Παραδείγματα από το σώμα κειμένου για CONELRAD
1. CONELRAD elicits a variety of emotions on its pages.
2. Strangelove" and "Godzilla" to NORAD‘s annual tracking of Santa‘s Yuletide activities, the period remains a part of our culture – and for those who may have forgotten that connection, Conelrad serves as a reminder of our shared atomic ‘heritage.‘ CONELRAD÷ All Things Atomic can be found at http÷//www.conelrad.com/.
3. Permission to reprint/republish Named for the CONtrol of ELectronic RADiation radio system (aka, The Emergency Broadcast System), CONELRAD is a growing pop cultural archive with contents that span from the late 1'30s to such recent developments as the 1''' film comedy, "Blast from the Past," and last December‘s induction of "Duck And Cover" into the Library of Congress National Film Registry. (While the Cold War may be over, it appears that Cold War ephemera might prove to have an impressively long half–life.) And with so much material to cover, CONELRAD wastes no time in presenting a few choice offerings from the Atomic age.
4. Well, if you need to brush up on your Atomic and Cold War culture, CONELRAD÷ All Things Atomic can assist you with everything from stocking your fallout shelter to infiltrating the neighborhood communist cell – and make some helpful entertainment suggestions along the way.
5. While there are no audio samples to accompany the Periodic Table‘s text notes, there is sound onsite – such as RealAudio clips from the 1'61 LPs, "Inside a Communist Cell," (with a "re–enactment of an actual cell meeting") and "The Complacent Americans" (which CONELRAD compares to a Cold War variant on "It‘s a Wonderful Life"). Other audio sources include "The Marxist Minstrels÷ The Communist Subversion of Folk Music" (featuring, "Bob Dylan÷ He, she or it?"), and a link to CONELRAD‘s Atomic Platters program on Live365 web radio.