Word: disks
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Jordan's Sari Aweidah, 26, a producer-announcer with the government-owned Hashemite Jordan Broadcasting Service, the junket provided his first professional contact with TV. Biggest beef: the "24-hour-a-day 'disk jockey.' It is just appalling. Perhaps that is because in Jordan we like to think of radio as a field where you transmit education, through entertainment...
...weeks ago we offered you our Election Year Argument Settler (TIME, July 16), the little red disk which provides the short answers to more than 800 political questions. Since then, letters asking for the Argument Settler have been coming in at the rate of 2,000 to 3,000 a day. Such widespread interest leads us to believe that you would also like to have a copy of our convention booklet, Here We Go Again!, which is just now coming off the presses...
...handy little red disk called the "Election Year Argument Settler," available to TIME readers who want a convenient, fact-packed reference to resolve questions about all U.S. national elections...
...obtain your free copy of this omniscient disk before it goes on sale at newsstands to the general public for 25? a copy, send your request, accompanied by an address label from your copy of TIME...
...John Wiggin, eventually made the point that, like it or not, jazz is a valuable exportable U.S. commodity. To sweeten its sometimes pungent flavor, the Voice decided to introduce the jazz with an hour of good pop music. To find an announcer the Voice held auditions, selected Buffalo-born Disk Jockey Conover, 35. His qualifications: a pleasantly resonant voice, the ability to speak slowly enough to be understood by foreigners with a little English, and an intimate knowledge of jazz; he owns a phenomenal 40,000 records, and draws from his collections for the Voice show. In most parts...