View allAll Photos Tagged online_learning

Symbiosis Center for Distance Learning maintains close links with business and industry, to promote the employability of our graduates and encourage them to recruit our students for vacancies to know more click on www.scdl.net/online-distance-learning-mba-placements.aspx

Excerpt from my CA2 Poster about changing culture of Higher Education towards Online Learning in the wake of the lockdowns. QR Code with link to the resources.

Note about this photograph: (rant inserted in July, 2015)

 

As you can see this photo has been up for nearly 8 years and, as of late, I had come to the realization that there are sleezy operators on the internet who will stop at nothing to make money on their sites by swiping other's work and displaying ads and giving NO attribution or credit to the original creator. I had originally posted this photo on Flickr and realized that it was getting more views than all of my other photos combined. So I set out to document what it was that made this particular building famous in my patently verbose way. I noticed that the more I typed and especially after adding links, the more views it got.

 

Originally on Google image search, it wended its way up to the first place if one searched for "Scranton Prep". That was not really my intention as the School itself should have top billing. I would settle for row 5 or 6 on page 1! Anyway, one day a couple of years ago, it fell totally off the Google radar and was only available if one was to add "Flickr" in the query. I don't really care as I am not really interested in the number of views though I found it interesting that this particular photo got so many views.

 

So then, in the interest of appeasing the Google gods and obtaining their algorithmic absolution, I put the same photo on Panaramio, another google property. This also allowed it to be viewed in Google Earth which I thought would get me the indulgence I was seeking on Google image search. Wrong!

 

So along comes this sleeze bag operator from the Czech republic by the moniker mapio.com which was using my photo (along with others that they swiped including the Scranton Fire Department) as background for their commercial pages, which, from what I can tell is a source of revenue as they display text ads for mostly educational sites.

 

Instead of my Flickr photo working its way back up, they chose my image which was expropriated by mapio (interestingly, they swiped it from Panaramio! - I don't know or care if Google is aware of it) Interestingly, even though I deleted my photo from Panaramio, it is still displayed on the top row of pictures (not in full resolution though) of Google image search though no longer on the mapio site as a background. Further, if one goes to mapio.com there is no way to leave feedback as in "I don't appreciate that you stole my photo without attribution".

 

If you go to their plain vanilla web address, mapio.com, you would not realize that they do more than rent out apartments in London without further digging. It is ironic that Google image search continues to display the mapio photo as if it belongs there even though they swiped it from Panaramio and it is no longer there! That obviously means that mapio has the photo cached.

 

That is the real reason for this rant. At the very minimum, any site wanting to use anyone else's photo or other media, should request permission to do so. I have had a few requests for that type of thing and I was glad to do so. Also, my photo not need to be the #1 photo (it is and has been on Yahoo image search which uses Bing as their search engine). I do not need to be embarrasingly successful...

  

Update 5-15-15

Though you can see an an approximation of the above image at google images, it is now a low resolution version hosted by flip.life (whoever they are) and, if one was to click on the "View Page" for further information, there is no information, in fact there is no photo!

 

Update: 5-16-15

Of all things, my actual Flickr photo is the one displayed on google images once again. It shows that, with persistence, one can take control of one's internet presence even if it is via a circuitous and devious route.

 

-- END of RANT --

 

Just sit back and eat the popcorn and enjoy our main feature...

  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------- The Scranton Preparatory School ------------------------

---------------------------------- aka Scranton Prep ----------------------------------

----- 1000 Wyoming Avenue in Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA -----

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  

The vantage point of this photo is through the fence abutting the railroad tracks behind the school's athletic field; the school itself is seen beyond the field and Wyoming Avenue. One of two relatively recent (2005+) additions can be seen to the left of the main building. It is actually the second iteration of wings built on the site of the former outdoor basketball courts and, like the smaller former wing, houses a gymnasium. The complementary addition on the right contains science laboratories and a lecture hall. That addition is not as large because it does not have the depth (from front to back) as it abuts a car dealership.

 

The Scranton Preparatory School, "Prep", was founded in 1944 by the Society of Jesus (the Jesuits) and was originally located in the 300 block of Wyoming Avenue. Its first home was a building next to the Cathedral rectory which had been vacated by the University of Scranton (formerly Saint Thomas College) when the university relocated to larger quarters at the Scranton estate in the area of Madison Avenue and Linden Street. That building is gone; its replacement is a prayer garden.

 

Prep later moved to a building at the east corner of the same block at the intersection of Wyoming Avenue and Mulberry Street. That building formerly housed the Thompson Private Hospital.

 

.The school remained there until 1961 when the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania decided to widen Mulberry Street resulting in the demolition of the building. There was a two-year temporary relocation to a building at the University of Scranton while a new site was located. An ideal candidate was located in the 1000 block of Wyoming Avenue at the site of the former Women's Institute of Domestic Arts and Sciences* (see footnote below) , a branch of the International Correspondence Schools. The school relocated to that building, pictured here, in 1963.

 

. Prep's enrollment grew substantially in 1971 as a result of the additional students from the all-girls' Marywood Seminary whose building had been destroyed by fire. Prior to the combination, Prep had been an all-boys' school. The current enrollment for the school (2016-17) is 775 students.

 

. If this building looks somewhat familiar, you may have seen its image in the old Popular Mechanics among others. Page three of the magazine was many times a full page advertisement for the International Correspondence Schools (ICS), which advertised heavily in popular technical magazines and had their headquarters in Scranton. The building was featured in the upper left corner of their study manuals and and there was nearly always a likeness of one of their manuals in the advertisement. Too, there was usually a bright yellow, double tear-off postage-paid return card for those interested in furthering their education in "The World's Schoolhouse". (Who or what was the second one for??!).

  

. The athletic field in the foreground of the above photo was previously occupied by a factory known as Haddon Craftsmen, the printing subsidiary of ICS. It occupied the entire block across the street from the Women's Institute. In perhaps the ultimate example of addressing simplicity and a study of worker/management dichotomy , the Women's Institute's address was 1000 Wyoming Avenue and Haddon's address was 1001 Wyoming Avenue. It pretty much boiled down to the boys being on one side of the street and the girls on the other. Amazing things can happen when there is one building per block on each side.

 

Haddon printed the course books for the correspondence courses as well as other textbooks for Intext (The International Textbook Company), the parent company of ICS that supplied textbooks used in college courses. In its latter days before it closed, Haddon Craftsmen was spun off from Intext and printed, among other things, paperback book selections for the Book of the Month Club.

 

.One mysteriously vanished detail of the demolition of the Haddon Craftsmen printing plant is an historical marker honoring Thomas J. Foster, the founder of ICS, which adorned the plant on the Wyoming Avenue side. In a rather grandiose proclamation, it stated that ICS was the "World's Schoolhouse". You can see an image of the plaque along with a comprehensive narrative of ICS's raison d'etre here. A rendering of the Haddon Craftsmen printing plant can be seen here. The vantage point for this image is catty-cornered to Haddon, in other words, if you were in the north corner of Coyer Motors, a tiny Pontiac dealership with room for a single automobile in its showroom. That property is now home to that paragon of fast food haute cuisine, Wendy's.

 

There is a street off to the left called Institute Way. The volume of mail was such that ICS had its own zone code (15, as in Scranton 15 Penna.) which later became zip code 18515 and is used to this very day by its successor institution Penn Foster . The value of having its own zip code has been largely attenuated, given that the terms "distance learning" and "online learning" have replaced "mail correspondence course" in the parlance of this type of education. Stamps are now optional!

 

When ICS moved to "new and improved" quarters on Oak Street in North Scranton in 1963, this building became the home of Prep. Along with classrooms and a chapel, it had residential quarters for the Jesuits on the 4th floor and a TV/radio station (not related to the school) in the basement.

  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE *

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

If you read on, you will see that there is a quiz at the end of this passage. It is recommended that, if one chooses to take the quiz, that it be self-scored.

 

As you may have NOTICEd, this segment is conveniently perforated so that you can cut and paste it and take it home if desired. If you are already at home, then you are already at home.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

********************* DO NOT attempt to mail it in! **********************

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The following is related only tangentially to the current building and is included for historical and amusement purposes only. It is not required reading for present day Cavaliers.

 

If you are, or have ever been a Cavalier after 1976 the following is arcane and superfluous information and will not appear on the graduation test. You need not read it!

 

Those who graduated in or before 1976 will be quizzed on call letters, frequencies, and TV and radio personalities.

 

One final preface to the next section is that, as usual, the people behind the scenes, the engineers, camera persons, secretaries, and others really deserve a lot of credit for any broadcast organization's success. They are, perhaps by omission and invisibility, the unsung heroes of broadcasting. This is largely because we never hear their names or see fast-scrolling credits which may or may not include them. What we see and hear on a daily basis is the "talent" or on-air personalities who are also essential and, because of their notoriety, appear to be 100% of tele-organizations. So, in a some way, we owe a good deal of gratitude to these invisible people for their contributions.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------- TALES OF THE BASEMENT -----------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

.First there was radio...

 

. In the olden days (the '60s and '70s), the basement of Prep was home to WGBI-TV (later changed to WDAU - channel 22) and WGBI-AM (910 kHz) and later WGBI-FM (101.3 mHz) radio. All were affiliates of the Columbia Broadcasting Sytem (CBS). The stations were owned by the Megargee family whose mainstay was the paper business.

 

Market penetration by the Megargee Paper Company, paper-wise, was such that its ubiquity ensured that no matter in which area restroom one chose to relieve oneself, it was assured that the label on the toilet paper and paper towel dispensers bore their brand.

 

.In the real olden days and after several frequency changes, WQAN (a Scranton Times/Lynett media company) and WGBI-AM (a Megargee of paper fame station) both broadcasted on 880kHz, the former from dawn until noon and the latter from noon until signoff. The stations operated at 1000 watts during the daytime and 500 watts at night.

 

.WQAN and WGBI shared the 880kHz frequency from the early 1930s until 1941 when the shared frequency was changed to 910kHz. This continued until 1948 when WQAN was allotted the 630kHz slot.

 

Urban legend has it that WQAN stood for "We Quit At Noon". That may be the actual derivation of the station's call letters. WQAN's call letters were changed to WEJL in January of 1954, the letters EJL being the initials of the newspaper's publisher Edward J. Lynett. According to the same urban legend types, the letters GBI in WGBI stood for "God Bless the Irish".

 

WGBI AM kept the 910kHz frequency and continued to use it for many years. Its mainstay was (both!) country and western music with the usual news and weather reports.

 

When Entercom lost its lease on WBZU's transmitter site on Davis Street in South Scranton in 2006, (WBZU is the current call letters of WGBI's 910kHz frequency) it set the stage for an ironic twist of fate. It turns out that WBZU and WEJL (formerly WGBI and WQAN) are once again located, equipment-wise, in the same location. This time, it is in the Scranton TImes building that the twain meet and their their transmitters are in the same room. Both broadcast from the tower atop the Scranton Times building at Penn Avenue and Spruce Street. These stations, which had parted company in 1948 are, once again, broadcasting side by side after a nearly 60 year hiatus!

 

...then came along that new-fangled invention, the television...

 

WGBI radio predated the televison station by nearly three decades. WGBI-AM began broadcasting in 1925 and WGBI-TV began in 1953.

 

In 1958 the McGargee family, the owners of WGBI TV, entered into a limited partnership with the Philadelphia Bulletin newspaper which operated WCAU TV in Philadelphia. The call letters of the TV station were then changed to WDAU. The Bulletin opted to sell WCAU, which then became a network O&O (owned and operated) and keep the smaller WDAU when forced by the Federal Communications Commission to divest itself of one of the television stations. The FCC deemed that there was too much signal overlap in the Lehigh Valley (Allentown) area where both signals were available. The partnership was dissolved a year later in 1959, the Bulletin selling its share back to the McGargees.

 

.In this era, Channel 22 was, hands down, the TV station as, along with the best local news gathering organization, the station was part of the CBS network which was the radio and television network. The local TV competition was WBRE, the NBC affiliate, and WNEP, the ABC affiliate. Too, there was a fair amount of synergy between TV and radio whereby some of the talent, including Tom Reilly and Bill White, among others, appeared on both media. Just imagine, one could watch the 6 o'clock news and on the way to the store in their '57 Chevy hear the same people talking at them!

 

.The entire TV menu at this time consisted of WDAU-22 (CBS), WBRE-28 (NBC), and WNEP-16 (ABC). Yes children, until WVIA, the PBS affiliate appeared on the scene in 1966, the entire TV world consisted of 3 TV stations! Nearly all broadcast stations, and TV sets for that matter, were black and white prior to 1965.

 

These were the days before the remote control; the term "couch potato" was not yet vernacular. One, upon hearing the phrase, might have thought that there was a misplaced spud on your davenport. TV viewers did not have the option of swiftly rotating though 500 channels of nothingness; three were plenty. One effect of the actual effort required to change channels is that people, many times, left their set tuned to a single station for an entire night. Too, it was a contest among the networks to see if they could lure you into leaving the dial set to their station.

 

.To add to the complexity of owning a set, there were many older TVs which received VHF only and in order to receive the UHF stations (those from 14 to 83), one needed a "converter box" as all TV stations in the Great Northeast (PA) were UHF. The converter box was a little box which sat atop the TV through which the antenna wire was routed, some electronic mumble jumble took place and then the resultant signal was routed to the TV via channel 3. These boxes (why are there always boxes involved with TV?) also had a separate electrical plug as they contained tubes. The TV was tuned to channel 3 (sound familiar?!!) and then one tuned the set through the converter box.

 

.As a bonus, semi-off topic, aside, I present the following:

 

Did you know that the TVs of old, the ones with the cathode ray tubes, (the analog ones) could be used to detect tornadoes or other storms in your area? It seems that storms broadcast on channel 2, much as channel 2 did. The method involved tuning the set to channel 13 and turning the brightness down just to where the screen was darkened and then tuning the set to channel 2. If there was a storm in the area, with each lightning strike, you would see the corresponding spikes on your CRT (here we are using the TV in monitor mode and hopefully you do not live in a city where there is an actual channel 2 broadcasting to spoil the fun). If there was an approaching tornado, the entire screen would glow so you knew to unplug your set and proceed directly to your tornado shelter. Maybe it would be best to place the TV in your tornado shelter and watch it until the power went out. By the way, there is nothing preventing you from trying this out if you have an old set lying aroud the house which has not been sacrificed due to our penchant for more pixels and the latest and greatest 3D 16384p 60" 7.1 theatre surround sound flat screen HD TV screens. Compare this product description with "da tube" which pretty much described a TV set in days gone by.

 

.For those of you who might be inclined to think that the previous passage was fabricated so that I might up my tube cred and continue my propensity for verbosity, which, given the lack of brevity in this mere photo description (!) seems not out of the realm of possibility, see the following link: Storms on TV

 

.End of bonus segment, now back to our regularly scheduled program

 

.Though their signals were easy to pick up in Scranton and Wilkes-Barre "metro areas", it was nearly impossible to get a signal outside of these urban areas. It seems that the undulating topography of heynaville (for clarification and further information on everything heyna, see Tutorial on Heynabonics ), otherwise known as Northeastern Pennsylvania, wreaks havoc on the electromagnetic emissions known as television signals. Simply stated, the folks out in the boonies could not get the TV signals.

 

.At this juncture in the annals of TV, a person in a metro area could easily get TV signals using a bow tie or rabbit-ear indoor antenna. The main problem with the "stronger" signal in these areas is that sometimes the signal could "ghost", a phenomenon whereby the viewer would not only see the intended transmission but, at times, a slightly off-registration "ghost" of the picture. These ghosts were caused by TV signals reflecting off large buildings or other objects. Many of these aberrations could be resolved by having someone else move the antenna about while you observed the screen. The best picture, it seems, always managed to leave the antenna holder/adjuster in a Twister-like body position and there were the predictable gripes as he/she put the antenna in a position "about" where it was optimum.

 

.Those in the intermediate area, say 8 to 10 miles away, depending on topography, could get a reasonable facsimile of a picture with an outdoor, roof-mounted antenna. It was found that wrapping a bit of aluminum foil around the antenna lead-in wire aided in minor adjustments to the picture. So if you needed to get rid of a minor ghost or snowy picture, the picture could be adjusted by sliding the foil up or down the wire as needed. People outside this range were able to get signals mostly through sheer will power and the expenditure of a goodly amount of funds for outdoor, roof-mounted antennae.

 

At this point, the only things keeping one from a clear TV picture were electromagnetic pulses, coronal mass ejections leading to minor EMPs), snow, fog, the cold war, high winds, communists, and rain. Reception, along with the dreaded horizontal and vertical hold adjustments on the TV required perseverance and experimentation if one was to be an avid TV watcher.

 

...it was then decreed that all TVs must have a coaxial cable attached and thus ended "free" TV as we knew it...

 

To solve the problem of lack of, or, at best, lousy, signal, the stations employed "translators" (no these were not people who translated heynabonics to English for the broadcasts!). These were additional broadcast towers distributed around NEPA (northeast Pennsylvania) to allow folks in say, Palmerton, Slatedale, and Slatington to get a reasonable semblance of a signal. These were not received on the regular station number, 22 in the case of WDAU, but rather, say for example, channel 18 in Clarks Summit or 52 in Hop Bottom.

 

Coincident with the rise of the translator, there was another industry, in its nascent stage, supplying TV signals to those who still had no reception. It was something called cable TV (or, in broadcast parlance, Community Antenna Television, or CATV) whose mission was to carry the local stations out to the valleys to the south and west where reception was otherwise impossible. This amounted to a guy locating an antenna on top of a mountain where he could receive the signal, amplify it by electronic means, and sell the signal to customers who were along the route of the wire. The charge was $2.00 per month for the service. They too had all of 3 stations on their schedule, though some subscribers in the southern reaches could get additional stations from the Philadelphia or New York areas.

 

Yes folks, cable TV was invented here in hard coal country in the little 'burgh of Mahanoy City so that an appliance store owner could sell more TVs. Though you may curse your Comcast or Time Warner cable bill, without cable it was impossible for a goodly segment of the population to receive any moving pictures on the television and for others to receive a clear signal.

 

Service Electric, which started operations in 1948 and still in business today, was a pioneer in the field. That may be why the first official broadcast of HBO was made from New York to Wilkes Barre in 1972 on Service Electric, a fact attested to on a bronze plaque on Public Square in Wilkes Barre.

 

--Yet another bonus, semi-off topic aside:

 

Certain areas in the Pocono mountains such as Tobyhanna and Mount Pocono were TV heaven. You could, with a moderate investment in an external VHF/UHF outdoor antenna, receive all the New York and Philadelphia stations plus the local UHF stations. Nearly the entire VHF dial from 2 to 13 had available stations. The quality of the signal depended on the weather and the amount spent on the antenna. Those with the best reception had the full dresser Channel Master fish bone antenna with the 360 degree rotating motor for VHF. You would turn on the desired station and turn the direction dial to the direction of the source station. Most times these directions were either known or actually marked on the rotation control knob. Some of the stations available were WCBS, KYW, WNBC, WNEW, WPVI, WABC, WOR, WCAU, WPIX, and WNET. It was like having cable before cable!

 

-- End of bonus segment. We now rejoin our regularly scheduled blurb which is already in progress.

 

.An odd situation was caused by the expensive AT&T/Bell System leased line to New York City for WDAU to recieve network programming. Rather than pay what they considered the exorbitant fee, a microwave relay system was set up to receive broadcast signal from WCBS in New York. This system was not unlike the system set up for cable TV where a receiver was placed on a mountain top and the signal was amplified. In this case, instead of being fed into a cable system, the signal was passed along to the next microwave tower in the chain. In the case of WDAU, the primary receiver was in Effort, PA in the Poconos and the signal was then beamed to the transmitter building atop the West Mountain in Scranton.

 

A problem occurred when WDAU had to sync with the CBS network for national programming. The engineers in the studio weren't able to see the WCBS signal and therefore an engineer had to be stationed at the transmitter to effect the changes as needed. This all had to be done with precise timing rather than cues from the station. Presumably there also had to be a switch at the commercials so those in Scranton would see commercials for da Acme and the Scranton Dry and not Crazy Eddie's commercials which were, as self-proclaimed, totally insane.

 

WDAU was not alone in having a cobbled-together system as similar methods were employed by WBRE in getting NBC's signal from New York to Wilkes-Barre and WNEP in getting ABC's signal from New York to Avoca. A side effect of all this cobbled-togetherness was that the TV signals' quality was, from time to time, not quite up to broadcast standards and there were the predictable complaints.

 

...they somehow all managed to operate in the cramped quarters....

 

When the local news made its debut on WDAU and other local TV stations, it was uncharted territory; they were flying by the seat of their pants, so to speak. The segments were 15 minutes long and consisted largely of the newsman reading reporter-generated news or copy from the newspaper. These documents were either held in his hand or laid on the desk, either of which required the anchor to be looking down a good deal of the time. There would be an occasional quick look up at the camera, hoping that his newspeak buffer did not run dry or his reading and speaking would get out of sync.

 

At this point in TV history, TV studios (also known as "sets") were rather primitive. Instead of having green screens , which enabled "chroma key", a method of cutting and pasting the talent's image superimposed over other graphics, the backdrop consisted of a textured, glittered wall. The field reporters were not giving live updates with the attendant graphics for their names and story lines; these were all shot on site on film and processed back at the station. In the weather segment, there were no dynamically updated, full color doppler radar weather updates. The highs, lows, and weather fronts were magnets arranged on a display board map.

 

These were the days before the teleprompter, chryron, chroma key, superimposed picture-in-picture and all the other equipment which give today's news broadcasts a very polished appearance.

 

What was remarkable was that, in this limited space, along with TV and radio studios and the requisite control rooms, there was a film processing area and a film library (Who can forget those "Movie for a Sunday Afternoon" etc. where cowboys and indians, Lawrence of Arabia type, and infinite World War 2, movies were played until the film reels wore out??!).

 

This was an era before ENG (Electronic News Gathering) where the live remote via microwave and later satellite was still a dream. The news was captured entirely on film shot by the photographers at the scene and rushed to the station and processed, hopefully in time for the next news broadcast. Submarine designers or NASA could surely have taken a clue on space utilization from this organization, where every cubic inch had to matter!

 

...and, as with all empires, it too must fall...

 

.Alas all of the former McGargee broadcasting empire has morphed into other entities. WDAU-TV was sold to Keystone Broadcasters in 1984 and redesignated WYOU. They initially moved broadcasting operations to the former Kresge's store which abutted the Scranton Dry Goods store on Lackawanna Avenue.

 

.That change also marked the end of the common ownership of the TV and radio stations. WYOU - the former WDAU (Channel 22 (13) - CBS affiliate), is currently owned by Mission Broadcasting and operated by the same company, Nexstar, that owns WBRE (Channel 28 (11) - NBC affiliate) in Wilkes-Barre. Both TV stations are currently located in the same building on Franklin Street near Public Square.

 

One downside to the WYOU/WBRE merger is that, upon the consolidation of the studios to Franklin Street in Wilkes Barre and the relocation of all their transmitters to Penobscot Mountain near Mountaintop, they decided to do away with all of their translators. Contrast that with WNEP which still maintains several translators reaching all the way to State College in the middle of the state and one can easily see why WYOU/WBRE are a distant 2nd and 3rd place finishers when it comes to audience size in the NEPA market. The Nexstar philosophy is that 90% of the people watching their station(s) are receiving it on cable therefore they don't need the expense of multiple translators.

 

.The radio stations were sold to Entercom in the early 1990s. WGBI-FM (101.3mHz) which had a soft rock format is now WGGY in Pittston doing a country thing. WGBI-AM (910khz) which was unabashedly country is now part of the greater WILK AM/FM conglomerate. It has a talk format that simulcasts in Wilkes Barre, Scranton, and Hazleton, and has a nearly 50 mile monopoly on talk radio in the region.

 

WGBI AM now bears the undignified moniker of WBZU AM and is merely, to use TV jargon, a translator. Though running on the classic 910kHz frequency, it is a tool with no personality of its own. Johnny Cash, Hank Snow, Ferlin Husky, and Merle Haggard surely are not tuned to BZU in their respective places of rest.

 

When WDAU moved out of Prep in 1984, its new home was the former Kresge's 5 and 10 Cent Store (note the F. W. Woolworth store further up the block, about the 4th iteration of Woolworth's opened by C. S. Woolworth mentioned at the outset of this description) downtown on Lackawanna Avenue. It remained there until Southern Union, a gas and oil conglomerate whose operations were largely located in Texas, through the beneficence of a hometown boy, bought the property and demolished Kresge's to build their expensive and fleeting headquarters. WYOU/WBRE then moved their Scranton operations next door to a corner of the Scranton Dry Goods building at Wyoming and Lackawanna Avenues. These days, WYOU, the formerly fabulously fantastic WDAU plays second fiddle to its ugly big sister WBRE.

 

...and that, folks, is the brief, concise history of a diminished broadcasting empire whose greatness will live on only in our memories and imaginations (and of course on Flickr!).

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

------------------------------------ UPDATES ----------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This will be updated periodically as the various internets and time allow.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  

Update April 3, 2009

 

WYOU announced that they will no longer be doing local news. They will offer Judge Judy or some similar tripe in its place. Sadly, they probably will have higher ratings.

 

Further Update sometime later 2012

 

WYOU once again has local news. It is a simulcast with its sister station WBRE. The only difference in the newscasts is the superimposed logo at the bottom right corner of the screen identifying the station one happens to be viewing.

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------- New and Improved: Quizzes -----------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This section will be updated periodically and I will post an email address where you can send your test for grading.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

WDAU quiz:

 

1. The main news anchor for much of the 60s was:

 

a. Mark Hiller

b. John Glough

c. Derry Bird

d. Perry Como

e. David DeCosmo

f. Franklin D. Coslett

g. John Perry

h. Hoyt Keiser

i. Tom Powell

j. Tom Bigler

k. Joey Shaver

l. Jerry Griffin

j. Bill O'reilly

 

2. A typical news/weather/sports lineup in the 60s would include (pick 3):

 

a. Vince Sweeny

b. Bill White

c. Harry West

d. Jack Doneger

e. Bill Flanagan

f. Nolan Johannes

g. Debbie Dunlavey

h. Jim Mustard

i. John Perry

j. Joe Zone

k. Tom Reilly

l. Lorri Lewis

m. J. Kristopher

n. Phil Cummins

o. Joe Dobbs

p. John Glawe

q. Bob Carroll

 

3. The signoff (Remember when TV stations actually signed off?) for WDAU started with:

 

a. The national anthem

b. "Hey all you coal miners out there..."

c. "From the basement of Scranton Prep..."

d. "Serving the industrial valleys of Pennsylvania..."

e. "That's all for today..."

 

4. The nearest donut/coffee shop to (and possibly half of the customer base of) WDAU was:

 

a. Mr. Donut

b. Curry Donut

c. Krispy Kreme

d. Dunkin Donuts

 

5. The official licensees of WDAU/WGBI was/were:

 

a. Roy Stauffer's Chevrolet

b. Megargee Paper Co.

c. Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Broadcasting Inc.

d. International Correspondence TV Inc.

e. Coyer Motors

f. Scranton Broadcasters Inc.

g. Burne Oldsmobile

 

6. During Station Identification (yet another "remember those"? questions), along with the call letters, channel number, and location, the following was shown:

 

a. A commercial

b. Public Service Announcements

c. Time and Temperature

d. Current Mine Subsidence information

e. School Closings

 

7. As part of WDAU's signoff each night, a video of an Air Force plane flying at high speed and altitude and accompanied by a (rather dramatic) poem by John Gillespie Magee was shown. The poem, whose last stanza is excerpted here:

 

Up, up the long, delirious burning blue

I've topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace

Where never lark, or ever eagle flew —

And, while with silent, lifting mind I've trod

The high untrespassed sanctity of space,

Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

 

was shown just prior to the national anthem. That poem was called:

 

a. Flying High

b. Hang 'em High

c. Twelve O'clock High

d. High Flight Poem

 

8. This is a quasi off-topic question: (quasi because it surely was reported on by WDAU) : The out-of-contol truck, the one popularized in Harry Chapin's immortal ballad "30,000 Pounds of Bananas", after overturning and disgorging its contents, came to a screeching halt at:

 

a. Chick's Diner

b. The beer distributor across from Chick's diner

c. The intersection of Harrison Avenue and Moosic Street

d. The intersection of Irving Avenue and Moosic Street

e. 1001 Wyoming Avenue

 

9. The very last image broadcast each day before the transmitter was turned off and the picture went to snow was:

 

a. A picture of the building

b. A picture of Madge Megargee Holcomb, the station owner

c. A test pattern

d. A random picture of paper products from the Megargee Paper Company

e. Live TV shot of Scranton Prep and WDAU staff schmoozing over coffee and doughnuts at Krispy Kreme

f. A live shot of the Krispy Kreme donut shop showing late night WDAU employees drinking coffee

 

10. The weather segment at WDAU was often sponsored by firms such as Bell Telephone or gasoline distributors. At one point, an oil company sponsored the segment which required the weatherman to use a car antenna as his pointer. Atop the antenna was a red ball. That sponsor was:

 

a. Shell

b. Texaco

c. Hess

d. Atlantic

e. Mobil

f. Sinclair

g. Esso

 

11. WDAU and WGBI had their transmitter on:

 

a. Penebscot Mountain

b. Bald Mountain, west of Scranton

c. Mountain Top

d. Colocated with WEJL atop the Scranton Times tower

e. Mount Pocono

 

12. WGBI radio's format was:

 

a. Hard Rock

b. Talk

c. Heavy Metal

d. Country and Western

e. Classical

  

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  

I will post the answers out there in internetville once I figure out what they are.

 

Update 4-12-13

 

Since this seems like just as good an internet as any, the answers are:

 

1. g 2. ibk 3. d 4. c 5. f 6. c 7. d 8. d 9. c 10. d 11. b 12. d

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

Finally, if the Tales of the Basement has whetted your appetite for all things WDAU, a most excellent (former) TV station, a most excellent site is maintained by a former WDAUer:

 

Carl Abraham's WDAU site

 

Go there and you can Catch 22.

 

I spent today at the Creative Live studio in San Francisco to attend a course on cyber security. Marc Goodman provided lots of information on how to secure our computers and devices to avoid malware, viruses, ransomware and identity theft. I highly recommend this course which you can watch online:

 

www.creativelive.com/class/how-to-secure-your-digital-lif...

 

365:2018

45/2018

getnewcourse.com

 

Online learning courses are synchronous or asynchronous. Synchronous learning is live learning which takes place at the same time that an instructor is presenting the course. Here the student and teacher are engaged in the process through the use of a microphone, earphone, monitor, computer and video camera.

Mind map separated out (by request) for linear thinkers

This is all I see of him. He is either doing online learning, playing fortnite with his friends or doing video editing to make some money. His whole life is spent behind a screen.

Branching out, interactive learning coming soon. Follow the link for more details.

karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2021/04/interactive...

Schools that offer online classes make it very simple to pick your classes and start whenever you want. As the picture quotes "knowledge is power...Turn your power on." Just saying how easy it is to work these things.

An inspiring place to read and learn!

 

You are free to use this photo under its Creative Commons license. For the attribution, please link back to either my online learning website DIY Genius or my tour website Spirit Quest Adventures.

Benefits of Online Learning is no more a topic of debate and the need of it in educational assistance is widely accepted. It is always better to have assistance in education that is available for students without any constraints of time. bit.ly/2QHT9hN

 

Pre-course warming-up for "First Steps in Learning & Teaching in Higher Education"

The image was published in my blog at zazani.wordpress.com/2012/05/20/lets-warm-up-pre-course-a...

 

Baking cookies with Max (and virtually his class) on the last day of online learning…. #yum #cookietime🍪

As DMPS transitions to distance learning for the rest of the 2019-20 school year, a top priority is making sure every student is equipped to access online learning resources. The effort took a big step forward on Friday, April 10 when seniors who had technology needs picked up laptops at their home high schools. A drive-thru service was setup at East, Hoover, Lincoln, North, Roosevelt and Scavo for students to check out devices. Distance learning for seniors will begin on Monday, April 13. Technology distribution will continue for other grade levels through late April.

From the 2nd Researching Online Learning Workshop at the University of Canberra (Council Room).

Best Powerpoint Presentation slides.Its my slample works.you can find more videos here .please subscribe my channel. powerpoint, presentation, training, microsoft powerpoint (software), tips, transitions, tedx, templates, power point, powerpoint template, animations, presentations, design, tutorials, video, powerpoint presentation, point, microsoft, power, tutorial, powerpoint tutorial, powerpoint tutorials, powerpoint 2013, tips and tricks, basic, office 2013 video tutorials, learn powerpoint, presentation (software genre), how to use powerpoint 2013, help, 2007, ms powerpoint, office 365, presentation software, office 2013, microsoft office, technology, \ slides, office, trick presentation, business, public speaking, toastmasters international, tips, communication, competition, how to, business video presentation, ruletheroomrtr, professional video, skills, informative video event, fbla, winner, warrior special offer, powerpoint template, powerpoint 2013, powerpoint 2010, powerpoint 2007, powerpoint 2003, after effect, business (literary genre), powerpoint, business seminar, plan, leadership, 2012, powtoon, explainer video, presentation software, make your own animation, animated presentation, free presentation software, animated videos, free animation software, animated clip, presentation (software genre), business english in london, business course infographics, animation, infographic (field of study), design, illustration, british, digital, adobe illustrator (software), statistics, illustrator, graphic, visualisation, data, infographic, usf;, fyc;, instagram, tumblr, binalogue, best, character, animated, motion, pinterest, twitter, facebook, social media, social, council, media, online, learning (quotation subject), microsoft powerpoint (software), marketing strategy (organization sector), marketing (industry), visual communication (field of study), mslgroup (business operation), storytelling (broadcast genre), of, communication (field of study) graphic design, design, graphic design (industry), illustration, photoshop, animation, gfx, illustrator, graphic designer, tutorial, graphic, typography, university, graphics, student, graphic design portfolio, ana marta, year, first, portugal, youtubers, marta, ana, coursework, work, acting, post, the arts (broadcast genre), corporate, editor, creative, editing, director, bad, motion, demo reel, digital, media, good, get powerpoint, powerpoint animation, powerpoint animation tricks, powerpoint animation tutorial, powerpoint animation examples, powerpoint animation effects powerpoint, powerpoint animation, powerpoint animation tricks, powerpoint animation tutorial, powerpoint animation examples, powerpoint animation effects Best powerpoint templates,best presentation templates,best powerpoint themes,powerpoint,themes,templates,best templates,best presentation themes,powerpoint presentation templates,powerpoint designs,best powerpoint designs,powerpoint master slide,powerpoint theme 2014,2015 powerpoint templates,Microsoft PowerPoint (Software),best powerpoint presentation,powerpoint template,best presentation powerpoint,power point Animation, PowerPoint, PPT, tricks, advanced, effect, effects, tutorial, cool, text, powerpoint animation, Kinetic Typography, presentation, powerpoint advanced effects, powerpoint animation tricks, powerpoint animation tutorial, kinetic typography powerpoint, cool powerpoint, amazing powerpoint, kinetic typography powepoint, powerpoint spice, powerpoint presentation animation, powerpoint tutorial, trick, power point, kinetic typography tutorial, advanced powerpoint, typography animation

Online classes allow students to learn from almost anywhere, using a computer.

 

For those who wish to use this image, please attach photo credit and a link to www.bluefield.edu, as detailed in the following terms:

www.bluefield.edu/article/creative-commons-images/

Today, many online course creators use technology such as augmented reality and virtual reality to make online learning courses more immersive, meaningful, real-time and exciting. Visit the website at hurix.com

 

hurix.com/online-courses-higher-education/

 

online learning courses

Photo of a smartphone, a tablet, and a laptop computer.

 

We welcome anyone interested to use or modify this image, but please provide credit and a link to www.leanforward.com. Read more about these terms here: www.leanforward.com/elearning-photos/

Exploring the mysterious gun turrets along Tower Beach. Photo by Caspian Kai.

 

You are free to use this photo under its Creative Commons license. For the attribution, please link back to either my online learning website DIY Genius or my tour website Spirit Quest Adventures.

"Online learning is not the next big thing; it is the now big thing."

- www.mgu.ac.rw

#elearning #mgurwanda

The video just came out, with a discussion of online education and Draper University.

Extramarks - Online learning apps For Students Complete Solution Crack tests, get to think about material, get help with homeworks, ventures, articles, advantage from all NCERT arrangements. To put it plainly, all that you requirement for modification and self-ponder, this application gives directly in your grasp. A pp Link -https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.Extramarks.Smartstudy&hl=en_US

The fall approach to Wreck Beach.

 

You are free to use this photo under its Creative Commons license. For the attribution, please link back to either my online learning website DIY Genius or my tour website Spirit Quest Adventures.

week seven of my free embroidery class is now live on my blog

karenannruane.typepad.com/karen_ruane/2020/04/embroider-o...

ISKME’s Teachers as Makers Academy stimulates teachers’ creation of Open Educational Resources (OER), freely available online learning materials, in a collaborative format that covers the basics of finding and evaluating OER; and leads teachers through the design and remix of new projects to share. We view teachers as makers of learning and strive to support innovation in their teaching by leading them through a dynamic two-day Academy that stretches their creativity in terms of how and what they teach. Started in 2009, the Academy has been offered in San Mateo, California, Detroit, Michigan, and Queens, New York in conjunction with ISKME’s Design Lab at Maker Faire.

More info available here: iskme.org/our-ideas/iskmes-teachers-makers-academy

Great quote.

 

You are free to use this photo under its Creative Commons license. For the attribution, please link back to either my online learning website DIY Genius or my tour website Spirit Quest Adventures.

1 2 4 6 7 ••• 79 80