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radio

Wiltshire and crew in the radio room at Yunnanyi. 27th Troop Carrier Squadron.
Fourteenth Air Force Transport Section radio operators outside their palatial Static Plaza, or in plain words, radio shack. Talking over things are Sgt Robert W. Riley, Steubenville, Ohio (left) and Sgt William Hellmund, Maplewood, N. J.. Looking puzzled at the innards of what makes music and messages is Sgt Philip C. Hagemann. From US Government sources.
Men work on radio equipment at a base in China. Image from U. S. Government official sources.
An American "headquarters radio unit" somewhere in China during WWII.
A GI talks into a microphone of a portable radio in the back of a vehicle, during WWII in China.
A GI operates a portable radio from the back of a vehicle in the CBI during WWII. See alternate image here.
During WWII in China, an American GI operates a portable radio from the back of a vehicle in near Guilin, Guangxi province. See alternate image here.
We rolled into Bronte, Texas—one odd errant American and two journalists from China—unsure of what to expect. We were all a long way from home, but for Mr. SUN Hong, a reporter from the Liuzhou Daily, and Mr. HUANG Xiling, a videographer from the Liuzhou TV Station, the rolling mesquite-covered earth was a world away from the karst mountain country...
Cpl. Provondo and Sgt. Williamson work at the receiver repair bench at Chanyi, China, during the Second World War. AACS Sta. No. 251, 128th Squadron, Chanyi, China.
Inside transmitter building (No. 1) tower: BC 329. Chanyi, China, during WWII. Station 251, 128th Squadron.