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...addition to presenting programs via "800 on your dial," the Workshop plans to continue its occasional appearances on WRUL, the international short wave station, and will exchange recorded dramas with other collegiate radio groups belonging to the Intercollegiate Radio Network. Originally organized by Archibald MacLeish, now Congressional Librarian, the Workshop sponsors an annual series of lectures by prominent radio personalities. Last year Norman Corwin, ace script writer for the major networks and Philip Cohen '32, head of the Federal Documentary Radio Program, spoke under its auspices...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLAYS MAPPED BY WORKSHOP | 9/23/1941 | See Source »

Messages of cheer and hope for eventual democracy and freedom are daily being broadcast over radio station WRUL to all the European nations by many prominent news commentators and a large group of Harvard professors and instructors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Professors Broadcast to European Countries Through WRUL | 5/2/1941 | See Source »

...broadcasting over WRUL is non-commercial, and the money necessary to run its 50,000 watt transmitter and to do other jobs connected with the station's operation comes entirely from private donations and memberships in the listener's league...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Professors Broadcast to European Countries Through WRUL | 5/2/1941 | See Source »

Radio, on the other hand, was adopted in the spring of 1939 and almost immediately became the protege of the Faculty. In 1940, it did a series of programs with the Civilization Councillors over short wave station WRUL. Professor Friedrich gives a section on the radio as a social force, in Government 25. Charles Siepmann, noted authority on radio, gave a series of lectures last fall. Norman Corwin and Phil Cohen, the most brilliant men at CBS, have been guest speakers. The Crimson Network runs a full-fledged station, and the Radio Workshop has been organized specifically for the writing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Adopted Children | 4/24/1941 | See Source »

Through his great & good friend Hamilton Fish Armstrong, onetime U.S. military attaché in Belgrade, now editor of Foreign Affairs, Dr. Petrovitch got a berth on WRUL, a 50,000-watt powerhouse, last fall. Conditions under which he agreed to operate were simple: a two-month trial at broadcasting three times a week, with no interference from anyone. Within three weeks, the State Department was advised by Arthur Bliss Lane, its Minister in Belgrade, that Dr. Petrovitch was becoming a potent force in Yugoslavia, that he ought to be aired every...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Short-wave Paul Revere | 4/14/1941 | See Source »

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