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  1. Hiroshima Telecasting was the second commercial television station in Hiroshima Prefecture. The founding shareholders' meeting was held on January 16, 1962. Construction of the headquarters building began on May 25 of the same year and was completed on August 26. When it was first established, Hiroshima Television was a dual affiliate of Nippon ...

    • 広島テレビ放送株式会社
    • Hiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd.
  2. Oct 6, 2016 · So began one of radio’s most unusual and powerful broadcasts: a series of four thirty minute commercial-free programs heard on consecutive weeknights in September of 1946 that serialized journalist John Hersey’s 31,000 word account of the experiences of six survivors of the Hiroshima atom bomb, published only two weeks earlier in the New ...

  3. TSS-TV Co., Ltd. (株式会社 テレビ新広島, T elevision S hin-Hiroshima S ystem), named Shinhiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd. until 2008, is a TV station serving in Hiroshima Prefecture and eastern Yamaguchi Prefecture, affiliated with of Fuji News Network ( FNN) and Fuji Network System ( FNS) .

    • October 1, 1975
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  5. Courtesy of Hiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd. Hiroshima mass media have produced several radio and TV programs and published special feature articles regarding the atomic bombing. Many have gone beyond the normal news framework to conduct exhaustive studies and major campaigns to help gather A-bomb materials.

  6. Donated by Hiroshima Telecasting Co., Ltd. This record of a bereaved family was featured in a documentary drama produced by Hiroshima Telecasting in 1969. Information about 209 first-year students at Second Hiroshima Prefectural Junior High School was handwritten by bereaved family members.

  7. Media in category "Hiroshima Telecasting" The following 11 files are in this category, out of 11 total. Hiroshima Telecasting 20181028-1.jpg 2,448 × 3,264; 1.8 MB

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HiroshimaHiroshima - Wikipedia

    Hiroshima was established on the delta coastline of the Seto Inland Sea in 1589 by powerful warlord Mōri Terumoto. [7] [8] Hiroshima Castle was quickly built, and in 1593 Mōri moved in. The name Hiroshima means wide island in Japanese. Terumoto was on the losing side at the Battle of Sekigahara.

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