November 25, 2025

Thanksgiving Day of Freedom 1954 ©

 

On Thursday, November, 25 1954, snow was falling lightly but that did not stop

enthusiastic citizens from the borough of Freedom, Pennsylvania, with a population of 3,500,

from greeting two Romanian refugee children, and their mothers, in the local Thanksgiving

Day celebration. Freedom’s enthusiastic pageantry gained nation-wide newspaper attention

and could be seen as a textbook example of how to rally Americans in support of Cold War

broadcasting in the 1950s. Below, we will look at Thanksgiving Day 1954 in Freedom, Pennsylvania, a borough in Beaver County located along the Ohio River about 25 miles northwest of Pittsburgh.


Dr. Constantin V. Teodoru, his wife Mirela, and Mr. and Mrs. I. Pop “escaped” Romania in

1951 and settled in New York with their families in 1952. Reportedly, broadcasts from Radio

Free Europe inspired them to “escape” from Romania. The Teodoru family later said they

“got through the Iron Curtain safely” by bribing a railroad guard; the Pop family did not

explain how they “pierced the Iron Curtain.”

 

On October 27, 1954, Frank Smith, president of Ambridge radio station WBVP, hosted a

luncheon at the Penn-Beaver Hotel in Rochester, Pennsylvania. Those in attendance included

representatives from Freedom’s borough government, schools, churches and civic groups.

Smith announced plans for the Thanksgiving Day festivities in behalf of two refugee children

Nicolas Teodoru (12) and Alina Pop (14), who were to be “entertained as guests of the people

of Freedom and Beaver County.”

 

Frank Smith told the assembled group in Freedom that Nicolas and Alina, at their request,

were to appear on the popular CBS television program “Strike it Rich” in New York on

November 24, 1954 so they could win money to donate to the Crusade for Freedom. “Strike it

Rich” (“Strike in Lucky in the UK) has been described as “A game show where people relate

their unfortunate situations (fatal disease, injury, their house burned down, etc.) in hopes that

someone will take pity on them, call the show and give them money or merchandise.“ The

producer of the show was Walter Framer formerly of Pittsburgh.

 

The American Heritage Foundation arranged to fly the children to Pittsburgh on Thanksgiving

Day as a “Flight to Freedom” to symbolize the Romanian family’s flight to freedom.

Arrangements would be made by the American Heritage Foundation to take them to Freedom,

including a possible helicopter flight.

 

Burgess (mayor) Thomas W. Harrison was named chairman of a committee that was formed

to arrange for a community dinner and program for the children. Harrison called for a

planning meeting in the Freedom High School Home Economics House on the evening of

November 4, 1954 of the borough’s schools, churches, civic clubs and fraternal

organizations.

 

Smith concluded the meeting with the hope that there would be national television and radio

coverage of Freedom’s Thanksgiving Day activities.

 

The November 24, 1954 editorial in the grass-roots newspaper Beaver County Times began

with this headline, “We Should Be Thankful for American Freedom.” The editorial went

on: "Tomorrow, Thanksgiving Day, the good people of Freedom, U.S.A., will pay tribute to

the continuous efforts of the “Crusade for Freedom” and Radio Free Europe to liberate the

downtrodden people of the Iron Curtain countries behind the yoke of the Red horde. As a

symbol of the freedom so earnestly desired by those people held captive in their own

countries by the Communist dictators, residents of Freedom will stage a community welcome

for two children who fled from Romania with their parents to escape the Red oppressors."


Nicolas and Alina appeared on the television show “Strike it Rich” on Wednesday night and

won $210 for the Crusade for Freedom. They left New York Thursday morning with their

mothers and Normal H. Pader from the American Heritage Foundation. After their arrival at

Greater Pittsburgh Airport, they all traveled via a motorcade to Freedom.

 

Freedom school children, waving American flags and singing “God Bless America” greeted

Nicolas and Alina as they entered the borough. Burgess Thomas W. Harrison presented them

with the “keys to the city” as a symbol of their "freedom to enter and leave without question.”

Harrison said he was “proud of the enthusiastic response of local civic and municipal groups

in arranging the Thanksgiving fete at a demonstration of American freedom and liberty in the

name of our community."

 

After a parade down Freedom’s main street Nicolas' and Alina sat down with 150 guests at a

Thanksgiving Day banquet in the Freedom High School gymnasium. Freedom housewives

dressed in pioneer costumes served the guests.

 

Nicolas and Alina then watched with 600 Freedom residents and guests a pageant depicting

early Pilgrim and pioneer days. School groups and Boy Scouts demonstrated Indian dances

and scenes from early American history. Alina Pop was asked if there was a difference

between “nothing but lies” of Communist propaganda and “the truth this side of the Curtain.”

She replied, “There is, oh, such a big difference.” Afterwards, Nicolas and Alina visited a

typical American turkey farm and then returned to New York.

 

Associated Press and United Press reports provided newspaper coverage throughout the

United States. The Associated Press reported, for example, “The community not only was the

scene of the actual festivities but symbolized the liberty found in every American town. And

the children represented freedom-loving peoples throughout the world”.

 

November 21, 2025

"Life with Luigi" in the Cold War ©


"Life with Luigi" in the Cold War

 

In 1950, about 3.9 million households in the United States had televisions -- this was 9 percent of American homes. Radio was the primary source of entertainment, dramatic, comedy, and variety programs. Radio was also a rallying tool for the first Crusade for Freedom campaign and Radio Free Europe.

 

A very popular weekly radio program that aired from 1948 to 1953 was a situation-comedy show “Life with Luigi,” with famed Hollywood actor J. Carrol Naish, who, as Luigi Basco, feigned a heavy Italian accent. The show aired before a live audience on the CBS radio network Tuesday evenings from 9:00 to 9:30 P.M. The fictional Luigi Basco was a new immigrant from Italy, who had recently arrived in the United States. The show’s premise was that Luigi wrote a weekly letter to his mother, who had remained in Italy, about his continuing experiences in the United States.

 

On September 19, 1950, the weekly half-hour long radio program was entitled “Crusade for Freedom Speech” and sponsored by the Wrigley Chewing Gum Company. The program's narrator started the program with a commercial: "You know friends, Wrigley's spearmint chewing gum is a typically American product that appeals to peoples of all ages and nationalities in all parts of our country."

 

During the program, Luigi was visited by a Crusade for Freedom volunteer who not only had Luigi sign the Freedom Scroll but also to put a Crusade poster in his shop’s window and asked to seek out others to sign the Freedom Scroll. The Crusade volunteer also told Luigi that the scrolls would be collected and “enshrined at the base of a huge Freedom Bell in Berlin.” Luigi was unsuccessful as the people he asked to sign the Freedom Scroll ignored him because they were too busy, were in a hurry, or had other reasons not to listen to him about the Crusade for Freedom.

 

The teacher of his night-school citizenship class, Miss Spaulding, selected Luigi to give a speech about freedom before a meeting of 10,000 other immigrants. The topic selected by Luigi’s teacher was “What Freedom Means to Me.” At the meeting he told the assembly not only about his failure to gather signatures but also what the Crusade for Freedom meant to him. The results were successful and those 10,000 persons who had listened to him signed the Freedom Scrolls and $300 was collected.

 

Near the end of the radio program, listeners heard a recorded statement by  General Lucius D. Clay, Crusade for Freedom national chairman in New York: "Luigi, you give me a great hope. And you also fill me with considerable pride. It has not taken you long to learn what America really stands for. You have also found that because you believe in its ideals, you can reach the hearts and minds of its peoples. Thank you very much, Luigi, and the many thousands of other volunteers who are undertaking the Crusade for Freedom. But thank you especially Luigi for your faith in your new country and your belief in freedom.

 

 Luigi concluded the show with by reading from his letter to his mother: "Yes, Mama Mia, now you see why America is a wonderful country and is worth fighting for. Because only here is it possible for a little immigrant like your son to hear from a great general and a great American like General Clay. It is like I once wrote to you, in America: everything is possible. Your loving son Luigi Basco,"

 


November 04, 2025

Balint Boda: Resistance Symbol Hungary 1956 ©


Balint Boda

 

For the reader to better understand the importance of Balint Boda in the years leading up to

the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, here is some detailed information: "In Radio Free Europe broadcasts, Balint Boda is represented as a man who makes frequent secret Trips through Hungary, returning after each trip to tell Hungarians what he has found out. His audience appeal rests on his daring defiance of the Communists (Many Hungarians believe that he makes journeys through their country), The uncanny accuracy of his information about the Communists (particularly Communist informers) and the fiery language with which he attacks the people

who has betrayed his country."

 

Hungary is unique -- primarily because RFE has furnished it with a symbol, B.B. for Balint Boda, that stirs the imagination and, paralleling the V-sign of World War II, can easily be chalked or painted on walls everywhere. Respondent after respondent from this country recalls having seen the letters B.B. -- or some variant, such as ~Come Balint Boda," "Balint Boda comes," "Fear and tremble, Balint Boda is coming," "B.B. will take care of the Communists --" on houses, fences, walls of public and factory toilets, and even on walls of police buildings," or "on fruit stands, bridges, and sidewalks ...

 

The Hungarian Secret Police (AVO) men used to scrub them off with wet brushes  “ respondents pride themselves on having shared responsibility for their appearance. "Balint Boda's initials," says the 20-year-old theology student," became the sign of resistance back home. They are to be seen in many places on the walls, and I and friends of my age also wrote them in innumerable places at night." The elderly seamstress had "heard that Balint Boda wrote his initials on the walls in Sopron so that the police were not able to scrub them off. There had been quite a crowd watching them try to do it." And a toolmaker tells of the police alerts following RFE's announcements that the next week Balint Boda was going to take a walk in the vicinity. "At this time the AVO men raided everywhere in the surrounding area. Unknown authors wrote the great B.B. letters all over ... In these days, the policemen didn't dare to walk alone,

only in couples. 

 

For a full analysis of Balint Boda, see Siegfried Kracauer and Paul Berkman, Satellite Mentality: Political Attitudes and Propaganda Susceptibilities of Non- Communists in Hungary, Poland, and Czechoslovakia, 1956 Frederick A.Praeger, Publishers New York, pp. 143-144.

 

 

 

November 03, 2025

Artificial Intelligence Comics ©



Below are samples of artificial intelligence comics based on my posts on Academia.edu:



    

     












June 11, 2025

Summary of CIA Clandestine Cold War Radio Broadcasting ©

  

 

 

Summary of CIA Clandestine Cold War Broadcasting to Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and China

 

 

CIA Supported Radio Broadcasting from West Germany

 

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Sponsoring Organization and Cryptonym

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

BG. RO, HU, CZ, PL

TPFEELING, SGCRIND

Radio Free Europe --National Committee for Free Europe TPTONIC, QKIVORY

July 4, 1950

Continues as RFE/RL in Prague           

Soviet Union

DTPILLAR, TPLINGO, QKACTIVE

Radio Liberation (Liberty) -- American Committee for Liberation, PBAFFIRM

 

March 3, 1953

Continues as RFE/RL 

 in Prague

Soviet Russia

 

AEGIDEON – AESAURUS, QKDROOP

Radio Free Russia, NTS - National Alliance of Russian Solidarists (Narodno Trudovoi Soyuz) 

 

December 1950

1974?

Soviet Russia

AEVIRGIL, AECROAK AEHANGOVER

Nasha Rossiya, TsOPE – Central Association of Political Emigres in Munich produced scripts and tapes for Spain, Rome, and Taiwan

1954

Summer 1963

 

Radio Nacional de España (RNE), Madrid, Spain

 

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Name and Cover Organization

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

Estonia

AEBASIN/AEROOT, AEFREEMAN, LCHOMELY

 

Voice of Estonian Freedom, Estonian National Committee

October 16, 1955

 

October 31, 1963

Lithuania

AECHAMP, AEPOLE, AEFREEMAN

VLIK – Supreme Committee for Lithuanian Liberation, Voice of VLIK

 

January 1, 1955

October 31, 1963

Latvia

AEMARSH, AEFLAG, AEMINX, AEFREEMAN

 

ILC – Institute of Latvian Culture, Voice of Free Latvians

 

February 1, 1955

October 31, 1963

Ukraine

AERODYNAMC

UHVR – Ukrainian Supreme Liberation Council, Prolog Associates 

 

March 1956

October 1959

Soviet Russia

AEVIRGIL

TsOPE – Central Association of Political Emigres in Munich  produced scripts and tapes

 

1954

1963

Belarus

AEQUOR, AECAMBISTA

 

BNR – Byelorussian National Republic in Exile 

January 1959

Oct. 1961 (?)

 

Clandestine Broadcasting from Greece

 

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Name and Cover Organization

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

Albania

OBOPUS/BGFIEND, OBTEST, OBLIVIOUS

HTGRUBY, Voice of Free Albania – National Committee for Free Albania (HTNEIGH); 

NATCOM --National Socialist Radio,

VOFA September 18, 1951 

 

NATCOM in May 1957

VOFA February 28, 1958

 

 

November 20, 1959

Bulgaria

QKSTAIR, BGCONVOY

 

Radio Goryanin, Voice of Bulgarian Resistance; (METAPHOR)

Hristo Botev, (METAPHOR 1), “National Communist”

 

April 1, 1951

 

October 1953

August 9, 1962

 

July 30, 1962

 

Romania

QKBROIL, SHELLAC

 

România ViitoareFuture of Romania, Voice of National Resistance; SHELLAC was directed against Communists

 

1954

October 1959

Soviet Russia

AEVIRGIL

TsOPE, Nasha Rossiya (Our Russia), 

1954 tapes prepared in New York. In Sept. 1957 programs prepared in Greece

1963

Ukraine

AERODYNAMIC

Nova Ukraina (New Ukraine) (RANTNER)

September 25, 1955

 

October 1959

Soviet Union 

AECROAK, AEHANGOVER 

Azeri ?

Armenian ?

TsOPE tapes prepared in USA

1955 ?

1960

Georgian SSR

AEPARADE

 

Radio Kavkaz (Caucasus), Georgian National Democrats

 

?

October 1959 (?)

Central Asia

?

 

Radio Bajkal

?

October 1959 (?)

 

 

CIA Supported Broadcasting from Taiwan

 

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Name and Cover Organization

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

Soviet Union

TPLINGO

Radio Liberation (Liberty)

 

 

1955

1972

Soviet Russia

AEGIDEON / AESAURUS

Radio Free Russia – NTS

 

 

1957

1960

Soviet Russia

AEVIRGIL

TsOPE Munich tapes for the Broadcast Corporation of China (BCC)

1958

1963

 

CIA Supported Broadcasting from Italy

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Name and Cover Organization

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

Soviet 

Russia

AERVIRGIL

TSOPE in Munich sent scripts for Radio Rome

1958

 

 

1963

Estonia

AEBASIN/AEROOT, AEFREEMAN

Radio Rome ?

?

October 31, 1963

Latvia

 

AEMARSH, AEFLAG, AEMINX, AEFREEMAN

Radio Rome

?

October 31, 1963

Lithuania

AECHAMP, AEPOLE, AEFREEMAN

Lithuanian Section at Radio Vatican and Radio Rome

1953

October 31, 1963

 

CIA Supported Broadcasts from the United States to Asia

 

Target Country

CIA Project Cryptonym

Name and Cover Organization

 

 

Began Broadcasting

Terminated Broadcasting

China, Japan, Philippines, India, Southeast Asia

DTPILLAR

Radio Free Asia (original), Committee for a Free Asia

Sept. 4, 1951

April 30, 1953