Canadian channels, but for the most part their powers are low enough to preclude interfer- ence. Since Mexico has indicated that it intends to back up its licensees—and it is licensing new stations freely—it is apparent that the subject must shortly be- come a matter for international negotiation. * X X X AN the radio exert any influ- ence toward the correct pro- nunciation of the “King’s Eng- lish” in the schools? British | Broadcasting Corporation au- thorities propose to find out and to that end are conducting an experiment in the teaching of English speech by radio. It con- sists of a course bearing the title | James began last September and ome. | | Latest of the new stations re- Dr. John R. Brinkley’s XER at | is the highest | and soon going to 5,000 watts, on | only, and a half dozen or more | Mexico’s 35 or more other sta-| | the “broadcast” groug shows any improvement over the ‘“control” group. If the London experiment | gives sufficiently valuable results, a further investigation covering the whole country may be ar- ranged. . A feature of British educators’| work in connection with broad- | | casts to schools has been the ex- | |tensive use of the new German | | recording apparatus, known as |the “Blatterphone.” With this | device an entire 20-minute talk | can be preserved on a magnetized | | steel tape and reproduced when | |desired. This invention has been | used by speakers and by members | ! of the B. B. C. staff for recordings | for later auditions | | “A very special technique,” re- ports the B. C., “is required | for broadcast lessons to schools | and by means of the Blatter-| phone speakers are able to hear | and correct their own defects far | more easily than hitherto. Fur- | | thermore, a speaker is able to| | visit a school while his talk is| being broadcast and watch the effect of his ‘broadcast person- | ality’ on the listening class, the children being unaware that the | speaker is actually in the room | with them and not in the studio. Such visits have repeatedly been | made during the past year and as a result the technique of speakers has been very consider- ably improved.” | The B. B. C. imposes no pro- hibitions, such as do the Ameri- can networks, upon the broad- casting of recorded programs, whether from the “Blatterphone” | steel tape or from | phonograph records. When rec- |ords are broadcast, due credit is | !also given their manufacturers, which has often been construed | as a form of commercialism along | American sponsorship lines. The‘ B.B.C.also makes it a practice to | | record speeches by notables on the “Blatterphone” so that they can | be repeated at will, and is thus | building up a great * oK K K THE tremendous popular inter- est in public affairs that pre- vails at this time, when the po- litical parties are sparring for| position for the forthcoming na- | tional elections, is reflected by | the exceptionally large networks | | subscribing to the several current | |events broadcasts from Washing- | | ton. With William Hard of N.B.C. | and Frederic William Wile of C.B. | S. gone to Geneva to “cover” the | | Disarmament Conference, various ‘Washington correspondents are going on the air in their stead |to_review current developments. | striking, however, has | Most been th popular acceptance of | the National Radio Forum, which | | recently switched from C.B.S.to| |N.B.C. and is being heard under“ the auspices of The Washington Star for a half hour every Monday | night. It brings national notables | before the microphone and more than 50 N.B.C.stations are carry- ing the program. . Ordinarily, programs of this | character, which may be accepted | | or rejected by network station | | members at their own discretion, | are regarded as successes if they | |have 20 to 30 stations. | ok | RESIDENT HOOVER heads the | most elaborate single series| |of programs ever planned for| | radio, being arranged by the Na-| ibration of the 200th birthday an- | open to the public after February 14.| crdinaryf After the opening night W3XK will “library” of | recorded broadcasts. l [ | | ter “of numbers, his monologues are TELEVISION STATION WILL OPEN SATURDAY Reichelderfer and Replogle Will Launch W2XAP—Three-Hour Program Arranged. Commissioner Luther H. Reichelder- fer and D. E. Replogle, vice president of the Jenkins Television Corporation, will formally open the WMAL tele- vision station, W2XAP at 8:30 pm.| Saturday. The new station will be on the with television for three hours begin- | ning at 8 pm. A full hour of the in- | augural program will be broadcast by WMAL from 8:30 to 9:30 p.m The artists taking part in the por- tion of the program to be broadcast with sound accompaniment by WMAL include Jack Miller, bar the Shan- | nons, Leonard Davis, baritone; Frank | Young, pianist, and Meyer Goldman’s | Orchestra. “Jitters,” popular comedy duo, be the first program to appear on a regular schedule of WMAL-W2XAP.| They are featured on WMAL every | Saturday at 8 p.m. Jack Miller, accompanist for Kate | Smith and Columbia baritone, will be | televised during his regular network program, from 10:45 to 11 pam | Television receivers will be_ installed in the Mayflower Hotel, the Shoreham | Hotel and Wardman Park Hotel, and in the WMAL studios for guests to| watch actual reception. Special invi- tations are being issued to prominent | officials to inspect the equipment on | the opening night. The station will be air will W2XAP now possesses the only mo- | bile television camera in existence. Op- | eration of the television station, con- trary to previous reports, will not sup- | plant the present schedules of W3XK | at Wheaton, Md. alternate with WMAL-W2XAP when WMAL does not have programs origi- nating in its studios available for tel islon. W3XK will present sound ac- companiment on its present short-wave channel. Folks Behind The Microphone BY THE RADIO EDITOR AY PERKINS, new master of ceremonies on the Sunshine hour, is more than an enter- | tainer. He’s an institution in | himself. Ray is one of the few men on the | air who can get along absolutely under his own motivation. Ray, it seems, writes his own songs, lyrics, poerus, chatter, plano arrangements and an- nouncements under compulsion. Though he’s willing to borrow from George Gershwin or Noel Coward in the mat- entirely original. Although for the past year he has been on the air alone in three or four rograms » week, Ray has never stolen, borrowed or appropriated a single joke not his own. Nor is singing his own songs a new experience to Ray. He spent a year in Hollywood as dean of the Warner Bros.’ song-writing staff, grinding out such hits as “Under the Texas Moon,” “Lady Luck” and “Smilin’ Irish Eyes.” Finally, Perkins is no slouch as a pianist. There is just the slightest possibility that he owes his wizardry over the keys to the years when he | was seriously engaged in studying mu- | sic under the tutelage of a score of the | Nation's greatest pianists. LENT SERVICE ON AIR Bishop Freeman to Be Heard on| Chain on Ash Wednesday. For the third consecutive year the: Bethlehem Chapel of Washington | which persons “King’s English,” which A. Lloyd | tional Broadcasting Co. in cele- | Ash Wednesday morning service at the | Baird is a cousin of Joseph L. Baird of Boston, American television inven- tor. His first experiments in visual broadcasting were conducted while he was a student at the Royal Technical College of Glasgow, from which he graduated in 1912. Since 1923 h devoted his entire time to developme of television, and in 1925 he demon- tsrated the transmission of living im- ages in Glasgow. {1 In 1927 he demonstrated television in_ natural colors and in stereoscopic relief. His system is being employed in regularly scheduled visual broad- casts over the government-operated British Broadcasting System. 1 Explains Accomplishments. | In testimony before the commission Baird explained some of his recent ac- complishments in _television, one of which he predicted might be a boon in wartime. Calling it “noctovision,” he said he discovered a device which uses infra-red rays in lieu of light. by objects in total darkness are vis d jevelopment of a scanr ing device which in three colors, aj t which makes possible three-dimensional es he application filed with the com- mission by WMCA is for authority to build an experimer television sta- tion of 1,00 ower to operate on the 2,850-2,950 kilocycle television band in New York. This band, however, on February 1 will no longer be available for television, but is exchanged for the 1,600-1,700 kilocycle band, formerly used for aviation communication. The commission was told that at least $2 000 would be expended annus the development of visual broad Baird himself plans to spe! months of each year in this country to carry on the experiments. (Copy W 11 Empire Programs Begun. England this month began its Er pire broadcasting service, by whick proposes to send musical programs, speeches and other broadcasts to all its dominions and colonies on a scheduled basis, by inaugurating the broadcast- ing of special news bulletins via 5SW. its short-wave station at Chelmsford Reuter's Agency, the European coun- terpart of the Associated Press, fur- nished the bulletins, which are being sentiont bdallysatiinoob, 16 Sp.m midnight with a view of testing the | 1 suitability of this time schedule for! overseas listeners. 2:00m—Radi 3:30 3:45—Wellesley E 1:00—Full 1:30 to 12:00—Howard program. ‘45a—Program 1 2:30 to 1:00a—Ann Leaf at the organ. Early Program Tomorrow. Girl. Morning Mail. 30a—Tony's Scrap Book 45a—Frank Y pianist, 00a—Chatting with Ida Bailey Allen. 5 and Hot. ers 00a—Musical Alphabet. 30a—Melody Parade. 45a—Ben Alley, tenor. Guide 05—Don Bigelov 2:30-—Columbia Re¢ 00—Taft Orchestra. 30—Ritz Orchestra 00—Chamber Music Concert from Library of Congress. 30—Ameri School of the Air. 3:00—Four 15—The Electro Columb rchestra. Gle 00—Ross Gorman JSY s Orchestra. 205.4 Meters. 1.460 Kilocycles. on music. Watch Tower Service 00a to 12:15—! P tropolitan Dance Orchestra. udio feature e Orchestra. 00—Gospel T 30—Tango Troubad 5:00—Sea Isle Moane: 1a Boys el Spreading Assoclation. ham Concert Orchestra. 45—Orange pregra DOA%;.M First, Church of Gospel Tabernacle Service. Early Program Tomorrow. 00a—The Breakfast Club. 0. ‘Treasure st. 30a—For Y 00a—Peg| Federation Women's 10a—Sacre wramm’s Trio. uncheon Music. er Hea s Troubadours. od program. Mrs. Blake’s Radio Column. nd's Health Clinic. ‘30a—Breen and de Rose Charles Colfax Long. 1 Farm and Ho rty’s Orct e Hour, 228.9 Meters. 1,310 Kilocycles. ce Bulletins. WOL 9:55a—Po " by Robert | 11:00a- Church of ! 12:25— nd. 1 's Orchestra. 1:30—Steve 1:45 to 2:00—Jimmy Harbison, pianist. 4:30— Hawalians, 4:45—The Entertainers, 5:00 to 6:00—C: Radio Hour., Early Program Tomorr w. 7:00a—Musical Clock. 8:00a—. k 8:058—M 9:55a—Police Bullet 10:00a—Modern_Melodies. 10:30a—Organ Rev 11:00a—Festival of Mu 1 Sheff, pianist. To keep the ministry of the Church of England up to its average strength w ordinations will be necessary 'this year. is continuing until next July. | niversary of George ‘Washington. | cathedral, including & sermon on “The The pronunciation of 80 children| There will be 28 celebrations | i;on.; Significance of Lent” by Right | from the first year of London |put on the air between February |gey. james E. Freeman, Bishop of APARTMENTIZE YOUR HOME WCAO, WFBL, KMOX, WORC services, and WCAV Whereas formerly the higher fre- limit of national (short wave) howmen; George Mar- spaper reporter, and Brusiloff’s Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and KDKA. 8.00—National Vespers; Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick—WJZ, WBAL, WLW and WSM. 6:00—Ra Junior, sketch of domes- tic life—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM and WJR. 7:00—Harold Stokes' Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL, WSM and WJR. 9:30—The Three Bakers and Billy Artz's Orchestra—WJZ, WBAL | and WJR. 8:00—Melodies; Betsy Ayres, Mary Hopple and Ensemble—WJZ, WBZ, WBZA, WHAM, WJR, KDKA and KYW. 8:15—Magazine hour; Dramatizations, Gene Tunney, Ernest La Prade’s Orchestra—WJZ, WBZ, WBAL, | WHAM, KDKA, WJR and WMC. 9:15—The Stag Party; Capt. Charles Woodyatt, male quartet and Brusiloff's Orchestra — WBAL, WJZ, WBZ, WBZA, WHAM, KDKA, WJR and WLW. 9:45—Slumber Music; Laurier's String Ensemble—WJZ, WBAL, WHAM, WJR and KDKA. 20:15—O0ld Singing Master; program of old songs—-WJZ, WBAL, WBZ, WHAM and KDKA. M:15—Sylvia Proos, crooner — WJZ, WBAL, WJR and WREN. 38:00—Henry Theis and his Orchestra— WJZ, WBZ, WJR, KDKA, WBAL and WREN. ‘Exchange depreciation in Great Brit- ain and the Scandinavian countries has bendel to prevent further wage de- quency and international channel assignments was 23,000 kilocycles (13 meters), the new allocations fix 28,000 kilocycles (10.7 meters) as the new limit, thus making 175 additional frequencies avail- able. Between 6,000 and 28,000 kilo- cycles, the largest increase in channels, takes place. On the old two-tenths basis there were 624 channels in this band; under the new scheme there are 1,377 frequencies available for maritime, transoceanic, Government, aviation, amateur, relay and other services. Beyond 28,000 kilocycles or up to 60,- 000 kilocycles in the range of waves commonly called ultra-high frequencies or ultra-short waves provisions are made for various services, largely ama- teur, television and experimental. It is in this field that the great develop- ments of radio in the future are ex- pected, especially inasmuch as these frequencies afford almost unlimited “room in the ether” for services requir- ing wide channels. Television, especially, is expected to find its greatest future de- velopment in this “no man’s land” of today’s radio. The whole reallocation was worked out with infinite care for detail and with the idea of disturbing the existing radio structure as slightly as possible. It is highly technical in character and represented labors of two years of the engineering division of the commission. Dr. C. B. Jolliffe, chief engineer of the commission, who was & delegate to The Hague Conference which decided on the new technique, directed the work, which was carried out by Lieut. E. K. Jett, U. S. N., retired, assistant chief engineer, with Gerald C. Gross, In charge of in- ternational radio wmu. handling that phase of the & the British Linguaphone Institute last September. The child. ... were then divided into two specially graded groups. One of these groups is to follow Mr. James course for the whole year and the other is to pursue the ordinary school routine. When the broadcast course is completed next July, the pro- nunciation of both groups will again be recorded and the records compared by phonetic experts. They will determine then whether ficial period of commemoration | as decreed by the George Wash- | ington Bicentennial Commission. | From the halls of Congress, the Capitol grounds and every im- portant shrine revered in Wash- ington’s memory, the celebrations will be broadcast. New Children’s Program. A new children’s program will be introduced by WJSV tomorrow at 5 ociock, It will be a daily feature| under the direction of Gaffer Grey. Authorized Service A. C. & Northeast Speedometer Repairs MILLER-DUDLEY CO. 1716 14th St. NNW. North 1583-4 EXPERT MEN A R S0P NEW POLICY We Will REPAIR Your RADIO SET and CHARGE IT ‘Work Guaranteed OKAY RADIO CO. 417 11th St. N.W. Tel. DI. 3106 primary school was recorded by |22 and Thanksgiving day—the of- | Washington, will be broadcast over a ! Nation-wide network of the Columbia Broadcasting System. | ‘The broadcast will be from 11:30 a.m. to 12, Eastern standard time, and will include the sermon and a portion of the penitential service. 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