Search Details

Word: weei (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...States industrial aid to China should attempt to raise that country's standard of living, not bolster the status of reactionaries and power politicians, John K. Fairbank '29, associate professor of History and former director of the U. S. Information Services in China, asserted yesterday in a broadcast over WEEI...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fairbank Asks Aid to Chinese Citizens, Not To Power Politicians | 1/17/1947 | See Source »

Actually, WEEI officials had been asked to recruit a representative from the University who has no problems, particularly of the housing variety. Other student speakers had been selected to illustrate the predicaments of the less fortunate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Undergraduate Tells Nation He has No Housing Problem | 9/23/1946 | See Source »

Even people in Boston-even Lowells and Cabots-admit the existence of sex. Said Mrs. Hugh Cabot Jr. last week: "I've been interested for a long, long time in this whole subject." Mrs. Cabot's interesting remark was heard by listeners to station WEEI. She and Dr. W. Linwood Chase, director of the Massachusetts Society for Social Hygiene, thereupon went on to discuss sex education for children...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Time for Sex | 7/15/1946 | See Source »

...hear only if your radio is placed at the right angle and with the antenna just so. There are also four programs of records on local stations, of which none is the 920 Club and one is the Crimson Network's Nine O'Clock Jump. Then there is WEEI's all-night session after one o'clock, guided by an amusing night owl named Sherman Feller. More on the order of the Crimson Network's program is the Swing Nocturne on WCOP at ten-thirty Mon.-Wed.-Sat., at which Bill Ingalls, Boston correspondent of Downbeat, usually plays plenty...

Author: By Harry Munroe, | Title: SWING | 4/17/1942 | See Source »

Finally there is George Frazier's Saturday morning session at eleven-fifteen on WEEI. George isn't quite as at case as he is in print five days a week, but something interesting always happens. Last week Ben Pollack divulged in an interview that Benny Goodman used to play cornet occasionally in the most exciting Bix Beiderbecke vein. Of late, the program has included at times a record-spotting quiz, at which this column will be represented tomorrow, along with Count Basic, Al Morgan, and perhaps Lionel Hampton...

Author: By Harry Munroe, | Title: SWING | 4/17/1942 | See Source »

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