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1. Liver and Onions. As any kid who grew up in the '50s or '60s knows, mothers insisted they eat their liver to get their dose of vitamins A, D, E, K, B12, and folic acid. And as these kids grew ...
Beaker Street with Clyde Clifford was the first underground music program broadcast regularly on a commercial AM radio station in the central US. The station's signal carried far and wide. In early 1967 Beaker Street was a staple for adherents to the burgeoning underground communities in the upper Mid-West especially in Des Moines, Iowa, where ...
Ma Perkins. Major League Baseball on NBC Radio. Make Believe Ballroom. Midwestern Hayride. Milkman's Matinee. Monitor (radio program) Moon River (radio program) My True Story (radio and TV series)
Z. The Zero Hour (U.S. radio series) Categories: 1970s in the United States. American radio programs by decade. 20th-century American radio programs. 1970s radio programs. Hidden category: Category series navigation decade and century.
"In 1995 there was Tool Kit for Healthy School Meals and in 2006 there was USDA Recipes for Child Nutrition Programs and Schools," Bolger tells Yahoo Life. " And, a list of the recipes from 2006 ...
1 August 1945. (1945-08-01) –. 13 January 1980. (1980-01-13) Opening theme. With a Song in My Heart. Family Favourites (remembered by its later name Two-Way Family Favourites) was the successor to the wartime radio show Forces Favourites, broadcast at Sunday lunchtimes on the BBC Light Programme, later BBC Radio 2 from 1945 until 1980.
Their slogan also changed to "Greatest Hits of the '60s and '70s." In late 2007 and early 2008, more 1980s music was added to the rotation, and effective July 6, 2008, WOGL's slogan was changed to "The Greatest Hits of the 60s, 70s and 80s," which is also used on sister station WCBS-FM when it returned to an Oldies/Classic Hits format in July 2007.
Marvin Lee Aday was born in Dallas, Texas, on September 27, 1947, [8] [9] the son of Wilma Artie (née Hukel), a schoolteacher and member of the Vo-di-o-do Girls gospel music quartet, and Orvis Wesley Aday, a former police officer who went into business selling a homemade cough remedy with his wife and a friend under the name of the Griffin Grocery Company. [10]