David P. Harmon Papers, 1941-1964

Container Title
Series: Script and Recording Library
Subseries: Radio Scripts
A-M: described in Part 11 of this finding aid (see search link in abstract in Summary Information)
NBC Music Appreciation Hour. Script, 1936
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script and one press release from a series of hour-long children's classical music programs aired weekly on the Red and Blue Networks. Instead of the usual concert, the program broadcast from this script consisted of dramatizations of incidents in the life of Beethoven and Handel.
Box   449
Folder   6
1936 December 18, Series C, 5th Concer, “Handel: Water Music” and “Beethoven: Canon to Maelzel”
NBC Parade of Stars. Scripts, 1942-1943
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Eleven scripts of a seris, written by Eric Barnouw, of fifteen-minute promotional musical variety shows broadcast at the beginning of WEAF radio seasons. Each show consisted of taped highlights of other NBC radio programs interspersed with live announcing.
Box   449
Folder   7
1942 September 28 - October 2, #1-6
1943
February 2, #6
#7
#8
February 12-19, #9-11
The NBC Radio Theater. Scripts, 1959-1960
Physical Description: 1 box 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a daily series of hour-long original radio dramas. Himan Brown produced and directed all the scripts except that of October 28, 1959, which was done by the author.
Box   449
Folder   8
1959
April 27, “Come Be My Love,” by Charles Friedman
May 5, “The Valley,” by Robert Newman
May 13, “The Star Quality,” by Earl Hamner
May 21, “My Best Friend's Girl,” by Robert Cenedella
Box   450
Folder   1
May 29, “My Brother's Keeper,” by Robert Newman
June 15, “The Brain Trust,” by John Sadler
June 23, “Paper Chase,” by Murray Burnett
July 1, “The Camera Eye,” by Peter Martin
Box   450
Folder   2
July 9, “Marry in Haste,” by Sam Dann
July 17, “Second Meeting,” by Sam Dann
August 10, “The Bridge,” by Sam Dann
August 18, “Local Talent,” by Sam Dann
Box   450
Folder   3
August 26, “Everything to Live For,” by Peter Martin
September 3, “Old Trooper,” by Sam Dann
September 11, “Return Engagement,” by Robert Newman
October 12, “The Man in Eight Fourteen,” by Sam Dann
Box   450
Folder   4
October 20, “The One and the Only,” by Sam Elkin
October 28, “Return to Springbank,” by Murray Burnett
November 5, “Romantic Lady,” by Murray Burnett
November 13, “Break Even,” by Sam Dann
Box   450
Folder   5
November 23, “The Other Woman,” by Robert Newman
December 1, “Dirty Money,” by Sam Elkin
December 9, “Golden Harvest,” by Sam Dann
December 25, “Among the Missing,” by Robert Newman
Box   450
Folder   6
December 17, “The Women In His Life,” by Sam Dann
1960
January 1, “Kindred Spirit,” by Sam Dann
National Grand Opera. Scripts, 1927-1929
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of broadcasts of performances by the National Grand Opera Company. The scripts, which range in length from thirty to ninety minutes, generally include only the commentary, and not the operatic dialogue. With the exception of the March 11, 1929 script, which was aired on WJZ and the Blue Network, the scripts were broadcast over WEAF and the Red Network.
Box   450
Folder   7
1927 November 23, “The Magic Flute”
1928
April 25, “Norma”
May 23, “Il Trovatore”
June 6, “La Favorita”
December 17, “Lucia di Lammermoor”
1929
January 14, “Samson and Delilah”
February 25, “The Pearl Fishers”
March 11, “The Marriage of Figaro”
March 18, “Fidelio”
April 1, “Namiko San”
April 8, “L'Eliser d'Amour”
April 15, “Aida”
April 29, “The Masked Ball”
May 9, “Shanewis”
May 20, “Halka”
June 17, “Der Freischutz”
July 1, “H. M. S. Pinafore”
National Light Opera. Scripts, 1928-1936
Physical Description: 1-1/2 boxes (7 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of radio adaptations of operas, broadcast at times over WEAF and the Red Network and at times on WJZ and the Blue Network. Each program was either thirty, sixty, or ninety minutes long.
Box   451
Folder   1
1928
July 25, “Iolanthe”
November 25, “The Princess of Trebizonde”
December 9, “The Mascot”
1929
January 6, “The Bohemian Girl”
April 21, “The Red Mill”
April 28, “King Dodo”
May 5, “The Idol's Eye”
May 12, “Spring Maid”
May 26, “Wizard of the Nile”
Box   451
Folder   2
June 9, “It Happened in Nordland”
June 16, “Love's Lottery”
June 23, “The Geisha”
July 8, “The Mikado”
July 14, “Princess Pat”
Box   451
Folder   3
July 21, “The Sho-Gun”
July 24, “The Yeomen of the Guard”
July 28, “Dolly Dollars”
July 31, “Iolanthe”
August 7, “The Pirates of Penzance”
August 11, “Tattooed Man”
August 14, “The Gondoliers”
Box   451
Folder   4
August 25, “The Ameer”
September 1, “The Yankee Consul”
September 4, “The Sorcerer”
September 8, “The Debutante”
September 22, “When Sweet Sixteen”
October 6, “Her Regiment”
October 20, “Babette”
Box   451
Folder   5
October 27, “The Jolly Musketeer”
November 10, “When Johnny Comes Marching Home”
November 17, “The Red Mill”
November 24, “The Girl of My Dreams”
December 1, “The Idol's Eye”
December 8, “The Sultan of Sulu”
December 15, “The Princess Pat”
December 22, “Marcelle”
[1929], “The Viceroy”
Box   451
Folder   6
1930
January 5, “The Geisha”
January 12, “The Mikado”
January 19, “The Lily of Killarney”
February 2, “Rip Van Winkle”
February 9, “Iolanthe”
April 20, “Cox and Box”
April 27, “Boccaccio”
August 28, “The Singing Girl”
Box   452
Folder   1
September 4, “Princess Pat”
September 25, “Naughty Marietta”
October 2, “The Only Girl”
October 16, “Eileen”
October 23, “Mademoiselle Modiste”
October 30, “Sweethearts”
November 6, “The Serenade”
November 13, “The Debutante”
November 20, “The Fortune Teller”
Box   452
Folder   2
November 27, “The Madcap Duchess”
December 4, “Her Regiment”
December 11, “It Happened in Nordland”
December 18, “Rose of Algeria”
December 25, “Babes in Toyland”
1931
July 12, “Patience” or “Bunthorne's Bride”
July 19, “Princess Ida”
July 26?, “Ruddigore”
August 9, “The Sorcerer”
August 16, “The Gondoliers”
August 30, “H.M.S. Pinafore”
September 13, “Yeomen of the Guard”
September 20, “The Mikado”
October 4, “The Pirates of Penzance”
1932 January 1, “The Merry Widow” (includes copy of 1927 version)
Box   452
Folder   3
1933 May 13, “The Gondoliers”
1934 February 4, “The Grand Duchess”
1935
January 29, “The Pirates of Penzance”
March 19, “Princess Ida”
April 9, “The Yeomen of the Guard”
April 16, “The Pirates of Penzance”
May 14, “The Chimes of Normandy”
May 21, “Rip Van Winkle”
May 28, “The Mascot”
June 28, “The Mikado”
September 8, “The Mikado”
1936 March 2, “H.M.S. Pinafore”
National Radio Pulpit. Transcripts, 1950, 1959, 1961-1962
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Transcripts of twenty radio addresses by Dr. Ralph Sockman produced by the Protestant Radio Commission and presented by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. The program was aired weekly from 10:00 to 10:30 on Sundays.
1950
Box   452
Folder   4
January 15, #16, “On being Self-Possessed”
January 22, #17, “Outdoing ourselves”
January 29, #18, “Living Your Whole Life”
February 5, #19, “Saving the Strong”
February 19, #21, “How Does God Guide?”
February 26, #22, “How Do We Reap What We Sow?”
March 19, #25, “How to Be Free From Guilty Feelings”
April 23, #30, “How to Feed the Hungry Heart”
1959 March 15, “Faith and Health”
1961
June 4, “Learning to Handle Frustration”
June 25, “The Habitual Vision of Greatness
October 22, “Man's Furor and God's Force”
November 5, “Differing Without Dividing”
November 19, “The Right to Be Happy”
November 26, “When Are We Lost?”
1962
January 14, “When Patience is Power”
January 28, “Life Escapes”
February 4, “Good Souls in a Bad Society”
February 11, “Delivered From Indignities”
February 18, “The Tyranny of Our Tools”
Neighborhood Call. Scripts, 1942
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of fifteen-minute consumer-education radio dramatizations broadcast weekly on WEAF. The program, written by Will McMorrow and directed by Earl Ebi or Lester O'Keefe, used the format of a narrator playing a neighbor who drops in for a chat.
Box   452
Folder   6
1942
July 10, #1
September 15
November 5 - December 31, #18-26
Nero Wolfe. Scripts, 1950-1951
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of half-hour dramas starring Sidney Greenstreet as detective Nero Wolfe. The series, based on characters created by Rex Stout, was produced and directed by J. Donald Wilson.
Box   452
Folder   7
1950
October 20, #1, “Stamped for Murder,” by Alfred Bester
October 27, #2, “The Case of the Careworn Cuff,” by Louis Vittes
November 3, #3, “Case of the Dear Dear Lady,” by Peter Barry
November 10, #4, “Headless Headhunter”
November 17, #5, “The Careless Cleaner,” by Shirl Hendryx
Box   452
Folder   8
November 24, #6, “The Beautiful Archer,” by Peter Barry
December 1, #7, “The Brave Rabbit”
December 8, #8, “The Impolite Corpse,” by William Kendall Clarke
December 15, #9, “The Girl Who Cried Wolfe,” by Charles O'Neill
December 22, #10, “The Slaughtered Santas”
Box   453
Folder   1
December 29, #11, “Case of the Bashful Body”
1951
January 5, #12, “Case of the Deadly Sell Out,” by Peter Barry
January 12, #13, “Case of the Vanishing Shells”
January 19, #14, “Case of the Calculated Risk,” by Charles O'Neill
January 26, #15, “Case of the Phantom Fingers”
The New Jack Pearl Show. Scripts, 1948
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: A complete run of scripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute comedy-variety programs presented in cooperation with the United States Treasury Department. The series was written by Paul Harrison, who was also director; Joe O'Brien; and Bernie Gould.
1948
Box   453
Folder   2
June 9 - July 14, #1-6
Box   453
Folder   3
July 21 - August 25, #7-12
The New York Life Program. Scripts, 1932
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of six half-hour dramatizations of episodes from the lives of great personalities of American history. The series, written by Gregory Williamson, was broadcast over WJZ on six consecutive Tuesdays. Also included is some correspondence concerning the rebroadcast of episode #4 over WOAI, San Antonio, on April 22, 1935.
Box   453
Folder   4
1932
April 26, #1, “Six Short Scenes From the Life of Alexander Hamilton”
May 3, #2, “Six Short Scenes From the Life of Andrew Jackson”
May 10, #3, “Eight Short Scenes From the Life of Lafayette”
[May 17], #4, “Six Short Scenes From the Life of General Sam Houston”
May 24, #5, “Seven Short Scenes From the Life of Lee”
May 31, #6, “Five Short Scenes From the Early Life of Lincoln”
News of The World. Scripts, 1960-1969
Physical Description: 2 1/2 boxes (12 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a daily news program and its evening update which featured Morgon Beatty (1960-1967) and Bill Ryan (1969). Although the program included reports from members of the NBC news staff around the world, only the reports broadcast from New York are included here.
1960
Box   453
Folder   5
May 2-6, 9-13
Box   453
Folder   6
May 16-20, 23-27, 30
Box   453
Folder   7
July 1, 4-8, 12-15
Box   453
Folder   8
July 19-22, 25-29
Box   453
Folder   9
September 16, 19-23
1961
Box   454
Folder   1
April 3-7, 12-14, 17-21, 24-28
Box   454
Folder   2
May 16-19, 22-26, 29-31
Box   454
Folder   3
1962 October 15-31
Box   454
Folder   4
1963 November 18-21, 26-29
1964
Box   454
Folder   5
July 1-3
Box   454
Folder   6
July 6-10, 13, 17, 20-24, 27-30
Box   454
Folder   7
August 3-7, 10-14
Box   454
Folder   8
August 17-21, 25
Box   454
Folder   9
August 26-28, 31
October 1-2, 5-9, 12-16, 19-21
Box   455
Folder   1
1965 April 20-23; August 2-6, 9-13
Box   455
Folder   2
1966 June 1-3, 6-10, 13-14
1967
Box   455
Folder   3
May 1-5, 8-12
July 17-18, 24-28, 31
1969
Box   455
Folder   4
January 9-14, 27-30
February 3-4, 7
Box   455
Folder   5
February 19-20, 24-28
Box   455
Folder   6
March 3-7, 10-14, 17-18
Box   455
Folder   7
July 3-4, 7-11, 14-18, 21-25, 28-29, 31
Box   455
Folder   8
November 3-7, 10-13, 17-21, 24-28
News on the Hour. Scripts, 1960-1971
Physical Description: 20 boxes 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts for a series of daily newscasts aired on the hour, both during the week and as part of the weekend Monitor programming. Holdings vary in completeness, with the period 1969-1971 being best represented. Among the featured commentators are Pauline Frederick, Chet Huntley, Merrill Mueller, and Edwin Newman.
1960
Box   456
Folder   1-3
May 1-11
Box   457
Folder   1-4
May 12-31
Box   457
Folder   5-10
July 1-31
Box   457
Folder   11-13
September 16-30
1961
Box   457
Folder   14-21
April
Box   457
Folder   22
May 16-19
Box   458
Folder   1-2
May 20-31
Box   458
Folder   3-5
1962 October 14-31
Box   458
Folder   6-7
1963 November 16-23, 26-29
1964
Box   458
Folder   8-9
July 1-4, 7, 9-11, 13-16
Box   458
Folder   10-17
July 17-August 29
Box   458
Folder   18
August 30-31
October 1-2
Box   458
Folder   19-21
October 3-9, 11-21
Box   458
Folder   22-23
1965 April 20-23; August 2-13
Box   459
Folder   1-2
1966 June 1-14
1967
Box   459
Folder   3
May 4-15
Box   459
Folder   4
July 16-21, 23-28, 30-31
1969
Box   459
Folder   5-15
January 8-31
Box   459
Folder   16-22
February 1-18
Box   460
Folder   1-3
February 18-25
Box   461
Folder   1
February 26-28
Box   461
Folder   2-5
March 1-12
Box   461
Folder   6-9
July 3-5
Box   462
Folder   1-16
July 6-31
Box   462
Folder   17-25
November 1-9
Box   463
Folder   1-21
November 10-30
1970
Box   463
Folder   22
January 16
Box   463
Folder   23-28
February 8-13
Box   464
Folder   1-15
February 14-28
Box   464
Folder   16-27
March 1-12
Box   465
Folder   1-13
March 13-25
Box   465
Folder   14-26
April 15-27
Box   466
Folder   1-26
April 28-May 23
Box   467
Folder   1-7
May 24-30
Box   467
Folder   8-26
August 22-September 9
Box   468
Folder   1-4
September 10-13
Box   468
Folder   5-24
November 1-20
Box   469
Folder   1-10
November 21-30
Box   469
Folder   11
December 3
1971
Box   469
Folder   12-26
March 1-14
Box   470
Folder   1-17
March 15-31
Box   470
Folder   18-24
April 1-7
Box   471
Folder   1-23
April 8-30
Box   471
Folder   24
May 21
Box   472
Folder   1-14
May 22-June 4
Box   472
Folder   15-25
June 7-June 17
Box   473
Folder   1-13
June 18-30
Box   473
Folder   14
July 12
Box   473
Folder   15-26
August 18-29
Box   474
Folder   1-25
August 30-September 23
Box   475
Folder   1-7
September 24-30
News From KFI. Scripts, 1943-1949
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of miscellaneous newscasts aired over NBC's Pacific Coast network.
Box   475
Folder   8
1943 September 1-7
1944 September 2-3
1945 September 3-5
1946 September 2-7
1947 September 1-6
Box   476
Folder   1
1948 September 8-14
1949 September 14-20
News With Art Baker. Scripts, 1943-1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of a fifteen-minute program of news and commentary broadcast daily, Monday through Firday, from NBC's Hollywood studios.
Box   476
Folder   2
1943 September 1-3, 6-7
1944 September 4-8
1945 September 4-7
News with David Anderson. Scripts, 1946, 1948-1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute program of news and commentary, originating in Hollywood.
Box   476
Folder   3
1946 September 1-6
1948 September 8-10, 13-14
1949 September 14-16, 19-20
News With Elmer Peterson. Scripts, 1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Four annotated scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute news program written by Elmer Peterson.
Box   476
Folder   4
1949 September 14-17
News With Fleetwood Lawton. Scripts, 1943-1947
Physical Description: 4 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute, Hollywood-based program of news and commentary.
Box   476
Folder   5
1943
September 1, 3, 6-7, 10, 13-15, 17, 20-22, 24, 27, 29
October 5, 8, 11-12
Box   476
Folder   6
October 15, 20, 25-27, 29
November 1-3, 5, 9, 15-17, 19
Box   476
Folder   7
November 22-24, 26, 29-30
December 1, 3, 6-8, 10, 14-15, 20-21, 24, 29
Box   477
Folder   1
1944 September 4-6, 8
1945 September 3-7
1946 September 2-6
Box   477
Folder   2
1947 September 1-5
News With Graeme Fletcher. Scripts, 1945-1946
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute program of news analysis and interpretation presented by Graeme Fletcher of the NBC Hollywood newsroom.
Box   477
Folder   3
1945 September 1, 3, 5-7
1946 September 2-6
News With Larry Smith. Scripts, 1943-1946
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute, Hollywood-based program of news and commentary.
Box   477
Folder   4
1943 September 1-3, 5, 7-10
1944 September 8
1945 September 3-7
1946 September 2-6
Newsmakers. Scripts, 1943
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Two annotated scripts of a weekly series of fifteen-minute dramatizations of events in the lives of World War II-era personalities. The series, which originated in Hollywood, was written by Ed Bloodworth and directed by Arnold Marquis. The life of Ruth Mitchell, an intelligence officer in Yugoslavia and Nazi war prisoner, was featured in the October 10 episode.
Box   477
Folder   5
1943 September 5, October 10
Night Reporter With Sam Hayes. Scripts, 1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One week of scripts of a nightly, fifteen-minute program of news and commentary, originating in Hollywood.
Box   477
Folder   6
1949 September 14-20
Noah Webster Says. Scripts, 1945-1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Five sample scripts of a weekly, half-hour vocabulary quiz program originating in Hollywood.
Box   477
Folder   7
1945 September 6
1946 September 5
1947 September 4
1948 September 9
1949 September 15
Not For Glory. Scripts, 1943
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: A complete run of scripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute dramatizations of true stories about operations of the U.S. Office of Civilian Defense in various parts of the country. The WEAF series was directed by Eddie Dunham.
Box   477
Folder   8
1943
June 26, #1, [Wheeling, West Virginia]
July 3, #2, [Elkridge, Maryland] by Pauline Gilsdorf
July 10, #3, “Peru, Massachusetts” by Margery Rice
July 17, #14, “New Orleans” by Pauline Gilsdorf
July 24, #5, “Vallejo, California” by Wade Arnold
July 31, #6, “San Antonio, Texas” by Pauline Gillsdorf and Margery Cunningham
Box   477
Folder   9
August 7, #7, [The Need for Child Care Centers in Wartime] by Wade Arnold and Marvin Beers
August 14, #8, [WERS, Fort Wayne, Indiana” by Margery Cunningham, directed by Joseph Mansfield
August 21, #9, “Ironwood, Michigan” by Wade Arnold
August 28, #10, “Montgomery County, Maryland”
September 4, #11, “Big Stone County Minnesota Crop Corps” by Wade Arnold
September 11, #12, [Final Broadcast: Review Sketch]
O. Henry Stories. Scripts, 1932
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Five sample scripts of a weekly WJZ series of half-hour radio dramatizations of O. Henry short stories. The format consisted of a Mr. Bell “telling” the stories to a Dr. Watson, who in turn shared Sherlock Holmes stories on another, crossplugged program also sponsored by the G. Washington Coffee Company.
Box   478
Folder   1
1932
May 11, “The Hiding of Black Bill”
May 18, “The Skylight Room”
May 25, “Tobin's Palm”
June 1, “The Third Ingredient”
June 8, “The Marionettes”
Okay for Release. Scripts, 1944-1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Ten scripts for a Hollywood-based, 15-minute news program.
Box   478
Folder   2
1944 September 4-8
1945 September 3-7
One Man's Family. Scripts, 1932-1959
Physical Description: 67 reels of microfilm 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a long-running radio series written by Carleton E. Morse, which appeared first weekly and then daily after 1950. This microfilm edition was prepared by scripts held by the Society as part of the NBC Records, together with selected additions loaned for filming by the author. The additions constitute Micro 10 (reels 1-7); the NBC holdings of the Society are Micro 779 (reels 8-67). References from the NBC holdings to the additions are included on the film. After filming, the scripts held by the Society were destroyed. Material missing from Micro 10 consists of Book 4, Chapter 12 (1933 March 29); Book 123, Chapter 36-39 (1956 August 20-23); Book 128, Chapter 28 (November 6); and Book 131, Chapter 49 (1958 August 14). Researchers are cautioned that the copyright to One Man's Family is held by Morse.
Micro 10
Reel   1
1936 December 27 - 1937 March 21: Book 21, Chapter 1-13 (285 pages)
1939 February 12-March 5: Book 29, Chapter 7-10 (91 pages)
1940 July 7-September 29: Book 35, Chapter 1-13 (302 pages)
1944 April 23: Book 50, Chapter 4 (22 pages)
1949
October 17-November 20: Book 72, Chapter 3-8 (252 pages)
December 4: Book 72, Chapter 10 (43 pages)
December 18: Book 72, Chapter 12 (35 pages)
1950 July 24-28: Book 76, Chapter 11-15 (96 pages)
1951
March 1: Book 83, Chapter 14 (18 pages)
March 6: Book 83, Chapter 17 (15 pages)
1952
January 3-4: Book 91, Chapter 24 8 25 (32 pages)
January 8: Book 92, Chapter 2 (15 pages)
May 27: Book 95, Chapter 17 (17 pages)
June 2: Book 95, Chapter 21 (16 pages)
Reel   2
June 4: Book 95, Chapter 23 (18 pages)
June 16: Book 96, Chapter 1 (19 pages)
June 19: Book 96, Chapter 4 (17 pages)
September 10-18: Book 97, Chapter 21-27 (119 pages)
1953
March 31: Book 100, Chapter 62 (17 pages)
September 16: Book 103, Chapter 18 (16 pages)
September 18: Book 103, Chapter 20 (15 pages)
1954
November 22: Book 113, Chapter 16 (20 pages)
November 24: Book 113, Chapter 18 (19 pages)
November 26-29: Book 113, Chapter 20, 21 (38 pages)
1955
February 16: Book 115, Chapter 18 (20 pages)
May 16: Book 117, Chapter 21 (22 pages)
May 19: Book 117, Chapter 24 (21 pages)
May 24: Book 117, Chapter 27 (19 pages)
December 5: Book 120, Chapter 46 (17 pages)
December 28: Book 120, Chapter 63 (21 pages)
1956
February 1: Book 121, Chapter 23 (22 pages)
April 16: Book 122, Chapter 11 (19 pages)
April 19, 20: Book 122, Chapter 14, 15 (40 pages)
April 26, 27: Book 122, Chapter 19, 20 (43 pages)
August 13: Book 123, Chapter 31 (22 pages)
August 24: Book 123, Chapter 40 (20 pages)
1957
February 19: Book 125, Chapter 37 (19 pages)
June 3-28: Book 126, Chapter 56-76 (370 pages)
July 1-31: Book 127, Chapter 1-23 (438 pages)
August 1-September 27: Book 127, Chapter 24-66 (776 pages)
Reel   3
September 30-October 12: Book 128, Chapter 1-7 (148pages)
October 16: Book 128, Chapter 9 (21 pages)
October 21: Book 128, Chapter 12 (17 pages)
October 28-29: Book 128, Chapter 17, 18 (32 pages)
November 11: Book 128, Chapter 27 (35 pages)
November 20-December 27: Book 128, Chapter 34-61 (544 pages)
December 30: Book 129, Chapter 1 (18 pages)
Reel   4
December 31-1958 March 28: Book 129, Chapter 2-64 (1101 pages)
1958
Reel   5
March 28-June 27: Book 130, Chapter 1-64 (1187 pages)
June 27-July 18: Book 131, Chapter 1-14 (346 pages)
August 8: Book 131, Chapter 29 (19 pages)
August 21-September 2: Book 131, Chapter 38-45 (157 pages)
September 4 & 5: Book 131, Chapter 47, 48 (40 pages)
September 8-15: Book 131, Chapter 50-54 (122 pages)
Reel   6
September 17-26: Book 131, Chapter 56-62 (162 pages)
September 29-October 1: Book 132, Chapter 1-3 (56 pages)
October 15-21: Book 132, Chapter 12-16 (107 pages)
November 17, 18: Book 132, Chapter 35, 36 (40 pages)
November 26: Book 132, Chapter 42 (20 pages)
November 28: Book 132, Chapter 44 (20 pages)
December 12-26: Book 132, Chapter 53-62 (186 pages)
December 29-1959 March 3: Book 133, Chapter 1-45 (872 pages)
March 4-27: Book 133, Chapter 46-63 (351 pages)
Reel   7
March 30-April 24: Book 134, Chapter 1-20 (394 pages)
Micro 779
Reel   8
Book 1-4, Chapter 6
Reel   9
Book 4, Chapter 7-Book 6
Reel   10
Book 8-10
Reel   11
Book 11-14
Reel   12
Book 15-17
Reel   13
Book 18-20
Reel   14
Book 21-24
Reel   15
Book 25-27, Chapter 6
Reel   16
Book 27, Chapter 7-Book 30, Chapter 2
Reel   17
Book 30, Chapter 3-Book 32, Chapter 7
Reel   18
Book 32, Chapter 8-Book 34
Reel   19
Book 35-38, Chapter 3
Reel   20
Book 38, Chapter 4-Book 40, Chapter 7
Reel   21
Book 40, Chapter 8-Book 41, Chapter 12
Reel   22
Book 42, Chapter 13-Book 45, Chapter 5
Reel   23
Book 45, Chapter 6-Book 47, Chapter 10
Reel   24
Book 47, Chapter 11-Book 50, Chapter 5
Reel   25
Book 50, Chapter 6-Book 52, Chapter 11
Reel   26
Book 52, Chapter 12-Book 55, Chapter 3
Reel   27
Book 55, Chapter 4-Book 57, Chapter 10
Reel   28
Book 57, Chapter 11-Book 59, Chapter 12
Reel   29
Book 59, Chapter 13-Book 62, Chapter 3
Reel   30
Book 62, Chapter 4-Book 64, Chapter 9
Reel   31
Book 64, Chapter 10-Book 66, Chapter 10
Reel   32
Book 66, Chapter 11-Book 68, Chapter 10
Reel   33
Book 68, Chapter 11-Book 70, Chapter 9
Reel   34
Book 70, Chapter 10-Book 73, Chapter 3
Reel   35
Book 73, Chapter 4-Book 75, Chapter 19
Reel   36
Book 75, Chapter 20-Book 78, Chapter 22
Reel   37
Book 78, Chapter 23-Book 81, Chapter 23
Reel   38
Book 81, Chapter 24-Book 84, Chapter 4
Reel   39
Book 84, Chapter 5-Book 86, Chapter 13
Reel   40
Book 86, Chapter 14-Book 86, Chapter 13
Reel   41
Book 88, Chapter 16-Book 90, Chapter 24
Reel   42
Book 90, Chapter 25-Book 83, Chapter 19
Reel   43
Book 93, Chapter 20-Book 95, Chapter 26
Reel   44
Book 95, Chapter 27-Book 98, Chapter 1
Reel   45
Book 98, Chapter 2-Book 99, Chapter 25
Reel   46
Book 99, Chapter 26-Book 100, Chapter 52
Reel   47
Book 100, Chapter 53-Book 101, Chapter 47
Reel   48
Book 101, Chapter 48-Book 103, Chapter 10
Reel   49
Book 103, Chapter 11-Book 105, Chapter 7
Reel   50
Book 105, Chapter 8-Book 107, Chapter 11
Reel   51
Book 107, Chapter 12-Book 109, Chapter 12
Reel   52
Book 109, Chapter 13-Book 111, Chapter 5
Reel   53
Book 111, Chapter 6-Book 112, Chapter 29
Reel   54
Book 112, Chapter 30-Book 114, Chapter 28
Reel   55
Book 114, Chapter 29-Book 116, Chapter 20
Reel   56
Book 116, Chapter 21-Book 118, Chapter 17
Reel   57
Book 118, Chapter 18-Book 119, Chapter 37
Reel   58
Book 119, Chapter 38-Book 120, Chapter 29
Reel   59
Book 120, Chapter 30-Book 121, Chapter 20
Reel   60
Book 121, Chapter 21-Book 122, Chapter 13
Reel   61
Book 122, Chapter 16-Book 123, Chapter 6
Reel   62
Book 123, Chapter 7-61
Reel   63
Book 123, Chapter 62-Book 124, Chapter 43
Reel   64
Book 124, Chapter 44-Book 125, Chapter 36
Reel   65
Book 125, Chapter 38-Book 126, Chapter 46
Reel   66
Book 126, Chapter 47-Book 132, Chapter 18
Reel   67
Book 132, Chapter 19-Book 134, Chapter 30
Original Microphone Plays. Scripts, 1938
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script, some correspondence, and a press release for a series of half-hour dramatic presentations broadcast weekly on WJZ and the Blue Network. This segment was produced and directed by James Church.
U.S. Mss 17AF
Box   478
Folder   3
1938 November 5, “Samson Agonistes,” by Norman Rosten
Pageant of Art. Scripts, 1940-1941
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts and some related correspondence of a weekly series of thirty-minute dramatizations tracing major periods and events in art history. Some of the programs were broadcast over WEAF, and others over WJZ.
Box   478
Folder   4
1940
November 24, #3, “The Art of Assyria, Babylonia and the Near East,” by Ranald R. MacDougall
December 1, #4, “Homeric Greece,” by Zachary Metz
December 15, #6, “The Age of Pericles,” by Zachary Metz
December 22, #7, “Augustan Rome,” by Zachary Metz
December 2-, #8, “Pre-Christian Rome,” by Zachary Metz
1941
January 12, #9, “Early Christian and Byzantine Art,” by Natalie B. Baker
January 26, #10, “Romanesque Art and the Dark Ages,” by Natalie B. Baker
Box   478
Folder   5
February 2, #11, “Islamic Art,” by Ranald R. MacDougall
February 9, #12, “The Crusades,” by Albert N. Williams
February 16, #13, “Art of the Middle Ages (Rise of the Town and Gothic Art)” by Natalie Baker
February 23, #14, “Art of the Middle Ages (Pre-Renaissance Italy),” by Natalie B. Baker
March 2, #15, “Early Renaissance,” by Natalie Baker
March 9, #16, “Marco Polo and the Discovery of China and the Near East,” by Don Witty
March 23, #17, “The Period of Ferdinand and Queen Isabella,” by Ranald R. MacDougall
Box   478
Folder   6
March 30, #18, “Discovery of America and Aztec Art” by Zachary Metz
April 6, #19, “Charles V and His Personality in Relation to Titian,” by Charles Newton
April 13, #20, “Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel,” by Charles Newton
April 27, “The Problem of the Individual and the Development of Conscience,” by Zachary Metz
May 11, “The Interest in Nature (The Glorious Revolution and the Bill of Rights,” by Zachary Metz
May 19, “The Interest in Nature (Worship of Nature and the Rise of Sentimentality),” by Zachary Metz
May 25, “The Industrial Revolution and the Art of the Future,” by Albert N. Williams
Box   478
Folder   7
Correspondence, 1940-1941
Parade of Progress. Scripts, 1939
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: A complete run of scripts, and some correspondence and press releases concerning a series of thirty-minute dramatizations broadcast weekly on WJZ and the Blue Network. The program, which outlined the history and production of various grocery items, were written by Tom Langan and produced and directed by Harry A. MacFayden.
Box   478
Folder   8
1939
January 26, #1, “The Story of Wheat”
February 2, #2, “The Story of Canning”
February 9, #3, “The Story of the Glass Bottle”
February 16, #4, “The Story of Packaging”
February 23, #5, “The Story of Oats and Corn”
March 2, #6, “The Story of Tea”
March 9, #7, “The Story of Frosted Foods”
March 16, #8, “The Story of Spices”
Box   479
Folder   1
March 23, #9, “The Story of the Cracker Barrel”
March 30, #10, “The Story of Desserts”
April 6, #11, “The Story of Beverages”
April 13, #12, “The Story of Meat”
April 20, #13, “The Story of Cheese”
April 27, #14, “The Story of Soap”
May 4, #15, “The Story of Coffee”
Box   479
Folder   2
Correspondence, 1939
Paul Page With Music in the Morning. Scripts, 1945-1947
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Nine scripts of a series of popular music broadcast fifteen minutes daily, seven days a week, from NBC's Hollywood studios.
Box   479
Folder   3
1945 September 1, 3-7
1946 September 1, 7
1947 September 7
Pepper Young's Family. Scripts, 1958
Physical Description: 3 1/2 boxes (1 foot, 6 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute daytime dramatic serial. Elaine Carrington, the creator of the series, wrote episodes #5708 through #5815, while #5816 through #5958 were written by Patricia and Robert Carrington.
Box   479
Folder   4
1958
January 2-3, #5708-10
January 6-10, #5711-5
January 13-15, #5711-3
Box   479
Folder   5
January 16-17, #5714-5
January 21-24, #5717-20
January 28-31, #5722-5
Box   479
Folder   6
February 3-7, #5726-30
February 10-14, #5731-5
Box   479
Folder   7
February 17-21, #5736-40
February 24-28, #5741-5
Box   479
Folder   8
March 3-7, #5746-50
March 17-21, #5756-60
Box   480
Folder   1
March 24-28, #5761-5
March 31-April 4, #5766-70
Box   480
Folder   2
April 7-11, #5771-5
April 14-18, #5776-80
Box   480
Folder   3
April 21-25, #5781-5
April 28-May 2, #5786-90
Box   480
Folder   4
May 5-9, #5791-5
May 12-16, #5796-5800
Box   480
Folder   5
May 19-23, #5801-5
May 26-30, #5806-10
Box   480
Folder   6
June 3-6, #5812-5
June 9-13, #5816-20
Box   480
Folder   7
June 16-20, #5831-5
June 23-24, #5836-7
June 26-27, #5829-30
Box   481
Folder   1
June 30-July 4, #5831-5
July 7-11, #5836-40
Box   481
Folder   2
July 14-18, #5841-5
July 21-25, #5846-50
Box   481
Folder   3
July 28-August 1, #5851-5
August 4-8, #5856-60
Box   481
Folder   4
August 11-15, #5861-5
August 18-22, #5866-70
Box   481
Folder   5
August 25-29, #5871-5
September 2-5, #5876-80
Box   481
Folder   6
September 8-12, #5881-5
September 15-19, #5886-90
Box   481
Folder   7
September 22-24, #5891-3
September 25, #5895
September 29-October 3, #5896-5900
Box   481
Folder   8
October 6-10, #5901-5
Box   482
Folder   1
October 14, #5907
October 20-24, #5911-5
Box   482
Folder   2
October 31, #5916
November 3-7, #5917-20
November 10-14, #5921-5
Box   482
Folder   3
November 17-21, #5926-30
November 24-26, #5931-3
November 28, #5934-5
Box   482
Folder   4
December 1-5, #5936-40
December 8-12, #5941-5
Box   482
Folder   5
December 15-19, #5946-50
December 22-24, #5951-3
December 26, #5954-5
December 29-31, #5956-8
The Philco Hour. Scripts, 1928-1929
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Six sample scripts of a series of radio adaptations of operas, aired weekly on WJZ and the Blue Network. In 1928 the programs ran a full hour, but were cut to thirty minutes at the beginning of 1929. The productions, under the musical direction of Harold Sanford, starred Jessica Dragonette and Colin O'More as leads and Henry M. Neely as “Philco's Old Stager.”
Box   482
Folder   6
1928
October 20, “The County of Luxembourg”
December 8, “Naughty Marietta”
December 15, “Sweethearts”
December 29, “The Vagabond King”
1929
April 5, “The Vagabond King, Act. I”
Pocketbook News. Scripts, 1959, 1964, 1970
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Four sample scripts of a weekly, five-minute program of financial news and commentary by Wilma Soss.
Box   482
Folder   7
1959 January 19
1964 July 19
1970 August 23
1970 September 6
Point Sublime. Script, 1944
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One edited script of a weekly, thirty-minute comedy-drama series written and produced by Robert L. Redd. Originating in Hollywood, the series starred Cliff Arquette.
Box   482
Folder   8
1944 September 4, #193, “Labor Day on the Ranch”
Public Affairs. Scripts, 1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Four sample scripts of a series of fifteen-minute dramatizations. NBC made the timer period available each week to representatives of various national organizations to present the views of their respective groups and what they are doing for the welfare of the people and our country.
Box   482
Folder   9
1949
January 8, “The Story of an American”: George Washington Carver Memorial Institute
April 9, “Brown Women in White”: National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses by Jack Caldwell
October 15, “The Council Story”: National Council of Jewish Women by George Lefferts
1950
November 25, “The Fourth Person”: Blue Cross and Blue Shield by Richard E. Davis
Pulitzer Prize Plays. Scripts, 1938
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts and some correspondence from a weekly WJZ series of hour-long radio adaptations of Pulitzer Prize-winner plays.
Box   482
Folder   10
1938
June 9, “Anna Christie,” by Eugene O'Neill, adapted by Joseph Bell
July 7, “Both Your Houses,” by Maxwell Anderson, adapted by James Church
July 14, “Men in White,” by Sidney Kingsley, adapted by Joseph Bell
Box   483
Folder   1
August 18, “Strange Interlude,” Part II, by Eugene O'Neill, adapted by Joseph Bell
Box   483
Folder   2
Correspondence, 1938
Quiz Kids. Script, 1941
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a thirty-minute quiz show featuring a panel of five children answering questions sent in by listeners. The program was aired weekly on the Blue Network; this script was broadcast from NBC's Chicago studios.
Box   483
Folder   3
1941 January 1
RCA Victor Hour. Script, 1929
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One script of the fifth program in a weekly series of hour-long musical variety shows.
Box   483
Folder   4
1929 December 26, “Aida”
Radio City Playhouse. Scripts, 1948-1950
Physical Description: 1 1/2 boxes (9 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute dramatic presentations, most originally written for radio. The series was directed by Harry W. Junkin.
Box   483
Folder   5
1948
July 3, #1, “Long Distance,” by Harry W. Junkin
July 10, #2, “Ground Floor Window,” by Ernest Kinoy
July 17, #3, “Of Unsound Mind,” by Harry W. Junkin
July 31, #4, “Whistle, Daughter, Whistle,” by Ernest Kinoy
August 7, #5, “Special Delivery,” by Harry W. Junkin
August 14, #6, “Hit... and Run,” by Max Shoub
Box   483
Folder   6
August 21, #7, “Fanny,” by Harry W. Junkin
August 23, #8, “Long Distance,” by Harry W. Junkin
August 30, #9, “Betrayal,” by Ernest Kinoy
September 6, #10, “King of the Moon,” by Joseph Schull
September 13, #11, “Mother,” by Stanley Robert Mednick
September 18, #12, “Soundless,” by Harry W. Junkin
September 25, #13, “The Dark Hour,” by Charles Bennett
Box   483
Folder   7
November 8, #14, “The Promise,” by Harry W. Junkin
November 15, #15, “The First and the Last,” by John Galsworthy, adapted by Nelson Olmsted
November 22, #16, “The Door,” by Harry W. Junkin
November 29, #17, “Temporarily Purple,” by Ernest Kinoy
December 6, #18, “Five Extra Nooses,” by Charles Lee Hutchings
December 13, #19, “Heritage of Wimpole Street,” by Robert Knipe, adapted by Ernest Kinoy
December 20, #20, “Three Men,” by Willis Cooper
Box   483
Folder   8
December 27, #21, “Strange Identity, by Harry W. Junkin
Box   483
Folder   8
1949
January 10, #22, “Correction,” by C. L. Hutchings.
January 17, #23, “Portrait of Lenore,” by Milton Geiger
January 24, #24, “The Wisdom of Eve,” by Mary Orr
February 7, #25, “Machine,” by Harry W. Junkin
February 14, #26, “Elementals,” by Stephen Vincent Benet
February 21, #27, “One From Three Leaves Two,” by Kerry Shaw and Emil Zubryn
Box   483
Folder   9
February 28, #28, “Deadline,” by John Bethune
March 7, #29, “Two Moods from the Past,” (“Passion in the Desert” by Honore de Balzac and “The Story of Ming Y,” author unknown) adapted by Harry W. Junkin
March 14, #30, “Weather Ahead,” by William Devlin, Jr.
March 21, #31, “Blind Vengeance,” by George Bellack
March 28, #32, “Luck,” by Wilbur Daniel Steel, adapted by Charles Bennett
April 4, #33, “Wardrobe Trunk,” by William Irish, adapted by Harry W. Junkin
April 11, #34, “Treasure Trove,” by F. Tennyson Jesse, adapted by Harry W. Junkin
Box   484
Folder   1
April 18, #35, “Only Unto Him,” by Kathleen Norris, adapted by Agnes Eckhardt
April 25, #36, “Witness for the Prosecution,” by Agatha Christie, adapted by Agnes Eckhardt
May 2, #37, “The Hands of Mr. Ottermole,” by Thomas Burke, adapted by George Lefferts
May 9, #38, “No Shoes,” by Lawrence DuPont
May 23, #39, “Murder Is a Matter of Opinion,” by Jules Archer
May 30, #40, “The Promise,” by Harry W. Junkin
June 6, #41, “Note on Danger B,” by Gerald Kersh
Box   484
Folder   2
June 13, #42, “How Love Came to Professor Guildea,” by Robert Hichins
June 20, #43, “Motive for Murder,” by Harry W. Junkin
June 27, #44, “The Legend of Theresa,” by True Boardman
July 4, #45, “Murder Is the Easiest Way,” by Harry W. Junkin
July 11, #46, “Disintegration,” by Luis Van Rooten
July 18, #47, “Local Storm,” by Harry W. Junkin
July 25, #48, “The Birthday Party,” by Shirl Hendrix
Box   484
Folder   3
August 1, #49, “Tension in 643,” by Allen Sloan
August 8, #50, “Level Crossing,” by Harry W. Junkin
August 15, #51, “Blackout,” by Harry W. Junkin
August 22, #52, “Joey Was Different,” by John Shaw
August 29, #53, “The Unguarded Moment,” by Harry W. Junkin
September 25, #54, “Affliction,” by Harry W. Junkin
October 1, #55, “Conqueror's Isle,” by Harry W. Junkin
Box   484
Folder   4
October 9, #56, “The Plotters,” by Harry Junkin
October 16, #56, “Duet,” by Harry W. Junkin and June Thompson
October 23, #57, “Ground Floor Window,” by Ernest Kinoy
October 30, #58, “The Wind,” by Ray Bradbury, adapted by Harry W. Junkin
November 6, #59, “Malice Domestic,” by Philip MacDonald, adapted by Harry W. Junkin
November 13, #60, “Problem Child,” by Joel Hammil
Box   484
Folder   5
November 20, #61, “Deception,” by Harry W. Junkin
November 27, #62, “Interval,” by Robert Esson
December 4, #63, “Local Storm,” by Harry W. Junkin
December 11, #64, “Sibling,” by Dolores Sutton and Richard Seff
December 18, #65, “The Wine of Oropalo,” by John E. Hasty
December 25, #66, “Twas the Night Before Christmas,” by Paul Galico, adapted by Harry W. Junkin
1950
January 1, #67, “Reflection,” by Harry W. Junkin
Radio Guild. Scripts, 1929-1936, 1938-1940
Physical Description: 6 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Selected scripts and some related correspondence concerning a weekly, daytime, prestige drama series of hour-long adaptations of well-known plays. The series was broadcast on WJZ and the Blue Network. Included with the script for March 16, 1940, are three other versions of “Drink Deep” as broadcast on other drama programs.
Box   484
Folder   6
1929
July 14, “The Importance of Being Earnest,” by Oscar Wilde, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
August 25, “Peter Ibbetson,” by Gerald du Laurier, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
September 8, “Macbeth,” by William Shakespeare, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
July 23, “Mr. Pim Passes By,” by A. A. Milne, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
Box   484
Folder   7
1931
October 16, “Doctor Faustus,” by Christopher Marlowe, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
1932
October 7, “Antigone,” by Sophokles, translated by Shaemas O'Sheel, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
1933
October 23, “The Wild Duck,” by Henrik Ibsen, adapted by Vernon Radcliffe
Box   485
Folder   1
November 27, “R. U. R.,” by Karel Capek, translated by Paul Selver, adapted by Joseph Bell
1934
January 8, “Saturday's Children,” by Maxwell Anderson, adapted by Joseph Bell
Box   485
Folder   2
1935
December 26, “King Henry the Fifth,” Part I, by William Shakespeare, adapted by Charles Warburton
1936
January 2, “King Henry the Fifth,” Part II, by William Shakespeare, adapted by Charles Warburton
1938
March 4, “The Critic,” by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, adapted by James Church
Box   485
Folder   3
1939
May 28, “The Silver Candlestick,” by Alicia Ramsey and Rudolph di Cordova
1940
March 2, “Johnny Pye and the Fool Killer,” by Stephen Vincent Benet, adapted by Welbourn Kelley
March 16, “Drink Deep,” by Don Johnson
Box   485
Folder   4
Correspondence and Related Material, 1929-1941
Radio Playbill. Scripts, 1931, 1934
Physical Description: 4 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of two seasons of a weekly series of half-hour original plays with contemporary themes broadcast over WEAF and the Red Network. There are differences in format between the two seasons, as well as a change in broadcast time. Three of the 1934 scripts, #3, #8, and #9, were originally broadcast as part of other drama series, the last two on WJZ's The Miniature Theatre; #6, “Manhattan Apartment,” was originally aired in Radio Playbill's 1931 season. It is unclear when, if ever, the final four 1934 scripts were broadcast as part of Radio Playbill. Some forms and a memo concerning the 1934 season are also included.
Box   485
Folder   5
1931
January 14, #1, “Legend of the Taj Mahal,” (Script labeled Radio Playhouse.) by Burke Boyce
January 21, #2, “Hello London,” by Katherine Seymour
January 28, #3, “The Whole Story,” by Raymond Scudder
February 4, #4, “Sweet Sixteen,” by Clifton Read
February 11, #5, “Skyscraper,” by Lawrence Holcomb
Box   485
Folder   6
February 25, #7 (#6?), “Backward Turn Backward,” by Finis Farr
March 4, #8, “Prayer Meetin!” by F. H. Wilson
March 11, #9, “The Pipe in the Field,” by T. C. Murray
March 18, #10, “Beauty and the Emperor,” by Mary Louise Eliott
March 25, #11, “Manhattan Apartment,” by Katherine Seymour
Box   485
Folder   7
1934
August 11, #1, “Men Love the Woods,” by Katherine Seymour
August 18, #2, “Long Live the King!,” by Francis Wilson
August 25, #3, “Partners,” by Elizabeth Todd
September 1, #4, “The Wishing Tree,” by Francis Wilson
September 8, #5, “You've Got to Have Glamour,” by Katherine Seymour
#6, “Manhattan Apartment,” by Katherine Seymour
Box   485
Folder   8
#7, “Eligible Bachelor,” by Katherine Seymour
#8, “Jerry and a Sunbeam,” by Cosmo Hamilton
#9, “The Game of Chess,” by Kenneth Sawyer Goodman Forms and Memo
Recollections at Thirty. Scripts, 1957
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Two sample scripts of a weekly series of retrospective musical variety shows compiled in celebration of NBC Radio's thirtieth anniversary. Each show featured Ed Herlihy announcing memorable recordings from the NBC Library of Sound.
Box   486
Folder   1
1957 January 2
1957 March 27
The Richfield Reporter. Scripts, 1943-1948
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of fifteen-minute programs of news and commentary broadcast daily, Sunday through Friday, from NBC's Hollywood studios.
Box   486
Folder   2
1943 September 1-3, 5-7
1944 September 3-8
1945 September 2-7
Box   486
Folder   3
1946 September, 1-6
1947 September 1-5, 7
1948 September 8-10, 12-14
Rupert Hughes Address. Scripts, 1943-1945
Physical Description: 5 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of fifteen-minute talks with Rupert Hughes -- soldier, novelist, historian, and humorist -- and his remarks on the international scene presented in his own entertaining style. The program originated in Hollywood.
Box   486
Folder   4
1943
August 22
October 9, 16, 23, 31
November 7, 20, 27
December 4, 11, 18
1944
January 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
February 5, 12, 19
Box   486
Folder   5
March 4, 11, 18, 25
April 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
May 6, 20, 27
June 3, 10, 17, 24
July 1, 8, 22, 29
Box   486
Folder   6
August 5, 12, 19, 26
September 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
October 7, 14
December 9, 16, 23, 30
1945
January 20, 27
Box   486
Folder   7
February 3, 10, 17, 24
March 3, 10, 17, 31
April 7, 21, 28
June 9, 16, 23, 30
Box   486
Folder   8
July 7, 14, 21, 28
August 4, 11, 18, 25
September 1, 8, 15, 22
Scramby-Amby. Script, 1943
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a popular weekly, half-hour quiz program originating in Hollywood in which contestants unscrambled anagrams sent in by listeners. Howard Blake was the writer-producer.
Box   487
Folder   1
1943 September 1
Sherlock Holmes. Scripts, 1934-1935, 1939-1942
Physical Description: 2 1/2 boxes (2 feet) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts and some correspondence and related material from a weekly WJZ series of thirty-minute, retitled radio versions of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. Edith Meiser, also known as Edith Meiser McKnight, wrote the adaptations, and Tom McKnight was director and producer. When the series was revived in 1939, it originated in Hollywood instead of New York.
1934
Box   487
Folder   2
November 11, #1, “The Jewish Breastplate”
November 18, #2, “The Case of the Lost Special”
November 25, #3, “The Adventure of the Syrian Mummy”
December 2, #4, “The Case of the Sealed Room”
December 9, #5, “The Case of Vamberry, the Wine Merchant”
December 16, #6, “The Case of the Walking Corpse”
December 23, #7, “The Case of the Poisoned Stick”
Box   487
Folder   3
December 30, #8, “The Case with Two Solutions”
1935
January 6, #9, “The Singular Affair of the Aluminum Crutch”
January 13, #10, “The Armchair Solution”
January 20, #11, “The Case of Dual Personality”
January 27, #12, “Wisteria Lodge”
February 3, #13, “Cherchez la Femme”
February 10, #14, “The Adventure of the Red Circle”
Box   487
Folder   4
February 17, #15, “The Adventure of the Devil's Foot”
February 23, #16, “The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb”
March 3, #17, “The Adventure of the Dying Detective”
March 10, #18, “The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans”
March 24, #20, “The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet”
March 31, #21, “The Veiled Lodger”
Box   487
Folder   5
April 7, #22, “The Three Gables”
April 14, #23, “The Gloria Scott”
April 21, #24, “A Case of Identity”
April 28, #25, “The Three Students”
May 5, #26, “The Copper Breeches”
May 12, #27, “The Man with the Twisted Lip”
May 19, #28, “Silver Blaze”
Box   487
Folder   6
May 26, #29, “The Reigate Puzzle”
1939
October 2, #1, “The Sussex Vampire”
October 9, #2, “Silver Blaze”
October 16, #3, “The Speckled Band”
October 23, #4, “The Man with the Twisted Lip”
October 30, #5, “The Devil's Foot”
November 6, #6, “The Bruce-Partington Plans”
November 13, #7, “The Lion's Mane”
November 20, #8, “The Dying Detective”
Box   487
Folder   7
November 27, #9, “The Creeping Man”
December 4, #10, “The Adventures of Charles Augustus Milverton”
December 11, #11, “The Musgrave Ritual”
December 18, #12, “The Adventure of Wisteria Lodge”
December 25, #13, “The Adventure of the Three Garridebs”
1940
January 1, #14, “The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle”
January 8, #15, “The Priory School”
January 14, #16, “The Greek Interpreter”
Box   488
Folder   1
January 22, #17, “The Cardboard Box”
January 29, #18, “The Second Stain”
February 5, #19, “The Adventure of the Abbey Grange”
February 12, #20, “The Golden Pince Nez”
February 19, #21, “The Blanched Soldier”
February 26, #22, “The Reigate Puzzle”
March 4, #23, “The Beryl Coronet”
Box   488
Folder   2
March 11, #24, “The Final Problem” (not aired)
March 11, #24, “The Retired Colourman”
September 29, #1, “The Empty House”
October 6, #2, “The Copper Beeches”
October 13, #3, “The Noble Bachelor”
October 20, #4, “The Engineer's Thumb”
October 27, #5, “The Red-Headed League”
Box   488
Folder   3
November 3, #6, “The Problem of Thor Bridge”
November 10, #7, “The Crooked Man”
November 17, #8, “The Norwood Builder”
November 24, #9, “The Three Students”
December 1, #10, “The Dancing Man”
December 8, #11, “The Adventures of Black Peter”
December 15, #12, “The Naval Treaty”
Box   488
Folder   4
December 22, #13, “The Bascombe Valley Mystery”
December 29, #14, “The Missing Three Quarter”
1941
January 5, #15, “The Mazarin Stone”
January 12, #16, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part I
January 12, #16, “A Case of Identity”
January 19, #17, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part II
January 26, #18, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part III
February 2, #19, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part IV
Box   488
Folder   5
February 9, #20, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part V
February 16, #21, “The Hound of the Baskervilles,” Part VI
February 23, #22, “The Resident Patient”
March 2, #23, “The Speckled Band”
March 9, #24, “The Adventure of Shoscombe Old Place”
October 12, “The Six Napoleons”
Box   488
Folder   6
October 19, “The Case with Two Solutions”
October 26, “The Solitary Cyclist”
November 2, “The Case of the Walking Corpse”
November 9, “The Stockbroker's Clerk”
November 16, “The Bruce Partington Plans”
November 23, “The Hindu in the Wicker Basket”
November 30, “A Case of Identity”
Box   489
Folder   1
December 7, “The Adventure of the Red Circle”
December 14, “The Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax”
December 21, “The Sealed Room”
December 28, “The Gloria Scott”
1942
January 4, “The Second Stain”
January 11, “The Haunted Bagpipes”
Box   489
Folder   2
January 18, “The Three Gables”
January 25, “The Lion's Mane”
February 1, “The Five Orange Pip”
February 8, “The Voodoo Curse”
February 15, “The Veiled Lodger”
February 22, “The Sussex Vampire”
March 1, “The Giant Rat of Sumatra”
Box   489
Folder   3
Correspondence and related material, 1935-1940
Something New. Script, 1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a weekly, half-hour musical variety show starring Hoagy Carmichael.
Box   489
Folder   4
1945 September 3, #28
A Song is Born. Script, 1944
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a weekly, thirty-minute musical program featuring works by amateur composers who competed for publishing contracts.
Box   489
Folder   5
1944 September 4
Specials
Physical Description: 3 boxes 
Box   489
Folder   6
Abraham Lincoln: The Prairie Years, by George Ludlam, 1933 February 13
Box   489
Folder   7
Alexander Graham Bell, by Innis Osborn, 1932 March 3
Box   489
Folder   8
Astronauts' News Conference, 1969 July 14
Box   489
Folder   9
Ballet of Light, by Julian Nally, 1935 April 25
Box   489
Folder   10
Battle for the Bill of Rights, by Robert E. Sherwood and Ernest Kinoy, 1949 December 15
Box   489
Folder   11
Benet Memorial Broadcast, written by Deems Taylor, 1943 April 17
Box   489
Folder   12
Chiang Kai-Shek, Madame, Speech, 1943 March 7
Box   489
Folder   13
Chopin, by Burke Boyce, 1932 February 22
Box   489
Folder   14
Crisis in the Gulf of Tonkin, 1964 August 5
Box   489
Folder   15
Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 November 24
Box   489
Folder   16
D-Day Program, by Edna St. Vincent Millay, c. 1944
Box   489
Folder   17
Democratic Convention, 1964 August 18-26
Box   489
Folder   18
Dickens Memories, by Innis Osborn, 1932 February 7
Box   489
Folder   19
A Dickens Pageant, by George Lowther, 1932 February 7
Box   489
Folder   20
The Drift from Thrift, by Eddie Rickenbacker, 1951 circa January 20
Box   489
Folder   21
Edgar Allen Poe Anniversary Program, by George Ludlam, 1935 January 19
Box   489
Folder   22
Edwin Booth, by Innis Osborn, 1932 November 13
Box   489
Folder   23
Edwin Booth-Prince of Players, by Ernest Boyd, 1938, circa November
Box   489
Folder   24
Eighth Anniversary of Lindbergh's Flight, by Julian Nally, 1935 May 21
Box   489
Folder   25
Eisenhower Press Conference, with introductory commentary by Robert McCormick, 1960 May 11
Box   489
Folder   26
Florence Nightingale Birthday Anniversary, by Burke Boyce, 1935 May 12
Box   489
Folder   27
For Us the Living, by Ben Kagen, 1946 August 14
Box   489
Folder   28
Forgotten Minority, by Harry Mantel, 1969 May 25
Box   489
Folder   29
From Victoria to George the Fifth, adapted from The Hundred Years by Welbourn Kelley 1937 January 31
Box   490
Folder   1
Gagarin Space Flight, 1961 April 12
Box   490
Folder   2
George Gershwin Memorial Program, by Francis Wilson, 1937 July 12
Box   490
Folder   3
Gilbert and Sullivan Anniversary Program, by George P. Ludlam, 1936 November 12
Box   490
Folder   4
Goethe Centenary Program, by Katherine Seymour, 1932 March 22
Box   490
Folder   5
Headlines of 1940, by Welbourn Kelley, 1940 December 29
Box   490
Folder   6
Headlines of 1934, 1934 December 20
Box   490
Folder   7
Headlines of 1936, by Welbourn Kelley, 1936 December 31
Box   490
Folder   8
Historical Inaugurations of the U.S., by Ranald D. MacDougall, 1941 January 19
Box   490
Folder   9
History of Advertising, by Katherine Seymour, Burke Boyce, Wade Arnold, George Ludlam, and Finis Farr, 1933 November 12
Box   490
Folder   10
History of Boxing, by George Ludlam, 1935 September 21
Box   490
Folder   11
History of West Point, by Francis Wilson, 1936 March 14
Box   490
Folder   12
Hoover, Herbert, Address, 1940 February 12
Box   490
Folder   13
Hull, Cordell, Speech, 1940 May 13
Box   490
Folder   14
I Got a Million of Then, (with Jimmy Durante), 1952 November 22
Box   490
Folder   15
Inaugural Balls - Past and Present, by Katherine Seymour, 1933 March 4
Box   490
Folder   16
Inauguration Show, by Welbourn Kelley, Wade Arnold, and John Erskine, 1937 January 18
Box   490
Folder   17
John Paul Jones, by Burke Boyce, 1932 July 6
Box   490
Folder   18
John Wesley, by Raymond Scudder, 1938 May 22
Box   490
Folder   19
Journey From Yesterday: A History of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, by Lynn Rhodes, 1955 February 27
Box   490
Folder   20
June Bride by Bob Shaw, 1948 June
Box   490
Folder   21
KNBC Anniversary Show (with interviews with Carleton Morse and Michael Raffetto of One Man's Family), circa 1969
Box   490
Folder   22
Key Women in Defense, 1941 December 4
Box   490
Folder   23
Khrushchev Retirement, 1964 October 15
Box   490
Folder   24
Lafayette Anniversary Program, by Burke Boyce, 1932 September 6
Box   490
Folder   25
The Letter: The True Story of Robert Eckman, by Martha Davis, 1951 July 27
Box   490
Folder   26
Letter to an Expectant Father, by Earl Hamner, 1951 October 13
Box   490
Folder   27
Life of Samuel Johnson, dramatized by George Lowther, 1935 September 18
Box   490
Folder   28
Longfellow Fantasia, by George P. Ludlam, 1932 February 27
Box   490
Folder   29
Louisa May Alcott, by Elizabeth Todd, 1933 November 29
Box   490
Folder   30
Machines Without Men, by Joseph Liss, undated
Box   490
Folder   31
Man of the Year, 1946 December 29
Box   490
Folder   32
Marconi, the Man and his Wireless, adapted by James Costello, 1937 April 24
Box   490
Folder   33
Memories of Victor Herbert, by Richard McDonagh, 1938 April 25
Box   490
Folder   34
Mental Health Program, 1951 May 5
Box   490
Folder   35
Museum of Science and Industry Special, 1941 January 29
Box   490
Folder   36
NBC Press Show, by George Lefferts, 1949 January 2
Box   490
Folder   37
NBC: 25 Years of Broadcasting, by Charles Speer, 1944 December 2
Box   490
Folder   38
The New York Times Goes to Press, by Welbourne Kelley and Don Goddard, 1937 April 22, 25
Box   490
Folder   39
Ninety Years of News, by Welbourn Kelley and James Hill (regarding the AP), 1938 December 25
Box   490
Folder   40
Norris, George W., Speech, 1939 October 3
Box   491
Folder   1
Olympics Past and Present, 1936 July 10
Box   491
Folder   2
The Ordeal of Sergeant Dunbar, by Alvin Yudkoff, 1951 February 10
Box   491
Folder   3
The Pageant of Prohibition, by John B. Kennedy, Katharine Seymour, Stuart Ayers, Wade Arnold, Finnis Farr, Raymond Scudder, and Elizabeth Todd, 1933 November 4
Box   491
Folder   4
Parallel 38, by Kenneth Greenberg, 1951 March 12
Box   491
Folder   5
The Pen and the Dream, by William Tunberg, 1949 September 17
Box   491
Folder   6
Pentagon papers, 1971 June 30
Box   491
Folder   7
President in Europe: Advance Report, 1961 May 30
Box   491
Folder   8
Princess Margaret's Marriage, 1960 May 6
Box   491
Folder   9
RCA Anniversary, by Julian Nally, George P. Ludlam, and Burke Boyce, 1935 March 1
Box   491
Folder   10
Radio in a World at War, by Paul Phillips, 1941 September 3
Box   491
Folder   11
Red China...The Fifth Nuclear Nation, 1964 October 16
Box   491
Folder   12
Republican National Committee, 1944 September 15
Box   491
Folder   13
Robert E. Lee, by Burke Boyce (3 versions), 1931 January 18, 1933 January 19, 1934 circa January 19
Box   491
Folder   14
Romance of the Wheel, 1934 January 5
Box   491
Folder   15
Samuel F. B. Morse, by Raymond Scudder, 1938 January 23
Box   491
Folder   16
Samuel Morse, by Burke Boyce, adapted by Wade Arnold, 1932 May 14
Box   491
Folder   17
Schoolhouse Anywhere, by Alan E. Sloane, 1951 May 11
Box   491
Folder   18
The Sentencing of Lt. Calley, 1971 March 31
Box   491
Folder   19
The Star Spangled Banner, by Wade Arnold, 1934 September 14
Box   491
Folder   20
State Department Broadcast: Message of Peace, by George Ludlam, 1938 November 23
Box   491
Folder   21
The Story of Cotton, by Welbourn Kelley, 1938 May 14
Box   491
Folder   22
The Ten Biggest News Stories of 1939, by Welbourne Kelley, 1939 December 31
Box   491
Folder   23
These Are Your Friends, (interview of soap opera personalities), 1954 February 23
Box   491
Folder   24
This is Radio, by Tom Langan, 1938 November 13
Box   491
Folder   25
Tobey, Charles W. Speech, 1940 February 19
Box   491
Folder   26
Tomorrow's America, by Harry W. Junkin, 1952 February 9
Box   491
Folder   27
Tribute to Mark Twain, by Innis Osborn, 1932 November 30
Box   491
Folder   28
Twentieth Anniversary Salute (to NBC affiliates), 1947 January 23
Box   491
Folder   29
United Nations debate on Summit collapse, 1960 May 23 and 28
Box   491
Folder   30
V-E Day Programs
Army and Navy Tribute
Serendade to America
Special Sun Copy
Victory Act II
Artists for Victory
Milestones on the Road to Peace, by Ben Kagen
V-E Day Signoff
Choral Group
Parade of the States
partial scripts, 1945 May 8
Box   491
Folder   31
V-J Day Programs
Salute to Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard
Sacred Program of Praise
Salute to Victory, 1945 August 15
Box   491
Folder   32
We Occasionally Point with Pride: A Singular Commentary on Radio, by Ranald R. MacDougall, 1941 December 12
Box   492
Folder   1
WEAF Birthday Celebration, by Neal Hopkins, 1942 August 16
Box   492
Folder   2
West Point Anniversary, by Welbourn Kelley, 1937 March 20
Box   492
Folder   3
WJZ Takes the Cake, by Neal Hopkins, 1941 October 5
Box   492
Folder   4
Women in Medicine, by Martin Seifert, 1950 April 6
Box   492
Folder   5
Young Man with a Horn, adapted by Welbourn Kelley, 1951 June 17
Box   492
Folder   6
Your Navy-First Line of Attack, 1952 October 25
Sports Recap With Jack Lightcap. Scripts, 1948-1949
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Eight annotated scripts of a nightly, fifteen-minute, Hollywood-based sports news program.
Box   492
Folder   7
1948 September 10
1948 September 14-20
Sports With Rube Samuelsen. Script, 1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a weekly, fifteen-minute, Hollywood-based sports news program.
Box   492
Folder   8
1945 September 1
The Standard Hour. Scripts, 1943-1947
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Five sample scripts of a weekly, hour-long, Hollywood-based musical program featuring the Los Angeles Philharmonic.
Box   492
Folder   9
1943 September 5, #820
1944 September 3, #882
1945 September 2, #930
1946 September 1, #1008
1947 September 7, #1061
Stardust. Scripts, 1959
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of five-minute chats by Madeleine Carroll on various women-oriented subjects. The scripts, which are undated except for some handwritten notes giving week of broadcast, appear to have been broadcast ten times per week.
Box   492
Folder   10
#1-#10, week of May 18, 1959
#11-#17, week of May 25, 1959
#25, week of June 1, 1959
#36-#38, #40, week of June 8, 1959
#41-#44, week of June 15, 1959
#51-#52, #52-#60, week of June 22, 1959
#61-#69, week of June 29, 1959
#72-#80, week of July 6, 1959
#81-#90, week of May 18, 1959
#101-#110, week of July 27, 1959
#111-#114, #120, week of August 3, 1959
Stones of History. Scripts, 1934-1935
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly, thirty-minute WEAF series featuring dramatizations by Wade Arnold of tales of the famous rocks and monuments of history -- their legends, their significance, their parts in the drama of mankind.
Box   492
Folder   11
1934
April 12, #2, “The Great Pyramid of Egypt”
April 19, #3, “The Cathedral at Aix-la-Chapelle”
May 3, #4, “The Tower of London”
May 10, #5, “Fingal's Cave”
May 17, #6, “The Kremlin”
May 31, #7, “The Great Wall of China”
June 7, #8, “The Alhambra”
June 14, #9, “The Rosetta Stone”
Box   492
Folder   12
July 5, #12, “Pompeii”
July 19, #13, “The Bastille”
July 26, #15, “Ludlow Castle”
August 2, #16, “The Sunken City of Ys”
August 16, #18, “The Alamo”
Box   492
Folder   13
August 30, #20, “Nithsdale's Escape From the Tower”
October 18, #25, “Fort Ticonderoga”
November 1, #27, “The Kremlin”
November 22, #30, “The Sphinx”
December 13, #32, “The Krak des Chevaliers”
1935
January 24, #37, “Cleopatra's Needle”
June 23, #1, “The Blarney Stone”
Stop or Go. Script, 1943
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a humorous thirty-minute quiz program starring Joe E. Brown. The program originated in Hollywood.
Box   492
Folder   14
1943 September 5
The Story Behind the Headlines. Scripts, 1938-1941
Physical Description: 4 folders and 1 volume 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of fifteen-minute talks on history presented weekly by NBC and the American Historical Association. The scripts, written by professional historians such as Charles A. Beard, Julian P. Boyd and Henry Steele Commager were edited for radio and read by Cesar Saerchinger. The earlier scripts are present as The Bulletin of The Story Behind the Headlines, transcripts published by the Columbia University Press.
Box   493
Folder   1
1938
March 8, #1, “England's Foreign Policy”
March 15, #2, “The Crisis in Austria”
March 22, #3, “The Federal Income Tax”
March 29, #4, “America's Foreign Policy”
April 5, #5, “Czechoslovakia, France, and Europe”
April 12, #6, “The Reorganization Bill of 1938”
April 19, #7, “The Crisis in France”
April 26, #8, “The Roosevelt Relief Plan”
May 3, #9, “The Anglo-Irish Agreement”
May 10, #10, “A New Alignment in Europe”
May 13, “The War in China”
May 20, “Tragedy in Spain”
May 27, “Memorial Day and the Wages and Hours Bill”
Box   506
Folder   3
October 18, #1, “Minorities: The Threat to World Peace”
October 25, #2, “Great Britain and the Four-Power Pact”
November 1, #3, “The Chinese War Enters a New Phase”
November 8, #4, “America Goes to the Polls”
November 14, #5, “France Faces the New Europe”
November 22, #6, “Government by Persecution”
November 29, #7, “United States Drive for Freer Trade”
December 6, #8, “Palestine and the Refugee Problem”
December 13, #9, “ 'Appeasement' Comes to France”
December 20, #10, “Monroe at Lima”
December 27, #11, “The Story of Christmas”
1939
January 3, #12, “When Congress Meets”
January 10, #13, “President Roosevelt Warns the Dictators”
January 17, #14, “Making Democracy Work”
January 24, #15, “The Struggle for Power in the Mediterranean”
January 31, #16, “The Fascist Conquest of Spain”
February 7, #17, “Hitler's Cry for Colonies”
February 14, #18, “American Foreign Policy and World Peace”
February 21, #19, “ 'Appeasement' Marches On”
February 28, #20, “Defending Our Interests in the Pacific”
March 7, #21, “George Washington and a Hundred-and-Fifty Years”
March 14, #22, “Will American Labor Unite?”
March 21, #23, “The Death of Czecho-Slovakia”
March 28, #24, “Economy, Recovery and the Debt”
April 4, #25, “Hitler Drives to the East”
April 11, #26, “Poland and the End of 'Appeasement' ”
Box   493
Folder   1
October 27, “The Polish Question Haunts Europe Anew”
November 3, #2, “Neutrality Today and Yesterday”
November 10, #3, “Soviet Russia Reaches Out to the West”
November 17, #4, “Must Finland Bow to Russia's Demands?”
November 24, “The Movable Feast of Thanksgiving”
December 1, #6, “Rumania Changes Her Course”
December 8, #7, “What Next in the Balkans?”
Box   493
Folder   2
December 15, “Turkey Holds the Key”
December 22, #9, [The Story of Christmas Music]
December 29, “The War at Sea”
1940
January 5, #11, “The Economic War”
January 12, #12, “Can Scandinavia Remain Neutral?”
January 19, #13, “The War in the Air”
January 26, #14, “Are the Low Countries in Danger?”
February 2, “Italy Watches the Balkan Conference”
February 9, #16, “Accent on Yugoslavia”
February 16, #17, “Mr. Welles Goes to Europe”
February 23, #18, “This is a Presidential Year”
March 1, #19, “China Fights On”
March 8, #20, “Hitler's Frederician War”
March 15, #21, “The Russo-Finnish Peace”
March 22, #22, “The War of Resources”
March 29, #23, “The Near East and the War”
April 5, #24, “Puppet Government in China”
April 12, #25, “The Invasion of Scandinavia”
Box   493
Folder   3
April 19, #26, “Can Britain and France Unite?”
April 26, #27, “Italy's Role in the War”
May 3, #28, “Is Sweden Next?”
May 17, #29, “The Low Countries Bear the Brunt”
May 24, #30, “The Third Invasion of France”
May 31, “The Threat to the British Empire”
June 14, #33, “The Drive on Paris”
June 21, #34, “What Next in France”
November 8, #1, “The War in Greece”
November 15, #2, “The Axis Push to the East”
November 20, #3, “ 'New Order' in the Far East”
November 29, #4, “Bulgaria on the Spot”
December 6, #5, “London Under Fire”
December 13, #6, “The Threat to British Shipping”
December 27, #8, “The Mediterranean Phase of the War”
Box   493
Folder   4
1941
January 3, #9, “Will Hitler Try Invasion?”
January 17, #11, “Will the New Deal Survive the War?”
January 24, #12, “The Italian Empire in Danger”
January 31, #13, “The French Empire and the War”
February 7, #14, “Why Ireland Is Neutral”
February 14, #15, “Is Versailles to Blame for the War?”
February 21, #16, “Spring Offensive in the Southeast”
February 28, #17, “Japan Drives to the South”
March 7, #18, “Germany Near the Dardanelles”
March 14, #19, “Will Yugoslavia Yield?”
March 21, #20, “Can German Resources Win the War?”
March 28, #21, “Britain's Conquest of East Africa”
April 4, #22, “The Battle of the Atlantic”
April 11, #23, [Background on the situation in Eastern Europe]
April 18, #24, “The Soviet-Japanese Pact”
April 25, #25, “The British Thermopylae”
May 3, #26, “The Riddle of the Straits”
Story Shop. Scripts, 1947-1949
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of thirty-minute dramatizations of original and adapted children's stories broadcast on Saturday mornings. The program, which starred Craig McDonnell as storyteller and Eve Young as his audience of one, was written by Richard E. Davis.
Box   493
Folder   5
1947
October 11, #24, “Christopher Cricket and the Freedom Train”
November 8, #28, “Through the Mouse Hole”
November 15, #29, “East 0' the Sun and West 0' the Moon”
November 22, #30, “The Good Comrades of the Flying Ship”
November 29, #31, “The Young Prince”
December 6, #32, “The Bad Bargains”
December 20, #34, “Christopher Cricket and the Star of Bethlehem”
1948
Box   493
Folder   6
January 31, #40, “The Story of Lars - A Boy Who Loved His Country”
February 28, #44, “The Story of Charley Chipmunk”
March 6, #45, “The Nuremburg Stove”
March 13, #46, “The Story of Rip Van Winkle”
March 20, #47, “The Story of Christopher Cricket and the Angel”
March 27, #48, “Dinkey the Donkey”
April 17, #51, “The Missing Doll”
Box   493
Folder   7
April 24, #52, “Christopher Cricket and the Enchanted Princess”
May 8, #53, “The Little Elephant”
1949
June 11, #1, “Christopher Cricket and the Heavenly Stardust”
June 18, #2, “The Story of Little Pedro”
July 2, #4, “The Ugly Duckling”
July 9, #5, “The Three Bears”
July 16, #6, “The Little Elephant”
The Telephone Hour. Scripts, 1958
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Three sample scripts of a weekly, half-hour musical variety show sponsored by the Bell Telephone System. The program was produced by Wallace Magill.
Box   493
Folder   8
1958
June 16, #933
June 23, #934
June 30, #935
This Is the Show. Tag Script, undated
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note

Two pages of a tag script, for the end of the weekly show, with jokes about the Trocadero night club and Valentine's Day. At the end the announcer says:

“Another edition of This Is The Show next week at this same time over many of these stations, with Martha Tilton, Herb Schreiner, the music of Gordon Jenkins and his orchestra, yours truly, Johnny Frazer, and your master of ceremonies, Cliff Nazarro. Be with us and hear another Most Amusing Story of The Week, from Hollywood's Radio City.”

(Found 7 June 1999 among scripts for Sherlock Holmes).

Box   493
Folder   9
Tag script
This Is War. Scripts, 1942
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute dramatizations produced for wartime America by the four radio networks. Norman Corwin directed the series.
Box   494
Folder   1
1942
February 14, #1, “America at War,” by Norman Corwin
February 21, #2, “The White House and the War,” by William Robson, John Driscoll, and Norman Corwin
February 28, #3, “Your Navy,” by Maxwell Anderson
March 7, #4, “Your Army,” by Stephen Vincent Benet
March 14, #5, “The United Nations,” by George Faulkner
March 21, #6, “You're on Your Own,” by Philip Wylie
Box   494
Folder   2
March 28, #7, “It's in the Work,” by Norman Corwin
April 4, #8, partial script only
April 11, #9, “The Enemy,” by Norman Corwin
April 18, #10, “Concerning Axis Propaganda,” by Norman Corwin
April 25, #11, “Smith Against the Axis,” by Ranald MacDougall
May 2, #12, “To the Young,” by Norman Corwin
This Woman's Secret. Scripts, 1945-1949
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of self-contained, fifteen-minute, human-interest narratives broadcast daily, Monday through Friday, from NBC's Hollywood studios.
Box   494
Folder   3
1945 September 3-7, #121-125
1946 September 2-6, #381-385
Box   494
Folder   4
1947 September 1-5, #641-645
1948
September 8-10, #908-910
September 13-14, #911-913
Box   494
Folder   5
1949
September 14-16, #1173-1175
September 19-20, #1176-1177
Today in Washington. Script, 1969
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a news program featuring Paul Friedman.
Box   494
Folder   6
1969 July 22
Tom Mix Ralston Straightshooters. Scripts, 1940-1941
Physical Description: 5 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a WENR and Blue Network children's adventure serial broadcast fifteen minutes daily, Monday through Friday. The program originated in Chicago.
Box   494
Folder   7
1940
December 27, #65
December 30-31, #66-67
1941
January 1 (cancelled)
January 2-3, #68-69
January 6-10, #70-74
January 13-17, #75-79
Box   494
Folder   8
January 20-24, #80-84
January 27-31, #85-89
February 3-7, #90-94
Box   494
Folder   9
February 10-14, #95-99
Box   495
Folder   1
February 17-21, #100-104
March 3-7, #110-114
Box   495
Folder   2
March 10-14, #115-119
March 17-21, #120-124
March 24-28, #125-129
March 31, #130
True Adventures. Scripts, 1955
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series of amazing five-minute stores in which life is oftem more surprising than fiction. Ruth Lieban wrote the scripts.
Box   495
Folder   3
1955
May 30, #1, “King of the Castaways”
May 31, #2, “The Boy Who Couldn't Sing 'Silent Night'”
June 1, #3, “The Disappearance of Diamond Dick”
June 2, #4, “The Haunted Ship”
June 3, #5, “The Wisconsin Youth Who Baffled the Kremlin”
June 6, #6, “The Bargain that Caused a War”
June 7, #7, “The Dog with the Second Sight”
June 8, #8, “The Baby Carriage that Changed Japan”
June 9, #9, “The Wrong Voyage Home”
June 10, #10, “The Tale of the Abandoned Sea Chest”
June 13, #11, “Lucky Smashup”
June 14, #12, “He Leaped Before He Looked”
June 15, #13, “The Ghost Who Won a Lawsuit”
June 16, #14, “The Best Deed of All”
June 17, #15, “A Mouse Is Born”
June 20, #16, “There's One Born Every Minute”
June 21, #17, “The Lock That Led to Freedom”
June 22, #18, “The Solid Gold Joke”
June 23, #19, “The Boy Who Wouldn't Play Ball”
June 24, #20, “The City that Never Was”
June 27, #21, “Jennie and the Genius”
June 30, #24, “The Most Important Dead Letter”
July 1, #25, “A Short Cut to Hades”
Twenty-Four Hours in History. Scripts, 1943
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Seven scripts of a daily, fifteen-minute Red Network news program originating in Hollywood.
Box   495
Folder   4
1943 September 1-7
[United Nations Broadcasts]. Script, 1951
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Sample script of a series of dramatic case histories presented by United Nations Radio. The program was produced by Gerald Kean of United Nations Radio.
Box   495
Folder   5
1951, circa March, #3, “Shooting Gallery”
The University of Chicago Round Table. Script, 1940
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Script of the five-hundredth program of radio's oldest public service network broadcast. The weekly, half-hour series of informal discussions originated on the campus of the University of Chicago. Published transcripts of most programs broadcast from 1938 to 1955 are included in the holdings of the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Memorial Library; this script is among the missing.
Box   495
Folder   6
1940 December 29, “Education in 1951”
Visiting Nurse of the Air. Scripts, 1943-1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Three sample scripts of a weekly Red Network series of fifteen-minute health talks by Grace L. Smith.
Box   495
Folder   7
1943 September 4, #37, “Infantile Paralysis”
1944 September 3, #86, [Child Care]
1945 September 2, #137, “Arteriosclerosis”
Voice of a Nation. Scripts, 1943-1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Ten annotated scripts of a fifteen-minute news program broadcast daily, Monday through Friday, from NBC's Hollywood studios. The program consisted of editorials from various newspapers across the country edited by John Reddy and reported by Jack Latham and Frank Hemingway.
Box   495
Folder   8
1943 September 7 (30-minute broadcast)
1944 September 4-8
1945 September 3-7
The Voice of Prophecy. Scripts, 1959-1960, 1962
Physical Description: 3 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly, half-hour Seventh-Day Adventist program featuring talks by H. M. S. Richards and music by The King's Heralds, Del Delker, and Brad Braley. The program originated in Los Angeles.
Box   495
Folder   9
1959
January 18, #3, “The Teaching Earth”
January 25, #4, “Bible Questions”
February 1, #5, “The Most Impressive Sermon”
February 15, #7, “Wonders of the Sky”
February 22, #8, “Bible Questions”
March 8, #10, “The Deity of Christ”
March 15, #11, “The Incarnation of Christ”
March 22, #12, “The Crucifixtion of Christ”
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
April 5, #14, “A Man From Outer Space Will Arrive Someday”
April 12, #15, “Hands on the Table”
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
April 19, #16, “Preaching Forgiveness”
April 26, #17, “Bible Questions”
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
May 24, partial script
June 21, #25, “Our Distinctive Doctrines”
July 19, #29, partial script
July 26, #30, partial script
September 6, #36, “Living a Double Life”
September 20, #38, partial script
October 18, #42, partial script
October 25, #43, partial script
November 15, #46, partial script
November 22, #47, partial script
December 20, #51, “The Bethlehem Manger”
December 27, #52, “Selah!”
1960
January 3, #1, “Give Me Tomorrow”
January 10, #2, “Great Events of Revelations 20”
January 17, #3, “Trouble in Space”
January 24, #4, “The Purchased Kingdom”
January 31, #5, “Bible Questions Answered”
February 14, #7, “The Three Worlds of Holy Scripture”
February 28, #9, “Bible Questions”
March 13, #11, “The Two Kingdoms”
March 20, #12, partial script
March 27, #13, “Bible Questions Answered”
April 3, #14, partial script
April 10, #15, “Repentence and Conversion Necessary”
April 16, #16, “I Am... the Life”
April 24, #17, “Bible Questions”
May 22, #21, “The New Jerusalem”
May 29, #22, “Bible Questions Answered”
June 5, #23, partial script
June 12, #24, “Two Resurrections”
June 19, #25, partial script
July 10, #28, “Christ, Israel's Messiah”
July 24, #30, “Who Is the Messiah?”
July 31, #31, “Who Is This Man?”
August 7, #32, “Are You Maladjusted?”
Box   495
Folder   10
August 14, #33, “A Burning Bush”
August 21, #34, “The Law of Love”
August 28, #35, “The Earth for the Blessed”
September 4, #36, “Cut-Rate Religion”
September 11, #37, “Why Not Try the Bible?”
September 18, #38, “Faith of the Earth”
September 25, #39, “God's Eternal Purpose”
October 2, #40, Special Thirtieth Anniversary Broadcast
October 9, #41, “Our Need of the Holy Spirit”
October 16, #42, “All the Holy Angels”
October 23, #43, partial script
November 6, #45, “Are You in Prison?”
November 13, #46, “The Sinner's Prayer”
November 20, #47, “Thanksgiving Is Coming”
December 11, #50, “Signs of Christ's Coming”
December 18, #51, “Your Life Work”
1962
January 7, #1, “The Garden Story”
January 14, #2, “The Flood of Noah”
January 21, #3, “The Tower of Babel”
January 28, #4, “When the Fire Fell”
February 4, #5, “The Image of Nations”
February 11, #6, “Joseph and His Brothers”
February 18, #7, “Every Man's Light”
March 4, #9, “Beasts From the Sea”
March 11, #10, “Christ Baptized in Jordon”
March 18, #11, “Christ in Temptation”
March 25, #12, “Bible Questions Answered”
April 1, #13, “The Garden of Gethsemane”
April 8, #14, “In Pilate's Judgment Hall”
April 15, #15, “The Day Christ Died”
April 22, #16, “I Believe in Life”
April 29, #17, “He Ascended to Heaven”
May 6, #18, “Christ and the Sabbath”
May 13, #19, “He Was Transfigured”
May 20, #20, “Blessing the Children”
May 27, #21, “To Be Or Not to Be”
June 3, #22, “Christ Honors Marriage”
June 10, #23, “God Gives Ten Commandments”
June 17, #24, “The Temple of Solomon”
Wake Up America! Scripts, 1941-1947.
Physical Description: 6 volumes in 4 folders (0.5 c.f.) 
Scope and Content Note: Published transcripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute radio debates and panel discussions sponsored by the American Economic Foundation. The program was aired on the Blue Network through 1943.
Box   506
Folder   4
1941
September 28, #92, “What Would Be the Economic Consequences of our Direct Participation in the War?”
October 5, #93, “Social Planning Versus Individual Initiative Under Free Enterprise”
October 12, #94, “Can Democracy Survive Under Present Economic Conditions?”
October 19, #95, “Would a Mediated Peace Be Desirable Under Present Circumstances?”
October 26, #96, “Should the Federal Government Regulate Labor Unions?”
November 2, #97, “What Would Inflation Mean to You?”
November 9, #98, “Can Government Control Prices Through Legislation?”
November 23, #99, “Can and Should Monetary Inflation Be Avoided?”
November 30, #100, “Should Labor Have the Right to Strike During the Defense Emergency?”
December 7, #101, “Can There Be a Substantial Reduction in Non-Defense Expenditures of the Federal Government?”
December 21, #102, “Is a Collective Economy Compatible with Economic Freedom?”
December 28, #103, “To What Extent Should We Suspend Our Free Institutions While We Are at War?”
1942
January 24, #104, “Just What Is Democracy?”
Box   506
Folder   5
January 11, #105, “What Happens to Civil Liberties Druing Times of War?”
January 18, #106, “Women's Role in War”
January 25, #107, “Can Wars Be Ended Under Private Capitalism?”
February 1, #108, “How Much Economic Equality Is Attainable?”
February 8, #109, “After the War -- What?”
February 15, #110, “Is a Closed Shop a Democratic Institution?”
February 22, #111, “Social Justice and Economic Reconstruction”
March 1, #112, “Has the Profit System Handicapped America's War Production?”
March 8, #113, “Is Industry Making Too Much Money Out of This War?”
March 15, #114, “Who Will Pay the Cost of This War -- And How?”
March 22, #115, “What Would Socialism Mean to America?”
March 29, #116, “Has America Gone Soft?”
April 5, #117, “South America -- Frontier of the Future”
April 12, #118, “How Can the War Effort Be Improved?”
April 19, #119, “Why Is Japan Fighting?”
April 26, #120, “Is Revolution Likely in Occupied Europe?”
May 3, #121, “President Roosevelt's Seven-Point Anti-Inflation Program”
May 17, #122, “The Road We Are Traveling”
May 24, #123, “What Can Be Done Now to Improve War Morale?”
May 31, #124, “Maintenance of Membership”
June 7, #125, “Is Democratic Socialism Possible?”
June 14, #126, “Would a Sales Tax Benefit the War Effort?”
June 21, #127, “Is War Destroying Free Enterprise?”
June 28, #128, “Post-War Problems in the Western Hemisphere”
July 5, #129, “Should a Congressman Be Defeated for Re-Election Because of this Pre-Pearl Harbor Attitude Toward America's Participation in the War?”
July 12, #130, “The Problems of Lasting Peace”
August 30, #131, “Your Next Year's Taxes”
September 6, #132, “Are the Four Freedoms Enough?”
September 13, #133, “News, Censorship and Morale”
September 20, #134, “Should the Draft Age Be Lowered to 18?”
September 27, #135, “Should the People Have a Greater Voice in the Conduct of the War?”
October 4, #136, “How Can America Best Solve Its Manpower Problem?”
October 11, #137, “Would A Supreme Command of the United Nations Be Desirable?”
October 18, #138, “Is a Second Front Practical at This Time?”
October 25, #139, “Would a Planned Economy Destroy Our Two Party System?”
November 1, #140, “Is Civilian Morale Retarding Victory?”
November 8, #141, “What Kind of an America Are We Fighting For?”
November 14, #142, “Is Our Silver Policy Sound?”
November 22, #143, “Should the Government Accept Responsibility for Full Post-War Employment?”
November 29, #144, “Would Immediate Freedom for India Hasten or Retard Victory?”
December 6, #145, “Is the $25,000 Salary Limitation Justifiable?”
December 13, #146, “Should Congress Assume Greater Responsibility in Domestic Affairs and Planning for Peace?”
December 20, #147, “Is Washington Over-Regulating War Industry?”
December 27, #148, “What Is the War Doing to Our Colleges?”
1943
January 3, #149, “Must Civilians Be Drafted for War Work?”
January 10, #150, “Can the People Have a Voice in Rationing?”
January 17, #151, “How Can We Solve the Shipping Crisis?”
January 24, #152, “Would Freedom From Want Create a Better World?”
January 31, #153, “What Should Be Done With Conquered Germany?”
February 7, #154, “What Should Be Done with Conquered Japan?”
February 14, #155, “Does the Profit System Penalize the Worker?”
February 21, #156, “What Is Free Enterprise?”
February 28, #157, “Should the Present Draft Laws Be Revised?”
March 7, #158, “Is Business Making Too Much Money Out of the War?”
March 14, #159, “What Should Be Done About Last Year's Income Tax Assessment?”
March 21, #160, “Can Free Enterprise Carry the Post-War Load?”
March 28, #161, “Can Our Manpower Problem Be Solved Through Voluntary Cooperation?”
April 4, #162, “What Kind of an America Are We Fighting For?”
April 11, #163, “What Would Thomas Jefferson Do Today?”
April 18, #164, “Should American Youth Support the Re-Establishment After War of Competitive Enterprise As Our Dominant Economic System?”
April 25, #165, “From Cradle to the Grave”
May 2, #166, “Will There Be Enough Food?”
May 9, #167, “Should Collective Bargaining Include Factory Foremen?”
May 16, #168, “Canada and the United States in the Post-War World”
May 23, #169, “What Stands in the Way of Higher Wages?”
May 30, #170, “Can We Hope for Effective Revolt in Occupied Europe?”
June 6, #171, “The Place of the Government in Post-War Prosperity”
June 13, #172, “Is Time on Japan's Side?”
June 20, #173, “Can We Head Off Serious Inflation?”
June 27, #174, “Does Modern Education Equip for Freedom?”
July 4, #175, “The Home Front in Relation to the Military Front”
July 11, #176, “Is Our Peace Planning Concrete and Realistic?”
September 5, #177, “Is Our Foreign Policy Winning Us Friends Abroad?”
September 12, #178, “Is an International Police Force Practical?”
September 19, #179, “Would a Military Alliance with Great Britain Contribute to a More Lasting Peace?”
September 26, #180, “Do We Understand Russia?”
October 3, #181, “Where Are Post-War Jobs Coming From?, Part 1”
October 10, #182, “Where Are Post-War Jobs Coming From?, Part 2”
October 17, #183, “The Future of the Liberal Arts College”
October 24, #184, “Does Any National Emergency Justify a Fourth Term?”
October 31, #185, “What Kind of America Do the Boys Want to Come Home To?”
November 7, #186, “What Is This Thing Called Capitalism?”
November 14, #187, “Does Congress' Desire for Re-Election Penalize Good Government?”
November 21, #188, “Where Are Post-War Jobs Coming From?, Part 3”
November 28, #189, “Oil -- Today and Tomorrow”
December 5, #190, “Should American Internationalism Involve Military Alliances?'
December 12, #191, “Where's the Money Coming From for Post-War Rehabilitation?”
December 19, #192, “What Part Should Congress Play in Determing Our Post-War Commitments Abroad?”
December 26, #193, “Can We Look Forward to a Better World?”
Box   506
Folder   6
1944
January 9, #194, “Who Can Best Provide Post-War Jobs -- Private Industry or Government?”
January 16, #195, “What Economic Advantages Can America Expect from This War?”
January 30, #197, “Do We Need an Economic Bill of Rights”
#198, “Does Private Capitalism Breed Monopoly?”
#199, “How Are We Doing on the Diplomatic Front?”
#200, “What Price Social Security?”
#201, “Is America Moving Toward Fascism?”
#202, “The Role of Russia in the Post-War World”
#203, “Is American Democracy Threatened from Within?”
#204, “What Should Be Done with Defeated Germany?”
#205, “How Long Will the War Last?”
#206, “How Long Will the Public Debt Affect the Private Citizen in Post-War America?”
#207, “America's Post-War Miliary Policy”
#208, “Will Present Limitations of Business Profit Handicap Post-War Jobs?”
#209, “What is Fascism?”
#210, “Should America Re-examine Its Faith?”
#211, “Is There Any Substitute for Military Alliances?”
#212, “The Freedoms for Which We Fight”
#213, “What Kind of Post-war American Does Young America Want?”
#214, “Mobilizing for Abundance in the Post-War World”
#215, “Has America an Economic Future in the Orient?”
#216, “Should White Collar Wages Be Allowed to Rise?”
#217, “How Much Help Can Our Invasion Forces Expect from the Underground in Fortress Europe?”
#218, “Should Federal Social Security Be Abolished?”
#219, “Can German Morale Withstand Another Major Defeat?”
#220, “Will the Wagner Act Help or Hinder Post-war Employment?”
#221, “Will the Corporation Tax Handicap Post-war Employment?”
#222, “What Voice Should Labor Have in Management?”
#223, “Would the Continuation of Present Income Taxes Handicap Post-war Recovery?”
#224, “Should Organized Labor Take Sides Politically?”
#225, “Is the Fourth Term a Major Campaign Issue?”
#226, “How Long Should Government Economic Controls Continue After the War?”
#227, “Is Bureaucracy a Menace to Democracy?”
#228, “Are We Making Friends Abroad?”
#229, “Should Congress Ratify the Bretton Woods Conference Agreement?”
#230, “How Can We Guard Against Post-war Depression?”
#231, “Are Our Political Parties Becoming Class Conscious?”
#232, “Can Small Nations Have an Effective Voice in the Peace?”
#233, “Is Congress Assuming Its Reconversion Responsibilities?”
#234, “How Would a Change in Administration Affect the War Effort?”
#235, “What Will Our Votes Mean This November?”
#236, “Can the Peace Be Won Without Roosevelt?”
#237, “Are Communism and Fascism Campaign Issues?”
#238, “Roosevelt or Dewey?”
#239, “Will Germany Crack Before Spring?”
#240, “Does Internationalism Mean Imperialism?”
#241, “Foreign Trade and Full Employment?”
#242, “What Is Full Employment?”
#243, “Will Russia Fight Japan?”
#244, “Should America Have Compulsory Military Training After the War?”
#245, “Should the United States Change Its Basis of Treaty Ratification?”
#246, “What Do We Mean By Democracy?”
#247, “The World of Tomorrow”
#248, “What Is British Policy in the Mediterranean?”
1945
#249, “Is American Still the Land of Opportunity?”
#250, “What Is the Future of Social Security?”
#251, “Is Dumbarton Oaks Our Best Chance for Peace?”
#252, “Would Wage Incentives Help Us Solve the Manpower Crisis?”
#253, “Should Government Guarantee Sixty Million Jobs?”
#254, “Does Congress Need Modernization?”
#255, “What Is the Place of Foreign Trade in American Prosperity?
#256, “Do Pressure Groups Threaten American Democracy?”
#257, “Will Monopolies Create Post-war Problems?”
#258, “How Can Government Best Help Business?”
#259, “What Is Labor's Part in Post-War Adjustments?”
#260, “What Is Management's Role in Post-war Adjustments?”
#261, “What Economic Claim Has the Individual Upon Society?”
#262, “How Can Peace Be Assured in Asia?”
#263, “Foreign Trade and Domestic Prosperity?”
#264, “What Is the Meaning of Bretton Woods?”
#265, “What Are the Problems of a Guaranteed Annual Wage?”
#266, “Should Foremen Be Unionized?”
#267, “Let's Examine the Post-war Slogans”
#268, “What Will Happen to Post-war Wages?”
#269, “Does the Wagner Act Threaten Post-war Prosperity?”
#270, “What Is the Future of the New Deal?”
#271, “What Is Behind the British Election?”
#272, “Has the American Form of Government Outlived Its Usefulness?”
#273, “Should the Little Steel Formula Be Scrapped Now?”
#274, “Can China Unite?”
#275, “Does Economic Security Endanger Personal Liberty?”
#276, “What Is America's Role in World Economic Stabilization?”
#277, “Can We Realize Full Employment?”
#278, “Is Government Economic Planning Compatible With Democracy?”
#279, “The Future of Labor Unions in Postwar America”
#281, “Has the American Educational System Been a Success?”
#282, “Could Civilization Survive Another World War?”
#283, “What Are the Possibilities for Democracy in Japan?”
#284, “What Does the British Labor Victory Mean to America?”
#285, “How Much Bureaucracy Must We Have?”
#286, “Should Congress Adopt the Murray Full Employment Bill?”
September 30, #287, “Would Increased Wages Mean Increased Prices?”
October 7, #288, “Should Price Ceilings Be Maintained?”
October 14, #289, “Is Industry-Wide Collective Bargaining Against the Public Interest?”
October 21, #290, “What Is Wrong With Labor-Management Relations?”
October 28, #291, “Would Free Trade Increase Our Domestic Prosperity?”
November 4, #292, “Has Victory Advanced the Cause of World Democracy?”
November 11, #293, “What Is Congress's Role in Establishing a Labor Policy?”
November 18, #294, “Should Congress Pass the 65 Cents an Hour Minimum Wage Law?”
November 25, #295, “Should the United States Subsidize British Socialism?”
December 2, #296, “How Would a 30% Wage Increase Affect the Public Interest?”
December 9, #297, “Which Way America?”
December 16, #298, “What Is Labor's Stake in Profits?”
December 23, #299, “Will Victory Create a Better World?”
December 30, #300, “Do Cartels Threaten International Peace?”
Box   506
Folder   7
1946
January 6, #301, “Does Price Control Mean Fewer Jobs?”
January 13, #302, “Is Crime an Economic Problem?”
January 20, #303, “What Has Gone Wrong With Collective Bargaining?”
January 27, #304, “What Are the Rights of Labor?”
February 3, #305, “What Are the Rights of Management?”
February 10, #306, “What Are the Rights of the Public in Wage Disputes?”
February 17, #307, “Will Socialism Solve Britain's Economic Crisis?”
February 24, #308, “Can We Avoid Serious Inflation?”
March 3, #309, “Does Economic Security Contradict Individual Freedom?”
March 10, #310, “What Is the Significance of the Minimum Wage?”
March 17, #311, “Is Monopoly Still an Economic Problem?”
March 24, #312, “Does the Right to Strike Infringe the Right to Work?”
March 31, #313, “Is Big Business Too Big?”
April 7, #314, “Why Does Russia Want Iranian Oil?”
April 16, #315, “What Is the Role of the Liberal Tradition in Human Progress?”
April 23, #316, “Should Foremen Join Labor Unions?”
April 30, #317, “Should Price Control Be Continued?”
May 7, #318, “Is Russia Moving Toward Political Democracy?”
May 14, #319, “Has the War Strengthened American Democracy?”
May 21, #320, “Does the Industrial Progress of the South Require Increased Unionization of Labor?”
May 28, #321, “Have Post-war Strikes Been Against the Public Interest?”
June 4, #322, “Should We Have National Compulsory Health Insurance?”
June 11, #323, “Should We Extend the Draft?”
June 18, #324, “Should the Wagner Act Be Amended?”
June 25, #325, “Is the Franco Regime a Threat to Peace?”
July 2, #326, “Is Russia a Threat to Peace?”
July 9, #327, “Is Socialism Working in England?”
July 16, #328, “Would Wage Incentives Promote Industrial Peace?”
July 23, #329, “What Should Be Our National Labor Policy?”
July 30, #330, “What Should Be Our National Labor Policy?”
August 6, #331, “What Is Holding Up Production?”
August 13, #332, “How Can We Maintain a High Level of Employment?”
August 20, #333, “Can Competition Hold Prices in Line?”
August 27, #334, “What Is the Answer to the Housing Shortage?”
September 3, #335, “What Is Holding Up New Housing?”
September 10, #336, “Is Collective Bargaining Out of Balance?”
September 22, #337, “Must We Have Boom and Bust?”
September 29, #338, “Can Industry Offer a Guaranteed Annual Wage?”
October 6, #339, “What Is Socialism?”
October 13, #340, “What Are the Economic Issues of the Election?”
October 20, #341, “Is There a Threat to Freedom of Speech on the Air?”
October 27, #342, “What Do We Mean By Un-American Activities?”
November 3, #343, “Will 1947 Bring Industrial Peace?”
November 10, #344, “Would Socialism Benefit Canada?”
November 17, #345, “How Can Labor Get Higher Real Wages?”
November 24, #346, “Should the Closed Shop Be Outlawed?”
December 1, #347, “What Should Be Done About Rent Ceilings?”
December 8, #348, “What Is the Future of Trade Unionism?”
December 15, #349, “Are High Personal Taxes a Threat to Our National Welfare?”
December 29, #350, “Would a General Wage Increase Now Benefit the Country?”
December 29, #351, “Do Present Profits Justify a Wage Increase?”
1947
January 5, #352, “Farm Prices and Prosperity”
January 12, #353, “Is Our Economic Policy in the Far East Sound?”
January 19, #354, “What Is Labor's Stake in Capitalism?”
January 26, #355, “What Is Capitalism?”
February 2, #356, “What Are the Issues of Portal-to-Portal Pay?”
February 9, #357, “Do We Need New Labor Legislation?”
February 16, #358, “Are High Personal Income Taxes Handicapping Prosperity?”
February 23, #359, “What Is Liberalism?”
March 2, #360, “How Can Capitalism Better Serve to Worker?”
Walter Winchell's Journal. Scripts, 1933-1942
Physical Description: 1 1/2 boxes (7 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly, fifteen-minute Blue Network series of news, gossip, and comment, also known as the Jergens Journal.
Box   496
Folder   1
1933
October 1, 8, 15, 29
November 12
December 17
1934
January 14
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
January 21
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
May 13
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
November 11, 18, 25
December 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
1935
Box   496
Folder   2
January 6, 13, 20
February 3, 17, 24
March 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
April 7, 14, 21, 28
May 5, 12, 19, 26
September 8, 15, 22, 29
October 6, 20, 27
November 3
Physical Description: (2 versions) 
November 10, 17, 24
December 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
1936
Box   496
Folder   3
January 12, 22, 26
February 2, 16
March 1, 8, 15, 22
March 29 (2 versions)
April 5 (2 versions)
April 12 (2 versions)
April 19 (2 versions)
April 26 (2 versions)
May 3 (2 versions)
May 10 (2 versions)
May 17, 24, 31
June 7, 14, 21, 28
September 6, 13, 20, 27
Box   496
Folder   4
October 4, 11, 18
October 25 (2 versions)
November 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
December 6
December 13 (2 versions)
December 20, 27
Box   496
Folder   5
1937
January 3, 10, 24, 31
February 7, 14, 21, 28
March 7, 14, 21, 28
April 4, 11, 18, 25
May 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
June 6, 13, 20, 27
Box   496
Folder   6
July 4, 18, 25
August 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
September 5, 12, 19, 26
October 3, 10, 17, 25, 31
November 7, 14, 21, 28
December 5, 12, 19, 26
1938
Box   496
Folder   7
January 2
February 20, 27
March 20
April 10, 17
May 15, 22
June 5, 19, 26
July 3, 24, 31
August 7, 14, 21, 28
September 11, 18, 25
October 2, 16, 23
November 6, 13, 20, 27
December 4, 11, 18, 25
1939
Box   496
Folder   8
January 1, 8, 15, 22, 29
February 5, 12, 19, 26
March 5, 12, 19, 26
April 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
May 7, 14, 21, 28
June 4, 11, 18, 25
Box   497
Folder   1
July 2
August 6, 13, 20, 27
September 3, 10, 17
October 8, 15, 22
November 5, 12, 19
December 17, 31
1940
January 14, 21, 28
February 4, 11, 18
March 24
April 7, 14, 21
May 5, 12
June 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
Box   497
Folder   2
July 7, 14, 21, 28
August 18, 25
September 1, 15, 29
October 6
November 3, 10, 17, 24
December 29
1941
January 26
February 16, 23
March 9, 16, 23, 30
April 6, 13, 20
May 11, 25
June 1, 8, 15, 22
Box   497
Folder   3
July 6
August 3, 10, 17, 24, 31
September 7, 28
October 5, 12, 19, 26
November 2, 9, 16, 23, 30
December 7, 14, 21, 28
1942
January 4, 11, 18, 25
February 1, 8, 15, 22
Washington Report. Scripts, 1971
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Two sample scripts of a news program reporting actions of the federal government. The scripts apparently are compilations of portions of other news broadcasts by various members of the NBC news staff.
Box   497
Folder   4
1971
August 25
August 27
Wings of Destiny. Script, 1940
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a weekly, thirty-minute Red Network adventure drama series prepared for radio by Mel Williamson. Each program ended with a contest in which a listener was awarded a Piper Cub airplane. The program originated a WMAQ in Chicago.
Box   497
Folder   5
1940 December 27
The Woman in My House. Scripts. 1957-1958
Physical Description: 1 1/2 boxes (7 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a daily dramatic serial. Episodes 1628 through 1976 and 1981 were written by Gil Faust; others were written by the serial's creator and director, Carleton E. Morse.
1957
Box   497
Folder   6
June 19, #1628
June 24, #1631
September 9, #1682
October 2, #1703
October 4, #1705
October 9, #1708
October 11, #1710
October 17-21, #1714-6
October 24-29, #1719-22
Box   497
Folder   7
October 30-November 4, #1723-26
November 7-8, #1729-30
November 15-19, #1732-4
December 26, #1761
1958
July 8-9, #1898-9
Box   497
Folder   8
July 16-31, #1904-15
Box   497
Folder   9
August 1-12, #1916-23
Box   498
Folder   1
August 13-19, #1924-8
September 12, #1945
September 23, #1952
October 2-9, #1949-54
Box   498
Folder   2
October 10-13, #1965-6
October 21-November 3, 1972-81
Box   498
Folder   3
November 4-11, #1982-7
November 14-18, #1990-2
November 26-28, #1994-5
Box   498
Folder   4
December 1-12, #1996-2005
Advertisements, 1957 July 1-October 1
Words at War. Scripts, 1943-1944
Physical Description: 2 1/2 boxes (1 foot, 11 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly WEAF series of dramatized adaptations of the greatest books to come out of the war. The series was presented in cooperation with the Council on Books in Wartime.
1943
Box   498
Folder   5
June 24, #1, “Combined Operations,” adapted by Richard McDonagh
July 1, #2, “One World,” by Wendell Willkie, adapted by Richard McDonagh
July 10, #3, “They Call It Pacific,” by Clark Lee, adapted by Neal Hopkins
July 17, #4, “The Last Days of Sevastopol,” by Boris Voyetekhov, adapted by Richard McDonagh
July 24, #5, “The Ship,” by C. S. Forester, Adapted by Edmund Birnbyer
July 31, #6, “From the Land of the Silent People,” by Robert St. John, adapted by Neal Hopkins
August 7, #7, “Prisoner of the Japs,” by Gwen Dew, adapted by Nora Stirling
August 14, #8, “Love at First Flight,” by Charles Spalding and Otis Carney, adapted by Edmund Birnbryer
August 19, #9, “The Last Days of Sevastopol,” by Boris Voyetekhov, adapted by Richard McDonagh
August 21, #10, “Malta Spitfire,” by George F. Buerling and Leslie Roberts, adapted by Kenneth White
Box   499
Folder   1
August 26, #11, “Burma Surgeon,” by Gordon S. Seagrave, adapted by Neal Hopkins
September 2, #12, “Dynamite Cargo,” by Fred Herman, adapted by Richard McDonagh
September 9, #13, “Falange,” by Allan Chase, adapted by Neal Hopkins
September 16, #14, “Since You Went Away,” by Margaret Buell Wilder, adapted by Nora Stirling
September 23, #15, “They Shall Not Have Me.,” by Jean Helion, adapted by Kenneth White
September 30, #16, “Battle Hymn of China,” by Agnes Smedley, adapted by Kenneth White
Box   499
Folder   2
October 5, #17, “Eighty-three Days: The Survival of Seaman Izzy,” by Mark Murphy, adapted by Edith Sommer
October 12, #18, “Paris -- Underground,” by Etta Shiber, adapted by Richard McDonagh
October 19, #19, “Short Cut to Tokyo,” by Corey Ford, adapted by William Welch
October 26, #20, “Who Dare to Live,” by Frederick B. Watt, adapted by Neal Hopkins
November 2, #21, “Here Is Your War,” by Ernie Pyle, adapted by Gerald Holland
November 9, #22, “To All Hands,” by John Mason Brown, adapted by Gerald Holland
Box   499
Folder   3
November 16, #23, “Skyways to Berlin,” by J. M. Redding and H. Leyshon, adapted by Edith Sommer
November 23, #24, “Escape from the Balkans,” by Michael Padev, adapted by Neal Hopkins
November 30, #25, “Ave Duce,” based on “Fruits of Fascism” by Herbert L. Matthews, “Sawdust Caeser” by George Seldes and “Balcony Empire,” by Reynolds and Eleanor Packard, adapted by Richard McDonagh
December 7, #26, “A Book of War Letters,” edited by Harry E. Maule, adapted by Nora Stirling
December 14, #27, “Mother America” and “I Saw the Fall of the Philippines” by Carlos P. Romulo, adapted by gerald Holland
December 21, “Log Book,” by Frank Laskier, adapted by Edmund Birnbryer
December 28, #29, “The Ninth Commandment,” by Hendrick Willem Van Loon, adapted by Richard McDonagh
1944
January 4, #30, “They Shall Inherit the Earth,” by Arnold Zoff, adapted by Edith Sommer
Box   499
Folder   4
January 11, #31, “Eighty-Three Days: The Survival of Seaman Izzy,” by Mark Murphy, adapted by Edith Sommer
January 18, #32, “Wartide,” by Lin Taiyi, adapted by Edith Sommer
January 25, #33, “Condition Red,” by Frederick J. Bell, adapted by Gerald Holland
February 1, #34, “The White Brigade,” by Robert Goffin, adapted by Ruth A. Brooks
February 8, #35, “George Washington Carver,” by Rackham Holt, adapted by Richard McDonagh
February 15, #36, “The New Sun,” by Taro Yashima, adapted by Kenneth White
February 22, #37, “Assignment: U.S.A.,” by Selden Menefee, adapted by Richard McDonagh
Box   499
Folder   5
February 29, #38, “I Served on Bataan,” by Juanita Redmond, adapted by Milton Geiger
March 7, #39, “The Weeping Wood,” by Vicki Baum, adapted by Neal Hopkins
March 14, #40, “Science at War,” by George W. Gray, adapted by Irve Tunick
March 21, #41, “Der Fuehrer,” by Konrad Heiden, adapted by Max Ehrlich
March 28, #42, “A Bell for Adano,” by John Hersey, adapted by Lawrence Menkin
April 4, #43, “Assignment: U.S.A.,” by Selden Menefee, adapted by Richard McDonagh
April 11, #44, “Wild River,” by Anna Louise Strong, adapted by Charles Newton
Box   499
Folder   6
April 18, #45, “The Silence of the Sea,” by Cyril Connolly, adapted by Lawrence Menkin
April 25, #46, “Tarawa,” by Robert Sherrod, adapted by Tom Langan
May 2, #47, “The Curtain Rises,” by Quentin Reynolds, adapted by Gerald Holland
May 9, #48, “Gunners Get Glory,” by Lloyd Wendt, adapted by Ruth A. Brooks
May 16, #49, “Lifeline,” by Robert Curse, adapted by Charles Newton
May 23, #50, “Lend-Lease, Weapon for Victory,” by Edward R. Stettinius, adapted by Ben Kagan
May 30, #51, “The Navy Hunts the CGR 3070,” by Lawrence Thompson, adapted by Edith Sommer
Box   500
Folder   1
June 20, #53, “Pacific Partner,” by George H. Johnston, adapted by Ben Kagan
June 27, #54, “Fair Stood the Wind for France,” by H. E. Bates, adapted by Gerald Holland
July 4, #55, “War Criminals and Punishment,” by George Creel, adapted by Richard McDonagh
July 11, #56, “Captain Retread,” by Donald Hough, adapted by Gerald Holland
July 18, #57, “War Below Zero,” by Bernt Balchen, Corey Ford, and Oliver LaFarge, adapted by Edith Sommer
August 1, #58, “Headquarters Budapest,” by Robert Parker, adapted by Gerald Holland
Box   500
Folder   2
August 8, #59, “The Nazis Go Underground,” by Curt Reiss, adapted by Ben Kagan
August 15, #60, “China Looks Forward” and “Heaven Below,” by Sun Fo and E. H. Clayton, respectively; adapted by Gerald Holland
August 22, #61, “Argentine Diary,” by Ray Josephs, adapted by Morton Wishengrad
August 29, #62, “Simone,” by Lion Feuchtwanger, adapted by Edith Sommer
September 5, #63, “The Veteran Comes Back,” by Willard Waller, adopted by Ben Kagan
September 12, #64, “One Man Air Force,” by Ira Wolfert, adapted by Gerald Holland
Box   500
Folder   3
September 19, #65, “The Time for Decision” and “U.S. War Aims,” by Sumner Wells and Walter Lippmann, respectively; adapted by Gerald Holland
September 26, #66, “Journey Through Chaos,” by Agnes E. Meyer, adapted by Peter Harkins
October 3, #67, “Pacific Victory 1945,” by Joseph Driscoll, adapted by Gerald Holland
October 10, #68, “The Veteran Comes Back,” by Willard Waller, adapted by Ben Kagan
October 17, #69, “War Criminals and Punishment,” by George Creel, adapted by Richard P. McDonagh
October 24, #70, “Still Time to Die,” by Jack Belden, adapted by Ben Kagan
October 31, #71, “Return of the Traveller,” by Rex Warner, adapted by Ben Kagan
Box   500
Folder   4
November 14, #72, “One Damn Thing after Another,” by Tom Treanor, adapted by Gerald Holland
November 21, #73, “Barriers Down,” by Kent Cooper, adapted by Raphael Hayes
November 28, #74, “Camp Followers,” by Barbara Klaw, adapted by Priscilla Kent
December 5, #75, “Guys on the Ground,” by Alfred Friendly, adapted by Peter Martin
December 12, #76, “Your School, Your Children,” by Marie Syrkin, adapted by Morton Wishengrad
December 19, #77, “The Cross and the Arrow,” by Albert Maltz, adapted by Ben Kagan
December 26, #78, “Scapegoats in History” and “History of Bigotry in the United States,” by Kenneth M. Gould and Gustavus Myers, respectively; adapted by Ben Kagan
1945
Box   500
Folder   5
January 2, #79, “It's Always Tomorrow,” by Robert St. John, adapted by Martin Sterne
January 9, #80, “Borrowed Night,” by Oscar Ray, adapted by Norman Winter and Richard McDonagh
January 16, #81, “Verdict on India,” by Beverly Nichols, adapted by Edward Jurist
January 23, #82, “Story of a Secret State,” by Jan Karski, adapted by Ben Kagan
February 6, #83, “Ten Escape from Tojo,” by Welbourn Kelley, adapted by Richard P. McDonagh
February 13, #84, “What to Do with Germany,” by Louis Nizer, adapted by Edward Jurist
February 20, #85, “Battle Report,” by Walter Karig, and Welbourn Kelley, adapted by Welbourn Kelley
Box   500
Folder   6
February 27, #86, “Faith of Our Fighters,” by Elwood C. Nance, adapted by Father Timothy Mulvey
March 6, #87, “The Rainbow,” by Wanda Wasilewska, adapted by Stanley Field
March 13, #88, “Can Do,” by William Bradford Huie, adapted by Steve Allen
March 20, #89, “Tomorrow Will Sing,: by Elliot Arnold, adapted by Edward Jurist
March 27, #90, “Banshee Harvest,” by Jum Phelan, adapted by Gerald Holland
April 3, #91, “Full Employment in a Free Society,” by William H. Beveridge, adapted by Ben Kagan
April 10, #92, “Apartment in Athens,” by Glenway Wescott, adapted by Phyllis Parker
Box   501
Folder   1
April 17, #93, “They Left the Back Door Open,” by L. S. B. Shapiro, adapted by Edward Jurist
April 24, #94, “Brave Men,” by Ernie Pyle, adapted by Gerald Holland
May 1, #95, “The Hideout,” by Egon Hostovsky, adapted by Ben Kagan
May 15, #96, “The Road to Serfdom,” by Friedrich A. Hayek, adapted by Jack Wilson
May 22, #97, “Wartime Racketeers,” by Harry Lever and Joseph Young, adapted by Maxine Wood
May 29, #98, “Soldier to Civilian,” by George K. Pratt, adapted by Bafe Blau
June 5, #99, “My Country,” by Russell Davenport, adapted by Russell Devenport
The World and Washington. Script, 1971
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One script of the final broadcast of a program of news commentary featuring Richard Valeriani.
Box   501
Folder   2
1971 April 18
The World Is Yours. Scripts, 1939-1940
Physical Description: 1 volume 
Scope and Content Note: Listeners' aids, including excerpts from scripts, published by Columbia University Press to accompany a weekly series of thirty-minute dramas based on the exhibits and scientific investigations of the Smithsonian Institution. The programs, broadcast over the Red Network, were produced by the U. S. Office of Education, Federal Security Agency, with the cooperation of N.B.C., and with the assistance of the Work Projects Administration. Irve Tunick wrote the scripts.
Box   507
Folder   1
1939
October 1, #1, “There's a Fish for You--”
October 8, #2, “The Lucayans Discover Columbus”
October 15, #3, “Into the Realms of Sound”
October 22, #4, “The Derby and the Earthquake”
October 29, #5, “Man-Made Stone”
November 5, #6, “History on the March”
November 12, #7, “Skipper Discovers the Apes”
November 19, #8, “The Wind That Blew the Ribbon”
November 26, #9, “Gifts to the White Man”
December 3, #10, “Fish Poisoning in the Amazon Valley”
December 10, #11, “The Gem of India”
December 17, #12, “Montezuma and His Island Paradise”
December 24, #13, “Washington's Christmas Tree”
December 31, #14, “First New Year's Day Under the Constitution”
1940
January 7, #15, “From the Four Corners of the Earth”
January 14, #16, “Modernizing the 'Iron Horse' ”
January 21, #17, “Wonders of Electricity”
January 28, #18, “The Angry Earth”
February 4, #19, “The Vanishing Bison”
February 11, #20, “The Coins of the Greeks”
February 18, #21, “A Rapid Writing Machine”
February 25, #22, “Drowned in Dust”
March 3, #23, “One in Ten Million”
March 10, #24, “Fighting Noise”
March 17, #25, “Protecting Our Wild Life”
March 24, #26, “First-Line Defense Against Disease”
March 31, #27, “ 'On to Oregon' ”
April 7, #28, “Men of Progress”
April 14, #29, “A Gigantic Dragnet”
April 21, #30, “Reptiles That Ruled the Earth”
April 28, #31, “Our Golden Grain”
May 5, #32, “Communication by Mail”
May 12, #33, “Whistler -- the Artist and the Man”
May 19, #34, “An Icebound Continent”
May 26, #35, “A Fire-Eating Paper Chariot”
June 2, #36, “Bygone Plants and Animals”
June 9, #37, “Hand Wingers”
June 16, #38, “An Island Paradise”
June 23, #39, “An Eighteenth-Century Viking”
World News Roundup. Scripts. 1960-1971
Physical Description: 2 boxes 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of an international news program broadcast daily and featuring Wilson Hall, Russ Ward, and Dean Mell during the period documented.
1960
Box   501
Folder   3
July 9, 11-15
Box   501
Folder   4
July 16, 23, 25-30
September 18, 21, 24
Box   501
Folder   5
1961
April 14, 29
May 25, 27
1964
Box   501
Folder   6
July 7, 9-11, 13, 18, 20, 23, 29-30
Box   501
Folder   7
August 1, 19, 20-22, 24-25; October 1
Box   501
Folder   8
1966 June 3, 13
Box   501
Folder   9
1967 July 20, 21, 31 (fragments)
1969
Box   501
Folder   10
January 8, 9; February 10
Box   501
Folder   11
July 3-5, 7-12, 14-19, 21-26, 28-31
Box   501
Folder   12
November 1, 3-8, 10-15, 17-22, 24-29
1970
Box   502
Folder   1
February 9-14, 16, 17, 20, 21, 23-28
March 2-7, 9-14, 16-21, 23-25
Box   502
Folder   2
April 15-18, 20-25, 27-30
Box   502
Folder   3
May 1, 2, 6-9, 11-16, 18-23, 25-30
Box   502
Folder   1
August 24-29, 31
September 1-5, 7-12, 22
Box   502
Folder   2
November 3-7, 9-14, 16-21, 23-28, 30
1971
Box   502
Folder   3
March 1-6, 8-13, 15-20, 22-27, 29-31
Box   502
Folder   4
April 2, 3, 5-10, 13, 16, 17, 19-24, 26-30
Box   502
Folder   5
May 21, 22, 24-29, 31
June 1-4, 7-12, 14-19, 21-26, 28-30
Box   502
Folder   7
August 18-21, 23-28, 30, 31
September 1-4, 6-11, 13-18, 20, 21, 23-25, 27-30
The World Today. Scripts, 1928-1933
Physical Description: 5 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Selected published transcripts of a series of informal discussions of world affairs and personalities, broadcast weekly over WEAF and the Red Network by James G. McDonald.
Box   502
Folder   7
1928
April 23, #1, “Europe Convalescent”
April 30, #2, “Poincaré”
May 7, #3, “Von Hindenburg”
May 14, #4, “Mussolini”
May 21, #5, “Red Russia”
May 28, #6, “China”
June 4, #7, “Democratic Japan”
June 11, #8, “Great Britain”
June 18, #9, “Masaryk”
June 25, #10, “Briand”
July 2, #11, “Stresemann”
Box   502
Folder   8
1929
February 11, #30, “What Can Germany Pay?”
February 18, #31, “Politics in Germany”
February 25, #32, “Politics in France”
March 4, #33, “Hoover's Foreign Problems”
March 11, #34, “Is Britain Done?”
March 18, #35, “British Politics”
March 25, #36, “The Vatican-Italian Accord”
April 1, #37, “The Mexican Crisis”
April 8, #38, “Trotsky's Exile”
April 22, #39, “Mr. Root's Work”
April 29, #40, “The Experts' Report”
May 13, #42, “The Third British Empire”
May 20, #43, “The Mandates”
May 27, #44, “Zionism”
June 3, #45, “The British Election”
June 10, #46, “Naval Disarmament”
June 17, #47, “Liquidating the War”
July 1, #48, “Anglo-American Relations”
July 15, #50, “British Labor's Program”
Box   502
Folder   9
1930
March 17, #66, “Success or Failure in London”
March 24, #67, “Great Britain's Naval Needs”
March 31, #68, “The International Bank”
April 7, #69, “Progress in Haiti”
April 14, #70, “Von Hindenburg's Leadership”
April 21, #71, “The Political Crisis in Great Britain”
April 28, #72, “The Russian Agricultural Crisis”
May 5, #73, “The London Conference Before and After”
May 12, #74, “Gandhi's Crusade”
May 19, #75, “Civil War in China”
June 2, #77, “Anglo-Egyptian Relations”
June 9, #78, “The Franco-Italian Impasse”
June 16, #79, “Briand and the United States of Europe”
June 23, #80, “Naval Opinion on the London Treaty”
June 30, #81, “Rumania's Dynastic Crisis”
July 7, #82, “Politics in Japan”
July 14, #83, “The Simon Report”
July 21, #84, “The United States of India”
July 28, #85, “The New Monroe Doctrine”
August 4, #86, “Italy Seeks New Friends”
October 6, #87, “An Uneasy Europe”
October 13, #88, “The Crisis in Germany”
October 20, #89, “The Eleventh Assembly of the League”
October 27, #90, “The Issues in British Politics”
November 3, #91, “A Truce in China”
November 10, #92, “A Testing Time in Argentina”
November 17, #93, “Brazil in Revolution”
November 24, #94, “The Fourth British Empire”
December 8, #96, “Preparing to Disarm”
December 15, #97, “Will a New India Be Born at London?”
December 22, #98, “Austria Repulses Fascism”
December 29, #99, “1930 in Retrospect”
Box   502
Folder   10
1931
March 16, #109, “Hitlerites Challenge the Reichstag”
October 15, #126, “The Crisis in Europe”
October 22, #127, “Laval's Leadership”
October 29, #128, “Great Britain's Choice”
November 12, #130, “Franco-American Co-operation”
November 19, #131, “Spain Makes a Constitution”
November 26, #132, “Germany Faces a Hard Winter”
December 3, #133, “England's National Government”
December 10, #134, “Is the League Menaced by Manchuria?”
December 17, #135, “Grandi's Diplomacy”
December 24, #136, “Franco-German Rapprochement”
December 31, #137, “Constitutional Progress in India”
Box   503
Folder   1
1932
January 7, #138, “The International Outlook for 1932”
January 14, #139, “Japan Under the Kellogg Pact”
January 21, #140, “China -- Internal Politics”
January 28, #141, “Silver -- An International Problem”
March 3, #142, “The Eastern Crisis”
March 10, #143, “Disarmament Proposals”
March 17, #144, “The United States at Geneva”
March 24, #145, “Dangers to the League”
March 31, #146, “Are Sanctions Predictable?”
April 7, #147, “The Irish Free State”
April 14, #148, “The German Elections”
April 28, #150, “What Progress in Disarmament?”
May 5, #151, “An Interdependent World”
May 12, #152, “World-Wide Economic Disorganization”
May 19, #153, “Paying for the War”
May 26, #154, “Governments as 'Shylocks' and 'Defaulters”'
June 2, #155, “Shall International Trade Be Stifled?”
June 9, #156, “Gold -- Tyrant or Servant?”
November 26, #158, “Non-partisanship in Foreign Affairs”
December 3, #159, “The Question of Intergovernmental Debts”
December 10, #160, “Disarmament or Re-armament?”
December 17, #161, “The League and Manchukuo”
December 31, #162, “The Year in International Affairs”
Box   503
Folder   2
1933
January 7, #163, “World Economic Problems in 1933”
January 14, #164, “The State Department”
January 21, #165, “Philippine Independence”
January 28, #166, “Fascism in Japan”
February 4, #167, “Hitler's Accession to Power”
February 11, #168, “The Irish Election”
February 18, #169, “Cuban Revolt”
February 25, #170, “The USSR Makes Readjustments”
March 4, #171, “Foreign Problems Facing the Administration”
March 11, #172, “Changes in Party Power in Germany”
March 18, #173, “Japan Versus the League”
March 25, #174, “Peace or War in Europe?” by Raymond L. Buell
April 1, #175, “Soviet Recognition,” by Vera M. Dean
April 8, #176, “The American Tariff and the World Crisis,” by Maxwell S. Stewart
April 15, #177, “Economic and Military Disarmament,” by William T. Stone
April 22, #178, “American Policy in the Pacific,” by T. A. Bisson
April 29, #179, “Preparations for the World Economic Conference”
May 6, #180, “Franco-Russian Relations”
May 13, #181, “War in South America”
May 20, #182, “The President's Leadership”
May 27, #183, “The American Offer at Geneva”
June 3, #184, “The Political Background of the Economic Conference”
June 10, #185, “The American Stake in the Economic Conference,” by Raymond L. Buell
June 17, #186, “Nazi Germany,” by Mildred S. Wertheimer
June 24, #187, “The World Economic Conference in Session”
The World's Greatest Stories. Scripts, 1940-1944
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a series, also known as Story Dramas, of fifteen-minute short-story readings broadcast three evenings each week from NBC's Chicago studios. The programs, selected and narrated by Nelson Olmsted, were aired over WENR and the Blue Network through September, 1941 and over WMAQ and the Red Network thereafter.
Box   503
Folder   3
1940
November 18, “Success Story,” by James Gould Cozzens
December 4, “The Clerk's Quest,” by George Moore
1941
January 6, “The Room with Forty-eight Stars,” by Maurus Jokai
January 28, “The Signal Man,” by Charles Dickens
February 18, “The Man Without a Country,” by Edward Everett Hale
April 7, “The Bet,” by Anton Chekhov
July 17, “The Cask of Amontillado,” by Edgar Allan Poe
August 21, “The Scoop,” by James T. Farrell
September 23, “A Struggle for Life,” by Thomas Bailey Aldrich
October 13, “The Sire de Maletroit's Door,” by Robert Louis Stevenson
October 29, “Claustrophobia,” by Carter Goodloe
November 17, “Homecoming,” by Tom Tracy
December 26, “Evening,” by Zona Gale
Box   503
Folder   4
1942
January 2, “A Horseman in the Sky,” by Ambrose Bierce
January 21, “The Campers at Kitty Hawk,” by John Dos Passos, and “The Art of Flying,” by Dr. Samuel Johnson
February 10, “A Tale of Negative Gravity,” by Frank R. Stockton
March 17, “A Wedding Dress,” by Morely Callaghan
April 4, “The Death of Olivier Becaille,” by Emile Zola
May 25, “Mirrors,” by Massimo Bontempelli
June 20, “Vienna Roast,” by Harold W. Brecht
September 1, “The Open Boat,” by Stephen Crane
November 17, “O Brave New World,” by Peter Fleming
1943
January 19, “To Build a Fire,” by Jack London
February 1, “The False Gems,” by Guy de Maupassant
February 6, “A Friend to Alexander,” by James Thurber
August 28, “The Elephant Child,” by Rudyard Kipling
November 27, “The Misanthrope,” by J. D. Beresford
1944
January 8, “Fishhead,” by Irvin S. Cobb
February 5, “The Hunch,” by A. H. Z. Carr
You and Your Government. Scripts, 1932-1936
Physical Description: 1 folder and 5 volumes 
Scope and Content Note: Published transcripts and accompanying material concerning a weekly series of half-hour, non-partisan civics addresses and discussions. The programs were broadcast over WJZ and the Blue Network. Among those appearing were Charles A. Beard; John Dewey; Bronson Cutting; Arthur Krock; Harry F. Byrd; Henry Morgenthau, Jr.; Herbert H. Lehman; Raymond Moley; James Curley; Fiorello H. LaGuardia; Francis Bowes Sayre; Robert Moses; Donald Richberg; Norman Thomas; Roger Baldwin; Philip F. LaFollette; H. Styles Bridges; Arthur Capper; Manuel Roxas; and Elizabeth Brandeis Raushenbush.
Box   507
Folder   2
Series I: “Party Politics and Government,” 1932
Announcement
Instructor's Manual
Listener's Handbook
April 5, #1, “The Twelfth Man”
April 13, #2, “The Significance of the Coming National Elections”
April 19, #3, “The Significance of Our State and Local Elections”
April 26, #4, “Primaries and the Manchinery of Their Operation”
May 3, #5, “The Party and the Issues”
May 10, #6, “The Campaign and Economic Planning”
May 17, #7, “Issues of Foreign Policy”
May 24, #8, “Issues of Domestic Policy”
May 31, #9, “Why We Have Political Parties”
June 7, #10, “The Existing Party Alignment”
June 14, #11, “The Party Convention -- Its History, Organization, and Work”
June 21, #12, “Results of the Republican National Convention”
June 28, #13, “The Place of Minor Parties in the American Scene”
July 5, #14, “Results of the Democratic National Convention”
Series II: “Government in a Depression,” 1932
Announcement (for Series II and Series III)
September 6, #1, “Issues Between the Parties”
September 13, #2, “Issues Above the Parties”
September 20, #3, “Constructive Economy in the National Government”
September 27, #4, “Constructive Economy in the State and Local Government”
October 4, #5, “What Can Government Do to Prevent and Relieve Unemployment?”
October 11, #6, “How Can Government Aid Finance and Banking?”
October 18, #7, “How Can Government Provide Greater Security in Our Economic System?”
October 25, #8, “Mechanics and Maneuvers of Campaigns”
November 1, #9, “Why Vote?”
Series III: “Constructive Economy in State and Local Government,” 1932
November 15, #1, “Retrenching in State and Local Expenditures”
November 22, #2, “Redrawing the Boundaries of Local Government”
November 29, #3, “Redistributing Functions of State and Local Government”
December 6, #4, “Reorganizing County Government”
December 13, #5, “Reforming Financial Methods”
December 20, #6, “Reducing and Limiting Local Indebtedness”
December 27, #7, “Revising Our State and Local Tax System”
Box   507
Folder   3
Series IV: “Legislatures and Legislative Problems” (incomplete), 1933
January 3, #1, “The Legislative Prospects of 1933”
January 10, #2, “Prohibition”
January 17, #3, “The Congress”
January 24, #4, “Budgets”
January 31, #5, “The Powers of Congress”
February 7, #6, “Local Government Legislative Needs of 1933”
February 14, #7, “Congressional Procedure”
February 21, #8, “Armaments”
February 28, #9, “Philippine Independence”
March 7, #10, “What Is the Matter with the State Legislatures?”
March 28, #13, “Lobbying”
April 4, #14, “Allocation of Sources of Revenue Between State and Federal Governments”
April 25, #17, “Unemployment Insurance”
Announcement
Box   507
Folder   4
Series V: “Constructive Economy in Government,” 1933
Announcement
June 20, #1, “Constructive or Destructive Economy”
June 27, #2, “Saving Money in State Government”
July 4, #3, “The Crisis in Government Economy”
July 11, #4, “Mr. Taxpayer Versus Mr. Taxspender”
July 19, #5, “Protecting the Taxpayer's Dollar”
July 25, #6, “Reducing the School Budget”
August 1, #7, “How to Reduce the Library Budget”
August 8, #8, “Reducing the Welfare Budget”
August 15, #9, “Reducing the Recreation Budget”
August 22, #10, “Reducing the Cost of Justice”
August 29, #11, “Are There Too Many Governments?”
September 5, #12, “Reducing the Public Health Budget”
September 12, #13, “Merit Versus Spoils”
September 19, #14, “Reducing the Public Works Budget”
September 26, #15, “Saving by Planning”
Box   508
Folder   1
Series VI: “The Crisis in Municipal Finance,” 1933-1934
Announcement
October 3, #1, “The Financial Plight of the Cities”
October 26, #2, “Secrets of Municipal Credit”
October 17, #3, “National Credit for Local Needs”
October 24, #4, “Default and Its Consequences”
October 31, #5, “Default and Its Remedies”
November 7, #6, “The Citizen and His City”
November 14, #7, “Borrowing for Current Needs”
November 21, #8, “The State and Local Credit”
November 28, #9, “Pruning the City Budget”
December 5, #10, “Why Taxpayers Strike”
December 12, #11, “A Voice in the Dark”
December 19, #12, “Tax Paying Made Easier”
December 26, #13, “Individual Rights and the N.R.A.”
January 2, #14, “New Sources of Local Revenue”
January 9, #15, “Modernizing the Mechanism of Local Finance”
January 16, #16, “Regenerating Local Civil Service”
January 23, #17, “Renovating Local Administration”
January 30, #18, “The Banks and Better Municipal Credit”
February 6, #19, “The Investor and Sound Local Finance”
Series VII: “Reviving Local Government,” 1934
Announcement
February 13, #1, “The State and Local Government”
February 20, #2, “New York City Blazes the Trail”
February 27, #3, “Financial Problems of New York City”
March 6, #4, “New York City's Business Activities”
March 13, #5, “Social Problems in New York City”
March 20, #6, “Ohio Forging Ahead”
March 27, #7, “Improving Local Government in New Jersey”
April 3, #8, “Progress in Pennsylvania”
April 10, #9, “State and Local Government in the Control of the Liquor Traffic”
April 17, #10, “From the Heart of the Depression”
April 24, #11, “Local Government and the New Deal”
May 1, #12, “Suburban Troubles”
May 8, #13, “Chicago Over the Hump”
May 15, #14, “Schools for Municipal Officials”
May 22, #15, “News from the South”
May 29, #16, “The National Administration and Local Reorganization”
June 5, #17, “The Schools in Local Revival”
June 12, #18, “The Voter and Local Revival”
June 19, #19, “What Are the Prospects?”
Box   508
Folder   2
Series VIII: “A New Deal in Local Government,” 1934
Announcements
June 26, #1, “Federal Financial Aid to Cities”
July 3, #2, “The Sumners-Wilcox Municipal Bankruptcy Act”
July 10, #3, “Saving the Cities”
July 17, #4, “English Local Government”
July 24, #5, “New Fields for New Planning”
July 31, #6, “The Tennessee Valley Experiment”
August 7, #7, “New Aspects of the Public Service”
August 14, #8, “A New Charter for New York City”
August 21, #9, “Higher Administrative Standards”
August 28, #10, “Housing and Slum Clearance”
September 4, #11, “Reconstruction in a Metropolitan County”
September 11, #12, “County Home Rule”
September 18, #13, “Westchester County Looks at Its Government”
September 25, #14, “A New Deal in Civic Education”
Series IX: “Trends in Government,” 1934-1935
Announcements
October 2, #1, “The Crisis in Local Government”
October 9, #2, “European Local Government”
October 16, #3, “Putting Cities on a Cash Basis”
October 23, #4, “Local Government from the Ground Up”
October 30, #5, “American Municipal Leagues”
November 6, #6, “New Rights for Old”
November 13, #7, “Regionalism and Local Government”
November 20, #8, “The 44 Legislatures of 1935”
November 27, #9, “Forty Years of Progress”
December 4, #10, “Community Foundations”
December 11, #11, “Enforcing Tax Collections”
December 18, #12, “Emerging Problems”
December 25, #13, “Progress in Election Reforms”
January 1, #14, “State Re-Organization”
January 8, #15, “Protecting the Taxpayer”
January 15, #16, “Government Personnel”
January 22, #17, “Federal Help in Local Refinancing”
January 29, #18
“Taxation for Prosperity”
“Report of Special Committee on Tax Policy to Aid Economi Recovery and Permanent Prosperity”
Series X: “The 44 State Legislatures of 1935,” 1935
February 5, #1, “The One-House Legislature”
February 12, #2, “ 'Government by the People' ”
February 19, #3, “Simplification of Local Government”
February 26, #4, “How Can the Legislatures Help the Police?”
March 5, #5, “Providing a Liquid Market for Home Mortgages”
March 12, #6, “Financing Emergency Relief”
March 19, #7, “Liquor Laws and Enforcement”
March 26, #8, “The Public's Responsibility for Legislation”
April 2, #9, “Interstate Cooperation in Combating Crime”
April 9, #10, “Solving Local Tax Problems”
April 16, #11, “Tax Limitations”
April 23, #12, “Social Insurance”
April 30, #13, “Overhauling Criminal Procedure and Other Things Pertaining to Law Enforcement”
May 7, #14, “The Model Tax Plan”
May 14, #15, “Better Tax Collections”
May 21, #16, “Safety Regulations”
May 28, #17, “State Councils”
June 4, #18, “State Control of Municipal Finance”
June 11, #19, “The State Legislative Product of 1935”
Box   508
Folder   3
Series XI: “Taxation for Prosperity,” 1935
Announcements
June 18, #1, “Just Taxes”
June 25, #2, “Paying for Social Security”
July 2, #3, “The Tariff and Business Recovery”
July 9, #4, “How Much Should the Drinker Pay?”
July 16, #5, “Missing the Intangibles”
July 23, #6, “Does Real Estate Pay Too Much?”
July 30, #7, “Tax Exemptions”
August 6, #8, “Tax Dodging by Constitutional Amendment”
August 13, #9, “Single Tax Vs. Triple Tax”
August 20, #10, “Who Gets the Tax Money?”
August 27, #11, “Processing Tax”
September 3, #12, “Sales Tax -- Pro and Con”
September 10, #13, “Federal Taxation and Business Recovery”
September 17, #14, “Coordinated Tax Administration”
September 24, #15, “Harmonizing the Tax System”
Series XII: “Planning,” 1935-1936
Announcements
October 1, #1, “A Plan for the Nation”
October 8, #2, “Limitations of Planning”
October 15, #3, “The Best Use of the Land”
October 22, #4, “The Economic Value of American Scenery”
October 29, #5, “Head Waters and Other Little Waters”
November 5, #6, “A National System of Transportation”
November 12, #7, “Who Owns Our Roadsides?”
November 19, #8, “Regional Planning -- The T.V.A. An Example”
November 26, #9, “Is Local Government Doomed?”
December 3, #10, “Planning as a Municipal Function”
December 10, #11, “Planning as a State Function”
December 17, #12, “Re-locating the Isolated Settler”
December 24, #13, “Making Plans Come True”
December 31, #14, “The Law of the Roadside”
January 7, #15, “Better Housing Through Better Zoning”
January 14, #16, “Planning and Paying For Places for Play”
January 21, #17, “Possibilities in Tax Title Lands”
January 28, #18, “From Acres to Lots”
Series XIII: “The Constitution in the 20th Century,” 1936
Announcements
February 4, #1, “The Constitution as an Element of Stability in American Life”
February 11, #2, “Curbing the Court”
February 18, #3, “Property Rights as Obstacles to Progress”
February 25, #4, “The Constitution as the Guardian of Property Rights”
March 3, #5, “The Freedom of the Press”
March 10, #6, “The Powers of the National Government”
March 17, #7, “Administrative Lawmaking”
March 24, #8, “The Constitution and the New Deal”
March 21, #9, “The Spirit of the Constitution”
April 7, #10, “A Socialist Looks at the Constitution”
April 14, #11, “Getting a New Constitution”
April 21, #12, “The Constitution and the States”
April 28, #13, “A Unified Economy and States' Rights”
May 5, #14, “Regional Governments for Regional Problems”
May 12, #15, “The Constitution and Social Security”
May 19, #16, “The Rights Reserved to the States and the People”
May 26, #17, “The Delegation of Powers”
June 2, #18, “Personal Liberty: Differing Vie”
June 9, #19, “The Living Constitution”
“The Constitution of the United States -- A Bibliography”
The Younger Generation. Script, 1945
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One sample script of a thirty-minute episode of a serial written by Carlton E. Morse and directed by Clinton Twiss. The program originated in Hollywood.
Box   504
Folder   5
1946 September 1, #8, “Private Secretaries and Saxophones”
Your America. Scripts, 1944
Physical Description: 2 folders 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of musical variety shows presented in commemoration of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Union Pacific Railroad. The series, written by David P. Lewis and produced by Lyle DeMoss, originated at station WOW in Omaha, Nebraska.
Box   504
Folder   6
1944
January 8, #1, “For Nebraska”
January 15, #2, “For Kansas”
January 22, #3, “For Colorado”
January 29, #4, “For Wyoming”
February 5, #5, “For Idaho”
February 12, #6, “For Lincoln”
February 19, #7, “For Jeffers” [William Jeffers, U.P. president]
February 26, #8, “For Utah”
March 4, #9, “For Nevada”
March 11, #10, “For California”
March 18, #11, “For Montana”
Box   504
Folder   7
March 25, #12, “Washington”
April 1, #13, “Oregon”
April 8, #14, “Missouri”
April 15, #15, “Iowa”
April 22, #16, “Grain”
April 29, #17, “Lumber”
May 6, #18, “Golden Spike”
Your Health. Scripts, 1929. Bound in volume
Scope and Content Note: Transcripts of addresses delivered by Dr. Shirley W. Wynne, Commissioner of Health of New York City, on a series of weekly, 15-minute programs broadcast over station WEAF in New York. Also bound in the same volume are transcripts of two special broadcasts by Dr. Wynne, one on station WOR and the other on WPAP.
Box   506
Folder   2
1929
May 8, “Why We Get Sick”
May 15, “Have You a Little Baby Coming?”
May 22, “The First Few Weeks of the Baby's Life”
May 29, “The Baby's First Year”
June 1, “The Public Health and National Security”
June 5, “Preparing Your Child For Its School Days”
June 12, “Vacation Health Hints”
June 14, “The Children's Bill of Rights”
June 19, “Files and Mosquitos”
June 26, “Safety for Bathers and Swimmers”
July 3, “Bootlegging Fireworks”
July 10, “Sun Don'ts for Sun Fans”
July 17, “Two Common Summer Dangers”
July 31, “Drinking for Health”
August 7, “Hot Weather Babies”
August 14, “When Man's Best Friend Becomes an Enemy”
August 28, “Health Goes to School”
Your United Nations. Scripts, 1946-1947
Physical Description: 1 1/2 boxes (7 inches) 
Scope and Content Note: Scripts of a weekly series of thirty-minute dramatizations presented by NBC's University of the Air.
Box   504
Folder   8
1946
October 1, #1, “This Uneasy Peace,” by William Hodapp
October 8, #2, “Man Against Himself,” by William Hodapp
October 15, #3, “Let's Make It Work,” by William Hodapp
October 22, #4, “Provisional Agenda,” by William Hodapp
October 29, #5, “The Homeless,” by William C. Hodapp
November 12, #6, “UNESCO,” by Jack C. Wilson
November 19, #7, “Trusteeship,” by Jack C. Wilson
Box   504
Folder   9
November 26, #8, “Budget,” by Jack C. Wilson
December 3, #9, “Disarmament,” by Jack C. Wilson
December 10, #10, “Food & Peace,” by Jack C. Wilson
December 17, #11, “Review of General Assembly,” by Jack C. Wilson
1947
January 7, #12, “Report from the World Preview,” by Jack C. Wilson
January 14, #13, “United Nations and Human Rights,” by Jack C. Wilson
January 21, #14, “Labor's Role in the United Nations,” by Ben Kagan
Box   505
Folder   1
January 28, #15, “Volcano's Edge,” by Jack C. Wilson
February 4, #16, “Trusteeship and Strategic Areas,” by Jack C. Wilson
February 11, #17, “World Trade and World Peace,” by Ben Kagan
February 18, #18, “Public Opinions and the U.N.,” by Jack C. Wilson
February 25, #19, “Economic and Social Council,” by Jack C. Wilson
March 4, #20, “You and Your U.N.,” by Jack C. Wilson
Box   505
Folder   2
March 11, 21, “World Health Organization,” by Ben Kagan
March 18, #22, “Free Air Space: The Story of the International Civil Aviation Organization,” by William Hodapp
March 19, #23, “UNESCO,” by S. Mark Smith
March 25, untitled script, by S. Mark Smith
April 1, #24, “Hungry Children,” by Bill Hodapp
April 8, #25, “Trusteeship: A Fable for Adults,” by William Hodapp
April 15, #26, “Human Rights,” by William Hodapp
April 22, #27, “Narcotics,” by Carol Martin
Box   505
Folder   3
April 29, #28, “Behind the Scenes,” by William Hodapp
May 7, #29, “The Kolchak Case,” by Carol Martin
May 14, #30, “Workers for Victory in Peace,” by William Hodapp
May 21, #31, “Aranha: A Profile,” by William Hodapp
May 28, #32, “The Three Questions of Jose el Mundo,” by Carol Martin
June 4, #33, “The Site,” by William Hodapp
June 11, #34, “Bob Jones Keeps Up with the World,” by Carol Martin
Box   505
Folder   4
June 18, #35, “World Security,” by William Hodapp
June 25, #36, “The Black & the Red,” by Carol Martin
July 2, #37, “The Devil and Human Rights,” by William Hodapp
July 9, #38, “Dear Harry,” by Carol Martin
July 16, #39, “Chaos in Centerville,” by Carol Martin
July 30, #40, “Revolt of the Resources,” by Carol Martin
August 6, #41, “Pity the Poor Germ,” by Carol Martin
August 13, #43, “Peace Through the Air: The Story of ICAO,” by William Hodapp
Box   505
Folder   5
August 20, #44, “Backstop U.S.A.,” by Carol Martin
August 27, #45, “Thar She Blows,” by Carol Martin
September 3, #45, “Stranded U. S. Citizens,” by William Hodapp
September 10, #46, “Protocol,” by Carol Martin
September 17, #47, “The Causes of War.” by William Hodapp
October 1, #48, “Agenda '47,” by Carol Martin
October 8, #49, “The Veto,” by William Hodapp
Box   505
Folder   6
October 15, #50, “Palestine,” by Michael Sklar and B. Edgar Marvin
October 22, #51, “How Can We Revive World Trade?,” address by Arthur Besse
October 29, #52, “The Devil and Human Rights,” (repeat) by William Hodapp
November 5, #53, “Little Assembly,” by Robert L. Schwartz
November 19, #55, “The 38th Parallel,” by William Hodapp
December 3, #54, “The Plus Side of the U. N.,” by Walter Hackett
December 10, “Will There Be a Tomorrow: The Story of UNAC,” by Alvin Boretz
December 17, #61, “U. N. or?,” by William Hodapp
Untitled series. Script, 1941
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: One script and some correspondence and related material from a short summer series of radio plays. The thirty-minute dramatic program was broadcast on WEAF.
Box   505
Folder   7
1941 August 7, #3, “The Man Who Forgot,” by Maurice Level, adapted by Arthur Laurents
Untitled series. Script, 1948
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Script of one of a series of dramatizations presented by the American Cancer Society. The program was produced and directed by Herbert Lytton.
Box   505
Folder   8
1948 April 8, #2, “The Mayo Story,” by Ledru Baker, Jr.
Untitled series. Scripts, 1969
Physical Description: 1 folder 
Scope and Content Note: Two sample scripts of a program of stock market, economic, and business news.
Box   505
Folder   9
1969? March 13
1969 July 14
Subseries: Television Scripts: described in Part 13 of this finding aid (see search link in abstract in Summary Information)
Subseries: Recordings: described in Parts 14-15 of this finding aid (see search link in abstract in Summary Information)