Word: broadcasting
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...55th birthday (Jan. 30), Franklin Roosevelt, who now hopes to visit Warm Springs in March, broadcast to his annual birthday balls in cities throughout the nation his thanks for the nation's response to 1) the Red Cross $10.000.000 flood relief fund, 2) the infantile paralysis benefit for which the balls are held...
...speech having been read loud and clear by Edward VIII (TIME, Nov. 9). Today George VI is making rapid further progress with doctors and vocalists to overcome his defective speech (TIME, Dec. 21), and the Duke of Kent was recently pressed into service to read an overseas royal radio broadcast to New Zealand. Omens were that the whole House of Commons will loyally cooperate to avoid unpleasant subjects until after the Coronation next May 12, and the House was slated last week for such work as raising Cabinet salaries a trifle, including that of the Prime Minister. This matter intensely...
...Soviet Socialist Republics. Never once did he even faintly indicate lack of sympathy or disloyalty towards the existing Soviet Government."Prisoner Romm, when invited by Prosecutor Vishinsky to confess, did so in words as satisfactory to the state concerned as were the words of Prince Edward in his abdication broadcast. Confessed Romm: "I had full knowledge of the terrorist plot against the Soviet Government. ... I carried five letters from Radek to Trotsky. ... I agreed to become Trotsky's under- cover correspondent...
...irritate Negrophobes. Mr. Kaltenborn, most literate of the commentators, offered an old interview with Spain's late Philosopher Miguel de Unamuno. Hearst's Edwin C. Hill wrote on political bosses, concluded that hypocrisy was a bad thing. Floyd Gibbons gave an unexciting account of his attempts to broadcast from Madrid. Russian-born, English-bred Boake Carter filled six pages on former King Edward VIII, closed with the information that Edward was now Duke of Windsor...
Under the direction of Archibald T. Davidson '06, professor of music, the Appleton Chapel choir gave a half hour broadcast ever station WNAC yesterday as a feature of the Catholic Truth Hour. Another program of fifteenth and sixteenth century church music, including works by Byrd, Lotti, and Palestrina will be given next Sunday on the same broadcast...