The lights out of the power, the easy power of the time. Lights out of the perfume, the pure water, the season, the fire. The lights out of the perfume, the pure water, the season, the fire. The hour of the time, I'm William Cooper. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. We're going to have a little fun tonight. Like last night, we're going to sort of travel through time. Back and forward and in between. And we're going to sort of get caught in some warps here and talk a lot about radio. We may even take some calls later on. But I want you to be sure and put yourself in the mood. Sit back once again like you did last night. Close your eyes. Because we're going to visit some of the golden age, the history of radio. And we're even going to do some current sort of stuff. You didn't know I was a DJ once in my life, did you? Well, I was. I was when I was a teenager. When I was 16 years old, I was a disc jockey on the Armed Forces Radio Network, Japan. And I had a program called Radio Teen. And we had a hookup between all the teen clubs in Japan, too. So when I wasn't doing that, I was doing DJ stuff back in the corner of a little closet-type room in the Grant Heights Teen Club. And hundreds of teenagers all over Japan were dancing to the music that I spun on my little machines there. It was a lot of fun. Until I said a lot of things that got myself in deep trouble. And I got kicked right off the air. But I had a great time. How many people do you know ever had a chance to be a disc jockey at the age of 16? And on my show, Radio Teen, on the Armed Forces Radio Network, I had millions, many millions of listeners all over Japan. Because the Japanese listened to the Armed Forces Radio Network also. And I'm sure the Chinese did. Because it reached way into China. Although I'm sure that it was jammed somewhat. We played the very best. Of what back then was called. Rhythm and blues and rock and roll. So, sit back and relax. We're going to sort of relive some years gone by. And we're going to have a lot of fun. At least I am. I hope you will, too. We'll be right back. We'll be right back. We'll be right back. We'll be right back. Rhythm and blues and rock and roll. Rhythm and blues and rock and roll. Rhythm and blues and rock and roll when you fart. Can't be right back. We'll tuvo soap and roll. Asいる間 not cesate, we're going to stay here. Queen of Lella and the Bella have a boy in the night down low, listening to the radio. Love is on the air tonight, and it's on a cozy-coast of death. Love is every word tonight, the battle of the co-coast will come. Key station to a nation, and have a song coming through. So you can get what the lady's at when she'll fill your home for you. You should never pay for her, and it's the song in the dark of your alley. You might sound like me to her, but the pole she likes, really fast. Get those blue rings, a whole house, and nothing else is better than you. What you do, yeah, love is on the air tonight. Thank you. I don't know about you folks, but I grew up on radio. When I was a boy, I never saw a television set. I knew they existed, but I never saw one until I think I was about seven years old. A neighbor, several doors down in Long Beach, California, had a television set, black and white. My parents used to haul us down there to watch Spade Cooley. And I don't remember what night Spade Cooley was on, but we watched Spade Cooley. And that's all we ever watched. And then we trucked back home, children in tow, and listened to the radio. The radio was it then. It was the greatest thing you can imagine. Because that's the way we escaped from the real world. Like people get lost in television today, we would get lost in radio. But with a difference. In radio, we could use our imaginations. And so when we were listening to the radio, everyone was picturing something different in their own mind. It was incredible. I don't know if you can appreciate the incredible sensation of lying in bed late at night. The lights out. Sometimes a little street light beam coming through your window. Sometimes moonlight. Sometimes so dark you couldn't see anything. Not even your own finger right in front of your nose. And then you would hear in the darkness an unbelievable tale of mystery. And suspense. And the whole thing took place in your mind, really. You were hearing the words, but the story was in your mind. It was unfolding. And you saw the characters and the scenes. And the automobiles and the trains and the ships. I remember one memorable night. I remember one memorable night. When I shared a lighthouse with some people who were stranded there during a storm. And the lightning flashed. And the wind blew. And the shutters crashed against the windows and whipped off. And the glass broke. And the glass broke. And we were terrified. Absolutely terrified. And then we could see in the storm-tossed waves a ship coming toward the rock upon which the lighthouse was perched. And we thought we were going to be rescued. It was an incredible feeling. The waves were crashing so high that we thought the lighthouse would be consumed in the water, torn from its foundations, and washed into the sea. We thought we were going to drown. We thought we were going to drown. And we could really hear the wind howling. We could see the waves. And then in the lightning flashes, we could see the ship. At times, it would rise way up into the air on the crest of the waves. And then it would disappear. And we couldn't see it as it went down into the trowel. And we held our breath, hoping that it would come back up and keep moving toward the lighthouse. We wanted to be rescued. That was our only hope, you see, because this was the worst storm ever experienced. And even though it was unsafe, terribly unsafe, to run down the stairs into the lower levels of the lighthouse, where the water had broken out, windows and seat in under doors and was washing about inside. To open the door was unthinkable. Unthinkable. But that's what we did. Because when the ship got close, if there was any possible way for us to get on that ship, we were going to do it. And it kept coming closer. And the wind kept howling. And the sea got higher and higher and crashed against the lighthouse. And every time the waves crashed against the lighthouse, the whole structure shook and strained and groaned. And we feared for our lives. And then when the ship was only about a hundred yards from the lighthouse, we ran down and threw open the door and ran into the storm, holding, balancing precariously upon the rocks. And the ship came closer. We could see that the masts were torn and ripped and the sails were flapping in the breeze. Huge holes torn in them from the wind. And we could see no one upon the decks. But then we realized there was no one aboard the ship. At least that we can see until it crashed into the rocks with a terrible, deathly sound. And we ran to the ship to see if there was something, possibly anything, that we could use to put around us or to get into in order to stay afloat when what we feared the most happened when the lighthouse was torn from its foundations and washed into the sea. We could see dead bodies on the deck. But these were different. These bodies were different. These bodies were torn up and chewed upon. These bodies were in various states of having been eaten. Oh, you can't imagine the terror that raced through our hearts. And all of a sudden we heard this terrible noise. Scratching noise and crawling noise and squealing. Then up from the bowels of this ship came a rat. And then another rat. And then yet another and another. There were tens and then hundreds of rats and then thousands. And we ran into the lighthouse and slammed the door behind us and began to pile things up against the door. And we ran up the circular stairs up to the light. And we looked down and we could see that all of the rocks were covered with the rats. And the waves would beat against the rocks and wash hundreds and thousands of them into the sea and they would swim frantically and scurry back onto the rocks. We could hear them gnawing at the door downstairs. We could hear the lighthouse shaking and vibrating and groaning with every crash of the waves. And then we heard this loud scratching squealing on the stairs and we knew the rats had penetrated through the door. And now they were seeking shelter in the lighthouse and they were looking for food. I was petrified. I pulled the covers up over my head as children always do when they see monsters in the dark. Or they feel their bed shake from the whipping of the tail of the dragon beneath their bed. or they looked up in the moonlight streaming through the window and they see the shadow of a man standing in the corner of their room. They pulled the covers up over their head. And that's what I did because I was scared. And those covers were going to save me from whatever it was that lurked that lurked in the darkness. And what was lurking in the darkness was a terrible storm. Seas a hundred feet high unbelievable crashing force against the lighthouse and rats rats scurrying up the stairs. And then and then oh friends you owe it to yourself and your family to leave the congested city and enjoy what nation intended you to enjoy. Visit our new apartment homes in Hawson Court Jackson Heights where you may enjoy community life in a friendly environment. do you do everybody how do you do give you face to say hello to all of you I'm very young I'm already here with the instruments how do you do do do do do do have you try wheaties their whole wheat with all of the bread won't you try wheaties for wheat is the best food of man they're crispy and crunchy the whole year through the kitties never tire of them and neither will you hold just why we be the best breakfast food in all land every one of you undoubtedly have a headache or pain remedy that you square by but haven't you noticed that on some occasions it fails you that there are times it does not seem to work on these occasions let me suggest that you try anacin for here is a remedy that I'm sure won't fail you you'll find the fastest and most complete relief in anacin you've ever experienced the reason is simple anacin contains not one pain-sitting agent alone but four one of which is in all probability the remedy you now customarily take to relieve pain you can get anacin at your druggist for a few cents your money back if you're not pleased I'll sell the name a-n-a-c-i-n light up a cream-o a mellow mild cream-o a winning first by far you can set every climb but at three for a dime you can't eat a cream-o cigar I love my son never just feel a-n-a-c-i-n coffee my heart you can't drink but at three for a dime good evening ladies and gentlemen of the sweet-spreaded cigar-smoking society this is ronzo godfrey down in washington dc light man godfrey cremo's capricious custodian of the calorific connoisseur the jurgens program with walter winchell america's one-man newspaper walter winchell's famous column appears in the new york daily mirror and other newspapers from new york to honolulu he's here with flash news odd news exclusive news flash across america and all the ships at sea right last night on halloween america was shocked this morning wall street entrepreneurs were jumping out of windows what's it the columbia broadcasting system and its affiliated stations present orson wells and the mercury theater on the air in the war of the world by h.g. and wedлекс yont셨� nacne oh시 I did the gentleman the director of the Mercury Theater and star of these broadcasts or some well we know now that in the early years of the 20th century this world was being watched closely by intelligences greater than man yet as mortal as his own we know now that it's human being visited themselves about their various concerns they were scrutinized and studied perhaps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinize the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water don't forget to tune in next week for the continuing saga of war of the world now ladies and gentlemen stay tuned for the upcoming oh you've never heard anything like this we have a new broadcast and everybody is just dying to get involved literally oh Martha isn't this just a wonderful day oh Jim are you still going off on that terrible trip yes my I must meet the boys in old Hong Kong you know why is it always the boys Jim why always the boys watch out watch out here comes carriage almost those horses are always leaving these strange little piles of things in the street now be careful where you walk oh Jim you must think we are just such helpless creatures well my dear you are oh Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. two of my male friends we had quite a bit to drink and all of a sudden things got really hazy for me I had a great time I'll tell you how I know I didn't wake up at home I don't remember what happened last night but it was good whatever it was it was good because I woke up this morning at the breakfast table I don't know what I had for breakfast I don't really think I had anything for breakfast all I can remember is that the girls sitting across the table from me didn't have anything on but a necklace I want to do it again back here week well Thank you, Abacom, Jackman, do the beat, give a shout out to my brother L.A.S.T. We've been having practice, killing, rocking over me, you know who's supposed to be forgotten. I wasn't there but there was Lance in the house, it's only me and mommy who's the man of the house. Always take the bridge back to the old days, I used to rockin' on the high tune, days. I used to drink, boy, back in the day, to play, switch to the pipe, switch to Pete, Pete, Dave. Just go on, so let you know I flow on, no way, get out my booty and so ho on and ho on. That's what we're about to do, say you ought to make you in the place with you. Me no deal, no baby, did this lip-flop, I get mad when it comes to playing hip-hop, but shit. I want a black-haired style, just shit. I want a black-haired style, yo, shit. I want a black-haired style, yo, shit. I want a black-haired style, yo, shit. Me don't live in here, here, so bring me here, so here for the... Oh, listen, my brothers, you are listening to Black Revolution Radio. And then after scooting through the dial, you finally find what you've been looking for. And, you know, God knows what that was, because everybody is looking for something entirely different. I found mine. Oh, I thought I got you going. I thought that really got you going. Because that's not really mine, you see. That's somebody else. Somebody else that was in the car with me. This is mine. And just, you know, stick around, listen, be cool, everything fine. Even if it isn't fine, everything is fine. And I'll tell you why everything is fine. Because God made wine. And pretty ladies and prozac. And pretty ladies and gentlemen to the Prozac Hour, where everything is cool. Oh, that just goes right up my spine. Oh, that's mine. That's mine. There you are, Shirley. Shirley works in the, she's your post office. She doesn't, she doesn't watch the, the love jazz. I've got a feeling this is Shirley's too. Shirley works in the, she's your post office. Get ready. Get ready. Get ready. Get ready. The saxophone is going to go right through your chest. It's going to wrap you around the table there. Just tie you, tie you in, tie you in wonderful knots. This, this ladies and gentlemen is the kind of music that makes Randy just want to rub up against the transmitter at WBCQ. bewn webpage it påil. Get ready. Get ready. Get ready, folks. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. I can smell a saxophone from a million miles away. And that's it for tonight, folks. As you lay your head down on your pillow. And we fade off into the sunrise. Yeah, here's my boy. I love you. I never saw the sunrise. Well, I'm going to make sure that I don't see it. I'm going to make sure that I don't see it. I'm going to make sure that I'm going to make sure that I don't know. I'm going to make sure that I don't know. So, for those of you waking up, I wish you the most wonderful cup of coffee that you've ever had, except in your life. And for those of you going to bed, sweet dreams. Once I had a pretty girl, her name doesn't matter. She went away with another guy, now he won't even look at her. And Dr. Mary, he broke your heart. Just like you broke my way, you said we were smart. He told you lies, you're hurting me. And when Mary said goodbye to you. I know this place on the plane. I want you back. You're listening to 1520 on your dial, KOMA, Oklahoma City. We own these stations. I know this place on the plane. I want you back. You laughed at me when you said we were through. Get older, me, lies, you're hurting me. We set them up. We knock them down. The music goes round and round and round. And where does it come out, Chaco? Glad you asked me that, Prof. The music comes out on... WSB! WSB! Classical Radio. And I think the time has come to try and give away some money here. That's right, Chaco. Now, folks, if you were listening to the Ethelbert Nevin Show this morning, you know what today's classical quickie quiz question is. And if you weren't listening, well, maybe you'll get lucky. I've got someone on the line now. And, ma'am, if you could just turn your radio down. Yeah, but... No, no, the thing is that when your radio is tuned to the station you're talking to on the phone, you get feed... It's not? Well, could you turn it down anyway? She's going over to turn it down. What, is she living in the Taj Mahal? Wait a minute, wait a minute. Here she comes. Okay, what's your name? Yeah, Brenda what? Brenda Tharlson. And where do you live, Brenda? Inkster, one of my favorite towns. Okay, Brenda Tharlson from Inkster, North Dakota. Here is today's classical quickie quiz question. How much would Domenico Scarlatti have weighed on Jupiter? That's right. How much would the 18th century composer Domenico Scarlatti have weighed on the planet Jupiter? That's okay. Take your time. Blondie, your toenails ain't cutting. Hey. Okay, Brenda, you got it? No, I'm sorry. That is not the correct answer. No. No, that's how much Alessandro Scarlatti would have weighed on Jupiter. We're talking about the younger one, Domenico. Too bad, Brenda, but don't worry. All is not lost. Just for talking to us this evening, you are going to receive, absolutely free, a pair of WTWP wall-to-wall Pop-a-Bell classical coasters. Now, these little beauts are suitable for use with glasses containing hot or cold beverages. And they're just our little way of saying thanks. Thanks, Brenda Tharlson, for talking to... What did you say? Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho. Listen to who's calling who a loser. I do, too. Shinola is a shoe polish. Yeah, well, same to you, you old bag. Boy, hell hath no fury. Oh, don't worry about it, Pross. We'll see we get back to some music. Good idea, Blondie. And I've got a very interesting little tidbit to throw in here. The original first movement of PDQ Box Choral Cantata, Knock Knock. Apparently, PDQ changed his mind later and wrote another first movement, which is the one I used, of course, when I recorded the entire work a while back there. But just for the historical heck of it, here's the original. Dropping straight down on you. From WTWP. And we'll see you on C dinners' shavedvers. Who is there? Stand and stand. Stand and stand and do. Stand and stand and do. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. That was Inspiration Lulu from Mop. Ooh, and the 12 Hickies. It's stronger every day, taking in the standing, handy, handy way. Men, Frank Crummett is here with me to say a word about Roy Tan cigars. Frank Crummett. I'm really a fan for Roy Tan, and the reason is, Roy Tan has more long filler Havana tobacco, and yet it's a five-cent cigar. Man to man, smoke Roy Tan. Seeing is believing. See an Oxidol wash. See how Oxidol wash is clothed, white, for life. Oxidol's home, Moppergian. The inspired harmonies of the Moonlight Sonata set the stage for another concert of the world's most honored music, presented as a salute to Longines, the world's most honored watch. Longines, Cincinnati, under the leadership of Michel Fiasco, will play a program of the world's most honored music. These lovely melodies and Longines watchers make a common appeal to cultured people the world over. What's happening to you these days? Having lots of fun? Believe me, I know some folks that are in for some fun. Those early bird friends of Annie's, who've already sent for their new 1940 model Orphan Annie shake-up mug. You know, all of Annie's friends who drink sweet chocolate-slavered opaline can get these well new shake-up mugs free. And boy, are they beauty. Wait till you see them. They're made of genuine fetal wear in brand new colors. A beautiful deep green and a bright, flashing scarlet. And every mug has a big colored picture of Orphan Annie and her dog Sandy right on the front. And don't forget, this shaker-upper is a two-in-one gift. When you put the top on, it makes a keen shaker for mixing your ice cold chocolate-flavored opaline shake-up. And then, when you take the bright red top off, presto, the shaker turns into a swell-pick drinking mug, holding a creamy, bubbly shake-up all ready for you to drink. Man alive, what fun you'll have with that new shaker-upper. Playing the shake-up game with your friends and having shake-up parties, making a picnic out of every meal this summer. Think of having a delicious ice cold shake-up drink any time you want it, made with fresh cold milk and sweet chocolate-flavored opaline. Mmm, what a treat on a warm summer day. And, of course, Mother will be glad to have you fix all the shake-ups you want, because she knows how much extra pep and energy food there is in every single opaline shake-up. Loads of extra vitamins and minerals and other things, everybody needs to be healthy and husky the way we all want to be. So, here's the thing. Annie wants all her friends to have one of these swell-new 1940 model shake-up mugs, and you want to get one, I know. Well, especially when Annie is fixed it so fellows and girls who drink opaline can get one absolutely free, even though our regular price is 50 cents. So, listen closely. Here's what to do. Sit right down after tonight's adventure, and print your name and address plainly on a piece of paper. Send it in, along with a thin metal foil seal, from under the lid of a can of sweet chocolate-flavored opaline. Mail it to Austin Annie, Chicago, Illinois, and she'll send you your new 1940 model shake-up mug, absolutely free. Now, don't put it off, will you? Ask mother to get you a can of sweet chocolate-flavored opaline right now, and send in that seal for your free shake-up mug tonight. Mail it to Austin Annie, Chicago, Illinois. Annie's sorry, but she can offer this wonderful free shake-up mug, only to her friends who live in the United States. But if you do live in the United States, send in tonight. Campbell's Soups bring you Amos and Andy, the drover Whalen, president of the 1939 New York World Fair, in person, in a special half-hour broadcast direct from the fairground. Hmm, say there, Kingfish. Now, what do you want there, Andy? Oh, well, I was looking for a sapphire. Well, sapphire done gone out with Mr. Brown. Mr. Brown, well, now, I got a kingfish. What's that there you're eating? Well, that's a new product there. It's called a goldfish soup, you know. Thank you. Good Lord. McFarland. Good Lord. Good Lord. Thank you. Good Lord. Hi. Good Lord. Good Lord. Good Lord. Good Lord. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. We're going to open the phone. And I'll tell you why it's enough of that nonsense. I'm losing stuff around here. Lost. Just never mind. I just lost it. That's all. And so we're going to talk about radio. And so we're going to open the phones. And so we're going to open the phones and we're going to talk about radio. Did that bring back to the mic. And where is going to hear thehope of the Internet. Now, then I say the device. Thank you. And I'll see you next time. I don't know. What is this? Uh-oh. No wonder I'm losing CDs. I just put one in the wrong place. 520-333-4578. Did you listen to radio a lot during your life? Do you do it now? I know that some of you are still doing it. I still do it. I'd rather listen to radio than watch television, to tell you the truth. I know that many of the listening audience is exactly the same way. Or used to be the same way. Anyway, that's why you're listening to radio tonight. That's why you have a shortwave radio, folks, because you like to listen to radio. I want to talk about something else also. Did you know that they now have a method of emitting a handheld EMP burst and can stop your car engine because it runs with the help of computer chips? Now, if they can do that, how many of you are listening to radios that have computer chips? How many of you purchased the little Y2K radios that are supposed to get you through an emergency that have chips inside? You didn't know that, did you? What are you going to do about that? You see, you're relying on these radios to get you through an emergency, and I'm telling you right now, if they can stop your car engine with a handheld little thing like a radar gun, they can stop your radio too. Or anything else with computer chips in it, if they want to. And in case of an atomic detonation or a hydrogen bomb going off, they emit electromagnetic interference, EMI. And this can completely destroy computer chips. Most people aren't aware of that and are not prepared for it. Good evening, you're on the air. Good evening. Yes, I remember I probably got on the tail end of radio. I listened to AFRTS on shortwave around 1965. Following really what's going on much easier on radio than I do on television anyhow. Well, we're sort of geared to that, aren't we? If we're watching television, our brain can't work. There is no room for the functioning of your brain. Your imagination is not allowed to work, and you're more or less put into sort of a trance, I guess it is. And you're forced to sit there and absorb whatever they throw at you. It's not the case with radio, is it? No, it isn't. In fact, you develop your intuition and your ability to conceptualize and imagine. And I still listen to radio quite a bit. I remember when I used to listen to radio in the early 60s and mid-60s in shortwave and trying to tune the ham radio operators in from the static and see how far you could get. And I remember listening to the Christmas programs on radio, the Scrooge. I've never been able to find it on TV, but it was in 1962 or 63 when I listened to that program, and I got so much out of it then. I was probably a late listener to radio, but I've always enjoyed radio. In fact, the only thing that came close to radio on TV was the baseball games with Dizzy Dean and Pee Lee Reese. They were the only people that really described it so that I could follow it. And on radio, if I want to watch a game or I guess you'd say figuratively listen to a game, I always turn on radio because I can always follow much better what's going on, and you're still able to use your imagination. You know that I have, right here in this studio, on tape, an entire baseball game from 1939. That's exciting. I think they do justice to the various games and stuff. They don't describe anything. They talk about whatever they feel like, you know, and then they find, oh, he hit a foul, or, yes, that's strike three, you know, or strike two, or whatever. They're sitting there wondering what happened, and they're talking about, you know, going to the 21st hole or something. Yes, that's true. You know, I still find radio quite valuable. A lot of the information I get on radio or I get on the computer, but you can't, I don't think you can beat it, the TV. I think it provides a distraction. I think there's a place for television, but I don't think that most television is being used, you know, the way it should, actually. I found a place for television. I really found one. I was out driving around one day, and I was headed out from Eager along 260 up toward Pinetop, and there was a road that I'd never been down before, so I turned right, and I went down that road, and it's, you know, went down a little ways, and then you were forced to go around a bend and go left, and then you went around this huge big pile of volcanic ash, actually. It was an old cinder cone from a volcano, and back behind there, guess what I found? What was that? A dump. That would be a place for them, you know. I think that they're missing the whole thing. I think that television used it in educational purposes and an interactive way, you know, or something like that, where it was probably given better resolution and a few things like that, and educational or documentary purposes would, you know, would be okay, but they did the same thing on radio, too, and I seem to find it much better. You picture, you can visualize things. Your ability to read seems to be better because you have to develop that picture. It's the same thing on radio, I think. Did you ever listen late at night to any of the old melodramas and suspense stories? Yes, we used to live, listen to it in, I think, I was in Colorado Springs at the time, and they used to have various, you know, mysteries, and they had a few murders, and they had a... Can you remember some of the names of those programs? Oh, let me think. Did you ever hear the whistler? Suspense? I don't remember that I, no, I didn't hear that. The creaking door? I remember hearing that one. Anybody who's ever heard that one never could forget it. I mean, from the very opening moments of the broadcast, it puts you in a real spooky mood when you hear that creaking door opening, and then the maniacal laughter of the master of ceremonies as he begins to spin the tale of suspense and mystery. I loved it. Well, I really wish they would do that again. I think you have better actors that came out of that, too. Your news was better. I mean, it seemed better. It seemed more together. I was listening to your program last night. I really marveled at the ability of those people to talk basically on their feet in an intelligent matter. I mean, you know, most of the interview with Mr. Bankhead and the other Republican minority leader there, they seemed to be able to talk at least on their feet. I'm not so sure that it was prepared or not, but they were able to say in a much more coherent manner what they wanted to say in radio and demanded the person to be able to speak well, I think. And it kept you interested, didn't it? You know, you hit something right on the head. Do you know that the greatest actors and actresses that ever appeared on the big screen started out in radio? Every single one of them? Well, that's pretty interesting. Well, you had to convey something. You had to convey a picture or you had to get someone thinking about it. I mean, you couldn't see the train, for example, in front of you. You couldn't see someone. You can imagine, for example, a person at the train station leaving his girlfriend or his family or his friends behind, you know, going forward to the war and various things like that. You had to convey that imagination or at least convey the atmosphere of it, I think. How did I do on the lighthouse story tonight? Did you hear that part of the program? I don't know that I heard, but I was in the eating. If you don't remember, you didn't hear it, or else I did a terrible job. I didn't hear it. I was probably eating supper at the time. I really certainly enjoyed tonight's program and last night's program because you could see what was going on. You could think about what was being said. I think that radio gives you a much better form for being able to use your imagination. I've certainly enjoyed it. I prefer to listen to radio anytime now. Anyhow, I wish they would get more programs. I wish they would develop new programs for radio. I think it would be still a good medium. I think, here's what I think. Now, I could be wrong, and I might be wrong, but this is what I think. I think if one powerful, really powerful radio station that could reach a lot of states started programming the way the old radio stations used to do, I think that station would gather a bigger audience than you could even imagine, and they would make more money than they could count. Well, I think you're right. I think there's a kind of a demand. There would be. There's kind of a need for that. I think people need to use their imaginations. When people build their ability to develop an intuitive concept, you find better readers. You find better students. Listen, I think you find better people that are as far as better thinkers, you know, because sitting in a radio, listening to a radio, someone the same as having somebody talk to you in your living room or your kitchen, you know, and you don't have, they have to convey the same idea to you that the person on radio would have to, and I think we're losing a little bit of that, I think, and I think radio would bring that back. Yeah, I think it gives you a sense of closeness and belonging. It lets you use your mind instead of sitting in front of some boob tube being mesmerized and put into a trance, and it gives you a sense of comfort. Even when you're hearing bad news on the radio, it's more comfortable to hear it on radio than it is to hear it on the television. Television gives you... Yes, I think you're right. I think that, well, for one thing, you have a sense of hope. You have a sense of confidence or a sense of, what would you say, I wouldn't say safety maybe, but you get the feeling that, yes, we're going to be okay if we just stick together. I mean, you don't get that feeling so much on TV. No, television, in fact, makes me extremely nervous. Now, don't get me wrong. I love to watch educational programs, and I love to watch a good movie sometimes. And sometimes they're not the best movie in the world, but, you know, to me, they're good. You know, and I like to sort of escape that way. But I don't like to get caught up in that, and I don't like to see anybody get taken over by the television set where they cannot live a life. I know people who never talk to anybody else unless they're at work, because when they're at home, they're in front of the boob tube. And they stay up in front of that boob tube until they go to bed. And that's kind of too bad. I believe that. That is kind of, it's really too bad. And I think a radio, you know, the family can sit around the radio. You can come in and, you know, if you hear a noise, you have to say, what does that mean? You know, if they're walking across the room or if they're doing something, you have to be able to interpret that noise, you know. And you have to imagine what it would be or the different sounds that went along with the various things that were going on. You know, you have to put that together. Whereas a movie or television, you know, and they're good things. But the radio, you had to put that sound together, what was going on. You had to put two and two together as far as what was going on. When they said something, you had to add, you had to use your head and put in the facts sometimes. Or when they said something, you had to pay attention and put other things together. Sure. I certainly enjoy radio. I really do. Well, I certainly thank you for your input and for your call. Thank you very much. I appreciate it. Yeah, radio makes me feel good. There's something magical about hearing that voice come through this little box and you can't see who it is. You have to imagine what they look like. And I can tell you right now, you never imagine what they really look like. Never. In a million years. When you actually see them, they never, ever look like what you pictured in your mind. It doesn't happen. 520-333-4578. What's been your experience with radio? I love to sit in a room with a group of people listening to something on the radio and know that my experience is totally unique. Even though we're all listening to the same thing, what's going on in each one of our heads is totally different. You can't do that with television. Television shows you what to think. Shows you what to see. Presents everything to you. There's no room for individuality. No room for imagination. No room to think. Good evening. You're on the air. Hey, Mr. Cooper. How are you? I'm fine. You know what they used to say? I collect old radio programs. It happens as a teenager. They used to say, back in the radio days, every family owned a color set. But, you know, the program you played yesterday, I believe I saw that advertised where they had an entire, almost an entire day of radio programming recorded. I don't know if that's where you got the one you played yesterday. That's exactly where I got it. It looked like it was going to be real interesting. I was wanting to get it. I just haven't sent away for it yet. Well, you know, on that day, I think it was about a year and a half ago. On that day here, September the 21st, 1997, beginning at 6 o'clock in the morning, I played that on this radio station, 101.1 FM in Eager. And a lot of people thought that they were in a time warp or something. They got up that morning and heard an entire day from 1939. And I didn't give them any warning. I didn't tell them what was happening or anything. Boy, did I get some strange phone calls. Oh, yeah. I love those little soap opera stories. Yeah. All day long. The Romance of Helen Trent. Yeah. Mark Perkins was like the king of the heap of soap. Ox and all. Procter and Gamble presents Ox and all's own Mark Perkins. Yeah. I'm sure if you're young, remember that. No, no. I remember it. I really do. You see, my father was in the military. And so I lived most of my life in foreign countries. And the Armed Forces Radio Network, wherever we went, would play all of those old shows. All of them. Hey, do any of your friends collect those discs that the Armed Forces people used? They were great big records. I got about a dozen of them. I've got two of them here. And they're not serial programs or nothing, but they're... What they are is movies. Movies? Yeah, the ones I have. Oh. Yeah, speaking of movie actors, did you ever hear the James Stewart Radio Series Six Shooter? Yes. I mean, everybody knew who James Stewart was. And you could just... When he would do that program, he was such a good... After it speaking, like you were talking about, you could write in your own mind, see everything he was doing, and the expressions he had on his face when he was going after a bad person or going to have to shoot at him or something. It was just like you described there. Yeah, I remember all of them. I remember Saturday morning, let's pretend. I remember the Lone Ranger, the Cisco Kid. I remember Boston Blackie, Sergeant Preston and his Wonder Dog King. Yeah, he's my... How old are you exactly? I know you're about... Probably at least 10... I'm 45. Are you 10 years older than me? Exactly. I'm 55. Yeah, you... I can barely... I can only remember the serials being on when I was really small. I don't remember all the ones you've had. And I remember when I was a little boy before I ever went to school, I remember my mom would have the radio on all day when she cleaned house. And that's when women really cleaned house. I mean, my mom cleaned house. She scrubbed the floor. There wasn't a speck of dust when my dad came home anywhere. And she listened to those soaps all day while she was cleaning and we played outside. Well, yeah. I mean, the families could kind of like have a radio going, say, in the evening when they were all at home together. They could have a card game going or something and still understand what the radio program is about. Whereas in television, you can't really do that. No, can't do it. Some of the times... And I noticed a lot of folks call in to the places that sell and collect and play the old program. The blind folks really enjoy them because they can understand all the story. Where there might be in a television program, even if just a few seconds of something is left out or not described to them, they'll miss something important to the story. Yeah, Orson Welles nailed it when he said, it's the theater of the mind. Oh, yeah. He was pretty cool. I mean, he was only 21 years old when he made those first... Oh, he was a genius. He was a genius. He was also, you know, working toward the New World Order. He was very much involved in that. I wouldn't be at all surprised about that. I got this information, please, Almanac. And it tells about how he made the movie about Citizen Kane, you know, and being about William Hurst. Uh-huh. Well, somehow, and maybe you know more about this story than I do, but William Hurst murdered a movie producer out on his yacht. And this was in the 1920s or 30s. Well, be careful. That's alleged. Oh, yeah. He was alleged to have murdered a movie producer on his yacht. And I thought maybe that was what prompted those folks to make that movie about him. No, they made it because it promoted Marxism. Whether he was right or wrong about William Randolph Hurst and whether Citizen Kane portrayed the media correctly or incorrectly is not the point. The point is that Orson Welles was involved in changing the mental attitude toward government and the established institutions in this country by waking up the common man to the power that resided within them in order to bring us to where we're at today in this wonderful democracy going into socialist new world order. Now, I'm not defending William Randolph Hurst or any of those people. Sometimes the best way to tear down a bunch of wonderful, great institutions is to single out one that's bad and pin it on all of them. Certainly. That's, you know, yeah. And he was marvelous at doing that. You know, something I heard you say on your, speaking of having ideas and stuff, something I heard you say years ago when you were on your other station years ago, and I kind of took it to heart and it made sense was, and I get in a lot of arguments with folks over this and I'll say, well, if you don't believe what I'm talking with you about, and this is after I've gone and checked it out at the public library, I said, go to the public library and read these publications these outfits have and look, don't believe what I'm telling you and take it as gospel. Like you say on your program, don't take this man or that man or all the others. Word is being gospel until you've gone and seen it for yourself. I still say that. Yeah. And I got this one friend of mine, his family's all Notre Dame graduates. He is too. He isn't even speaking to me anymore for telling them that. Because some of the things that we talk about and it's mentioned and discussed on programs like yours, I said, hey, don't just take what those folks tell you or what I'm saying. Go and find out. And he's gotten offended and left in a huff and won't even speak to me. Well, you've threatened his comfort zone, you see. He's comfortable in what he's been told is the truth, and he does not want that stirred up or shaken because it might bruise the cocktails. I mean, wouldn't you just be happy as you could be if you could wake up tomorrow morning and find out everything you thought you knew today about these things were all mistaken? Absolutely. I would be so happy and such a weight would be removed from my shoulders, I would be delirious with happiness. And that's what I tell my buddy. I say, I hope all you doggone Rebecca, Sonny Book, Prime people are right because the specter of what's coming is going to be absolutely, you know. Yeah. When we lose our rights and freedoms, they've been chipping and, you know, sanding away at it. Oh, and they're not going to stop either. And they firmly believe that there's too many people living in this world and they've got to eliminate at least two or three billion of them, minimum. Well, I've gone back and gone through the old foreign affairs magazines and stuff, and unless I would have seen it myself, there was no way to talk with you personally. You couldn't have convinced me those folks, you know, actually believe that stuff. But it's all there, isn't it? Yeah, and that's not the only publication. Even the mainstream publications sometimes allude to that stuff. There's tens of thousands of publications. You see, but most people never look beyond their own little world. They don't read the publications of special interest groups that have agendas. They just listen to their spokespersons and think that they're doing good for the country and for the world because they sound good. And they don't really get in beyond, you know, that facade, that public presentation, the public relations job. And so they don't really know what's going on. Yeah. I didn't mean to get off the radio subject. I love those old radio. I got like three hours of them that we get around this area. But we are on the radio subject. We're on the radio. I thought about the old radio programs. But, yeah, yeah, programs are always interesting. I didn't want to call and hog up the entire night. But, yeah, there's some other stuff I wanted to say. But that was the one that's got me in trouble with everybody. You know, everybody. And I tell them don't believe just because I... Well, you put them on the spot when you do that. See, you're not telling them what to believe. And so they can't say, oh, you're just full of crap. Now you've put them on the spot. You've said, okay, I've told you this. And you say you don't believe it. Now I'm telling you don't believe me. But don't believe anybody else until you go check for yourself. And if you don't check for yourself, you know, what you're saying without saying it. And they get the message loud and clear is that they're stupid. I'll tell you a strategy these folks will use if you're conversing with them. They'll use a statement and then they'll try to pretend your intentions of what you said were entirely something else and then base an argument from that. Have you ever had someone do that? Like someone, you've had folks call you and try to say, well, you're anisemitic or something where you didn't even say something. Or you'll mention just one Jewish person that might be acting up and make it sound like you dislike everyone that's in that ethnic group where you don't mean that at all. Or they'll take just a small and try to make it sound like you have an entirely different idea than what. And then base their argument from that. Oh, they do that all the time. In fact, that's a standard procedure for the socialists is character assassination by making unfounded accusations. For instance, if you're speaking in front of a group and you're put on the spot, the unfounded accusation is made to you in an arena where you cannot really prove that it's not true. And so that everybody was there goes away with this thought in your mind that you're anti-Semitic or that you're a racist or that you're some right-wing extremist bomber dude or something like that. But I used to get around that really easily. People would, like I would be a guest on a radio show, and someone would call in and accuse me on the air of being a right-wing extremist, white supremacist, racist, anti-Semitic. And then I would just calmly look at the radio host and I would ask him, do you believe that? And he would say, well, I don't really know. And then I would introduce my wife. You see, and she's Chinese. And so then I would ask him to describe my wife over the air. And then he would say, well, how do you know he's a white supremacist, anti-Semitic, racist, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And he would say, I know because I've seen him at these meetings and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And he would just bury himself. And be totally discredited because I could not possibly be any of those things. And be married to a Chinese woman. And even if I wasn't, I still couldn't be because I'm part Native American. I'm not a white dude. What nation is your family? I've heard you mention that before. It's one of the tribes of the Northeast that made up the Iroquois Federation. Wow. Yeah, that's interesting. There's no one left of that tribe of pure blood at all. And the movies, I used to get so bad. I'd see they portray Indians. My family's all, well, my mom's Jewish, crap, man. But people look like me and look just like me and I don't even look anything like an Indian. And they just put dark makeup on them and expect folks to believe they're Indians. That's anti-Semitic. Huh? You're an anti-Semite. No. I heard what you said. That's anti-Semitic. Oh, speaking of radio programs, you know what you're saying? I'm really sorry. It's not on no more. The radio. What's that? The Larry King call-in radio program. Remember that one? I don't like Larry King because he controls the button. In other words, when you call this show, there is no screener and there is no way to prevent anybody or to even know who's on the phone. Not the TV program, the old radio program. I know what you're talking about. His radio program, all of his calls were screened. Every single one. Oh, yeah, yeah. Just like Rush Limbaugh. If they even suspect you're going to say something they don't want to hear, you never get on those shows. You don't get on Larry King Live. Oh, I didn't like it so much for the people that called as much as I liked for the honors and stuff he'd get on there. And they would explain. He could get the. Oh, you're talking about the guests. Yeah. Yeah, and he could get them to explain about their books and stuff. And it would kind of give you a good idea whether you could even be interested to buy it or go to the library and get it. Or, you know, he was pretty good at doing that kind of stuff. Yeah, well, if that's the reason you like it, well, that's a good reason. But most of those broadcasts, anybody who makes it big in broadcasting like Rush Limbaugh, Larry King, you know, any of those big syndicated people, they make it big because the established power knows that those people aren't going to allow anybody to come on their show and say anything that's going to disturb the status quo. Well, I know I called a big station in Chicago. They were talking about all the right wing folks being after Bill Clinton. This was about six, eight weeks ago. And I called the young guy that was screening. And I said, hey, why don't you guys go to your tape library there in Chicago and pull out that doggone debate. You know, it was during the primary where Governor Brown from California, when he was running along with Bill Clinton. And they faced off there in Chicago. I believe it was at WLS TV station. And I said, get that doggone tape. And Jerry Brown really got dug into Bill Clinton about, you know, all various kinds of things. He hadn't been nominated yet. And I said, now, is that a doggone right wing conspiracy? I said, Jerry Brown is about as establishment Democrat as you're going to get. And that kid wouldn't let me get on there. And he's like a... Of course not. He wasn't going to let you say anything like that on the air. And I'm not... It's like if... When Bill Clinton does something good, it should be... Even though I don't care for the man that didn't vote for him, I... You know, or anything. And the primaries are not... It has nothing to do with Democrat or Republican. Yeah, sir, you and me understand that. Yeah. Or just anybody with an open mind. Any idea is good, no matter where it comes from. Yeah. If it's a good idea, it's a good idea. It doesn't matter who says it or who implements it or anything else. If it's not a good idea, it's not a good idea. And because you say it's not a good idea, it doesn't mean that you're some wacko out in left field or something. That's where you get, like folks that... That's the socialist technique of discrediting the opposition. They label you as something that they have brainwashed the public not to like. Where did that doggone expression... They say Nixon was one of them to really get it started when he was a congressman. They call it the whispering campaign. Yeah. You know, to where you just begin just the aspersion of somebody believing or saying something or have done something. And nobody really has enough gumption to go check it out for themselves. Oh, they never will. People love gossip. And they love to hear bad things about their neighbors. And they love to spread it. Whether it's true or not, they don't care. And if they find out ultimately that it's not true, hell, it was fun, wasn't it? Yeah, nobody... They don't care who they hurt or how much they hurt somebody. And the next rumor they hear, they're going to do the same thing all over again. Yeah. And they never check. Oh, no, that's work. That requires that they actually do something. You know, I got a lazy streak and bad than anybody else. But I guess folks need it. Most of their education needs to come from a teacher, an old teacher at our Catholic high school where I went. My father, I got an Irish father, Jewish mother. I drank too much but I bought alcohol wholesale. I was reminded. But this old priest used to tell us, education isn't something we can't just fill your mind with information. We're teaching you how to go and get it for yourself when you need it. Mm-hmm. And I never could make that connection until I was an adult because I thought you go to a college or a high school or whatever just for them to show you what to do. Where your own education in all areas of your life needs to come from, you know, your experiences of learning it mostly on your own. I think everybody in America should be assigned to their own personal nun. And that nun should go with them everywhere. And every time they start to do something stupid or ignorant, that nun should pull out a ruler and just smack them across the knuckles just as hard as she can. I'll tell you what, those old teachers like that slapped those N-words out of my vocabulary at a real young age. They slapped a whole bunch of stuff out of me. They weren't nuns, but I remember my English teacher in high school, Naramasu High School at Grant Heights Military Housing Area in Japan. Her name was Dr. Florence Hay. And she was one of the most wonderful women I've ever met. I've never, ever forgotten her. She taught me English. And the next greatest teacher I ever had taught me speech. And that was my speech teacher, Mrs. Bale. And between those two women, they pretty much set me on the straight track. And that's upon the foundation that my grandmother laid. Because my grandmother really, really took care of me when I was little. And she taught me to read, as a matter of fact. Yeah, you know, you never forget good people. Even if they smack your knuckles and make them hurt really bad. I mean, you know whether it was for a good cause or a bad cause. And I just hate to see all these children running around today with no discipline whatsoever. And they think the world owes them everything. And boy, have they got a rude awakening coming. Well, a lot of us, I don't believe their condition or the way our behavior is not. It's more of the parenting's fault than it ever is of the... Absolutely the parent's fault. And it's the school teacher's fault. These children get away with murder. Well, yeah. I mean, they get away with murder. I'm 45 now. And I knew when I was young, I thought, man, I probably shouldn't have any children. Because I like to chase my women and drink too much. So I didn't. Because I knew I had that much of an irresponsible way about myself. So I didn't. But, and I watched folks. And I knew I would raise children that turned out the way they are now. My sister is the same way. She's like 53. And she didn't want to care. Not that she doesn't like them, but she didn't want them. And so she didn't have. I don't understand why these folks today, if they have no plan to, not only to care for the children, I mean, to see that their material needs are met, but they don't want to spend the time with them. What did they have them for to begin with? Oh, you know the answer to that. It was for a few seconds of pleasure in the back seat of a Chevrolet. That's what it was all about. It had nothing to do with being responsible or looking out ahead. And guess what? Oh, I can always have an abortion. You know, it's okay. Even at our Catholic high school, we were told, in this day and age, there is no reason for any, this was 27 years ago when I got out there before. They said there's no reason for any of you girls to be turning up pregnant in this day. And this was at a Catholic high school. Yes, there is, because they're taught that it's okay to have sex, and they're even given condoms to go and do it. Today, yes, entirely. And they're taught how to do it. When I was a boy, in fact, I'm going to tell you the truth, right here on radio, right in front of the world, you can take what you want. I never had sex with a girl until I was, I think, 22 years old. And I never knew anybody who did. I knew a lot of guys who liked to say that they did, but I knew that they didn't, because I knew the girls that they went out with. And I never knew a girl who got pregnant. Never. Not once. Now, I'm not saying that this didn't happen in some places. But it certainly didn't happen in any of the schools or the crowds or the places where I lived. Oh, I believe it just didn't, you know, there's a slight big difference between you and I, but, yeah, it was, well, it was starting to change a lot when I was in school. You got out in 62, I got out in 72. No, I graduated in 1961. Yeah, yeah, just, you know, about 10 years difference, right? And it was really beginning, and you were probably still in military then, weren't you? Back then. 1961, August, I enlisted in the United States Air Force. How long did you stay in? You were in just... I was in the Air Force and the Navy. And how long... And when I got out of the Navy, I was going to go in the Marines. Yeah, you were in until how long in your life? In the Army. In the Army. Um, I was, I received honorable discharge from the United States Navy December the 11th, 1975. Yeah. I mean, I think the 70s, really, everything... So from 61 to 75, I was in the military. Oh, that's wild. Yeah, my dad's brother's a colonel from... The reason I got out is I discovered what was really going on behind the scenes. Oh, yeah. I heard your one program one time where you saw the messages when Richard Nixon resigned and stuff. Yeah. Encoded secret messages. Yeah. That was a military coup. They're all trying to blame it on Henry Kissinger or something. That was a military coup engineered by the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Yeah, it's strange. When the president got acquitted, one of the Watergate men died that weekend. Yeah. Well, listen, we better let somebody else get in here. We only got to... Oh, I love you. I'll tell you, I take back everything I ever said about you. I like it. Well, thank you. That's the whole hillbilly expression. I know. Well, hey, so long. Let those other folks on. I know. You lift them up by the tail and you say, yep, it's a pig. Well, so long now. Okay. Thanks for calling. 520-333-4578 is the number. Wow. We had some good calls. We had a good broadcast, I think, and I'm having fun. I don't know about you. So, the number is 520-333-4578. Call us up. Let us know what you think of all this. Do you remember the real radio days? I mean the real radio days. There's very little real radio today. Good evening. You're on the air. Mr. Cooper. Yes, sir. Yes, this is Jack from Indiana. Hi, Jack. And I'd like to share a few of my radio experiences with you. Okay, Jack. But try and talk a little louder, would you, Pete? Okay. I'm sorry, sir. Okay. I started in the shortwave probably around 63 when I was about 10 with an old night kit. And I remember listening to some old programs. I don't even have my old logbook anymore. I wish I did. But I remember listening to the first heart transplant broadcast over that in school. John Glenn's launching the space, so-called launching space. Had a few rebroadcasts of the shadow. And when I was in the Marine Corps, stationed down in Jacksonville, I would stay up late at night and try to pull in WOS on a Sunday night. And this thing about these EMF or nuclear blasts or radios, I heard, I don't know if it's true because I never checked it out yet, about a safe box where you could put a radio in. I'm not sure about this. I've heard that, too, but I don't know how to build one, and I wouldn't know if it was built if it would really work. All right. Do I have some old tube radios and transistor shortwave radios also? It won't hurt tube radios. I don't know about transistors, but it won't hurt tube radios. And that was my point tonight is if you don't have some tube transmitters and tube receivers, shame on you. Because when the buffalo chip hits the fan and they start, you know, popping these bursts and frying computer chips, these things aren't going to work. Yes, that's correct. What I understand. Check your local cop, if he has one of these guns that can stop your car. If he accidentally pointed it at your house and pulled the trigger, it could just really wipe you out. Yes, sir. I've heard that. And I remember using CB radios, you know, with illegal amplifiers stopping cars right on the road. And I remember when my grandfather used to have the old radio telephones in his vehicle, you know, quite a while. I remember a lot of things about radio, old crystal radios that I built and trying to build. Uh-huh. I eventually wanted to build a transmitter myself. But that's about it, Bill, you know. Well, we're looking for an all-band transceiver right now. We've got a Siltronics CB. It's the 1110 Charlie. And we've got an old Halicrafters S108 shortwave receiver that is just unbelievable. Yes. It puts the Sangians and everything else just to shame. I mean, it is so sensitive and brings in such faraway broadcasts that we can clip a Sangian to the same antenna and not hear a thing. It's amazing. And a Hammerlin and all that. Yeah. Yeah, Hammerlin and so good. I don't have a Hammerlin. And a couple other kits that I built when I was younger. I had to rework them, you know, after time. But I do have tubes and that. I had to get hot on that. Well, Mr. Cooper, thank you for your program. And keep up the good work. You're welcome. Thanks for calling. Thank you. 520-333-4578 is the number. You're listening to... Thank you. I woke up one morning, turned my radio on. I heard a man's voice coming on strong. All about a contact he was having that day. And the winner got a date with Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. He said, hey, my name's Dick. Let's get this straight. You're the lucky lady. It's your caller number eight. Well, I did touch the phone. I didn't hesitate. I said, Dick, Dick, Dick. Am I caller number eight? Caller number eight. Caller number eight. I could be the lucky lady if I was caller number eight. He said, you're caller number eight. I'll pick you up at seven. And you can start climbing that stairway to heaven. So he picked me up. We stayed out till three. Dick, we're sure the jock I thought he'd be. The man for me. The man for me. Dick, we're sure the jock I thought he'd be. He said, time's up, sweetie. I gotta go. I'll be talking to you on the radio. So he took me home. I begged him to stay. I knew I was in love with Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. I knew I was in love with Dick the DJ. Always voice comes through so cool and clear. I just love having Dick next to my ear. So every day I turn him off. I've got Dickie on my mind all day long. All day long. All day long. I got him on my mind all day long. Don't you love that laugh? Dick it was and Dick it is. Dick the number one radio with North, South, East and West. Everybody knows Dick is best. Dick is best. Dick is best. Dick the DJ. He's the best. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. Dick the DJ. I love, I just love that laugh. Oh, the laugh? Yeah. Good evening. You're on the air. Oh, okay, Bill. This is Dave calling from Sock Choppy, Florida. The placina of the universe. Sock Choppy, Florida. Yeah, real winter. Okay. Well, I was listening to, I'm the merchant seaman you mentioned. Oh, yes, I know who you are. Yeah, I was in the deck department. I made one trip and we called it the stupid department. That's the galley. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. And then I went ordinary seaman. That took me six months during the Vietnam War because of the emergency. Uh-huh. To get my blue A-B's ticket. And the reason I did because I looked at the engineers coming out of the engine room all greasy and dirty. Used to make me sick just to carry a message down there for the captain. Yeah, but they made more money than the captain. Well, that's okay with me. I didn't want to be down there. That was stinky, stinky, smelly, hot, terrible place. It was like being in hell. 150 degrees in the fiddle. We dry our clothes on victory ships up there. That will be done in 20 minutes. But I've been listening. You're very correct about tube sets. I keep an old national packed away receiver. Uh-huh. And I keep a 40 and an 80 meter coil and some crystals off of a 15 watt Amico transmitter CW. They say there is no more CW. And I picked up the commercial maritime station. It was right on your frequency. Yeah, they're all over the place. Yeah, and they still use them today. Sure. And if they ever have an air burst, you can forget about your satellites. And they don't have any more radio operators. They've got one technician. He takes care of the engine room, the diesels. And I sailed on a few diesels, and they're worried about terrorists. Well, I'm also a locksmith. You know, I picked up over the years. And if I was a terrorist with a 21-man crew cut down from 42, I could go down in that engine room, unlock it, and completely destroy that ship. And they're doing it with the Navy ships. But it's a good idea for you listeners to pick up, like, a Holocraft. The S-38 was my first receiver I brought on a ship. And it would work on AC and DC. I've got an S-108. S-108. Yeah. And they're excellent radios. They're fantastic. Mine is, anyway. Right. And the thing, the status of a merchant seaman, the bosun, say, would have, was it the Grundig back in the late 60s? Yeah. The officers, they could afford the Zenith, Transoceanic. And I've got the second model sitting here, if you ever want to read. There's a lot of those floating around with the magnet antenna? Right. I've got the one with the three batteries, the A, B, and C battery. Uh-huh. And it's like the second model. But it's got to be restored. But we used to sit on ducks, run into Vietnam or run into India. And forgive my breathing, because I had heart failure to recuperate. But, uh... Did you ever go into Da Nang Harbor? That was my first trip. That's where I had my 18th birthday, May 6, 1967. Did you see that patrol boat? My birthday is you. Did you see that patrol boat scooting around the harbor with the twin 50s in the turret? No. I remember, let's see. I remember changing money at the White Elephant. Yeah. Yep. That was also Naval Headquarters. Right. And we were too stupid of kids. We were 16 and 17 to realize that we could change a black market outside the gate and get more. Well, I'm disappointed that you didn't see me tooling around the harbor there protecting your ship. Well, on my second ship... You didn't care, did you? You wanted your leave. Yeah, we wound up in a Pacific house of... I know where you went. Yeah, it's all right. We were on a family program. But, you know, kids are kids. Yeah. But, uh... But, uh... The name was a beautiful place. And, you know, I kind of liked those people. I liked them, too. Yeah, you know. But, uh... I've, uh... I've, uh... We used to sit on deck and the, uh... You could... We made a run to India on S-Man lines. And every time there's a phenomenon. Yeah, I did not like India. You didn't like India? You've been there? India? You never told... Put that in your book. No, I've been to India. I don't like India because of the... The unbelievable poverty that some of those people live in. And because of the caste system, they have no hope of ever getting out of it. That's true. I wound up with hepatitis in Madras six weeks and I almost died. Yeah. Well, you can die real easy in India of just about any kind of disease you can think of. Well, my watch partner, the ordinary, drank water from shore. And brought back some food. And exactly one month later, I came down with it approximately. And, uh... Wow. It's a terrible thing there. Well, you know, I could talk to you all night about our seafaring adventures. Well, you have to go to show the Navy and Merchants Day now. Well, maybe we will sometime in the future. Yeah. I, uh... Sent off your newspaper. And I sent off some stamps for the kids. I went through my, you know, QSL card stamp collection. Uh-huh. And I picked up the weirdest stamp from Poland. It's got a bull's head, a man, in a brown shirt, holding a chest, like a money chest, with a padlock on the front. The bull's head has a ring through his nose. How do you interpret that esthetically? You mean esthetically? I don't know. I'd have to look at the actual stamp. Well, I made a package for you. Oh, okay. Well, the girls will like that, I'll tell you. I got one from the Channel Islands in England. One little island, the Diving Club, put them out. And that's got the Sebring diving helmet. I didn't know they made clothes suits in 1840-something. Yes, they did. Well, it's got that on it. When I went to diving school, the Coastal School of Deep Sea Diving in Oakland, California, Al Michelow, who ran the school, had one of those, and I got to dive in it. Wow, that must have been neat. I bought an open-bottom helmet out of popular science. Uh-huh. And I got off the ship, and they gave you a little electric pump you run off a dry cell battery. And I tested it with my nieces and nephews in a swimming pool. I wouldn't be doing that. Well, I went down about 20 feet with it. We took a boat out, and I almost got ran over by a yacht because I was used to steering ships. Some of these things that people put together to go diving with, like little electric pumps, can kill you. Right. And I had lights on the clam rake, lights on the basket, and a knotted rope, and it was three pounds underwater. Gilbert Roland. Huh? Gilbert Roland, the 12-mile reef. Yeah. Yeah. But what happened was my nephew went to get a soda in the bow of the rowboat, you know, and I'm talking three times, like the book said, for him to pull me up. Uh-huh. Because I got caught in a current. Yeah, well, you know your line signals. That's exactly what it is. Pull me up. Yeah, I read a book. I read books on things, on the bottom, by command or something. You know what? You know what I just noticed? What? We're out of time. Okay, Bill. I've got to let you go. Okay, bye. God bless you. God bless you, too. Bye. Your conversation was so interesting, I forgot the time. Good night, folks. God bless each and every single one of you. See you tomorrow night. The May of the World of Warp God bless each and every single one of you. Remember, folks, as you go about your daily business, God is watching you. God is watching everything you do. You're here with a time and destiny between the future and the past. I am a lighthouse. I am a sea. I am an air that you breathe. You're watching to me. I am a sea. I am a sea. I am nothing to do. You are coming to me. I'm inside my heart. You come to me To lay by my side To show my care To cuddle my leg And to quell the threats You're listening to 101.1 FM Eager Classic radio like you always wished it could be 101.1 FM is your community service Non-profit radio station A raindrop So many raindrops It feels like raindrops Falling from my eye Falling from my eyes And my love has left me I'm so alone I would bring her back to me But I don't know where she's gone I don't know where she's gone But she's gone In my head Rain is falling From my eye Oh no It's meant to kill For a man ain't supposed to cry Oh it must be a rain A little bit of rain It feels like a rain Falling from my eye Falling from my eye Falling from my eye Falling from my eye Falling from my eye to the