Word: broadcasting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
SUNRISE SEMESTER (CBS, 9:30-10 a.m.). New York's excellent adult education show goes network. Courses offered this year by members of the N.Y.U. faculty will be Introduction to Ethics, Outlines of the History of Art, the Legacy of Greece and Rome. Daily programs will be broadcast on the network at 1-1:30 p.m. weekdays. Premi...
Back home in Louisville, Ky., Hornung was taping a series of 130 five-minute radio interviews and sports commentary that will be broadcast by 22 stations in four states; he has also started a 13-week series of pro football talks for a Louisville TV station. And last week he began another radio stint as commentator on local high school games. But will Expert Hornung try to predict winners? "Oh, absolutely not," he groans. "You know, I did that once...
...years, we will have to rely on the weapons we now have." Today the weapons China most desperately wants -nuclear warheads-are nowhere in sight. Peking is so bitter about Moscow's reneging on its 1957 agreement to help create a Red Chinese atom bomb that it has broadcast details of the Russian about-face. Chinese physicists are now believed to be two to three years away from detonating a nuclear blast, farther still from what the experts call a "significant capability." But work proceeds on the project, for Peking hopes that achievement of nuclear status, however primitive, will...
Pagodas, sporting protest signs in Vietnamese and English, became command posts where duplicating machines ground out hundreds of thousands of messages, and the sound of typewriters and telephones blended with the boom of temple gongs. Appeals for aid were broadcast to President Kennedy, Pope Paul VI, and U.N. Secretary-General U Thant. At a grisly, well-organized press conference in Saigon, Buddhist leaders introduced a tiny, withered Buddhist nun as a candidate for self-immolation in protest against the Diem government. When one Buddhist spokesman who had studied at Yale wanted to pass out the latest communiqués from...
...Yugoslav Red Cross broadcast an appeal for blood donations, and one of the first donors was U.S. Ambassador George F. Kennan, on his last day of duty in Belgrade. U.S. Air Force planes from bases all over Europe flew in with help; one entire U.S. Army hospital was moved to the scene from Germany. Twenty Yugoslav medical teams were rushed into Skoplje, army tank trucks brought in desperately needed fresh water, and volunteer workers signed up to help clear away the debris. At least 80% of Skoplje's buildings were destroyed or badly damaged, all utilities disrupted, and more...