Charles Francis Hunter (1913-1975) Papers 1961-1975
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Midwest Program on Airborne Television Instruction
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OVERVIEW The Midwest Program on Airborne Television Instruction (MPATI) was a nonprofit organization of educators and television producers who pioneered efforts to transmit instructional television to a wide audience before the advent of cable and satellite. Most earlier televised classroom instruction had been produced and shown in house. These efforts represented a new use of technology; planes equipped to transmit broadcast signals sent "classroom television" to mem...
Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Radio Department
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Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Department of Radio and Television
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Hunter, Charles Francis, 1913-1975
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Charles Francis Hunter received a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences degree from Southeast Missouri State College, a Master of Philosophy degree from the University of Wisconsin, and a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Cornell University. Hunter came to Northwestern in 1947 from the University of Missouri. After serving as Assistant Professor of Radio (1947-1952), Assistant Professor of Radio and Television (1952-1956), and Associate Professor of Radio and Television (1956-195...
Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Department of Radio, Television, and Film
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Instruction in radio was begun at Northwestern during the 1931-32 academic year, when a course entitled “Radio Advertising Copy” was offered by the School of Journalism. The School of Speech entered the field of radio in the fall of 1935 with courses in radio acting and writing taught by Albert Crews, who received his M.A. from the School of Speech in 1937 and chaired its Department of Radio until 1943. The Department began offering graduate degree programs in 1946, and ...