radio 
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SOURCE: The Conversation
1/15/2021
That Time Private US Media Companies Stepped in to Silence the Falsehoods and Incitements of a Major Public Figure … In 1938
by William Kovarik
"There’s not much that separates, on the one hand, the mad fanaticism that held Jews supposedly responsible for their own persecution in 1938 and, on the other, the fevered delusion of 2020."
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SOURCE: Leominster (MA) Champion
11/16/2020
Fitchburg State Professor Named to Library of Congress Task Force
Fitchburg (MA) State University professor Katherine Rye Jewell has been named to a Library of Congress task force for the preservation of college and community radio.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
11/2/2020
D.C. Man Fights to Educate Americans on the Importance of Voting
“No matter what position you have, in a democracy if you don’t have the right to have your voice heard, you cannot really be considered a full citizen,” Phil Portlock said.
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SOURCE: Untapped New York
10/19/2020
New PBS Documentary on New York Gossip Columnist Walter Winchell
Walter Winchell's gossip-driven approach to the news made him famous; his fame helped publicize the dangers of Nazism and overcome American isolationism before World War II. A new PBS documentary considers his career and legacy.
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SOURCE: NPR
10/15/2020
Throughline: The Electoral College (radio program)
NPR's Throughline launches its (mis)Representative Democracy series on the institutions of American elections with a focus on the Electoral College, featuring Alexander Keyssar, Carol Anderson and Akhil Reed Amar.
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SOURCE: NPR
10/12/2020
Prof. Kiara Vigil: Why It Is Important To Highlight Roles Of Native Americans In History (audio)
"This last spring, for the first time, I taught a class called Native Futures, and I thought that it would make sense to teach a class where Native people themselves not only are part of the past and the present, but they're going to be part of the future."
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6/14/2020
John F. Kennedy Did What Donald Trump Only Wishes He Could Do
by Paul Matzko
Rules to promote “fairness” or prevent “discrimination” can all too easily turn into tools for gaining partisan advantage at the expense of free speech, a free press, and a functioning democracy.
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SOURCE: WBUR
5/26/2020
How History Informs Our Current Crisis (Audio)
Historian Julian Zelizer contextualizes the mask debate, the U.S. death toll, social distancing, and the U.S.'s international standing.
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SOURCE: Nursing Clio
10/31/19
How Talk Radio Transformed American Politics
by Lara Freidenfelds
A review of Brian Rosenwald’s Talk Radio’s America: How an Industry Took Over a Political Party That Took Over the United States.
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SOURCE: Chronicle of Higher Ed.
4-23-13
Susan Matt and Luke Fernandez: Before MOOCs, ‘Colleges of the Air’
Susan Matt is chair of the history department at Weber State University, and Luke Fernandez is Weber State’s manager for program and technology development. In 1937, as she lay ill in bed, Annie Oakes Huntington, a writer living in Maine, thought of ways to spend her time. She confided in a letter: “The radio has been a source of unfailing diversion this winter. I expect to enter all the courses at Harvard to be broadcasted.” Huntington was joining in an educational experiment sweeping the country in the 1920s and 30s: massive open on-air courses.As educators contemplate the MOOCs of our day—massive open online courses—they would do well to consider how earlier generations dealt with technology-enhanced education.
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