Word: network
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Students in the Yard and the Business School will be able to pick up broadcasts of the Crimson Network within the next few months, if plans for territorial expansion announced last night by Network officers goes into effect...
According to the plan, as announced yesterday by Ray A. Goldberg '48, program director, the network will try to wire both the Yard and the Business School before the end of the term. Lack of money has been the limiting factor so far in plans of this nature, but the network is confident that it will be able to overcome this obstruction...
...Workshop, a feature of the network before the war, will share the Wednesday evening 9:30 o'clock slot with a dramatic show with plans as yet nebulous. In the first round table discussions, scheduled for this Monday at 9 o'clock, the speakers will be Joseph T. Morgan and Phillip D. Bradley, both instructors in economics, and Charles R. Cherington '35, instructor in government. The subject will be "Sixty Million Jobs...
...plug the gaps in this national network, TIME'S Domestic News Bureau has part-time-but no less important-correspondents strategically located in 79 cities across the U.S. Their job is not only to watch for news stories of more than local interest, but to keep us constantly filled in on what people in their sections are doing, saying, thinking. And you may be sure that these correspondents never fail to jack us up when we get off the beam; they are, in fact, our quickest, toughest critics...
Strikes knifed through the nation's network of 22 million telephones last week. In 44 states, long distance and overseas service was paralyzed. In many a city or town which still has manual phones, local calls were spotty or completely cut off.* Executives and clerical workers, trying to man the switchboards (see cut), fell hopelessly behind the blinking lights...