Twenty-six dramatic radio broadcasts, spotlighting the contributionsof various cultural groups to the economic, social, and politicaldevelopment of the United States, presented by the United StatesDepartment of the Interior, Office of Education, and the ColumbiaBroadcasting System with the cooperation of the Service Bureaufor Intercultural Education, and assisted by the Works ProgressAdministration.
Harold L. Ickes
Secretary of the Department of the Interior
William Dow Boutwell
Director, Radio Division, Office of Education
John W. Studebaker
Commissioner of Education
Rachel Davis-DuBois
Director, Service Bureau for Intercultural Education
Program Executive: Philip H. Cohen, Officeof Education.
Writing: Gilbert Seldes, Director Television,Columbia Broadcasting System.
Research: Philip L. Green, Office of Education;Rachel Davis-DuBois, Service Bureaufor Intercultural Education; Ruth E. Davis,Office of Education.
Production: Earle McGill and William Robson,Casting Directors, Columbia BroadcastingSystem; Mitchell Grayson, Office ofEducation.
Music: Leon Goldman, Conductor, ColumbiaBroadcasting System; Rudolf Schramm,Office of Education; H. Charles Pantley,Office of Education.
Administrative: Richard P. Herget, BusinessManager. Wm. A. Wheeler, Jr., Assistant.
The “Americans All—Immigrants All” programs are designedto promote a more appreciative understanding of our growingAmerican culture through the dramatization of the contributionsmade by the many groups which are a part of it. Whatbrought people to this country from the four corners of theearth? What gifts did they bear? What were their problems?What problems remain unsolved? This series dramatically presentsthe story of “Americans All—Immigrants All.”
1. Opening Frontiers.—New trails are blazed,frontiers are pushed westward, and foundationsof our great democracy are laid by newcomersfrom across the seas.
Adams, James Truslow. The March of Democracy;the Rise of the Union, Vol. I.Charles Scribner’s Sons, N. Y. 1932.
Morgan, James. The Birth of the AmericanPeople. Macmillan Company, N. Y. 1930.
2. Our English Heritage.—Rich experiences inself-government and basic liberties are introducedby the English in colonizing the northern Atlanticseaboard.
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