author
A pioneering force in American broadcasting, this corporate author was behind program books and promotional publications from radio’s early decades. Its publications capture how CBS presented itself to listeners as radio became a national habit.

by United States. Office of Education, Inc. Columbia Broadcasting System
Inc. Columbia Broadcasting System refers to the corporate body behind CBS, the American broadcast company that grew into one of the country’s major radio and television networks. Sources for this author name in library catalogs and public-domain listings connect it to works such as Sound of Your Life; a Record of Radio's First Generation, program books, and other in-house publications.
As an author, it is best understood not as an individual writer but as an institutional voice. These books and pamphlets helped document CBS programming, promotion, and the culture of broadcasting during the 1930s and 1940s, making them useful snapshots of radio history.
Because this is a company rather than a person, a true author portrait is not available. The surviving record is stronger for its publications and role in media history than for any single biographical narrative.