Word: radioing
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...like your new LISTINGS. Why not include top radio programs too? There are still a few of us without an antenna...
...insisted on a first-instance endorsement of Rockefeller ("I love Nelson"), if he had not had breakfast in Manhattan with Vice President Nixon ("Nixonism has replaced McCarthyism as the greatest threat to the prestige of our nation today"). Then Governor Harriman gave her a reason-by implying, in a radio broadcast, that Rockefeller was pro-Arab and anti-Israel. En route to Baltimore to visit the ailing mother of her fourth husband, Philanthropist Rudolf G. Sonneborn (and co-chairman of Democrats for Rockefeller), Dolly brooded and made up her mind...
...Priced nearly $3,000 above the top of the 1957 line, a $7,500 convertible, the Continental includes as standard equipment $2,044 worth of accessories and usually optional equipment. These range from a $25 chrome curb-guard molding, up through electric doorlocks ($59.15 for four doors) to dual radios ($152.70 apiece) and dual air conditioners ($440 apiece). When the retractable curved-glass partition between the front and back seats is up, passengers and chauffeur can listen to different radio programs in individually adjusted air conditioning. Like the original model T, the limousine comes in just one color, black...
...million backlog of defense orders for missile components and electronic systems. But it needs more capital. On its side, General Telephone needs a bigger base in the electronics field, anticipating the day when telephone service will dispense with some land lines and electromechanical switching equipment, take to radio and other electronic equipment. In April 1957 the companies reached the "getting to know you" stage when General Telephone President Donald C. Power, 58, went on Sylvania's board. In the merged General Telephone & Electronics Corp., Power will be chairman and chief executive officer; Sylvania's President Don G. Mitchell...
BERLIN, Nov. 16--Willy Brandt, mayor of West Berlin, said yesterday he does not believe the Communists are going to blockade his city now. In a soothing radio address to fellow West Berliners, Brandt declared: "I do not believe that the American transport planes which are standing by will have to be used...