Boys To Men
Produced by Jay Allison
Listen to this program with RealAudio in 14.4, 28.8, or G2 SureStream.
Boy Scout Troop 3 in Derby, Connecticut has been performing its "Gang Show"
in a church basement for 75 years. Pictured here, the Gang in 1950. Songs
and skits have been passed down generation-to-generation all these years.
|
Two stories about males in uniform, marking two very different
anniversaries are told by Quest for Sound Curator Jay Allison. Both stories
are the result of listeners calling NPR to tell us about sonic treasures
they had in their possession.
Part One:
Boy Scout Troop 3 - The 75th Gang Show
Produced by Jay Allison
Listen to this program with RealAudio in 14.4 or 28.8 flavors. (3:20)
For 75 years the Boy Scouts of Troop 3 have performed a Gang Show in
the basement of the Methodist Church in Derby, Connecticut. Shows from the
1920s through the 1990s are on record - scout skits and songs. Some of the
songs sung today by this generation of boy scouts are the same songs sung by
their grandfathers. We heard about this tradition through the Scoutmaster,
Randal Ritter when he called our Quest For Sound phone line.
Part Two:
VE-Day
Produced by Jay Allison
Listen to this program with RealAudio in 14.4 or 28.8 flavors. (4:50)
May 7, 1999 marks the 54th anniversary of VE-Day - the day Germany
surrendered unconditionally to Great Britain, the United States and the
USSR. But Japan's surrender was still to come. Through our Quest For Sound
line, NPR listener Ken Dunn told us about his mother Edna Glover Dunn,
former president of the Marine Corps Auxilliary in Los Angeles. On VE-Day,
radio station KHJ aired her plea to continue the fighting until victory was
reached in Japan.
You need the free RealAudio player to listen to audio files.
Copyright © 1999 The Kitchen Sisters
|