In September 1967, Radio Hanoi transmitted a message by General Võ Nguyên Giáp entitled "The Big Victory, The Great Task". Unbenknownst to Americans listening to the message, it was actually an outline to the upcoming Tet Offensive (which occurred on January 30, 1968). In the message, Giap stated: "U.S. Generals are subjective and haughty, and have always been caught by surprise and defeated."
Hanoi (/hæˈnɔɪ/ or US/həˈnɔɪ/; Vietnamese: Hà Nội [ha˨˩ nɔj˩]) is the capital of Vietnam and the country's second largest city. Its population in 2009 was estimated at 2.6 million for urban districts and 7 million for the metropolitan jurisdiction. The number of population in 2015 was estimated at 7.7 million people. From 1010 until 1802, it was the most important political centre of Vietnam. It was eclipsed by Huế, the imperial capital of Vietnam during the Nguyễn Dynasty (1802–1945), but Hanoi served as the capital of French Indochina from 1902 to 1954. From 1954 to 1976, it was the capital of North Vietnam, and it became the capital of a reunified Vietnam in 1976, after the North's victory in the Vietnam War.
The city lies on the right bank of the Red River. Hanoi is 1,760km (1,090mi) north of Ho Chi Minh City and 120km (75mi) west of Hai Phong city.
Hanoï is the sixth live album by Frenchnew wave band Indochine. It was released in February 2007. It is a recording of a performance that took place on 6 June 2006. The album takes its name from the location of the concert, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Hanoi is the fifteenth novel in the long-running Nick Carter-Killmaster series of spy novels. Carter is a US secret agent, code-named N-3, with the rank of Killmaster. He works for AXE – a secret arm of the US intelligence services.
Publishing history
The book was first published in 1966 (Number A182F) by Award Books part of the Beacon-Signal division of Universal Publishing and Distributing Corporation (New York, USA), part of the Conde Nast Publications Inc. The novel was written by Valerie Moolman. Copyright was registered on 1 February 1966.
Tagline
In the hot-spot capitol of North Vietnam, Killmaster is caught in the mesh of a deadly plan to dominate the world!
Plot summary
Officers of the US Special Forces discover a secret camp in North Vietnam near Hanoi. The camp is guarded by Chinese soldiers and houses a group of German scientists, led by Ulric Krutch, who are working on a top secret rocket programme.
A new rocket has been perfected that can deliver a payload into earth orbit. The team of scientists is waiting for Dr Erich Burgdorf to arrive from Buenos Aires with plans for a triggering device that will release a secondary component carrying a secret payload after the rocket has reached orbit.
She called herself Thu Houng---the fragrance of Autumn. We called her Hanoi Hannah. Her job was not to charm and seduce, but to chill and frighten. Her English was almost impeccable and as North Vietnam’s premier propagandist she tried to convince American GI’s that the war was immoral and they should lay down their arms and go home.
June 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “How are you G.I. Joe? It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here.”
The wartime words of Hanoi Hannah, part of the loud soundtrack of the Vietnam war, which may have been the first war fought to a rock n’ roll background. But for American G.I.’s along with the beat came the message; propaganda from North Vietnam’s radio beamed s...
published: 24 Jul 2017
Hanoi Hannah Scene from Hamburger Hill
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley during the Battle of Hamburger Hill tune in to Hanoi Hannah's broadcast. From the movie Hamburger Hill by Paramount Pictures. I do not own the rights to this movie or video.
published: 19 Oct 2020
Audio, Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) [Subtitled/Subtitulado]
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) was a Vietnamese radio personality best known for her work during the Vietnam War, when she made broadcasts in English for North Vietnam, directed at United States troops.
When she says “G.I. Joe” she refers to the soldiers of the United States.
Date of this broadcast: 16 June 1967.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) fue una locutora de radio vietnamita que se hizo famosa durante la guerra de Vietnam. Era la locutora de una emisora de radiodifusión y difundía propaganda comunista de Vietnam del Norte en inglés, dirigida a las tropas estadounidenses combatientes en el país.
Cuando dice “G.I. Joe” se refiere a los soldados de los Estados Unidos.
Fecha de esta emisión: 16 de junio de 1967.
published: 19 Mar 2017
Hanoi Hanna ,Radio Hanoi Propaganda Broadcast To The Troops In South Vietnam 1968
published: 29 Apr 2013
Hanoi Hannah - The Mystery of Hanoi Hannah
Please support for our channel by like, share and subcribe. We provide the truth of history to everyone and together we make a better future .
Her name was Trinh Thi Ngo, but she called herself Thu Huong, “The Fragrance of Autumn.” We called her Hanoi Hannah. She was North Vietnam’s chief voice of propaganda, reaching out over the airwaves to American servicemen across South Vietnam, attempting to convince them that the war was immoral and that they should lay down their arms and go home.
Her job was to chill and frighten, not to charm and seduce. Her English was almost impeccable; men would stumble across her while tuning their radios and be unable to turn away. “How are you G.I. Joe?” she asked in a June 1967 broadcast. “It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the goi...
published: 01 Aug 2021
Black G.I.
Radio Scene from the film 'Da 5 Bloods'
published: 21 Jun 2020
White rabbit but Hanoi Hannah is teasing you while you are in a fire fight with the Veit cong
“My solution to the problem would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Ages.” General Curtis E. LeMay
Thanks Jormüngandr for the idea.
Copyright disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act: This disclaimer appears on content (commonly YouTube videos) that uses someone else's copyrighted content. Including this statement of “fair use” helps protect against copyright infringement claims.
published: 04 Jan 2022
Monotape - Vietnam Radio (Official Music Video)
Monotape - Vietnam Radio is part of Vietnamese Nu Breed EP, OUT NOW on Spinnin' Records Asia! Like this track? Download or add it to your favourite Spotify/Apple Music playlist by clicking HERE: http://spinninrecordsasia.release.link/vietnamese-nu-breed-ep!YT
Make sure to subscribe to Spinnin' Records: http://bit.do/spinnintv
..and turn on notifications to stay updated with all new uploads!🔔
Join our Spinnin' Records Top 100 Playlist ► https://spinninrecords.lnk.to/top100!YT
---
The Spinnin’ Records YouTube channel is the home for all music videos of the world’s leading dance record label!
We feature the latest music videos by Spinnin’ artists like Oliver Heldens, Sam Feldt, KSHMR, Ummet Ozcan, Blasterjaxx, Merk & Kremont, Timmy Trumpet, Tujamo, Alok, Curbi, Mike Williams, Lucas & St...
published: 18 Apr 2020
PLAYLIST HAY NHẤT CHƯƠNG TRÌNH THE MASKED SINGER VIETNAM MÙA 1 | 11 BEST LOVE SONGS |
She called herself Thu Houng---the fragrance of Autumn. We called her Hanoi Hannah. Her job was not to charm and seduce, but to chill and frighten. Her English...
She called herself Thu Houng---the fragrance of Autumn. We called her Hanoi Hannah. Her job was not to charm and seduce, but to chill and frighten. Her English was almost impeccable and as North Vietnam’s premier propagandist she tried to convince American GI’s that the war was immoral and they should lay down their arms and go home.
June 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “How are you G.I. Joe? It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here.”
The wartime words of Hanoi Hannah, part of the loud soundtrack of the Vietnam war, which may have been the first war fought to a rock n’ roll background. But for American G.I.’s along with the beat came the message; propaganda from North Vietnam’s radio beamed south or misinformation from the U.S. Armed Forces radio in Saigon.
July 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “Now for our talk. A Vietnam black GI who refuses to be a victim of racism is Billy Smith. He was illegally searched and put in Long Binh jail. The evidence that showed him guilty was this: being black, poor and against the war and refusing to be a victim of racism.”
Mike Roberts, 41 of Detroit, Michigan remembers Hannah. Based in Danang in July 1967, Roberts summed up his recollections of the black veterans attitude toward Hannah’s broadcasts. “I remember July 23rd. I was sitting in a tent with guys from Charlie Company and we were gambling, drinking and having a good time and listenin’ to the radio. One guy says ‘Shshh, sshh, be quiet’ and he says” There’s a riot in Detroit.’
There was no feeling of what were they rioting for. We all knew what they wanted, you know what I’m sayin’? So of course we would feel empathy for the folks back home.
“Then Hannah comes on and she knows what guard unit was called in and what kind of weapons were used…you know what I’m sayin’? Thats when it starts to hit home. We knew what kind of fire power and devastation that kind of weapons can do to people, and now those same weapons were turning on us, you know our own military is killing our own people.”
We might as well have been Viet Cong. But Hannah picked up on it and talked about it. And clearly if she knew about it, Armed Forces Radio did too. That was the first time I started hearing Hannah call upon Blacks, you know, to rethink the situation here. Why are you fighting? You have your own battle to fight in America. We were smokin’ herbs, you know and we decided to listen to Hanoi Hannah.”
GIW 5855
She called herself Thu Houng---the fragrance of Autumn. We called her Hanoi Hannah. Her job was not to charm and seduce, but to chill and frighten. Her English was almost impeccable and as North Vietnam’s premier propagandist she tried to convince American GI’s that the war was immoral and they should lay down their arms and go home.
June 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “How are you G.I. Joe? It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here.”
The wartime words of Hanoi Hannah, part of the loud soundtrack of the Vietnam war, which may have been the first war fought to a rock n’ roll background. But for American G.I.’s along with the beat came the message; propaganda from North Vietnam’s radio beamed south or misinformation from the U.S. Armed Forces radio in Saigon.
July 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “Now for our talk. A Vietnam black GI who refuses to be a victim of racism is Billy Smith. He was illegally searched and put in Long Binh jail. The evidence that showed him guilty was this: being black, poor and against the war and refusing to be a victim of racism.”
Mike Roberts, 41 of Detroit, Michigan remembers Hannah. Based in Danang in July 1967, Roberts summed up his recollections of the black veterans attitude toward Hannah’s broadcasts. “I remember July 23rd. I was sitting in a tent with guys from Charlie Company and we were gambling, drinking and having a good time and listenin’ to the radio. One guy says ‘Shshh, sshh, be quiet’ and he says” There’s a riot in Detroit.’
There was no feeling of what were they rioting for. We all knew what they wanted, you know what I’m sayin’? So of course we would feel empathy for the folks back home.
“Then Hannah comes on and she knows what guard unit was called in and what kind of weapons were used…you know what I’m sayin’? Thats when it starts to hit home. We knew what kind of fire power and devastation that kind of weapons can do to people, and now those same weapons were turning on us, you know our own military is killing our own people.”
We might as well have been Viet Cong. But Hannah picked up on it and talked about it. And clearly if she knew about it, Armed Forces Radio did too. That was the first time I started hearing Hannah call upon Blacks, you know, to rethink the situation here. Why are you fighting? You have your own battle to fight in America. We were smokin’ herbs, you know and we decided to listen to Hanoi Hannah.”
GIW 5855
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley during the Battle of Hamburger Hill tune in to Hanoi Hannah's broadcast. From the movie Hamburger Hill by Par...
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley during the Battle of Hamburger Hill tune in to Hanoi Hannah's broadcast. From the movie Hamburger Hill by Paramount Pictures. I do not own the rights to this movie or video.
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley during the Battle of Hamburger Hill tune in to Hanoi Hannah's broadcast. From the movie Hamburger Hill by Paramount Pictures. I do not own the rights to this movie or video.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) was a Vietnamese radio personality best known for her work during the Vietnam War, when she made broadcasts in English for North Vi...
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) was a Vietnamese radio personality best known for her work during the Vietnam War, when she made broadcasts in English for North Vietnam, directed at United States troops.
When she says “G.I. Joe” she refers to the soldiers of the United States.
Date of this broadcast: 16 June 1967.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) fue una locutora de radio vietnamita que se hizo famosa durante la guerra de Vietnam. Era la locutora de una emisora de radiodifusión y difundía propaganda comunista de Vietnam del Norte en inglés, dirigida a las tropas estadounidenses combatientes en el país.
Cuando dice “G.I. Joe” se refiere a los soldados de los Estados Unidos.
Fecha de esta emisión: 16 de junio de 1967.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) was a Vietnamese radio personality best known for her work during the Vietnam War, when she made broadcasts in English for North Vietnam, directed at United States troops.
When she says “G.I. Joe” she refers to the soldiers of the United States.
Date of this broadcast: 16 June 1967.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) fue una locutora de radio vietnamita que se hizo famosa durante la guerra de Vietnam. Era la locutora de una emisora de radiodifusión y difundía propaganda comunista de Vietnam del Norte en inglés, dirigida a las tropas estadounidenses combatientes en el país.
Cuando dice “G.I. Joe” se refiere a los soldados de los Estados Unidos.
Fecha de esta emisión: 16 de junio de 1967.
Please support for our channel by like, share and subcribe. We provide the truth of history to everyone and together we make a better future .
Her name was Tr...
Please support for our channel by like, share and subcribe. We provide the truth of history to everyone and together we make a better future .
Her name was Trinh Thi Ngo, but she called herself Thu Huong, “The Fragrance of Autumn.” We called her Hanoi Hannah. She was North Vietnam’s chief voice of propaganda, reaching out over the airwaves to American servicemen across South Vietnam, attempting to convince them that the war was immoral and that they should lay down their arms and go home.
Her job was to chill and frighten, not to charm and seduce. Her English was almost impeccable; men would stumble across her while tuning their radios and be unable to turn away. “How are you G.I. Joe?” she asked in a June 1967 broadcast. “It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here. Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what’s going on.”
#HanoiHannah
#VietnamWar
#TrueWarHistory
Please support for our channel by like, share and subcribe. We provide the truth of history to everyone and together we make a better future .
Her name was Trinh Thi Ngo, but she called herself Thu Huong, “The Fragrance of Autumn.” We called her Hanoi Hannah. She was North Vietnam’s chief voice of propaganda, reaching out over the airwaves to American servicemen across South Vietnam, attempting to convince them that the war was immoral and that they should lay down their arms and go home.
Her job was to chill and frighten, not to charm and seduce. Her English was almost impeccable; men would stumble across her while tuning their radios and be unable to turn away. “How are you G.I. Joe?” she asked in a June 1967 broadcast. “It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here. Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what’s going on.”
#HanoiHannah
#VietnamWar
#TrueWarHistory
“My solution to the problem would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression or we’re going to bomb them back int...
“My solution to the problem would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Ages.” General Curtis E. LeMay
Thanks Jormüngandr for the idea.
Copyright disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act: This disclaimer appears on content (commonly YouTube videos) that uses someone else's copyrighted content. Including this statement of “fair use” helps protect against copyright infringement claims.
“My solution to the problem would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Ages.” General Curtis E. LeMay
Thanks Jormüngandr for the idea.
Copyright disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act: This disclaimer appears on content (commonly YouTube videos) that uses someone else's copyrighted content. Including this statement of “fair use” helps protect against copyright infringement claims.
Monotape - Vietnam Radio is part of Vietnamese Nu Breed EP, OUT NOW on Spinnin' Records Asia! Like this track? Download or add it to your favourite Spotify/Appl...
Monotape - Vietnam Radio is part of Vietnamese Nu Breed EP, OUT NOW on Spinnin' Records Asia! Like this track? Download or add it to your favourite Spotify/Apple Music playlist by clicking HERE: http://spinninrecordsasia.release.link/vietnamese-nu-breed-ep!YT
Make sure to subscribe to Spinnin' Records: http://bit.do/spinnintv
..and turn on notifications to stay updated with all new uploads!🔔
Join our Spinnin' Records Top 100 Playlist ► https://spinninrecords.lnk.to/top100!YT
---
The Spinnin’ Records YouTube channel is the home for all music videos of the world’s leading dance record label!
We feature the latest music videos by Spinnin’ artists like Oliver Heldens, Sam Feldt, KSHMR, Ummet Ozcan, Blasterjaxx, Merk & Kremont, Timmy Trumpet, Tujamo, Alok, Curbi, Mike Williams, Lucas & Steve, Throttle and many, many more! Expect daily uploads of official music videos, lyric videos and official audio across genres like dance, house, electro house, future house, deep house, big room and trap.
Follow Spinnin’ Records:
https://open.spotify.com/user/spinninrecordsofficial
https://soundcloud.com/spinninrecords
https://facebook.com/SpinninRecords
https://instagram.com/spinninrecords
https://twitter.com/SpinninRecords
https://spinninrecords.com
#Monotape
#Spinnin
#SpinninRecords
#SpinninRecordsAsia
#SpinninAsia
Monotape - Vietnam Radio is part of Vietnamese Nu Breed EP, OUT NOW on Spinnin' Records Asia! Like this track? Download or add it to your favourite Spotify/Apple Music playlist by clicking HERE: http://spinninrecordsasia.release.link/vietnamese-nu-breed-ep!YT
Make sure to subscribe to Spinnin' Records: http://bit.do/spinnintv
..and turn on notifications to stay updated with all new uploads!🔔
Join our Spinnin' Records Top 100 Playlist ► https://spinninrecords.lnk.to/top100!YT
---
The Spinnin’ Records YouTube channel is the home for all music videos of the world’s leading dance record label!
We feature the latest music videos by Spinnin’ artists like Oliver Heldens, Sam Feldt, KSHMR, Ummet Ozcan, Blasterjaxx, Merk & Kremont, Timmy Trumpet, Tujamo, Alok, Curbi, Mike Williams, Lucas & Steve, Throttle and many, many more! Expect daily uploads of official music videos, lyric videos and official audio across genres like dance, house, electro house, future house, deep house, big room and trap.
Follow Spinnin’ Records:
https://open.spotify.com/user/spinninrecordsofficial
https://soundcloud.com/spinninrecords
https://facebook.com/SpinninRecords
https://instagram.com/spinninrecords
https://twitter.com/SpinninRecords
https://spinninrecords.com
#Monotape
#Spinnin
#SpinninRecords
#SpinninRecordsAsia
#SpinninAsia
She called herself Thu Houng---the fragrance of Autumn. We called her Hanoi Hannah. Her job was not to charm and seduce, but to chill and frighten. Her English was almost impeccable and as North Vietnam’s premier propagandist she tried to convince American GI’s that the war was immoral and they should lay down their arms and go home.
June 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “How are you G.I. Joe? It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here.”
The wartime words of Hanoi Hannah, part of the loud soundtrack of the Vietnam war, which may have been the first war fought to a rock n’ roll background. But for American G.I.’s along with the beat came the message; propaganda from North Vietnam’s radio beamed south or misinformation from the U.S. Armed Forces radio in Saigon.
July 1967 Hanoi Hannah: “Now for our talk. A Vietnam black GI who refuses to be a victim of racism is Billy Smith. He was illegally searched and put in Long Binh jail. The evidence that showed him guilty was this: being black, poor and against the war and refusing to be a victim of racism.”
Mike Roberts, 41 of Detroit, Michigan remembers Hannah. Based in Danang in July 1967, Roberts summed up his recollections of the black veterans attitude toward Hannah’s broadcasts. “I remember July 23rd. I was sitting in a tent with guys from Charlie Company and we were gambling, drinking and having a good time and listenin’ to the radio. One guy says ‘Shshh, sshh, be quiet’ and he says” There’s a riot in Detroit.’
There was no feeling of what were they rioting for. We all knew what they wanted, you know what I’m sayin’? So of course we would feel empathy for the folks back home.
“Then Hannah comes on and she knows what guard unit was called in and what kind of weapons were used…you know what I’m sayin’? Thats when it starts to hit home. We knew what kind of fire power and devastation that kind of weapons can do to people, and now those same weapons were turning on us, you know our own military is killing our own people.”
We might as well have been Viet Cong. But Hannah picked up on it and talked about it. And clearly if she knew about it, Armed Forces Radio did too. That was the first time I started hearing Hannah call upon Blacks, you know, to rethink the situation here. Why are you fighting? You have your own battle to fight in America. We were smokin’ herbs, you know and we decided to listen to Hanoi Hannah.”
GIW 5855
Soldiers of the 101st Airborne in the Ashau Valley during the Battle of Hamburger Hill tune in to Hanoi Hannah's broadcast. From the movie Hamburger Hill by Paramount Pictures. I do not own the rights to this movie or video.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) was a Vietnamese radio personality best known for her work during the Vietnam War, when she made broadcasts in English for North Vietnam, directed at United States troops.
When she says “G.I. Joe” she refers to the soldiers of the United States.
Date of this broadcast: 16 June 1967.
Hanoi Hannah (Trịnh Thị Ngọ) fue una locutora de radio vietnamita que se hizo famosa durante la guerra de Vietnam. Era la locutora de una emisora de radiodifusión y difundía propaganda comunista de Vietnam del Norte en inglés, dirigida a las tropas estadounidenses combatientes en el país.
Cuando dice “G.I. Joe” se refiere a los soldados de los Estados Unidos.
Fecha de esta emisión: 16 de junio de 1967.
Please support for our channel by like, share and subcribe. We provide the truth of history to everyone and together we make a better future .
Her name was Trinh Thi Ngo, but she called herself Thu Huong, “The Fragrance of Autumn.” We called her Hanoi Hannah. She was North Vietnam’s chief voice of propaganda, reaching out over the airwaves to American servicemen across South Vietnam, attempting to convince them that the war was immoral and that they should lay down their arms and go home.
Her job was to chill and frighten, not to charm and seduce. Her English was almost impeccable; men would stumble across her while tuning their radios and be unable to turn away. “How are you G.I. Joe?” she asked in a June 1967 broadcast. “It seems to me that most of you are poorly informed about the going of the war, to say nothing about a correct explanation of your presence over here. Nothing is more confused than to be ordered into a war to die or to be maimed for life without the faintest idea of what’s going on.”
#HanoiHannah
#VietnamWar
#TrueWarHistory
“My solution to the problem would be to tell them frankly that they’ve got to draw in their horns and stop their aggression or we’re going to bomb them back into the Stone Ages.” General Curtis E. LeMay
Thanks Jormüngandr for the idea.
Copyright disclaimer under Section 107 of the Copyright Act: This disclaimer appears on content (commonly YouTube videos) that uses someone else's copyrighted content. Including this statement of “fair use” helps protect against copyright infringement claims.
Monotape - Vietnam Radio is part of Vietnamese Nu Breed EP, OUT NOW on Spinnin' Records Asia! Like this track? Download or add it to your favourite Spotify/Apple Music playlist by clicking HERE: http://spinninrecordsasia.release.link/vietnamese-nu-breed-ep!YT
Make sure to subscribe to Spinnin' Records: http://bit.do/spinnintv
..and turn on notifications to stay updated with all new uploads!🔔
Join our Spinnin' Records Top 100 Playlist ► https://spinninrecords.lnk.to/top100!YT
---
The Spinnin’ Records YouTube channel is the home for all music videos of the world’s leading dance record label!
We feature the latest music videos by Spinnin’ artists like Oliver Heldens, Sam Feldt, KSHMR, Ummet Ozcan, Blasterjaxx, Merk & Kremont, Timmy Trumpet, Tujamo, Alok, Curbi, Mike Williams, Lucas & Steve, Throttle and many, many more! Expect daily uploads of official music videos, lyric videos and official audio across genres like dance, house, electro house, future house, deep house, big room and trap.
Follow Spinnin’ Records:
https://open.spotify.com/user/spinninrecordsofficial
https://soundcloud.com/spinninrecords
https://facebook.com/SpinninRecords
https://instagram.com/spinninrecords
https://twitter.com/SpinninRecords
https://spinninrecords.com
#Monotape
#Spinnin
#SpinninRecords
#SpinninRecordsAsia
#SpinninAsia
In September 1967, Radio Hanoi transmitted a message by General Võ Nguyên Giáp entitled "The Big Victory, The Great Task". Unbenknownst to Americans listening to the message, it was actually an outline to the upcoming Tet Offensive (which occurred on January 30, 1968). In the message, Giap stated: "U.S. Generals are subjective and haughty, and have always been caught by surprise and defeated."
There's a place for us, Somewhere a place for us. Peace and quiet and open air Wait for us Somewhere. There's a time for us, Someday a time for us, Time together with time to spare, Time to learn, time to care, Someday Somewhere We'll find a new way of living, We'll find a way of forgiving Somewhere. There's a place for us, A time and a place for us. Hold my hand and we're half way there. Hold my hand and I'll take you there Somehow, Someday, We'll find a new way of living We'll find a way, of forgiving Somewhere There's a place for us, Somewhere a place for us. Peace and quiet and open air Hold my hand and I'll take you there Somehow, Someday,
To many Vietnam veterans and refugees, Fonda more than earned her pejorative nickname “HanoiJane” when she traveled to North Vietnam during the war, was interviewed for communist radio broadcasts and ...
To many Vietnam veterans and refugees, Fonda more than earned her pejorative nickname “HanoiJane” when she traveled to North Vietnam during the war, was interviewed for communist radio broadcasts and ...
To many Vietnam veterans and refugees, Fonda more than earned her pejorative nickname “HanoiJane” when she traveled to North Vietnam during the war, was interviewed for communist radio broadcasts and ...
... intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) for wireless communications, announce the industry's first live AI/ML-based neural receiver in a 5G Open virtualized radio access network (vRAN), in Hanoi.
... slander that sounded like a script for RadioHanoi.” The Washington Post said King, quote, “diminished his usefulness to his cause, his country, his people,” unquote.
Hanoi , December 13 (ANI) ... In remarks made public by the official media on both sides after their meeting in Hanoi on Tuesday, the two leaders also promised to create a community with a "shared future"--a crucial Xi phraseology, CNN reported.
. Originally published ... On Sept ... ... Aired via RadioHanoi, with loudspeakers on the Vietnamese front to reach U.S ...Adams was also summoned to testify in front of HUAC, and faced calls for a treason conviction due to his broadcasts on Radio Hanoi ... .
On Sept ... vulnerable to foreign criticisms ... Aired via RadioHanoi, with loudspeakers on the Vietnamese front to reach U.S ...Adams was also summoned to testify in front of HUAC, and faced calls for a treason conviction due to his broadcasts on Radio Hanoi.
Sophisticated OSA assembly is conducted in Suwon, South Korea where its headquarters is located and downstream production is done at the facility in Hanoi, Vietnam...MXL) is a leading provider of radio ...
... and Astrophysics at Beijing Normal University carried out a study that focused on multi-band observation of the radio pulsar radiation phase of the HanoiFastRadioBurst Magnetar SGRJ1935+2154.
The first was after his trip to Hanoi, this fact-finding mission, about the good negotiation position, the CIA’s readout of Staughton’s speech, which was broadcast over Radio Hanoi and transcribed by the CIA, landed on the desk of Kingman Brewster.
The first was after his trip to Hanoi, this fact-finding mission, about the good negotiation position, the CIA’s readout of Staughton’s speech, which was broadcast over Radio Hanoi and ...
In 1972, the U.S. StateDepartment criticized actor Jane Fonda for making anti-war radio broadcasts in Hanoi... They reunited eleven years later ... In 1972, the U.S. State Department criticized actor Jane Fonda for making anti-war radio broadcasts in Hanoi ... .