Welcome toOld Radio World! Here you will find some of the most popular radio programs of the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. Before television, radio provided entertainment by presenting radio plays and programs of mystery, intrigue, and comedy. There was also news and soap operas. ...
Big Bluff-Free— Directed by W. Lee Wilder. When a scheming fortune hunter finds his rich wife is not going to die as expected, he and his lover make other plans to get her millions. (1950) Blonde Ice -Free— A society reporter keeps herself in the...
doi:10.24425/rhpp.2020.133427KAMISKA-CHEMINIAK, KamilaYearbook of History of Polish Press
1950. Fortunately, YouTube channels about radio mysteries have posted it, so I can embed it here. (Alas, the recording is not very high quality. It even repeats 12 minutes of the 30 minute
According to the postwar census of 1950, the population was 83.2 million; according to the 1975 census, it was 111.9 million. The rapid population growth characteristic of the 1940’s and 1950’s, when the number of births reached 36 per 1,000 inhabitants, changed markedly in the 1960’s,...
Radio programs are broadcast in Ukrainian, Russian, Moldavian, Hungarian, German, and English. In 1951 the Kiev Television Center went into operation. In 1977 the republic had 3,983 hospitals, with 599,300 beds, compared to 2,498 hospitals and 157,600 beds in 1940. Medical personnel in ...
[5]is because of zoo care/breeding programs and educational efforts. Human population is exploding; thus, the world for wild animals is shrinking – that ship has sailed when it comes to the idea that all animals should live in their native habitats, when those habitats are increasingly being...
They are also home to the student radio station WXYC which provided the first internet radio broadcast internationally. The University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill shares the Robertson Scholars Leadership Program with Duke University, where they select several young leaders who are invested in creating...
Posted in1940s,comedy,teenagers|Leave a comment Newsies in the Dusty Attic Posted onJanuary 30, 2023byBob Stepno During the past month, “The Dusty Attic,” a classic-radio program of the Radio Talking Books Service offered a series of four hour-long programs on the same theme as “Newspa...
Although I was registered and christened as John Geoffrey, in later life I have adopted JG as my name (I have not made a formal deed poll). This came about when I was a radio ham, we were all "John's" on our morning mobile net so we adopted handles to distinguish each other. I...