Special Interest Session: Academic Freedom in Broadcasting

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How they present here will be very much interested in discussing some of the points he raises.
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Jerry ever will read his talk for him.
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Our recorder at this session.
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The second gentleman on my left is George bring up from of e.g.
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UC in Cincinnati in our first speaker
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will be Richard Hafner who was formerly general manager
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vice president of Channel 13 and is now a university professor of
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communications and public policy at Rutgers University.
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So we will begin with Mr. Hefner discussing the various evolving aspects
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of academic freedom in broadcasting.
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Thank you it was thank you it was going to reach into my pocket and pull out a long
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speech but with that introduction I decided I'd better not. It really isn't true but
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I hope that I can write some of the questions that you referred to.
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I was unable to attend the session this morning but I can assume that if
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Bob Shea on and John Siegmund participated then many salient
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points were made and I think it goes without saying that most of us who have been
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involved with educational broadcasting are concerned with this major prime
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problem of academic freedom. Now I don't say prime problem
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because one might begin a session such as this by saying that
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educational broadcasting was born free but everywhere is in chains and our job is today
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to find out why.
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I don't think that's true at all. I don't think the point that we have to make it today is
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that as one searches through the spectrum of educational broadcasting radio and television
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one finds many instances of
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violations of what we could claim to be academic freedom. I don't say that at
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all. I do think however that over the past many years as educational broadcasting has been
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developing we have never sufficiently given thought to
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the question of academic freedom as it relates to this extended expanded
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form of the classroom.
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By and large my own experience and I think I must judge if you'll forgive me by my
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own experience.
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We are very unfortunate indeed to have been fortunate indeed in having enjoyed
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a maximum of freedom and a minimum of official
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inhibition but official inhibition shouldn't be an our concern the
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limitation of the limits that one might place upon academic
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freedom.
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And I think we have to go a bit beyond the returns to analyze this problem.
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Again I keep referring to using this word problem. And again I don't
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mean to infer that we're faced with it in any horrendous to any horrendous
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extent at this moment and yet I think back to many of the volumes that have
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been written on broadcasting educational broadcasting. I think of
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the comparatively recent projection into the then next 10 years of
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educational television in particular. I was thumbing through that volume
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again the other evening. And was astonished to find that nowhere
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could one find salient meaningful hard hitting reference to the whole
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question of content in terms of freedom content in terms
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of controversy content in terms of what limitations one might begin to
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find.
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Subtly perhaps sophisticated limitations perhaps
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upon academic freedom. I come from an institution now Rutgers University that is
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severely been suffering the jitters over the past few months in terms of the issue of
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academic freedom. You probably have been following your own newspapers the account of a political
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campaign that has been based almost solely upon a university
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professors statement concerning the Vietnamese conflict
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that raised the hackles. I think quite correctly I mean quite correctly those
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hackles were raised on a great many people. The result
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was that one of the candidates for governor New Jersey is now demanded that the
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incumbent who is running for re-election fire this professor and we are coming
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to a point I think where more and more we are involved in public
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statements or statements by academic people on public issues.
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And I think we're going to be pressured more and more in the direction of some
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limitation upon the freedom of the of the academic. I think I
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am most concerned about this question and I'll use that word this time instead of problem this
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question of academic freedom because of something that happened here last year when
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there were extended discussions if you remember at this meeting of
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financing educational broadcasting.
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And I remember as one of the participants in one of the panels that there seemed to have
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been a very pronounced sea change in the attitude of a great many people
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on this matter of finance. We've all suffered so intensely over the past
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decade from limitations of funds upon available funds that
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I think a great many of us are willing. I don't think this last year it was quite clear.
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Last year a great many people were willing to subscribe to the notion that we may look to governmental
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sources for funds for educational broadcasting without what had
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one time been at one time was the traditional
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concern for the notion that who pays the piper
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calls the tune because there was such a overwhelming.
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Lack of concern last year with this old notion that who does pay the bills
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may in some subtle way or other determine content in broadcasting
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educational broadcasting. Because of that almost total lack of concern I
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began to feel that at that time that we had to give Now
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some thought to what we mean by academic freedom in
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broadcasting educational broadcasting. If indeed the future
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means that increasingly our source of
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supply of funds for the conduct of educational broadcasting will
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be federal state and local governments then it seems to me
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that we have to think once again in the perhaps just begin to think
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about this question of academic freedom on the air. Some years
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back when there was what turned out to be an abortive effort to
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establish educational television in New York City before Channel 13 became an educational
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station the old Metropolitan Educational Television Association
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with which I was associated We had what I think was a prime example of the kind of
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pressure that can be brought and perhaps the kind of pressure that is brought more than we are willing
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to admit at this particular time.
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Perhaps some of you remember the case at that time fortunately made the press. I say
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fortunately because it was an unsuccessful attempt to impose restrictions upon
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what I would consider to be academic freedom. We did a program which I must say
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was not a very good program called Faces of war. And we did it in
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cooperation with the New York Public Library an institution that receives
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much of its money much of its support from the city government.
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We submitted a script to the library it seemingly was approved we were tracing the faces that meant it
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put upon more. Since ancient times of course we are putting the program not on
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our own journal we didn't have when we were putting it on WCBS TV. CBS
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outlet in New York City the night before that program was to go on the air I received a
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telephone call indicating that a trustee of the library that read the
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script had just read the script and was concerned that the
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academic expression of the thoughts we which wished to
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present might be misconstrued by the public and
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pressure might then be brought upon the city council which might then
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attend at the next go around for appropriations. Limit the monies that it would appropriate for
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the New York Public Library which was participating financially in the support
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of this program. And calls went through us to change the script and we refused because it
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went through literally to Mr. Paley and Dr. Stanton at CBS to throw the program off the air on the
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grounds that it was a pacifist document. They of course refused. The library withdrew
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its support and we went on the air with a mediocre program which then was Herat
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of course because of the involvement of the issue of freedom.
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Now there was a prime example of who pays the piper calls the tune or attempts to call
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the tune. And it seems to me that we're likely as we go more and more into public
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support of educational broadcasting to find either outright
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or rather subtle efforts that one
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might call what one might call limitations upon academic freedom.
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I think that one of the things we have to do right now while we're still rather much in the clear
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is begin to formulate our own ideas as to what the appropriate extension of
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the traditional doctrine of academic freedom in the university is
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as it pertains to educational broadcasting. Does
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the student the listener the viewer gain from
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total freedom on the part of the person in the
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station addressing that is the basic question before us I think.
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And I think we have to put aside this question
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the question of whether we don't have somewhat different and I don't mean greater but somewhat
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different responsibilities than does a professor in the cloisters
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who cloistered halls of academe as we reach out on an open circuit
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broadcast system to many many many people who have
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not been involved in the prior training that your college students and my college students in our
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elementary school and high school students have received. I think that this is
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going to be in the near future a very very very basic issue
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as educational broadcasting comes to play in larger and larger role in our total communications
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structure. It seems to me quite clear that as problems have
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developed in the cloistered halls of academe they must of
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necessity develop an open circuit radio and television that claims to be
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educational. It seems to me therefore that we have to put to ourselves the basic
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question of just precisely how much of the
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traditional doctrine of education of academic freedom. Can and must
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we bring into educational broadcasting. Do we say that the academic
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on radio the academics on television has
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precisely the same rights. Academic freedom
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that he has when he is in the classroom. Or do we say that we must
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define academic freedom differently. When one exercises it
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on the air I think that this is a very very basic question I think we'd be
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foolish not to understand at this particular moment that whatever
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we face at the moment in terms not of violations
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but of affirmation of academic freedom on the air. As time goes on and as we
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come closer and closer to finding that more and more of our funds come
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from a single source that of government. That we must
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begin to think through and develop just as the American Association of University
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Professors has developed just as other academic groups have developed
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concepts traditions rules guidelines for academic freedom. So
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I think that this organization and similar organizations must
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begin to think upon this issue must begin to answer some of the fundamental
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questions. The most basic of which is does the
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traditional concept of academic freedom which has throughout the centuries
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more or less protected the freedom of the academic and the right to
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learn of the student. Does it extend
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thoroughly and completely and without modification.
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When we find ourselves involved in educational broadcasting that I think is the one basic
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question that we should discuss here today and I think I prefer
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saving other comments until I hear the other speakers and hear the questions that are asked.
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Thank you.
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Thank you.
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Thank you Mr. Hefner.
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Those of us who for many years have worked
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in major state universities have
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seldom felt that we were in those groves of academe
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which there was no question of academic freedom.
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We have always felt sensitivity to the
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fact that we are states Oregon and have legislators
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breathing down our necks and listening and watching
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to our every move and frequently we have
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looked at other organizations in the
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noncommercial field such as they so called listener
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supported stations with some envy.
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Believing that they can do anything they want
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and that isn't it wonderful that they can deal with so many
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controversial topics without ever getting into trouble.
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We defend ourselves many times by casting aspersions at such
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organizations and saying that that's all they're interested in is
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controversy and stirring it up and they're not
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really concerned with basic discussion of issues
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but merely in raising a lot of smoke.
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You know to gain attention whether this is true or not I'm
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sure it's up to the individual to decide on the basis of the evidence. But
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it is true. I'm sure that some of the listener supported
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stations have plenty of problems when it
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comes to this problem of academic freedom even though
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they may not be directly associated with universities or using
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consistently on their programs academic personnel.
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As I explained to those of you for the benefit of those who came in late Mr. Hoffman the
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president of Pacifica Foundation cannot be here today because of a death in the
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family.
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Bae has sent us a speech which will be read for us now by Jerry
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Sater.
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I might precede the reading of Mr Hoffman's text by saying to you that he called me this weekend
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just after his father in law died and expressed his deep
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regrets that he could not be with us here today and offered very
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graciously to send this text so that it could arrive in time so that he could share
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his thoughts with you today and ask please that you not refrain
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yourselves from commenting on any of the thoughts that he has put down here
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but rather that you listen to him as you would have had he been here today.
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But Truth first said the Bishop and self-interest second. Then you will serve
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truth put truth second and your desires first
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then you will always fail truth when it matters.
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The Republic needs broadcasters who put truth first Americans and men and women
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everywhere are in the midst of great and revolutionary change times of
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transition are always times of trouble when trustworthy information becomes necessary
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to survival. Broadcasters who operate the communication system in which
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most men and women depend for their information about their world can be the means of
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human survival. They can also be agents of human extinction.
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At the moment they come down on the side of desire and self-interest and survival
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is in doubt. The great issue about academic freedom in broadcasting is simple.
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The people who accept the obligation to put truth first have limited resources.
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The people who serve desire can and great wealth. It is
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nobody's fault the fault is in the system and the arrangements that determine who gets rewarded for
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what. What is on it in a country will be cultivated there. As Aristotle observed
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and as we have discovered ever since. What is cultivated in a country well beyond
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what is on it in America is the desire of consumers. It is a country that
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proclaims the customer is always right. What is cultivated in America is the
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under ability of consuming and those who cultivated best are given
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our highest awards. When you want to know what people put first see
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what they are doing. Our words have a slippery relationship to our actions.
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We talk more in justification than in appraisal. We rationalize more often
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than we think. Rationalization and justification follow action. They do not
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set the conditions for it. America is a land that flows with myth and
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money and a good many of the myths are created to justify the distribution and
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possession of the money.
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We put our money where our hearts are.
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We have two arrangements for supporting the cost of operating broadcasting stations. Support is
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either voluntary or involuntary taxes levied on citizens and
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dispersed the government and taxes levied on consumers and dispersed through advertising agencies
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between them pay for most of the broadcasting that is done. Money
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volunteered by contributors which I suspect is the main source of revenue for most of the stations
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operated by those in this audience do not come in huge amounts.
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Educational radio and television is not ranked high among the desires of most Americans.
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However good for them our programs would be they prefer others they arrangements for
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financing broadcasting reflect the general sentiment of advertising supported broadcasting is
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a lot more money than listener supported broadcasting. And I do not hear many complaints from the citizens at
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large. The reasons people like witches and Cowboys better than Shakespeare in
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public issues are complex but one ingredient in the mix is surely that we are
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so badly educated. But it's been cultivated here is a taste for witches and
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cowboys so we honor those who provide them to us. Which isn't Cowboys gratify us
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at once. Shakespeare is an acquired taste. It is hard for
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most people to acquire a taste for Shakespeare because they have so few chances to experience its place.
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The decisions about what will be broadcast in that great medium called commercial
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broadcasting are based on what will sell what will sell is not
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necessarily what is true good or beautiful.
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We put selling first and the true and good and beautiful second.
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Selling usually wins and always wins when the matter is important.
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Commercial broadcasting falls into that category of Enterprise my friend W. H Ferrie
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calls mass comm Mass Comm a short for mass communication and mass
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communication is by definition trying to move masses mass com
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addresses its massive audience in a manner calculated to bring about a statistical change in their
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buying or voting behavior. Communication has a different way. It
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seeks human contact it tries to convey a message to somebody not motivation
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to everybody. It assumes participation. Its object is information
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or persuasion. That is education. Match.com aims at
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indoctrination mass comics a lot of noise about freedom of
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broadcasting. It wants freedom aright but it wants to use freedom in its own way. It wants
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to put selling first. It often sounds as if it were directed toward freeing communication
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among citizens and sometimes it is really so. But among the mass come
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broadcasters freedom turns out usually to mean trying to make sure the FCC
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does not restrain its unlimited right to make a profit. As chairman William Henry of
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the FCC told the National Association of Broadcasters he waited in vain for their rush
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to the defense of the licenses of the Pacifica stations. But he heard an awful racket when he
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proposed to limit them to six commercial minutes per hour of prime time.
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Mass Comm broadcasters derive their rights to do what they do not from the traditions of free
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speech and from the people's rights to know. But from that position as men who serve the
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community by doing business. They are enterprises in a society
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that owe as much as of its quality and richness to the hard work and intelligence of
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entrepreneurs in this country. We encourage innovation and
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ambition and diversity of product by making the rewards of enterprise great.
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And by doing our best to ensure easy entry to the market for a number of producers.
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Monopoly we have thought was the enemy of freemen both because it limits the choice of consumerism
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because it concentrates economic power on Julie. We thought that the common good was
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served by losing the entrepreneur has to make good for themselves. We thought their pursuit of their private goods
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would bring goods for all. And history seems to have shown in general that we were
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right but the rights of citizenship are of a different order. We have been
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confused because some businessmen have been operating in a field where citizens not
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businessmen have special protections and immunities. The First Amendment has never
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been thought to give a man special protection in the manufacture of automobiles or the
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extraction of steel. But when businessmen decide to sell information and
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to compete for the money of consumers by winning the minds and loyalties of men they have talked
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as if their calling was holy. They've claimed that their businesses ought to come under grants of rights
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covered by the First Amendment. Their right as citizens doing the work of citizenship is not
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in question. As citizens business men have the exact freedoms all the rest of us have
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as businessmen they come under a different branch of law and theory of rights
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and they are and should be regulated in their business practices for the sake of the common good.
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Mass Comm. cannot be protected against the FCC or any other government regulating
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agency on the grounds that it is in the communicating business. On the contrary
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because it is in the communicating business and because communicating is critical to the security of the
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Republic mass comes business must be regulated for the sake of the right of the people to
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know. The ethics of business are not good enough for public communication.
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Communication about public matters cannot be treated like haggling in the marketplace.
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There is a form of art in thought that is appropriate to the marketplace and another that is appropriate to
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the discussion of public affairs. It is said that publishers should be free to
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publish what they wish because since there is no natural monopoly of printing presses and the means of
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distributing what is printed. All ideas and opinions will be free to circulate.
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But the same theory cannot be applied to broadcasting. Broadcasting requires a
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franchise using a piece of the peoples there requires that others be denied
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use of it. Everybody not somebody owns the frequencies and the people's agent
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their government must decide who is most likely to increase the common good by using one of the
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peoples limited frequencies. I realize there's no argument about this issue. The
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commercial broadcasters are shown not by their words but by their deeds. How jealously they guard the rights
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of the FCC to allocate frequencies now highly they value the exclusive rights to
[25:06 - 25:10]
use them. It is important to state the principle however because the character of our
[25:10 - 25:15]
discussion depends upon it. We are here to examine academic freedom
[25:15 - 25:20]
as it applies to broadcasting academic and other freedoms apply to
[25:20 - 25:24]
broadcasting in the context of a form of communication that is licensed in order
[25:24 - 25:29]
that it can be made usable in the absence of licensing. There would be no
[25:29 - 25:33]
broadcasting freedom at all. Academic freedom applies to one kind of
[25:33 - 25:38]
broadcasting only educational broadcasting business
[25:38 - 25:42]
broadcasting is incidentally and disastrously educational.
[25:42 - 25:47]
Its aim is not teaching but indoctrination and its freedoms are to rely not upon the tradition of
[25:47 - 25:52]
teachers but of merchants educational broadcasting is broadcasting whose
[25:52 - 25:57]
aim is enlightenment enlargement of thought improvement of human capabilities
[25:57 - 26:01]
and the circulation and distribution of public issues.
[26:01 - 26:06]
Its claim to the right to broadcast is founded on the right of the people to know its aim
[26:06 - 26:11]
is service to its public its theoretical base. The First Amendment
[26:11 - 26:17]
and the limits upon it are those of citizenship in its full range of the suits.
[26:17 - 26:22]
It must serve the interest of the people in their chief function as citizens. It is the
[26:22 - 26:26]
work of citizens to judge to judge that government this society and its institutions
[26:26 - 26:31]
to be a judge requires knowledge of what is judged.
[26:31 - 26:36]
The people have to know that they may judge. They have to judge that they may be citizens. They
[26:36 - 26:40]
need many instruments for seeking information and political wisdom among these
[26:40 - 26:43]
educational broadcasting can be of great value.
[26:43 - 26:49]
Some historic court brought the broadcasting into existence in the United States during one of the country's more
[26:49 - 26:54]
confused eras. Some strange national irrationality or lack of
[26:54 - 26:59]
foresight handed over the people's frequencies to selling agencies.
[26:59 - 27:04]
It was thought according to the theory implied by the original Communications Act that radio station
[27:04 - 27:09]
owners could be bribed into serving the public interest in exchange for a license to
[27:09 - 27:14]
use most of their hours for their personal purposes. It was believed they could be forced or
[27:14 - 27:19]
cajoled into serving the purposes of the Republic with the remaining hours so educational
[27:19 - 27:24]
broadcasting came late and was a stepchild. It is like most
[27:24 - 27:27]
step children poor and disregarded.
[27:27 - 27:32]
The case can be made that the proper relation between educational and commercial broadcasting has been inverted from the
[27:32 - 27:37]
beginning since there are a few channels for communication the Republic might well have chosen to reserve
[27:37 - 27:42]
all but a few for public purposes. It might have allowed those who wanted to broadcast for their
[27:42 - 27:47]
personal purposes a few frequencies for experiment. It could have reasoned that
[27:47 - 27:52]
private enterprise which has so often been inventive and daring might set a standard
[27:52 - 27:57]
and stimulate innovation. But we have fallen into the opposite pattern.
[27:57 - 28:02]
The private entrepreneur enterprises have most of the frequency they have made
[28:02 - 28:07]
broadcasting extremely profitable and so they have made money so they have
[28:07 - 28:12]
money to spend on the exploitation of the medium. I am doubtful that the pattern
[28:12 - 28:17]
can now be reversed. I am more doubtful that we can reform commercial broadcasting.
[28:17 - 28:21]
It will go on doing what it has been doing and it will go on struggling to avoid the few
[28:21 - 28:26]
obligations to public service that it apparently has. You might
[28:26 - 28:31]
ask one of my going to address the subject of academic freedom in broadcasting. My answer is
[28:31 - 28:35]
that I have been addressing it. Of course speech should be free
[28:35 - 28:40]
inquiry should be encouraged. Criticism especially of the going institutions in the offices and power
[28:40 - 28:46]
ought to be required as a regular service. The whole range of human art and thought ought to be
[28:46 - 28:50]
exhibited nothing that men and women anywhere are doing or thinking or making
[28:50 - 28:55]
should be excluded but especially those products of human invention that are little
[28:55 - 29:00]
exposed should be brought to light. Broadcasting Stations are a powerful means
[29:00 - 29:05]
of communication. What should be communicated is all those important and
[29:05 - 29:09]
curious opinions and reasons and sounds and sights that expand our intellects and
[29:09 - 29:14]
sensibilities. Of course speech should be free of course
[29:14 - 29:19]
educational broadcasters has a have a positive obligation under the First Amendment to use that
[29:19 - 29:24]
grant of immunity to engage in public discussion and controversy but the
[29:24 - 29:28]
exercise of such freedom by educational broadcasters takes money
[29:28 - 29:34]
it takes much more money than any one of us has ever had. Money will
[29:34 - 29:38]
not cure the ills of educational broadcasters. It will make it possible to cure
[29:38 - 29:44]
for every educational radio station in this country that is unrestrained by the pressure to please
[29:44 - 29:49]
somebody. There are 20 that are beholden to some board of trustees some group
[29:49 - 29:54]
of supporters some government body. There is room for specialized educational
[29:54 - 29:59]
radio to extend classrooms or churches to deal with limited subject matter. But there
[29:59 - 30:04]
is much more room. There is an aching void for radio that takes as its standard
[30:04 - 30:09]
the opportunity to raise the basic issues to ask the hard questions and to search for
[30:09 - 30:13]
the unpleasant truths. This kind of radio takes money
[30:13 - 30:18]
and it has almost not freedom to broadcast in the absence of the
[30:18 - 30:23]
means to use it for the public benefit is perfectly academic. It's the kind
[30:23 - 30:28]
most of us have too much of. The thrift Pacifica Foundation stations have I would
[30:28 - 30:33]
guess among the biggest program budgets of radio stations in the United States.
[30:33 - 30:38]
I speak here for three big and powerful radio stations. It costs almost as much to run one of
[30:38 - 30:43]
our stations for a year as advertisers pay for one hour of network television prime time.
[30:43 - 30:49]
But our stations are feeble compared to what they could be. None of us has yet begun to
[30:49 - 30:54]
think about the capacities of out medium. None of us has done more than exploit the
[30:54 - 30:59]
struggling musicians and dramatist and actors and writers and commentators whose need to
[30:59 - 31:02]
reach an audience makes them prey to our microphones.
[31:02 - 31:08]
We could be providing a forum for the most serious political discussion anywhere in this country.
[31:08 - 31:13]
Radio offers possibilities that television will never match for undistracted serious
[31:13 - 31:18]
conversation. We could be seeking out the new composers and freeing them with a little money
[31:18 - 31:23]
to make their special contribution to our public taste. We could be forcing science and
[31:23 - 31:28]
technology to explain and justify themselves. We could be discovering the meaning of the absurd in the
[31:28 - 31:33]
light in black humor we skim the surface of these fields of human activity and
[31:33 - 31:37]
take only what is cheap or free. We could be exploring challenging
[31:37 - 31:42]
and achieving with all listeners that degree of understanding that would enable those who
[31:42 - 31:46]
take citizenship seriously to master their art.
[31:46 - 31:50]
We do not. Not because we lack intimations of the way to begin
[31:50 - 31:52]
but because we are broke.
[31:52 - 31:59]
As I have said I have little hope that commercial broadcasting will reform. I have equally little hope that
[31:59 - 32:03]
educational radio will amount to much as long as it has to depend for its sustenance on the
[32:03 - 32:08]
uncertain handouts of those who have no obligation to support it. Since the present
[32:08 - 32:14]
situation is nobody's fault it is the fault of the arrangements. The solution is to change the arrangements.
[32:14 - 32:19]
Let us relieve commercial broadcasters of any legal obligation to broadcast programmes aimed at
[32:19 - 32:24]
public information or unlike them and we have seen that their commercial requirements corrupt their
[32:24 - 32:28]
efforts to make such programmes more often than not. Let them instead pay some
[32:28 - 32:33]
modest percent of their gross income say 10 percent into a public fund. That would be
[32:33 - 32:38]
available to put a foundation under educational broadcasting. This would produce for
[32:38 - 32:42]
educational broadcasting about one hundred eighty million dollars more or less which unless my figures are
[32:42 - 32:47]
wrong would more than double the entire annual expenditures for educational
[32:47 - 32:51]
broadcasting. Commercial broadcasters with then be free to give up the pretense of
[32:51 - 32:56]
public service which would reduce the hypocrisy level in the mass media by several
[32:56 - 33:01]
orders of magnitude. If the arrangements were equitable and just as they could be
[33:01 - 33:06]
the underpinnings to educational radio and television would release them from their servitude to
[33:06 - 33:11]
fundraisers. I'm not sure Pacifica Radio which as you know is supported
[33:11 - 33:16]
primarily by its listeners would be willing to accept the support of a National Foundation.
[33:16 - 33:21]
We have treasure the independence we have enjoyed by virtue of our many sponsors none of
[33:21 - 33:26]
whom is important enough to our survival to make us subservient. Pacifica is free
[33:26 - 33:31]
radio freer than any government owned and operated stations of which we know anywhere
[33:31 - 33:36]
in the world. Freer than most commercial stations though there are no limits on those
[33:36 - 33:40]
not imposed imposed by their owners. We are freer than many educational
[33:40 - 33:45]
stations which sadly seem subject to pressures almost as limiting as those of
[33:45 - 33:50]
comers. The restraints on Pacifica Radio are of our own making.
[33:50 - 33:54]
They are our own fault and they exhibit our lack of character and intellect and
[33:54 - 33:59]
insight they result also from the lack of resources. But that may be
[33:59 - 34:04]
in the end that in the end may be resolved without assistance of a financing scheme such as the one I
[34:04 - 34:09]
have proposed. Perhaps other educational stations would also prefer to stand aside
[34:09 - 34:14]
from the financing that could be distributed through a National Foundation funded from levies on
[34:14 - 34:19]
commercial broadcasters none would need to fear the common services that could
[34:19 - 34:23]
one such funds were available be provided for all network connection of
[34:23 - 34:28]
educational stations of which we had an exciting example during the recent German elections. Could
[34:28 - 34:33]
be one regular result programmes centrally produced and distributed to all
[34:33 - 34:38]
broadcasters is another. Money would be in hand to establish the many new educational radio and
[34:38 - 34:43]
television stations the new leisured could make valuable for millions of Americans
[34:43 - 34:49]
of most importance. Is that a National Educational Network equivalent to the BBC's
[34:49 - 34:53]
Third Programme in AIM and scope could broadcast programmes professionally quality
[34:53 - 34:58]
and unrestricted in content. Money donors could not control
[34:58 - 35:04]
money donors could not control would enable educational broadcasters to
[35:04 - 35:09]
put truth first the new Americans. We could make through such general
[35:09 - 35:14]
public education might be at last equal to the tasks and opportunities
[35:14 - 35:14]
ahead
[35:14 - 35:20]
of me.
[35:20 - 35:30]
Thank you. I should say that the opinions expressed by the writer are not
[35:30 - 35:35]
necessarily those of the reader not necessarily
[35:35 - 35:42]
the final speaker on our panel. Using Mr. Hawkins
[35:42 - 35:47]
definition as a representative of Match.com but
[35:47 - 35:56]
I hasten to add a very good friend of national educational radio.
[35:56 - 36:01]
MR. As an interesting background in a
[36:01 - 36:05]
variety of informational media.
[36:05 - 36:12]
Having been connected with newspaper work with
[36:12 - 36:16]
television with public relations for
[36:16 - 36:21]
radio and television with say OWS connection with
[36:21 - 36:25]
magazines as a freelance writer
[36:25 - 36:31]
and back once again to radio
[36:31 - 36:37]
in 1963 he returned to
[36:37 - 36:41]
WTOP here in Washington and at the present time
[36:41 - 36:46]
is serving as General Executive of the Post Newsweek stations
[36:46 - 36:52]
in charge of information promotion advertising and public
[36:52 - 36:57]
cultural and community affairs for WTOP radio and
[36:57 - 37:02]
GOP TV. And I should add I suppose there Jacksonville Florida
[37:02 - 37:07]
station WJ x T. With great pleasure we introduce
[37:07 - 37:13]
friend of noncommercial radio Mr. Wright.
[37:13 - 37:22]
Wow I have two points to
[37:22 - 37:25]
make before I get to this prepared text.
[37:25 - 37:30]
The first is a paraphrase of I think Mr. Milton Hofmann
[37:30 - 37:35]
Hofmann the spear Meachem have need of the now. I'm so sorry the gentleman
[37:35 - 37:38]
isn't here that we can engage in a dialogue in his speech.
[37:38 - 37:43]
And the second one is that I have been accused by various friends of mine of having a
[37:43 - 37:48]
very Talmudic soul for a Scotch-Irish So I ask you to bear with me as I
[37:48 - 37:50]
go through the beginning of this.
[37:50 - 37:55]
Freedom is like free love. Every man has a general idea as to the
[37:55 - 38:00]
area it embraces. But it can mean so many different things even when
[38:00 - 38:05]
the word academic somewhat narrows the scope of the area covered the full range of
[38:05 - 38:10]
any man's interpretation comes into play. To some freedom
[38:10 - 38:14]
can be a license to wallow in excesses beyond the realm of that which is
[38:14 - 38:19]
desirable by any standard including his own in a
[38:19 - 38:24]
self-created uncertainty of their excesses they find happiness a brooding
[38:24 - 38:29]
discontent with themselves and what they have done. The trick to freedom academic or
[38:29 - 38:33]
otherwise is to enjoy it fully without stretching it or yourself out of
[38:33 - 38:38]
proportion. Now admittedly if you reach the point of being forced to make that
[38:38 - 38:43]
judgment most human beings live foetus lives securely tucked
[38:43 - 38:48]
inside the very center range of their capabilities. Let something disturb their personal
[38:48 - 38:52]
sense of safety and like the fetus they kick back without really abandoning their
[38:52 - 38:57]
position. This is the dilemma most human beings work within
[38:57 - 39:02]
guidelines created by ourselves and safely positioned well inside
[39:02 - 39:07]
the range of what is possible. The really damning thing about this philosophy of the majority
[39:07 - 39:12]
is that the more time spent in this crippling self restraint the more shrinkage
[39:12 - 39:17]
occurs the capability. This unwillingness to test fully the range of one's
[39:17 - 39:22]
capabilities takes precedence in my mind over the plaintive bawling of many for
[39:22 - 39:27]
more freedom. The reasons for the shocking state of affairs are not hard to
[39:27 - 39:31]
discover. We live in a century in which finds man attended an apathetic animal
[39:31 - 39:37]
not giving a damn whether the bell is ringing for him them or anybody at all.
[39:37 - 39:41]
And he won't worry until someone comes over and grabs a hold of his arm. His attitude as
[39:41 - 39:46]
dictated partially by the press of population growth which constantly is reducing as percentage of
[39:46 - 39:51]
importance in the human action. Also by the fact that government whatever the nation has
[39:51 - 39:56]
assumed a larger role in controlling the individual as it attempts to deal with larger numbers through
[39:56 - 40:01]
modern technology. This trend towards the containment of man and man self
[40:01 - 40:06]
containment is reaching its fruition in his reduction to a number or series of numbers.
[40:06 - 40:11]
But it could be said to have begun with the introduction of last names to choose the most obvious of starting points.
[40:11 - 40:16]
John himself became John the son of John the citizen of or John the maker of
[40:16 - 40:21]
of course John have always been these things. But now he was officially so. Most of
[40:21 - 40:26]
John's reaction to this categorization was to continue to be whatever they were
[40:26 - 40:30]
labelled at least initially. This is simply human nature or human
[40:30 - 40:35]
nature at its least complex. The label commercial
[40:35 - 40:39]
broadcaster seems semantically accurate for that aspect of American communications
[40:39 - 40:44]
which was placed by the government into the hands of private entrepreneurs who are
[40:44 - 40:49]
expected to make a profit from their operation. This is the way our system is evolved.
[40:49 - 40:54]
The commercial broadcaster exists to make money is labor strikes me as a
[40:54 - 40:58]
proper designation altogether honorable under our free enterprise system.
[40:58 - 41:04]
On the basis of logic Mr Hoffman and absent us I have
[41:04 - 41:09]
never understood that myth that the people own the commercial broadcasters frequency or
[41:09 - 41:14]
channel unless it is under the doctrine of eminent domain under which the people
[41:14 - 41:19]
through their government can take possession of everything. But why frequencies are
[41:19 - 41:23]
channels more so than for example railroad right of ways. They're not spelled
[41:23 - 41:28]
out in these exact words. Railroads were granted thousands of acres in the last
[41:28 - 41:33]
century in the public interest convenience and necessity. Lionel
[41:33 - 41:38]
expostulate sion by politicians or others. Now the theory that the people own the
[41:38 - 41:42]
Union Pacifics real estate holdings that were derived from federal granting
[41:42 - 41:48]
with a mind still simple in the absence of complicated legal training. I believe
[41:48 - 41:53]
that both the railroader and the commercial broadcaster possess true ownership of their granite
[41:53 - 41:57]
properties excepting eminent domain and also accepting that they attempt no
[41:57 - 42:02]
injury to the public good. I am not seeking an abrogation of
[42:02 - 42:07]
the commercial broadcasters responsibility to do more than simply bemused
[42:07 - 42:12]
as audiences and inundate their conscious and subconscious with Bear and baby
[42:12 - 42:17]
food commercials and we've even come to Brazil years. Now we do a hell of a lot more than that
[42:17 - 42:22]
isn't enough. I have to ask by whose standards by yours or mine Mr.
[42:22 - 42:26]
Hofmann is the Federal Communications Commission or the people's. If this is a
[42:26 - 42:31]
democracy and if in a democracy all things exist for the people and the general
[42:31 - 42:36]
welfare and in the general interest then the general response of the people through their listening and
[42:36 - 42:40]
viewing seems to indicate that commercial broadcasting is meeting the wants and
[42:40 - 42:45]
demonstrated needs of most of the people most of the time. Let us examine
[42:45 - 42:48]
your label educational broadcaster.
[42:48 - 42:53]
If this nation and its several communities had no right to expect something different from you than
[42:53 - 42:58]
they receive from your commercial colleagues then there would be no separate grants of licenses for educational
[42:58 - 43:03]
stations. Now you must reach your own understanding of what this something different is.
[43:03 - 43:08]
Through dialogues and experimentation you must resolve what is for me the
[43:08 - 43:11]
uncertain role of the educational broadcaster.
[43:11 - 43:16]
It would perhaps be improper for me as a commercial broadcaster to intrude at length this much
[43:16 - 43:21]
I will venture you must not allow yourself to be limited by a label as our friend
[43:21 - 43:27]
John was. Some of you are certainly hampered by a lack of elbow room.
[43:27 - 43:31]
I don't know whether this condition exists because you are not given enough freedom because there is a shortage of
[43:31 - 43:36]
money or because you do not take advantage of those freedoms you have. I
[43:36 - 43:40]
know that there are those then there probably are not in this room who have curled up
[43:40 - 43:45]
into an educational fetus safe from criticism but equally safe from real
[43:45 - 43:50]
accomplishment. I said they're probably not in this room not gratuitously but because I
[43:50 - 43:54]
think that kind of person would not show up at a panel in title academic freedom.
[43:54 - 43:59]
I know there are also others who are genuinely Haras by regulations of major and
[43:59 - 44:04]
petty and sometimes by petty people. From what I have seen of the campus brand of
[44:04 - 44:08]
politics there is by comparison a certain honesty and
[44:08 - 44:13]
cleanness about the cliche figure of the already ailing Politico handing out bad
[44:13 - 44:18]
cigars and self-serving patronage. I refuse to accept however as
[44:18 - 44:23]
fact that there is not a way around strangling regulation and the politicians whether their
[44:23 - 44:28]
desks are in are school or they're in a state legislature. In the first place
[44:28 - 44:32]
chances are very good that regulations and the politicians who make them for the educational
[44:32 - 44:37]
broadcaster exist not with the recognition of the realities but in fear of the
[44:37 - 44:41]
possibilities. Indeed there is something to fear about the power you have in
[44:41 - 44:46]
ways it's comparable to that exercised by the British Broadcasting Corporation. I can
[44:46 - 44:51]
illustrate by repeating a story told by John A Ses who is now president of Post Newsweek stations.
[44:51 - 44:56]
But during the last great war started the American Forces Network in Europe the
[44:56 - 45:00]
AFN was brought into being when American forces moved into the British Isles and some not
[45:00 - 45:06]
because it was necessary to have the BBC assign frequencies for the soldier stations
[45:06 - 45:10]
then Colonel Hayes did a lot of sitting down with the British broadcasting power structure
[45:10 - 45:16]
on one occasion he was in with their neighbor bobs of the programming department and the topic
[45:16 - 45:21]
under consideration was a possible gardening show. As Mr Asia likes it no
[45:21 - 45:26]
one was sure that anyone in all of Great Britain wanted a programme on gardening.
[45:26 - 45:31]
They weren't really sure that anyone needed him but they went ahead with the program because they
[45:31 - 45:36]
decided that was the kind of thing the people really up to me. Now you
[45:36 - 45:41]
have the power to make decisions on the same basis. Recognizing the realities. There are a
[45:41 - 45:45]
limited number of things that people want from educational stations. There are not many who
[45:45 - 45:50]
recognize that they even have a need. This leaves you freedom to program some things they
[45:50 - 45:55]
ought to need. If this smacks of a kind of reverse switch on thought control
[45:55 - 46:00]
and a vision of totalitarian broadcasting dances for your mind forget the commercial
[46:00 - 46:05]
stations exist as a deterrent to your broadcasting power. As you well know which really means
[46:05 - 46:09]
you free to proceed as you choose. Now your freedom is a very precious
[46:09 - 46:14]
commodity to the commercial broadcaster. The world is too much with him. It counts on your
[46:14 - 46:19]
capability to do things he cannot do. The broadcasting world in this country
[46:19 - 46:24]
doesn't indeed exist half slave and half three and it doesn't cure.
[46:24 - 46:28]
I'm not saying that commercial stations are all slaves and you are entirely free.
[46:28 - 46:33]
But the fact remains that the commercial broadcaster is most limited in his range of freedom.
[46:33 - 46:39]
He's limited by the competitive squeeze of the great number of stations on the air a long way
[46:39 - 46:44]
from being a monopoly. The distrust of some politicians born of a fear akin
[46:44 - 46:49]
to the fear that other politicians have of you is a limiting factor. He's limited not by a
[46:49 - 46:54]
monolithic Madison Avenue but scores of advertisers each of whom wants an acceptable
[46:54 - 46:59]
atmosphere for his product and atmosphere are restricted to his specific marketing needs.
[46:59 - 47:03]
Limited by radio TV critics of the daily press who unfortunately frequently have no
[47:03 - 47:08]
fondness for the media. Whatever their programming efforts and limited by the people's
[47:08 - 47:13]
interest and desires I say the people because there is no such thing as
[47:13 - 47:17]
the audience. Certainly not in radio which is return to the original concept of
[47:17 - 47:22]
communicating with a single person rather than masses or the family group not even a television.
[47:22 - 47:27]
The people are not a faceless mindless lump call audience. They are the same citizens of
[47:27 - 47:32]
diverse interest who buy a multiplicity of magazines and attend or stay away
[47:32 - 47:37]
from motion pictures ballets and concerts. Mr. Burroughs
[47:37 - 47:42]
did not mention I used to be in the ballet business and in the symphony business too. The
[47:42 - 47:46]
commercial broadcaster who has attempted to program on the basis of what the people often need finds
[47:46 - 47:51]
himself kicked right in his raise on debt. He needs you and your
[47:51 - 47:55]
freedom to complete the totality of American broadcasting as it must be
[47:55 - 48:01]
in every one of your communities there is at least one commercial broadcaster who understands this
[48:01 - 48:06]
reality who is more than willing to help you protect your rights as a broadcaster in the
[48:06 - 48:10]
educational sphere. A surprising thing I discovered on re-entering the
[48:10 - 48:15]
commercial broadcasting business two years ago was the great lack of communication between the
[48:15 - 48:19]
commercial and educational people within a community.
[48:19 - 48:24]
I went through the program while I was sitting over there and I discovered for example that I'm the only commercial
[48:24 - 48:29]
broadcaster schedule for these entire conferences outside of the fact that my station
[48:29 - 48:33]
and others are picking up the tab for some blues on Wednesday night at a cocktail party.
[48:33 - 48:40]
My appearance here today was started by a long distance talk with Ed Burroughs in Ann Arbor Michigan
[48:40 - 48:45]
last January on the subject of Thomas Sterns Elliot and a memorial program
[48:45 - 48:50]
which led me to Jerry Sandler which brought me to here which is a long way around anybody's
[48:50 - 48:55]
barn. Earlier I expressed some doubts that you were
[48:55 - 49:00]
using all the freedom you have. I ask you not to hide behind your educational label but seek your
[49:00 - 49:05]
full proper dimensions according to the particular needs of your communities. I told you
[49:05 - 49:10]
that the commercial broadcaster values your freedom and have given you the reasons by telling some of the
[49:10 - 49:15]
non-governmental restrictions that inhibit his freedom and latitude not because
[49:15 - 49:20]
they must be obvious to you who also rebroadcasting magazine. I have not conjured up the
[49:20 - 49:24]
specter of that rose with ever increasing thorns. The daily intrusion of federal
[49:24 - 49:29]
agencies into our affairs. Precisely because he is
[49:29 - 49:34]
cell bound up by rich and bloody parchment died by pronouncing
[49:34 - 49:38]
it. The responsible commercial broadcaster is more than willing to come to your aid.
[49:38 - 49:44]
The power that he wields can be of great assistance in liberating you from the insolence of
[49:44 - 49:48]
office of petty politicians on campus and off. As has been the case in scores of
[49:48 - 49:53]
communities it can take a hand in raising funds to ensure your financial health. As
[49:53 - 49:58]
he chafes under limit his limitations and is constantly forced to fight for his own freedom
[49:58 - 50:03]
as set forth not only in the First Amendment but in Section 326 of the Communications Act.
[50:03 - 50:08]
It can help you to measure the realities of your own position but do not wait for
[50:08 - 50:13]
him to begin the relationship. Approach him if nothing else
[50:13 - 50:18]
results the occasional frictions between the educational and commercial broadcasters can be
[50:18 - 50:22]
generally eliminated through communication. At its very best with
[50:22 - 50:27]
intelligence and understanding on both sides the commercial broadcaster can help you not only
[50:27 - 50:32]
to enjoy fully the academic freedom you now possess but to a new era of direction and
[50:32 - 50:34]
growth for educational broadcasting.
[50:34 - 50:38]
Thank you to you.
[50:38 - 50:42]
Me
[50:42 - 50:46]
thank you very much Roy Meacham.
[50:46 - 50:52]
I should point out for your benefit Roy that that
[50:52 - 50:56]
is quite an unusual situation in terms of an APB
[50:56 - 51:01]
Conventions our history over the years has been to have many
[51:01 - 51:06]
many representatives of commercial stations. It always however
[51:06 - 51:11]
does lead to the kind of dialogue which I
[51:11 - 51:15]
sense is somewhat behind the scenes of Mr.
[51:15 - 51:20]
Hoffmann's and your remarks which I hope
[51:20 - 51:25]
is not necessarily the proper subject under discussion here that neither one of us is
[51:25 - 51:30]
free but we are less free than you are.
[51:30 - 51:35]
There is a problem of course of communications between commercial and
[51:35 - 51:39]
noncommercial stations but I think we both face
[51:39 - 51:45]
similar problems and have areas of mutual interest which we should go about
[51:45 - 51:50]
solving. Mr. Blanco sitting at
[51:50 - 51:54]
my left over here I have also had considerable experience in commercial
[51:54 - 51:59]
broadcasting as well as in educational broadcasting and I notice he's been writing a
[51:59 - 52:04]
small manuscript of his own. So perhaps before I
[52:04 - 52:09]
open this to discussion from the floor I have to ask George if he would like to react
[52:09 - 52:14]
or to raise some questions on the basis of what has been said up until now
[52:14 - 52:21]
with that or are you planning to publish
[52:21 - 52:25]
or is it to just know when I was making a few
[52:25 - 52:27]
notes here.
[52:27 - 52:28]
Thank you Stan.
[52:28 - 52:37]
I agree with Mr. Mason.
[52:37 - 52:42]
Many communities in most communities I think that there's sometimes a
[52:42 - 52:46]
reaction between the commercial stations and the noncommercial spaces
[52:46 - 52:51]
to strange dogs meeting one another very badly and certainly
[52:51 - 52:56]
warily around that they decide that the other guy's a little too
[52:56 - 53:01]
rough for him and walk away. Directors of the firm against the fly over against any
[53:01 - 53:07]
well seen that happen in those few cases where there has been.
[53:07 - 53:12]
Some meeting between the two camps of the as it were.
[53:12 - 53:17]
There's been very concrete progress made. We've had some of that
[53:17 - 53:21]
situation in my home city of Cincinnati. We've had cooperation from
[53:21 - 53:27]
commercial stations on many levels. We in turn of the neighbor loses them
[53:27 - 53:29]
unexpected way.
[53:29 - 53:39]
Problem with academic freedom which
[53:39 - 53:45]
you guys have. Other way he spoke of
[53:45 - 53:51]
being always worrying about the hot breath on her neck
[53:51 - 53:56]
the state legislature or whatever who had to appropriate money.
[53:56 - 54:01]
We have an even closer to the US because we're in the midst of a university and we've got a
[54:01 - 54:05]
city council living right their town they can move faster. The state legislature
[54:05 - 54:11]
and sometimes This produces a very interesting result is that they get into the
[54:11 - 54:16]
area of controversy.
[54:16 - 54:21]
Frankly we have by solved. We hope we're on the way to in the
[54:21 - 54:26]
area of the natural support. We
[54:26 - 54:31]
do receive considerable support but some we deal with
[54:31 - 54:35]
unsolicited from our listeners and
[54:35 - 54:41]
rest the other day comes from an allocated
[54:41 - 54:45]
endowment request to the university and one of our support is
[54:45 - 54:50]
direct tax money which is handed over to the
[54:50 - 54:55]
university by the community. Nonetheless. Every
[54:55 - 54:59]
politician is in Sana'a he was at the has a vested interest in what we put on the air
[54:59 - 55:04]
and every citizen who sees his tax bill go up
[55:04 - 55:10]
thinks it's going to go up gets a red neck here he hears something he doesn't like
[55:10 - 55:16]
because as your own experience would probably indicate in this educational
[55:16 - 55:21]
broadcasting field you seldom hear when you do something right. Little
[55:21 - 55:26]
boy when you do something wrong when someone thinks you know
[55:26 - 55:33]
I do think I agree that with what has been said that we do have a broader
[55:33 - 55:38]
responsibility and I think many of us have exercised
[55:38 - 55:43]
and the phrase you used the hiding behind the educational label is something I think we do
[55:43 - 55:47]
to. Far more of the time than is healthy.
[55:47 - 55:53]
As a next commercial man I chafe under the some of the
[55:53 - 55:58]
restrictions that I find both the ideal
[55:58 - 56:03]
situation and here I get his view is worth listening to.
[56:03 - 56:08]
Let's get along and do it as professionally as possible and let the chips fall where they
[56:08 - 56:18]
may. I wish I can say that all the time.
[56:18 - 56:23]
I would just like to say couple of more words before you throw this up to the audience.
[56:23 - 56:27]
It seems to me that we have one of two problems here. I felt like saying
[56:27 - 56:33]
if Mr Hofmann were here I'd say to him Mr. Meacham let you and he fight.
[56:33 - 56:37]
And we could watch or we could participate you're talking about one thing and that's fine. And the
[56:37 - 56:42]
arguments concerning cultural democracy. On those that should go on the need to go
[56:42 - 56:47]
on we need to have a continuing dialogue on this question of the relationship of the broadcast a commercial
[56:47 - 56:52]
or educational to his public and what it wants and what it needs etc.. But I
[56:52 - 56:57]
think that if we're going to talk about academic freedom and broadcasting we have to be
[56:57 - 57:02]
rather precise and we have to ask ourselves certain questions one are we
[57:02 - 57:07]
talking about freedom of the broadcaster the educational broadcaster
[57:07 - 57:12]
we arrogating to ourselves as educational broadcasters the traditional academic
[57:12 - 57:18]
freedom of the university. Or are we talking only about the university
[57:18 - 57:23]
person as he appears on our educational broadcasting facilities and saying that
[57:23 - 57:27]
his traditional rites of freedom within the classroom are to be protected on
[57:27 - 57:32]
the air which is it. Are we going to permit an instructor in a
[57:32 - 57:37]
university to come on an educational station and make comments that he
[57:37 - 57:42]
makes ordinarily and regularly in terms of his academic responsibilities and
[57:42 - 57:47]
obligations and opportunities in his classroom about perhaps some aspect
[57:47 - 57:51]
of American history or some aspect of the history of the of the Catholic Church
[57:51 - 57:56]
perhaps as happened in one broadcast and permit him to do this even though he
[57:56 - 58:01]
is now reaching not just his students in the classroom you know within the university but
[58:01 - 58:06]
many many hundreds of thousands of other people hopefully and that he is doing
[58:06 - 58:12]
harm in certain ways. To the well-being of the station in
[58:12 - 58:17]
terms of what it ordinarily does. And I think these are some of the
[58:17 - 58:22]
questions that we have to ask ourselves I think there's a very specific question I don't think we ought
[58:22 - 58:26]
to permit ourselves the luxury of indulging in this question of
[58:26 - 58:31]
cultural democracy up or down or decide that this is what we're going to argue about. I think the
[58:31 - 58:36]
matter of academic freedom educational broadcasting is terribly important. If we
[58:36 - 58:41]
don't begin to consider it now in its specifics I suggest that when the time
[58:41 - 58:46]
comes that we have to deal with it in terms of our own individual stations and
[58:46 - 58:51]
perhaps some of us have already we're going to be lost. I think we need to take a lesson
[58:51 - 58:56]
from the rest of the academic community the rest of the educational community and
[58:56 - 59:00]
to find precisely what it is that we mean by academic freedom as it relates to
[59:00 - 59:05]
educational broadcasters for the broadcaster or for the academic. I think
[59:05 - 59:06]
that's the prime question.
[59:06 - 59:14]
I wish I could feel that the academic community would or
[59:14 - 59:17]
was taking the leadership in this field.
[59:17 - 59:22]
I sometimes feel that they are behind far behind some of the broadcasters
[59:22 - 59:27]
who want to engage in greater academic freedom
[59:27 - 59:32]
but I would like to get the reaction of some people not just necessarily your
[59:32 - 59:38]
sad stories of what is happening in your areas but to put this on a
[59:38 - 59:42]
positive basis. What have you done
[59:42 - 59:47]
if at all possible to meet this
[59:47 - 59:52]
person or the band upon yourself and the feeling that you have from your audience.
[59:52 - 59:58]
This gentleman here.
[59:58 - 60:01]
I am here.
[60:01 - 60:10]
I think we.
[60:10 - 60:18]
Need that breather.
[60:18 - 60:18]
Well
[60:18 - 60:34]
you're right.
[60:34 - 60:55]
Rob.
[60:55 - 61:11]
Right.
[61:11 - 61:13]
Oh oh.
[61:13 - 61:32]
If you don't respond I don't really
[61:32 - 61:36]
understand it unless it is the fact that you are dealing with with the
[61:36 - 61:41]
electronic means of communication. Any approach
[61:41 - 61:49]
which would suggest that this is a new problem for the academic community.
[61:49 - 61:53]
There is more than ample historical precedent
[61:53 - 61:58]
for the academic community to go beyond the confound of the campus to
[61:58 - 62:02]
communicate with the people. You can go back to the Middle Ages
[62:02 - 62:08]
when it was a priest teachers of the universities who went out into
[62:08 - 62:12]
the various communities and into the marketplaces and sometimes got boiled in oil for their efforts
[62:12 - 62:18]
to communicate with the people to awaken their minds and awaken their at Aleck's. You don't have to go
[62:18 - 62:23]
that far back. You can go to the last days of Czarist Russia
[62:23 - 62:28]
when they students and the professors of the. Of the universities form something
[62:28 - 62:33]
which I think was called an old Nicky and they went out to communicate with the people and to
[62:33 - 62:38]
teach them. It is simply now that you have a different means this question of that. DEMICK
[62:38 - 62:43]
freedom beyond the limit of the campus is not something that now you have to begin a
[62:43 - 62:47]
dialogue and consideration. The ample precedent does exist. What I
[62:47 - 62:52]
think you do have to figure out for yourselves is not within this lateral forgive me for this
[62:52 - 62:55]
Mr after not within this very vertical.
[62:55 - 63:00]
I mean definition but I think you have to figure out. You have the freedom.
[63:00 - 63:05]
The difference is now that you are and I don't guess this is really a difference either because many of
[63:05 - 63:10]
those priest teachers were communicators in their way they were preachers they have
[63:10 - 63:15]
powerful voices and a great means for getting thousands of people around.
[63:15 - 63:20]
I think you have to figure out now is how do you implement this academic freedom which you really have. And when I said
[63:20 - 63:25]
he was it if you ain't got it there exists a body which in their selfish interest want
[63:25 - 63:27]
you got it. I don't think it's a new problem.
[63:27 - 63:40]
Mike Royce Freudian slip here the confines of the Careful.
[63:40 - 63:45]
He said. I would like to preserve or alter I
[63:45 - 63:48]
think that was a Friday and slept there.
[63:48 - 64:13]
But this gentleman here.
[64:13 - 64:18]
Many years ago when I was young and innocent and Tarleton saw yes it was
[64:18 - 64:23]
needed. The question of what our editorial policy should be. And I
[64:23 - 64:28]
began by thinking there shouldn't be any editorials and I ended up thinking that there
[64:28 - 64:33]
certainly should be for the purpose of stimulating provoking dialogue given
[64:33 - 64:38]
we use the word again. But I find it very difficult to believe that
[64:38 - 64:42]
a University station any more than a university president or
[64:42 - 64:47]
university provost in the midst of a election campaign for
[64:47 - 64:50]
instance should commit the university.
[64:50 - 64:56]
Two Way position in such a campaign.
[64:56 - 65:01]
Rather than arouse its own particular his own particular point of view. No
[65:01 - 65:06]
my answer would be no and it's no because I think that Mr. Meacham is terribly terribly wrong.
[65:06 - 65:10]
I like the damn trouble is that we think we know what academic freedom as we think it means freedom
[65:10 - 65:16]
and it does not. It's a very very specific terms of as a
[65:16 - 65:20]
very very specific context in history and I think it would be terribly
[65:20 - 65:25]
unfortunate if we confuse the question of academic freedom
[65:25 - 65:30]
with this older and much more important question I grow
[65:30 - 65:36]
of freedom in general and I think our tendency is to weave these things together.
[65:36 - 65:42]
Within the confines of our own room and I think this is
[65:42 - 65:47]
very unfortunate I think it is not true that traditionally freedom has an academic
[65:47 - 65:51]
freedom as extended as far as the priests and the monks and the professors want to tell you
[65:51 - 65:57]
we have not only a body of tradition but we have a body of law concerning this whole
[65:57 - 66:01]
matter of academic freedom. And now we are going to expand it no we are not going to
[66:01 - 66:06]
expand it we're going to interpret it in one way or another. I'm sorry you call for dialogue again but
[66:06 - 66:11]
I hardly think of the history of the matter in the grades that we have
[66:11 - 66:17]
if we have it what is it and how does it differ from our constitutional rights.
[66:17 - 66:21]
Let's say under the First Amendment and other amendments all we do if you want something is visible
[66:21 - 66:26]
all we talking let's say about a university professor teaching on educational
[66:26 - 66:31]
radio or educational television a course in American history or
[66:31 - 66:36]
international relations. Are we not talking about his specific
[66:36 - 66:40]
freedom academic freedom to say precisely what it is he would say in the
[66:40 - 66:45]
classroom. If you are saying that this goes by definition on radio because it's called
[66:45 - 66:48]
educational radio I think you're quite wrong.
[66:48 - 66:53]
I think we're going to make it that it would not make it that and I think we better examine the implications of
[66:53 - 66:58]
making it that because it can stand it can extend far beyond those things that we
[66:58 - 67:02]
want to hear because academic freedom anything more really than the freedom
[67:02 - 67:07]
of the of the better educated mind for that that the point of view which is brought about
[67:07 - 67:12]
through the process of educators it's not something which is artificially
[67:12 - 67:15]
confined to the Groves.
[67:15 - 67:20]
It's not any of the teachers tell their pupils underneath the tree but I beg your pardon it is
[67:20 - 67:24]
all legal academic freedom are we talking about freedom here are we talking this is what we get with
[67:24 - 67:29]
this is what I did. The confusion between leaders started at this point so that
[67:29 - 67:35]
we get to the confusion between the leader mans of Mr Hofner to
[67:35 - 67:40]
limit the rights of the. Commercial broadcasting and the specific
[67:40 - 67:45]
question I mean let's not mix them together I think we get what you
[67:45 - 67:46]
like and I don't miss you.
[67:46 - 67:51]
I think this is me. No I'm just going to say that the question here also
[67:51 - 67:55]
in in about this business of editorializing by a station.
[67:55 - 68:00]
And if I might just make a personal comment that as I see it part of
[68:00 - 68:05]
academic freedom is a multiplicity of opinion and therefore it is
[68:05 - 68:10]
extraordinarily difficult for a station to arrive at what
[68:10 - 68:14]
is an editorial opinion to represent the
[68:14 - 68:18]
university if you will for which they work the minute they
[68:18 - 68:23]
editorialize taking a certain point of view and pretend that this
[68:23 - 68:29]
is the consensus of the institution for which they work.
[68:29 - 68:33]
To me this is a denial of academic freedom.
[68:33 - 68:36]
Could we have missed a meeting with Everything's the University station should have.
[68:36 - 68:42]
There's an interesting historical reason why the question was put to me the question was
[68:42 - 68:47]
do I think that university station should editorialize and one of the reasons that I
[68:47 - 68:52]
think probably profs that is the time Mr hafter was a consultant to CBS and they were debating on
[68:52 - 68:57]
whether or not to do editorials are stations were doing it. Now
[68:57 - 69:04]
I think that there are matters upon which my University station shouldn't editorialize.
[69:04 - 69:08]
I think that these they're very careful areas. I
[69:08 - 69:13]
don't think that for example that the best of our educated minds I reject entirely your
[69:13 - 69:18]
thesis that academic is limited to the academy. That's too narrow an
[69:18 - 69:23]
interpretation of the word academic to suit my mother. I think that there are some
[69:23 - 69:28]
areas though as I was about to say politics is one area for example in which
[69:28 - 69:33]
the best of education does not necessarily give the best of knowledge wisdom and understanding.
[69:33 - 69:38]
I think that there are other matters. One matter which jobs immediately to my mind is something I'm very much concerned about
[69:38 - 69:43]
as I said within that as is I'm concerned about the public apathy.
[69:43 - 69:47]
I think this is one subject I think that upon certain chosen subjects
[69:47 - 69:53]
you're damned right I think the odd editorial who chooses these well-educated
[69:53 - 69:55]
mines.
[69:55 - 70:00]
Should we go on with more questions from the audience. I don't know who is
[70:00 - 70:03]
first here I've lost track there. Your Did your version.
[70:03 - 70:13]
You vs. a guy I will
[70:13 - 70:14]
say all
[70:14 - 70:23]
right if you use your mind.
[70:23 - 70:23]
Overall
[70:23 - 70:32]
yes. There you go. Say we use the
[70:32 - 70:36]
hard verse. You know
[70:36 - 70:40]
the result.
[70:40 - 70:45]
Sir I would let my wildest dream from the several years I spent in
[70:45 - 70:50]
certain universities you know gang myself. You know our great difficulty. I'm in my
[70:50 - 70:55]
wildest dreams proposed use of met through the faculty senate
[70:55 - 70:56]
or whatever you call the right.
[70:56 - 71:01]
Why not. The company cited translation of wheat editorialized
[71:01 - 71:05]
on this. You cannot even get a green light in the same door
[71:05 - 71:10]
upon a different nation anything which is possible with a lot of money going to
[71:10 - 71:15]
various departments this is one responsibility that the educational broadcaster not
[71:15 - 71:20]
shipped all over the into the factory side you need a university station then the management of
[71:20 - 71:25]
a university on station should take it upon itself in the name of the university
[71:25 - 71:27]
to editorialize.
[71:27 - 71:32]
He's doing it in the name of the station isn't a station in your
[71:32 - 71:35]
own station yet organized in the name of water management.
[71:35 - 71:40]
Right through the ownership and the ownership and
[71:40 - 71:45]
management of the University station is not the general manager of the other ship was vested in the
[71:45 - 71:49]
university with the matter WHAT was vested in the responsible individual and the men who managed the gels.
[71:49 - 71:53]
Do you mean to say that you would have.
[71:53 - 71:58]
The you know the ownership to my station. Why if I was in The Washington Post up right now when we get
[71:58 - 72:03]
ready we have to realize we do not run out of 15 15 hours really that's where the Post
[72:03 - 72:08]
newspaper is located and consult with every editor with the editorial writers we don't
[72:08 - 72:13]
consult with the president of the company. We don't run up to New York to consult with Newsweek which
[72:13 - 72:14]
is another part of our operation.
[72:14 - 72:18]
But that's because the editorial policy and I think you would see this that the general
[72:18 - 72:23]
philosophy and political approach of those who will write and
[72:23 - 72:27]
deliver the editorial in the name of the only ship and management that was needed
[72:27 - 72:33]
is accepted that it is not true because you know one thing the Washington
[72:33 - 72:38]
Post can come out one way and we can come out here on the repeal of 14 Bay we're poles apart
[72:38 - 72:43]
we have just a few minutes left there are questions over here I don't know the gentleman on
[72:43 - 72:46]
the right.
[72:46 - 72:51]
I like the rest reply so hostle has said
[72:51 - 72:57]
I'm ready for this. Oh you expressed them well do
[72:57 - 73:02]
you get the idea here. Oh radio channels or TV
[73:02 - 73:06]
show are not making this film about
[73:06 - 73:11]
Jack your life and I think the viewers why
[73:11 - 73:16]
do you think there is white list of the state of these or is about
[73:16 - 73:21]
one of them where this is stated is where the manager your receiver stays
[73:21 - 73:26]
or whoever signs of Newsweek has as I stated first
[73:26 - 73:31]
saying that they don't understand and he said it's not whether or not it should be sold is another
[73:31 - 73:32]
quest for this.
[73:32 - 73:36]
Quite clearly excited low serve rather. You know I think
[73:36 - 73:43]
I mean. I understand you're right we got them phrased to looking
[73:43 - 73:44]
useful to the user.
[73:44 - 73:53]
I know I know I know jolly well that it is allowed me to believe that when I
[73:53 - 73:58]
was quite young there was I have questioned the living presence 7
[73:58 - 74:03]
times or seven times I went quiet when there was a much bigger give away
[74:03 - 74:08]
are real in the face of all these hundreds of thousands of acres many
[74:08 - 74:13]
many people very very rich and they turn around and use those riches inside the sense
[74:13 - 74:18]
that we got hold of the entire commission system because of the fact that these railroad
[74:18 - 74:21]
bearer I heard heard you know it was valid at all.
[74:21 - 74:26]
We have one more that might have bought back their possession of these we have one more question I
[74:26 - 74:31]
think we'd better go over here. The gentleman back there I think was ready.
[74:31 - 74:34]
Yes he's seen me
[74:34 - 74:39]
play. Oh my
[74:39 - 74:42]
God.
[74:42 - 75:02]
Oh yeah oh oh.
[75:02 - 75:03]
Oh oh
[75:03 - 75:09]
oh
[75:09 - 75:18]
well you know you
[75:18 - 75:36]
were right.
[75:36 - 75:45]
Why.
[75:45 - 75:48]
They are how they
[75:48 - 76:00]
write right.
[76:00 - 76:11]
Even our own
[76:11 - 76:19]
people are all really mean.
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Mazen gentleman I'm terribly sorry and it's obvious that we have got an interesting
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discussion here and I hope you will continue it. But officially we're going to have to call a
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halt we have one announcement here from Jerry Sanders.
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We break another form of inverted academic
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freedom the gag rule. Tonight at 8:00 o'clock in this room
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those of you who have requested an opportunity to hear the
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commercial right to hear some of the material that was used in our live
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German election broadcast we will have a two hour session here from 8:00 to 10:00 p.m. and also
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remind you that those of you who have not yet purchased your tickets for the NDR luncheon tomorrow there are
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some still available at last count. I would urge you of course to
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to take advantage of that as soon as possible there is a cocktail party as most of you know at 5 o'clock
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which is one of the reasons for imposing the gag rule Mr. Meacham of this moment.