Channel Affiliate Market Timeframe of Move Call

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Channel Affiliate Market Timeframe of Move Call TV Broadcasters’ Impact on Maryland Impact on MD 05 Broadcasters have an impact of $23.62 billion annually on Maryland’s economy. 47,540 Jobs 10 Commercial TV Stations Call Channel Affiliate Market Timeframe of Move WAZT-CD 10 Independent Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WAZW-CD 0 Independent Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WETA-TV 26 Public Television Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WFPT 62 Public Television Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WHAG-TV 25 Heroes & Icons Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WPXW-TV 66 ION Media Networks Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WRC-TV 4 NBC Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WWPB 31 Public Television Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 9: Mar 14, 2020 - May 1, 2020 WWPX-TV 60 ION Media Networks Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 9: Mar 14, 2020 - May 1, 2020 WBAL-TV 11 NBC Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 9: Mar 14, 2020 - May 1, 2020 WBFF 45 FOX Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WJZ-TV 13 CBS Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 9: Mar 14, 2020 - May 1, 2020 WMAR-TV 2 ABC Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WMJF-CD 0 Independent Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WMPB 67 Public Television Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WMPT 22 Public Television Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WNUV 54 CW Television Network Baltimore, MD (26) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WCVE-TV 23 Public Television Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WCVW 57 Public Television Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WRIC-TV 8 ABC Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WRLH-TV 35 FOX Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 5: Aug 3, 2019 - Sept 6, 2019 WTVR-TV 6 CBS Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WUPV 65 CW Television Network Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WWBT 12 NBC Richmond-Petersburg, VA (55) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020 WBOC-TV 16 CBS Salisbury, MD (144) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WCPB 28 Public Television Salisbury, MD (144) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WMDT 47 ABC Salisbury, MD (144) Phase 8: Jan 18, 2020 - Mar 13, 2020.
Recommended publications
  • Download the Event Program (PDF)
    THE POWER OF GIVING PHILANTHROPY’S IMPACT ON AMERICAN LIFE National Museum of American History Washington, DC December 1, 2015 #AmericanGiving THE POWER OF GIVING PHILANTHROPY’S IMPACT ON AMERICAN LIFE 9:00 SMITHSONIAN WELCOME David J. Skorton 9:05 LAUNCH OF THE PHILANTHROPY INITIATIVE AND DONATION CEREMONY John L. Gray HISTORIC PERSPECTIVES ON PHILANTHROPY 9:20 “REAL AND PERMANENT GOOD”: EXAMINING A CENTURY OF AMERICAN PHILANTHROPY INTERVIEWER: David Rubenstein PANELISTS: Warren Buffett | David Rockefeller Jr. | Olivier Zunz 10:05 Break PHILANTHROPY TODAY: EVERYDAY GIVING 10:20 OVERVIEW David Rubenstein 10:25 LESSONS FROM #GIVINGTUESDAY Henry Timms 10:40 RISING TO THE CHALLENGE: BALTIMORE’S RESPONSE TO OPPORTUNITY AND CRISIS SPEAKERS: Jamie McDonald | Sarah Hemminger | Joseph T. Jones Jr. Diana Morris | Carla Hayden | Ricardo Amparo 11:20 GIVING BACK, GIVING HOPE: THE BEST WAY TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE INTERVIEWER: Nina Easton PANELISTS: Melinda Gates | Nicholas D. Kristof | Sheryl WuDunn FUTURE IMPACT: PHILANTHROPIC HORIZONS 12:05 UNLOCKING CITIZEN GIVING VIA TECHNOLOGY Premal Shah 12:20 INNOVATION AND PARTNERSHIP: THE FUTURE OF PHILANTHROPY Bill Gates 12:35 CLOSING REMARKS David Rubenstein 12:40 ADJOURNMENT TO LUNCH Guests are invited to view selected Giving Pledge letters on display in the LeFrak Lobby before proceeding to lunch in Liberty Square, Second Floor, West SPEAKERS RICARDO AMPARO development of strategies and sets the Ricardo Amparo is an 18-year-old Baltimore overall direction of the organization. In resident and filmmaker who works three 2010, Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren jobs while attending his first year of college. Buffett founded the Giving Pledge, an effort Through the BridgeEDU program, he is to encourage the wealthiest families and taking classes at the University of Baltimore individuals to publicly commit more than and Baltimore Community College.
    [Show full text]
  • Report of the Independent Inquiry Into the Media and Media Regulation Is Protected by Copyright
    REPORT OF THE INDEPENDENT INQUIRY INTO THE MEDIA AND MEDIA REGULATION BY THE HON R FINKELSTEIN QC ASSISTED BY PROF M RICKETSON REPORT TO THE MINISTER FOR BROADBAND, COMMUNICATIONS AND THE DIGITAL ECONOMY 28 FEBRUARY 2012 © Commonwealth of Australia 2012 ISBN: 978-0-642-75424-0 (PDF version) 978-0-642-75425-7 (DOC version 978-0-642-75426-4 (printed version) The Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Media and Media Regulation is protected by copyright. With the exception of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms and where otherwise noted, all material included this report is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/). The details of the relevant licence conditions are available on the Creative Commons website, as is the full legal code for CC BY 3.0 AU licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/legalcode). The document must be attributed as the ‘Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Media and Media Regulation’. Using the Commonwealth Coat of Arms The terms of use for the Coat of Arms are available from www.itsanhonour.gov.au Other use The use of any material in this report in a way not permitted or otherwise allowed under the Copyright Act 1968 may be an infringement of copyright. Where you wish to use the material on this in a way that is beyond the scope of the terms of use that apply to it, you must lodge a request for further authorisation with the department. Authorisation Please address requests and enquiries concerning further authorisation to: The Media Inquiry Secretariat Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy PO Box 2154 CANBERRA ACT 2601 [email protected] Letter of transmittal Contents Executive summary—conclusions and recommendations 7 Media codes of ethics and accountability 7 Changing business models and quality journalism 10 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Portraits of Gentrification: When Neighborhood Change Becomes News
    Portraits of Gentrification: When Neighborhood Change Becomes News By Zawadi Rucks Ahidiana A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Claude Fischer, Co-chair Professor Margaret Weir, Co-chair Professor Sandra Smith Professor Carolina Reid Summer 2018 © 2018 Zawadi Rucks Ahidiana ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Abstract Portraits of Gentrification: When Neighborhood Change Becomes News By Zawadi Rucks Ahidiana Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology University of California, Berkeley Professor Claude Fischer, Co-chair Professor Margaret Weir, Co-chair The term gentrification was coined in the mid-1960s to describe the process by which neighborhoods were changing from predominately low-income to middle-class. While the term has expanded in usage in the academy since then, we know little about what gentrification means in its every day use and how that might vary depending on city size, demographic composition, and housing and labor market conditions. In this study, I investigate the representations of gentrification by one cultural institution, the media, to understand the depictions that contribute to public opinions, attitudes, and assumptions about what the term means, who is affected, what is driving the change, and how those representations vary by context. Using data from 4 newspapers published in Baltimore, Maryland and San Francisco, California between 1990 and 2014, as well as Census data, I found that the news media replicates and reinforces racial and class hierarchies in its representations of gentrification by reflecting the patterns of uneven (re)development of the past and present, and reinforcing stereotypes of racial and class groups.
    [Show full text]
  • Channel Affiliate Market Timeframe of Move Call
    TV Broadcasters’ Impact on Maryland Broadcasters have an impact of $23.62 billion annually on Maryland’s economy. 47,540 Jobs 10 Commercial TV Stations Call Channel Affiliate Market Timeframe of Move KYW-TV 3 CBS Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WCAU 10 NBC Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WDPB 64 Public Television Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WFPA-CD 28 UniMas Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WHYY-TV 12 Public Television Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 9: Mar 14, 2020 - May 1, 2020 WNJS 23 Public Television Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WPHY-CD 25 SonLife Broadcasting Network Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WPPX-TV 61 ION Media Networks Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WPSG 57 CW Television Network Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WPSJ-CD 0 Independent-Spanish Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WQAV-CD 0 Independent Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WTXF-TV 29 FOX Philadelphia, PA (4) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WAZT-CD 10 Independent Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WAZW-CD 0 Independent Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WETA-TV 26 Public Television Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019 WFPT 62 Public Television Washington, DC (Hagerstown, MD) (7) Phase 4: Jun 22, 2019 - Aug 2, 2019
    [Show full text]
  • Toxic Journalism an Analysis of the Associated Press Article on the Use of Compost to Mitigate Lead Poisoning in Baltimore
    Toxic Journalism An Analysis of the Associated Press Article on the use of Compost to Mitigate Lead Poisoning in Baltimore Charles Hooks, Crockett+Hooks,LLC William Toffey, Mid-Atlantic Biosolids Association Chris Peot, PE, District of Columbia Water & Sewer Authority Summary On April 13, 2008, the Associated Press moved a feature story by John Heilprin and Kevin Vineys to its print and electronic subscribers titled “Sludge-Poisoned Land.” The story claimed that dangerous “sewage sludge” was used on yards in “poor, black neighborhoods” in Baltimore, Maryland, as part of a study to test whether it would protect children from lead poisoning in the soil. A much shorter article by Vineys, “What makes up sludge? No one can say for sure,” accompanied the story. The “Poisoned Land” story received front-page coverage in daily newspapers across the nation, was featured on radio and TV, received prominent coverage on major Internet news sites and blogs and even attracted international media coverage. The story provoked a firestorm of protest from editorial writers, local, state and national politicians and activists from a wide spectrum of environmental, civil rights and social justice organizations who cited the Baltimore research as the latest example of the victimization of poor and minority members of our society. There was just one problem with the Heilprin and Vineys story: It was false. Not false in the sense that the authors made up incidents or quotes or relied on forged documents as exampled by Jayson Blair of the New York Times, Christopher Newton of the Associated Press, Jack Kelly of USA Today and Dan Rather of CBS News.
    [Show full text]
  • The Baltimore Museum of Art Receives $5 Million Gift to Establish Center Dedicated to the Study of French Master Henri Matisse
    THE BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART RECEIVES $5 MILLION GIFT TO ESTABLISH CENTER DEDICATED TO THE STUDY OF FRENCH MASTER HENRI MATISSE The Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies Honors Longtime BMA Supporter and Creates Important New Resource Using the Museum’s Extensive Holdings BALTIMORE, MD (July 25, 2019)—The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) today announced that it has received a gift of $5 million from the Ruth Carol Fund to support the creation of a center within the museum dedicated to the study of French artist Henri Matisse, drawing on the museum’s incomparable collection of more than 1,200 works by the artist. In recognition of this generous gift and in tribute to the Ruth Carol Fund’s founder, a longtime BMA supporter, the center will be called The Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies. The Marder Center will serve as a major resource for scholars, providing new opportunities for research and symposia, for the presentation of exhibitions that contribute to both academic and public understanding of the French master’s practice, and for the digitization and publication of portions of the collection, making it accessible to audiences around the world. The gift from the Ruth Carol Fund provides essential support toward the design and construction of the space and also establishes an endowment for the Marder Center’s ongoing operations. The Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies is slated to open in 2021, with a focused presentation drawn from the BMA’s vast Matisse collection. “With the opening of The Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies, we are creating new opportunities to engage our audiences with our collection and to spark new interests and conversations on Matisse’s influence on modern and contemporary art practice,” said Christopher Bedford, BMA Dorothy Wagner Wallis Director.
    [Show full text]
  • Regional Coordinators to Facilitate Post-Auction Transition for Broadcast Stations
    PUBLIC NOTICE Federal Communications Commission th News Media Information: 202-418-0500 445 12 St., S.W. Internet: www.fcc.gov Washington, D.C. 20554 TTY: 888-835-5322 DA No. 17-376 Released: April 20, 2017 INCENTIVE AUCTION TASK FORCE AND MEDIA BUREAU ANNOUNCE REGIONAL COORDINATORS TO FACILITATE POST-AUCTION TRANSITION FOR BROADCAST STATIONS MB Docket No. 16-306 GN Docket No. 12-268 The Incentive Auction Task Force and Media Bureau (the Bureau) announce the assignment of Regional Coordinators to support broadcast television stations moving to new channel assignments in the post-incentive auction transition period. The Bureau is committed to ensuring a smooth and efficient post-auction transition. To enhance its ability to closely monitor the progress of the repack and to facilitate coordination among stations, each station that will transition to a new channel has been grouped into one of 10 geographically-based regions.1 Each region has a dedicated Bureau staff member as a Regional Coordinator.2 Regional Coordinators will act as a first point of contact at the Commission for stations and, with the support of other Bureau staff and other Commission bureaus and offices, will assist in resolving issues and challenges that stations in the region encounter as a result of the transition. This Public Notice announces that in the coming days, the Regional Coordinators will contact the stations in their assigned regions by email to introduce themselves, and begin the process of coordination with stations in the region. Regional Coordinators will communicate throughout the transition period with stations regarding process, will respond to inquiries from, and otherwise work closely with stations to help facilitate the phased transition schedule and aid stations in satisfying their construction permit deadlines.
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Media Kit Multi-Touchpoint Advertising
    2019 Media Kit Multi-Touchpoint Advertising About Us Connecting ready to buy consumers directly to Radio businesses through scale and influence. • Heritage stations, WBAL NewsRadio 1090 & FM 101.5 and 98Rock Hearst Baltimore is a multi-media content organization that reach over 466,000 people each week. delivers consumers to local, regional and national businesses through multiple platforms consumed online, on-air, and on- • Socio-economics, demographics, and geography of listenership site. No matter the consumer target, type of engagement, proves our listeners have prolific buying power. media platform, time period, or budget- Hearst Baltimore can and will deliver the exact customer you want and need. • 100% Live and Local during prime time on both stations. • Baltimore Ravens Flagship Radio stations. Broadcasting. Social. Mobile. Targeting. Impactful Creative. Event Marketing • Highly visible and most impactful events in Baltimore. • Hearst event marketing is a extremely valuable strategy for all types of businesses in Maryland. • Companies choose to invest in Hearst event marketing because our events inherently generate leads and sales. Digital Platforms • Through highly engaging and visible placements on 98online.com and wbal.com, you can follow the consumer throughout the entire sales cycle as they interact with the station content and are doing research for intended purchases. • Creative video, display ads, mobile app, social media and creative sponsorships of online content. • Engage potential customers with enormous scale through Hearst’s Core Audience programmatic platform. Core Audience uses First Party Data, owned by Hearst, collected from engagement between users and our brands. BALTIMORE; Scarborough R2 2018: Jul17-Sep18; Metro; A18+; WBAL-AM or WIYY-FM; M-Su 6a-12m cume; Target Persons.
    [Show full text]
  • BMA Debuts New Screen House Video Series Featuring Several Baltimore Artists
    BMA Debuts New Screen House Video Series Featuring Several Baltimore Artists BALTIMORE, MD (July 29, 2021)—The Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) is For media in Baltimore Anne Brown announcing Screen House, a new series showcasing the work of video and film artists 410-274-9907 with concerns relevant to Baltimore that will open on August 4. Each video in the [email protected] Screen House series considers places and spaces with troubling pasts shaped by For media outside histories of forced labor, plunder and colonization, and war. The artists included in Baltimore Aga Sablinska the initial presentation are Tom Boram and Jackie Milad, Ariel René Jackson, and PAVE Communications Ada Pinkston. The works are projected inside the museum’s Spring House, a 19th- & Consulting 862-216-6486 century Greek Revival structure designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe. Originally [email protected] located at an estate near Baltimore’s Roland Park neighborhood, the building was used as a dairy and tended by enslaved people before moving to the BMA in 1932. Now, as a house for new media at the museum, it becomes a space to interrogate history, reimagine familiar stories, and reclaim joy and creativity. The first group of Screen House videos are on view August 4–29. Future screenings will feature works by TT the Artist (September 1–26) and Kandis Williams (September 29–October 31). “The Screen House series is part of the BMA’s ongoing commitment to examining objects in our collection that represent challenging and sometimes traumatic histories. We see it as essential to bring these narratives forward through different perspectives and voices and in ways that provoke active discussion,” said Christopher Bedford, the BMA’s Dorothy Wagner Wallis Director.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Media Literacy
    History of Media Literacy The following timeline, produced by Frank Baker, was organized at the request of Webster University media professor Art Silverblatt. An earlier version appears in the“Praeger Handbook of Media Literacy”(Greenwood, 2013). I am responsible for the content. Anyone who would like to make corrections, suggestions, additions or deletions should send correspondence to me: [email protected] A Media Literacy Timeline Significant Developments (includes events, publications, conferences and more) The history of media education cannot be told without correlating it with the rise and development of the mass media themselves (cameras, radio, television, film, the Internet). Presented here is a media literacy timeline, with a special note about events, publications, legislation, conferences and proceedings. Exact date unknown: camera obscura principle and device invented (source) 1833: modern day Zoetrope (a device that produces the illusion of motion from a rapid succession of static pictures) invented by British mathematician William George Horner (Source) 1877: the Praxinoscope, an early animation device, was invented in France in 1877 by Charles-Émile Reynaud. (source) 1888: One of the first patented motion-picture film cameras was designed by Louis Le Prince (Source) 1891: Thomas Edison creates/patents the kineotographic camera: The first motion picture camera patented in the United States (Source) 1900: The first known public exhibition of projected sound films took place in Paris (Source) 1905: Variety begins covering entertainment industries such as vaudeville, films, television, radio, music, and theater (Source) 1907: The Moving Picture World, a weekly movie industry periodical published during the silent film era, becomes the official organ of the Moving Picture Exhibitors’ Association.
    [Show full text]
  • Report-Of-The-Independent-Inquiry
    REPORT OF THE INDEPENDENT INQUIRY INTO THE MEDIA AND MEDIA REGULATION BY THE HON R FINKELSTEIN QC ASSISTED BY PROF M RICKETSON REPORT TO THE MINISTER FOR BROADBAND, COMMUNICATIONS AND THE DIGITAL ECONOMY 28 FEBRUARY 2012 © Commonwealth of Australia 2012 ISBN: 978-0-642-75424-0 (PDF version) 978-0-642-75425-7 (DOC version 978-0-642-75426-4 (printed version) The Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Media and Media Regulation is protected by copyright. With the exception of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms and where otherwise noted, all material included this report is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Australia licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/). The details of the relevant licence conditions are available on the Creative Commons website, as is the full legal code for CC BY 3.0 AU licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/au/legalcode). The document must be attributed as the ‘Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Media and Media Regulation’. Using the Commonwealth Coat of Arms The terms of use for the Coat of Arms are available from www.itsanhonour.gov.au Other use The use of any material in this report in a way not permitted or otherwise allowed under the Copyright Act 1968 may be an infringement of copyright. Where you wish to use the material on this in a way that is beyond the scope of the terms of use that apply to it, you must lodge a request for further authorisation with the department. Authorisation Please address requests and enquiries concerning further authorisation to: The Media Inquiry Secretariat Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy PO Box 2154 CANBERRA ACT 2601 [email protected] Letter of transmittal 1 Contents Executive summary—conclusions and recommendations 7 Media codes of ethics and accountability 7 Changing business models and quality journalism 10 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Complete Issue 18(2)
    Speaker & Gavel Volume 18 Article 1 Issue 2 Winter 1981: The 1980 Presidential Debates December 2018 Complete Issue 18(2) Follow this and additional works at: https://cornerstone.lib.mnsu.edu/speaker-gavel Part of the Speech and Rhetorical Studies Commons Recommended Citation (1981). Complete Issue 18(2). Speaker & Gavel, 18(2), 12-78. This Complete Issue is brought to you for free and open access by Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. It has been accepted for inclusion in Speaker & Gavel by an authorized editor of Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato. et al.: Complete Issue 18(2) speakeR anP gavel ipi THE 1980 PRESIDENTIAL DEBATES Guest Editor: KURT W. RITTER University of Missouri-Columbia volume 18, nuniBeR 2 winteR, 1981 Published by Cornerstone: A Collection of Scholarly and Creative Works for Minnesota State University, Mankato,1 2018 Speaker & Gavel, Vol. 18, Iss. 2 [2018], Art. 1 speaikeR an6 gavel Official publication of Delta Sigma Rho—Tau Kappa Alpha National Honorary Forensic Society PUBLISHED AT LAWRENCE, KANSAS By ALLEN PRESS. INC. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas, U S A. 66044 Issued quarterly in Fall, Winter. Spring and Summer The Journal carries no paid advertising. NATIONAL OFFICERS OF DSR-TKA President: JACK HOWE, California Stale University, Long Beach Vice President: DAVID A. THOMAS, Auburn University Secretary: BERTRAM W. GROSS, Marshall University Treasurer: ELAINE BRUGGEMEIER, Loyola University Trustee: WAYNE C EUBANK, University of New Mexico Historian: JOHN A. LYNCH. St. Anselm's College REGIONAL GOVERNORS.
    [Show full text]