Language: English
Published by Cox Broadcasting Corporation, Atlanta, 1974
Seller: R. Siedlecki Vintage Books -- Collectible Bookseller, Roswell, GA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. [1974] FIRST EDITION red hard cover with slipcase. Illustrated book has silver lettering, 112 pages. About 8¾-inches wide x 11¼-inches high. Condition of book: Fine. Free of shelf wear, cracks and tears, stickers, bookplates, writing in text, and torn pages. Not a former library book. Slipcase: A few tears to two extremities (paper has lifted a tad due to shelving), minor scuffs/rubbing; else Near Fine. A wonderful historical overview of WSB broadcasting in Atlanta. Loads of early photos. Note: We are a well-established, well-respected, ethical book dealer in business since 1991. Insightful. Collectible. Note: We are a well-established, well-respected, ethical book dealer in business since 1991. We describe the condition of our books thoroughly and honestly, so you'll know exactly what you will be receiving when you order. We ship promptly.
Published by WSB Radio,, Atlanta, 1974
Seller: Kurtis A Phillips Bookseller, Roswell, GA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover in Slipcase. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Larger red-boards hardback with its original red slipcase. This copy has a "read-only-once" look & feel. Minor edgewear along the corners of the slipcase. Color and black-&-white photos. Stored in sealed plastic protection and mailed (bubble-wrapped) in a sturdy Jiffy Rigi Bag envelope. We ship daily from Roswell, Ga. Serving satisfied customers since 1999.
Published by Cox Broadcasting Corporation, Atlanta, 1974
Seller: Kurtis A Phillips Bookseller, Roswell, GA, U.S.A.
Hardcover in Slipcase. Condition: Very Good. Larger red-boards hardback enclosed in a red slipcase. The slipcase has minor shelf wear. Elmo Ellis, Officer Don; great memories and plenty of photos. Stored in sealed plastic protection and mailed in a sturdy cardboard box. Due to weight and low price; international orders are subject to a postal surcharge. We ship daily from Roswell, Ga. Serving satisfied customers since 1999.
Published by Atlanta: Cox Broadcasting Corporation
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. No Jacket. 1974. 112pp. illus. red cloth 4to w/silver decoration & titles: near Fine in slipcase that is scuffed on back cover with no dj as issued [a mustiness from having been in a slipcase; else a nice crisp copy] A broadcast history of local radio and television station WSB in Atlanta.
Published by WSB. Verlan. Cox., Atlanta., 1974
Seller: BookMine, Fair Oaks, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Gilt decorated hard cover. First edition. Illustrated in black, white and color. Important reference work. Very scarce in this condition. Fine copy in fine slip case. 112 pps.
Language: English
Published by Cox Broadcasting Corporation
Seller: West Cove UK, Wellington, United Kingdom
US$ 43.67
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Immediate dispatch from Somerset. Nice book in great condition. Pages in unused condition. Book like new. Box has a split. Hardcover. English. See images for condition. About the book >.>.> It has become habit for me to scan rather than read manuscripts. After five decades in the craft, I instinctively judge a work by its heft, paragraphing and punctuation. Not so with Welcome South, Brother, the history of WSB, Atlanta. It's a fascinating account of this pioneer station and its parent company, Cox Broadcasting Corporation. WSB became the South's first radio station in 1922-just two years after KDKA, Pittsburgh, had been given the first "regular" (as op- posed to experimental) call letters. It was licensed to the distinguished Atlanta Journal, which beat its competitor, the Constitution, to the radio punch. That was in the days when radio receivers, called consoles, sold for up to $700; when news- papers promoted "kits" to coax readers to make their own cat's whiskers, oatmeal box, earphone receivers. Only the carriage trade could afford the Kolsters or the gooseneck-speaker Atwater Kents of that era. I recall that, in 1926, when I began writing a syndicated radio colum.
Seller: GoldBooks, Denver, CO, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: new. New Copy. Customer Service Guaranteed.
Published by Broadcasting Publications, Inc., Washington DC, 1940
Seller: Antiquarian Bookshop, Washington, DC, U.S.A.
First Edition
Publishers wrappers. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Washington DC: Very Good. 1940 & 2 issues 1939. First Edition. Broadcasting" -- the entire year 1940, two issues per month. Our file lacks the issue published May 15, 1940, but does include issues for November 15 and December 15, 1939. These issues are bound (using spring-steel clips at the gutter margins) with the first group of issues for 1940 (through February) . All have the front covers intact, but all but the issue for February 15, 1940 are lacking the rear covers. The issues for March through June are bound together using another clip, and the issues for July 1 through October 15, 1940, similarly bound using a third clip. The final four issues for the year 1940 are loose as issued in their original printed wrappers. Generally excellent condition, with a very few issues showing minor folds or short tears to the wrappers. "Broadcasting" magazine was founded in Washington, D. C. , by Martin Codel, Sol Taishoff, and former National Association of Broadcasters president Harry Shaw; the first issue was published on October 15, 1931. Sol Taishoff became sole proprietor after June 1944 when he bought out his remaining partner, and appears on the mastheads as Publisher and Editor. Although Broadcasting magazine was early on devoted to the ever-increasing business of radio, commerical television was just coming into existence as our file of this important publication commenced. As early as our issue dated November 15, 1939 -- there is significant television news reported in "Broadcasting. " There is a discussion on page 17 of an important report of the FCC Television Committee (formed earlier in the year) -- suggesting details of how the 19 available channels might be divided between potential commercial and experimental stations. Only seven of the theoretical channels seemed nearly ready to begin experimental broadcasts. Fewer than a thousand television receiving sets had been sold Nationwide; nearly all in greater New York City. Also, see p. 77 for a notice that GE was testing the "practicability" of a television broadcast network based on radio relay rather than coaxial cable transmission. The test involved construction of a relay facility near the NBC & GE Schenectady station on Heiderberg Mountain. The aim was to receive signals from New York station W2XBS (120 miles distant) and rebroadcast via the airwaves. The diamond antenna covered an area of about 300 by 600 feet, giving the engineers a good chance of success, despite the fact that the new receiving station was about 8000 feet below a theoretical line-of-sight. Even though television broadcasting was already underway in 1939. For the moment, this notice shows how many technical details had yet to be worked out. Also, there was an entire page (86) of "Television News Notes. " This file of the important magazine "Broadcasting" shows the ever-enlarging business world of radio (and television in its infancy) in incomparable detail, as history was in the process of being made. Collectively, "Broadcasting" shows who filled America's airwaves, who hired that on-air talent, and who made and sold the advertising which paid for it all. The advertisements within these pages are a priceless record. Themselves. Twenty-five issues. . 1940 & 2 issues 1939; Science and History of Science, Music and Performing Arts, Most Recent Listing.