The first 76 scripts of the Good Neighbor Broadcasts written by Edward Thornton and broadcast over WHFC. The program was a joint venture of the Stark County Historical Society in cooperation with the Ohio Broadcasting Corporation.
Repository/Collector:
Temple University Libraries, Special Collections Research Center
An engineer and executive for Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, the collection also includes papers relating to Davis's involvement in the beginnings of KDKA, the first commercial radio station in the United States. Also includes material about WJZ.
Primarily Dunning's personal collection of 94 scripts for plays, radio, TV and film and a small amount of related papers, clippings and correspondence. Catalog listing does not include any details about the radio scripts.
Includes papers relating to Hillman' s involvement with Republican Party politics in the 1950s and some material related to Fulton Lewis, Jr.'s radio programs. Also, Folder 141 includes what are likely transcripts of Rev. Carl Mclntire's program, Twentieth Century Hour, 1958-1961 (intermittent).
Papers include scripts Hodges wrote for The Children's Bookshelf and other materials related to the program and also about her role as a storyteller on Let's Tell A Story which became the nationally broadcast television program Tell Me A Story.
Conversation with Semu Huaute, Chumash Medicine Man, on a variety of topics. Recorded at a powwow held at Tonawanda, New York, in the summer of 1966. Broadcast by Radio WBFO (Buffalo, N.Y.) in November 1967. Also includes a brief speech by Mad Bear recorded at the same time.
Part of a series, "Red Man in Michigan," broadcast on WUOM (Ann Arbor, MI). Features "extensive clips from field recordings made by Gertrude Prokosch Kurath."
Includes scripts and other material for radio programs during the 1940s, including material for You Are An American, 1942-1944. The Institute was concerned about promoting better understanding and appreciation among people of all cultural and national backgrounds.
Scripts adapted by Reade from Terence Rattigan's "The Winslow Boy" and Robert Louis Stevenson's "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" for the Theatre Guild on the Air. Collection includes two drafts of each script, including the final broadcast version.
Repository/Collector:
Temple University Libraries, Special Collections Research Center
Includes manuscripts for mystery stories written by Wilson as well as scripts for radio shows she did on WHYY, Philadelphia, including Story Teller's Holiday, Poet's Place and other papers.
Repository/Collector:
Temple University Libraries, Special Collections Research Center
Papers document Stanton's private life and radio and film activities as they relate to Ireland and the Irish-American community, including his career as an announcer at WIAD where he created the Irish Hour and his later ownership of WJMJ. Includes correspondence, speeches, radio scripts, newspaper clippings, scrapbooks, certificates, photographs and a large amount of material on Irish history and culture.
Contains papers related to Regan's career as a broadcaster in Philadelphia, including correspondence, clippings, printed materials, a scrapbook, uncataloged photographs and sound recordings.
A variety of recorded interviews across multiple collections, as aired on a variety of radio stations, including WHYY and (possibly) WEXP, which took to the air in 1972. Online catalog needs further exploration.