Difference between revisions of "Chapter 8"
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'''Mary Texanna Loomis's Radio College'''<br /> | '''Mary Texanna Loomis's Radio College'''<br /> | ||
Loomis (1880-1960) founded the Loomis Radio College in Washington, D.C., around 1920. Her goal was to train students not only in radio theory and operation but also in the practical craftsmanship and electrical skills behind the technology. The school included a workshop and a lab, where students built or repaired their own equipment. She required students to have hands-on experience: “No man … can graduate … until he learns how to make any part of the apparatus.” Courses included topics in radio theory, operating practice, drafting, basic electricity, shop work, and more. [https://oldqslcards.com/3ya.pdf More...] | Loomis (1880-1960) founded the Loomis Radio College in Washington, D.C., around 1920. Her goal was to train students not only in radio theory and operation but also in the practical craftsmanship and electrical skills behind the technology. The school included a workshop and a lab, where students built or repaired their own equipment. She required students to have hands-on experience: “No man … can graduate … until he learns how to make any part of the apparatus.” Courses included topics in radio theory, operating practice, drafting, basic electricity, shop work, and more. [https://oldqslcards.com/3ya.pdf More...] | ||
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+ | '''bootleggers'''<br /> | ||
+ | In the 1930s, “Bootleggers” were people or organizations that broadcast or transmitted radio signals without a valid government license — the radio equivalent of Prohibition-era alcohol bootleggers. |
Revision as of 20:04, 5 October 2025
Page 51
Type 19 [...] Doerle Twinplex
The Doerle “Twinplex” regenerative radio receiver, a popular kit or DIY radio design in the mid-1930s, often sold by or associated with the Doerle Company. It used the Type 19 dual-triode vacuum tube.
an eye electrically fly
In 1930s slang, "fly" meant smart, sharp, hip, alert. So this phrase would mean "sharp, perceptive vision."
policy runners
“Policy” (also called the numbers game, policy racket, or policy wheel) was an illegal daily lottery. Players would choose a 3-digit number (usually from 000–999), wager a small sum (a penny, nickel, dime), and hope the number matched the “winning number” drawn that day — often based on horse-race results or stock exchange figures. A small bet could return big winnings — sometimes $60 on a nickel bet — so it was wildly popular among working-class people shut out of legitimate financial systems. Policy runners were the low-level agents who collected bets from players in homes, barber shops, taverns, and street corners. They “ran” the slips and money to a policy station or policy bank, where a “writer” or “clerk” logged them in and forwarded them up the chain to the “banker” — the operator who financed and controlled the operation.
Page 52
Mary Texanna Loomis's Radio College
Loomis (1880-1960) founded the Loomis Radio College in Washington, D.C., around 1920. Her goal was to train students not only in radio theory and operation but also in the practical craftsmanship and electrical skills behind the technology. The school included a workshop and a lab, where students built or repaired their own equipment. She required students to have hands-on experience: “No man … can graduate … until he learns how to make any part of the apparatus.” Courses included topics in radio theory, operating practice, drafting, basic electricity, shop work, and more. More...
bootleggers
In the 1930s, “Bootleggers” were people or organizations that broadcast or transmitted radio signals without a valid government license — the radio equivalent of Prohibition-era alcohol bootleggers.