EXISTING EPISODES OF INNER SANCTUM MYSTERIES (Revised as of September 30, 2008) by Martin Grams, Jr. The initial purpose of this listing (created in 2004) was to encourage both collectors and fans to look back through their holdings, and see if maybe some episodes in their collection are considered "lost." A "lost" episode is defined as any radio broadcast of the past formerly not known to exist in recorded form. This list is subject to change annually, as updates are acquired. As of September 2008, this list has been updated for the fourth time. The code LOC are marked beside episodes known to exist in the Library of Congress Archives. Many of these LOC entries are not available from collectors yet, but according to the LOC, they do exist. If there is an episode marked Q, that means "questionable." This means even through listening to the recording, it cannot be proven that the title and date is accurate. There still remains a few episodes that supposedly exist but I marked a Q because I have not personally verified that the episode exists. If anyone feels they have a recording that isn't on this list, by all means contact me. * "The Amazing Death of Mrs. Putnam" (1/7/41) * "The Strangled Snake" (2/18/41) LOC * "The Man of Steel" (3/16/41) Boris Karloff LOC * "The Tell-Tale Heart" (8/3/41) Boris Karloff * "The Death Ship" (8/10/41) * "Hunter From Beyond" (9/7/41) only last seven minutes known to exist * "The Stallion of Death" (9/14/41) LOC * "The Haunting Face" (9/28/41) LOC * "Hell is Where You Find It" (10/19/41) Burgess Meredith * "Nocturne of Death" (11/2/41) LOC * "The Island of Death" (12/7/41) * "The Man From Yesterday" (12/21/41) Myron McCormick * "Death Has Claws" (12/28/41) Santos Ortega * "The Scarlet Widow" (1/11/42) LOC * "Dead Reckoning" (1/18/42) Arthur Vinton * "A Study for Murder" (5/3/42) Boris Karloff * "Terrible Vengeance" (6/14/42) Australian version exists -- not the American version. * "The Black Seagull" (3/7/43) Peter Lorre * "The Horla" (8/1/43) Arnold Moss * "The Walking Skull" (4/15/44) * "The Melody of Death" (4/22/44) Mary Astor * "The Silent Hand" (5/13/44) Mary Astor * "Death is a Joker" (6/10/44) Peter Lorre * "Dead Man's Vengeance" (10/7/44) * "Dead Woman's Tale" (10/28/44) half of the episode exists * "Blind Man's Bluff" (11/4/44) half of the episode exists * "The Voice on the Wire" (11/29/44) * "The Color Blind Formula" (12/6/44) Richard Widmark * "Desert Death" (1/9/45) * "Death is an Artist" (1/23/45) Lee Bowman * "Death in the Depths" (2/6/45) Santos Ortega * "No Coffin for the Dead" (2/20/45) Les Tremayne * "The Meek Die Slowly" (4/3/45) Victor Moore Q * "The Bog Oak Necklace" (4/10/45) Miriam Hopkins * "The Judas Clock" (4/17/45) Santos Ortega * "Song of the Slasher" (4/24/45) Arnold Moss * "The Girl and the Gallows" (5/1/45) Wendy Barrie * "The Black Art" (5/15/45) Simone Simone * "Dead to Rights" (5/22/45) Elspeth Eric and Santos Ortega * "Musical Score" (5/29/45) Berry Kroeger * "Death Across the Board" (6/5/45) Jackson Beck and Raymond Massey * "Portrait of Death" (6/12/45) Leslie Woods * "Dead Man's Holiday" (6/19/45) Myron McCormick * "Dead Man's Debt" (6/26/45) Joseph Julian * "Dead Man's Deal" (8/28/45) Larry Haines * "The Murder Prophet" (9/4/45) Wendy Barrie * "The Last Story" (9/11/45) Richard Widmark * "Terror By Night" (9/18/45) Anne Shepherd * "The Lonely Sleep" (9/25/45) Karl Swenson * "The Shadow of Death" (10/2/45) Richard Widmark * "Death By Scripture" (10/9/45) Stefan Schnabel * "Till Death Do Us Part" (10/16/45) Larry Haines * "The Corridor of Doom" (10/23/45) Boris Karloff * "Death for Sale" (10/30/45) Boris Karloff. * "The Wailing Wall" (11/6/45) Jackson Beck and Boris Karloff * "The Dreadful Hunch" (11/13/45) with Anne Shepard and Richard Widmark Q * "Boomerang" (11/20/45) with Martin Gable LOC * "The Dark Chamber" (12/11/45) Kenneth Lynch * "The Undead" (12/18/45) Anne Seymour * "The Creeping Wall" (1/8/46) Irene Wicker * "The Edge of Death" (1/15/46) Larry Haines, Mercedes McCambridge * "The Confession" (1/22/46) Santos Ortega * "Blood of Cain" (1/29/46) Mercedes McCambridge, Karl Swenson * "Skeleton Bay" (2/5/46) Betty Lou Gerson * "Elixier Number Four" (2/12/46) Richard Widmark * "I Walk in the Night" (2/26/46) Larry Haines * "The Strands of Death" (3/12/46) Santos Ortega * "Death is a Double Crosser" (3/26/46) Lawson Zerbe * "The Night is my Shroud" (4/2/46) Ann Shepherd * "Lady with a Plan" (4/9/46) Elspeth Eric * "Make Ready My Grave" (4/23/46) Jackson Beck and Richard Widmark * "You Can Die Laughing" (5/7/46) Santos Ortega * "Detour to Terror" (5/21/46) Mason Adams * "Eight Steps to Murder" (6/4/46) Berry Kroeger * "I Want to Report a Murder" (6/18/46) Santos Ortega * "Spectre of the Rose" [Ben Hecht special] (8/19/46) * "Murder Comes at Midnight" (9/9/46) Mercedes McCambridge * "The Dead Laugh" (9/23/46) * "Death's Old Sweet Song" (11/4/46) Mercedes McCambridge * "No Rest for the Dead" (11/25/46) * "Death Bound" (2/3/47) Richard Widmark * "The Ghost in the Garden" (2/10/47) Leslie Woods * "Don't Dance on My Grave" (5/5/47) Charlotte Holland * "Over My Dead Body" (6/23/47) Larry Haines, Vera Allen * "Till Death Do Us Part" (10/27/47) Mercedes McCambridge * "Death Out of Mind" (12/29/47) Larry Haines and Ann Shephard * "Tempo in Blood" (1/12/48) Mason Adams and Everett Sloane * "The Doomed" (1/26/48) Mercedes McCambridge and Karl Swenson * "The Magic Tile" (3/8/48) Mercedes McCambridge and Everett Sloane * "Lady Killer" (3/29/48) Everett Sloane * "Death Demon" (7/5/48) Ann Seymour and Everett Sloane * "Murder Takes A Honeymoon" (7/26/48) Ann Shepherd and Everett Sloane * "The Murder Ship" (8/2/48) Mason Adams * "House of Doom" (8/9/48) Charlotte Holland and Santos Ortega * "Death Rides a Riptide" (9/6/48) Arlene Blackburn and Lawson Zerbe * "The Murder Carousel" (9/13/48) Larry Haines * "Hangman's Island" (9/20/48) Mason Adams and Elspeth Eric * "Murder by Prophesy" (9/27/48) Joseph Julian * "Death of a Doll" (10/18/48) Mason Adams * "Deathwatch in Boston" (11/15/48) Ted Osborne * "The Cause of Death" (12/6/48) Berry Kroeger * "Murder Faces East" (12/13/48) Charlotte Holland * "Between Two Worlds" (12/20/48) Mason Adams and Ann Shephard * "Fearful Voyage" (1/3/49) Elspeth Eric and Arnold Moss * "Murder Comes to Life" (1/10/49) Charles Irving and Santos Ortega * "Mark My Grave" (1/17/49) Santos Ortega and Lawson Zerbe * "The Deadly Dummy" (1/24/49) Mason Adams and Elspeth Eric * "The Devil's Fortune" (1/31/49) Jackson Beck * "Death Demon" (2/7/49) Everett Sloane and Leslie Woods * "Birdsong for a Murderer" (2/14/49) Arlene Blackburn * "Flame of Death" (2/21/49) Charlotte Holland * "Only the Dead Die Twice" (3/21/49) Larry Haines * "Appointment with Death" (3/28/49) Charlotte Holland and Karl Swenson * "Death Wears a Lonely Smile" (4/4/49) Mercedes McCambridge * "Murder Off the Record" (4/11/49) Mason Adams and Elspeth Eric * "The Death Deal" (4/18/49) Mercedes McCambridge * "The Unburied Dead" (5/16/49) Leslie Woods * "Strange Passenger" (5/23/49) Mason Adams * "Death on the Highway" (6/6/49) Ted Osborne and Alice Reinhart * "Corpse Without a Conscience" (6/20/49) Karl Swenson * "Pattern for Fear" (7/4/49) Cameron Prud'Homme and Everett Sloane * "Deadly Fare" (7/18/49) Larry Haines * "Dead Heat" (8/15/49) Mercedes McCambridge and Karl Swenson * "Mind Over Murder" (8/22/49) Elspeth Eric * "Death's Little Brother" (8/29/49) Amzie Strickland * "Murder Rides the Carousel" (9/5/49) Leslie Woods * "The Vengeful Corpse" (9/12/49) Karl Swenson * "Honeymoon with Death" (9/19/49) Mason Adams * "Catch a Killer" (10/3/49) Larry Haines and Barbara Weeks * "The Devil's Workshop" (10/10/49) Mason Adams * "Image of Death" (10/17/49) Jean Ellen * "Night is my Shroud" (10/24/49) Ken Lynch and Ann Shephard * "A Corpse for Halloween" (10/31/49) Larry Haines * "The Wish to Kill" (11/14/49) Karl Swenson and Leslie Woods * "Beyond the Grave" (12/19/49) Martin Gabel * "Killer at Large" (1/9/50) Larry Haines * "The Scream" (1/16/50) Barbara Weeks * "The Hitch-Hiking Corpse" (1/23/50) Ken Lynch * "Skeleton Bay" (1/30/50) Charlotte Holland (both versions exist) * "Murder Mansion" (3/27/50) Arnold Moss * "Beneficiary-Death" (4/17/50) Everett Sloane and Barbara Weeks * "No Rest for the Dead" (7/13/50) different story from that of the 1946 episode of the same name. Q * "Twice Dead" (11/6/50) Larry Haines and Amzie Strickland * "Beyond the Grave" (12/4/50) Mercedes McCambridge * "The Smile of the Dead" (2/19/51) Larry Haines - only the first half of this episode is known to exist. * "The Man From the Grave" (2/26/51) Ralph Bell and Peter Cappel - only the second half of this episode is known to exist. * "The Unforgiving Corpse" (5/28/51) Luis Van Rooten and Lawson Zerbe * "Birdsong for a Murderer" (6/22/52) Boris Karloff * "Terror By Night" (6/29/52) Agnes Moorehead * "Death Pays the Freight" (7/6/52) Everett Sloane * "The Listener" (7/20/52) Agnes Moorehead * "The Murder Prophet" (7/27/52) Agnes Moorehead * "Murder Off the Record" (8/3/52) Ken Lynch * "The Magic Tile" (8/10/52) Ann Seymour "The Corpse Laughs Last" (8/17/52) * "No Rest for the Dead" (8/24/52) Barbara Weeks and Everett Sloane * "Strange Passenger" (8/31/52) Wendell Corey * "The Meek Die Slowly" (9/7/52) Arnold Moss * "Till Death Do Us Part" (9/14/52) Mason Adams * "The Corpse Nobody Loved" (9/21/52) Joan Lorring * "The Dead Walk at Night" (9/28/52) Donald Buka * "Death Pays the Freight" (10/5/52) Everett Sloane THE FAKE INNER SANCTUM EPISODES “The Mystery of the Howling Dog” (2/11/41) does not exist. There was such a drama aired over the radio, but there is no recording of this episode known to exist. Someone at one time, took the premiere episode, which is entitled “The Amazing Death of Mrs. Putnam,” and labeled it “The Mystery of the Howling Dog.” Why was this done? Because someone deliberately wanted to mis-lead another party -- most likely a vendor wanting to claim ownership of a recording previously not known to exist. Money was the motive. Assigning a different title or airdate to a pre-existing episode to purposely mislead other people is a scam. Back when vendors were responsible for seeking out the transcription discs and transferring them to a feasible audio format, this never happened. They verified the title and date before making the recording available to the general public. Sadly, the MP3 technology opened the door for a large number of “Johnny-come-lately” who, attempting to outdo their competition, purposely take a pre-existing recording and assign it a new title and thus fool their customers into believing they offer recordings you won’t find anywhere else. Vendors who perform this scam do so willingly with disregard to YOU -- their customers. One such example is “The Snow-White Scarf” which is really an episode from a South African radio program (circa 1966-68) titled The Creaking Door. There was an episode titled “The Snow-White Scarf” broadcast in 1951 on Inner Sanctum Mystery, but this is not that episode -- it is a recording of the 60s South African series. This of course, is just ONE of MANY examples floating about. There is a simple solution: buy CDs (containing an hour’s worth of material) from a respectable vendor who, for the past four decades, was responsible for the transfer of 90% of the old-time radio programs you hear today. They did all the hard work, purchased the transcription discs, applied the correct procedure to do the transfers, took the time to clean and improve the sound quality, and verify the accurate title and broadcast date before putting it on the market. There are plenty to choose from. Buying CDs may be more costly than MP3s, but doing so eliminates the frustration of hearing the same recording repeated many times on the same disc. The sound quality is superior and the customer can feel content that he or she has a better collection compared to the mess contained on these widely-circulated MP3s. Another option/solution is to buy a reference guide available on a commercial level that would help the collector solve the mysteries. For $25 the collector can own a 300 page book that lists all 500 plus episodes in detail: titles, broadcast dates, cast, trivia, writer credit and plot descriptions. Whoa! Did I just say plot descriptions? Yep. Have an MP3 that contains four copies of the same recording, each with a different title? Bet when you consult the book you’ll find the solution to that mystery . . . The MP3 technology is a new medium. Until the MP3s came into the market, there was rarely a problem with customers buying a duplicate recording under an alias title. Experts on the subject of old-time radio who are staples in the hobby and have been for the past four decades like to make jokes about the people who, when given the option of a newly-restored CD recording or more-bang-for-your-buck MP3, prefer to buy the MP3s -- “they are getting exactly what they paid for.” 2008 has given us two new Inner Sanctum Mystery episodes that were never in circulation before. The same year has also introduced another growing problem which has become the frequent subject of confusion. Many experts and authors in the field of old-time radio are receiving e-mails from customers who bought an MP3, requesting clarification. Upon discovering they have duplicate recordings, they request the experts to help them. But just looking over a list of recordings from an MP3 and correcting the titles and airdates can take as long as 3 hours -- and these e-mail requests are becoming more frequent. One author has already put his foot down and is now telling everyone who e-mails with this kind of request to “go out and buy the book.” He is not doing this to add commercial sales for the book. He is doing this to save time on what is a needless (and thankless) job. It is also the most efficient solution to the problem. Many years ago I purchased all 106 episodes of the Have Gun - Will Travel radio program. A total of 53 compact discs. Do they take up more room than a single MP3 disc? They sure do. Would I consider getting a single MP3 disc containing all 106 episodes to substitute the 53 discs on the shelf for the sake of adding shelf space? No. Because unlike the MP3 disc, the 53 CDs were mastered from the original studio masters. To substitute superior sound quality for decent sound quality and an MP3 disc that 180 episodes is ridiculous. I have the Ferrari of sound recordings. Why trade it in for a Cadillac? For those who still prefer to buy the MP3s because of the cheap $4 or $5 price tag . . . Seriously -- If I can spend $200 for 53 audio CDs for the same recordings that cost them $4 or $5, they can afford to spend the $20 or $30 and purchase the published reference guides. They will do themselves a favor for all parties concerned. You’d be surprised how quickly the rewards add up. The purpose of this essay is to make a small effort to help those who fell victim to the problem of duplicate recordings found on MP3 discs (and free internet downloads), the list of existing episodes above should help clarify what does and does not exist. If a “lost” episode was to become available right now, established companies with large reputations for seeking source material (such as Audio Classics, First Generation Archives, Ed Carr, Radio Memories, and SPERDVAC to name a few) would most likely be responsible for the release. So why is Inner Sanctum Mystery one of the few radio programs that is in such a mess? It is one of the few radio programs out there that have not received any special restoration treatment. Look at the Gunsmoke and Suspense series for example. Those have been restored to superior sound quality. It is estimated that of the 100 plus episodes of Inner Sanctum known to exist in circulation, about half of them only exist because of the AFRS. The AFRS replayed various episodes over the late forties and early fifties, (sadly editing many of these shows into their own format with a closing signature “this is the AFRS, brought to our troops over seas”). Take “Murder Comes at Midnight” from September 1946. Only the AFRS recording exists, not the CBS air-check. Although many collectors dislike what the AFRS did to the recordings (like deleting the original sponsor commercials), we are appreciative for what the AFRS for having done what they did, else we would not have as many Inner Sanctum episodes floating about. Like many radio programs, the same scripts were performed again years later and on rare occasions, with the same actor repeating his or her previous role. “Death for Sale” with Boris Karloff from 1945 is in circulation, but many people keep assigning a 1952 date. Sorry, the 1952 version (same script title and again with Karloff) does not exist. But people keep assigning the 1952 date to the 1945 recording. Shame! Stop it! If you think you have the 1952 version, consult the published reference works which clarifies the names of the supporting cast and the sponsor. That will clear up any confusion. Another tip: careful listening to the closing of some of these episodes such as the host telling us the “Inner Sanctum mystery novel of the month” can help narrow down which version of these episodes actually exists. Each month Simon and Schuster released a different mystery novel under the “Inner Sanctum” by-line and (once again) the published reference guide clearly lists all of the novels by title, author, page count, and month and year of release. Thus anyone can verify the month and year of release using common sense. Beware! Many of the Inner Sanctum episodes during the mid to late 40s were repeated the same scripts under different titles and with the switch of sex. Instead of a male being terrorized by a female ghost, it’s the female who is being terrorized by a male ghost. Yep, when they wanted to disguise a script they performed years before, the script writers changed more than the title of the script. Hence, just because you are hearing the same story for a second time does not mean it is the same recording you heard previous. ALTERNATIVE TITLES: Thanks to Gordon Payton, Robert Newman and David J. Johnson, below is a list of alternative titles that have been floating about quite common. Gordon severely fell victim to the plague many Inner Sanctum fans have gone through. He continued to buy and trade for copies of Inner Sanctum that did not match any other titles on his list. He eventually discovered like the rest of us, that he was just getting duplicates of what he already had. So Gordon started detailing the “alternative titles” in his catalog and with a little help, we have compiled the correct titles and dates. * "Aunt Ellen" is really "The Listener" (7/20/52) * "Catherine Bryan" is really "The Confession" (1/22/46) * "Cemetery Hitch-hiker" is really "Murder Prophet" (7/27/52) * "Chinese Tile" is really "The Magic Tile" (8/10/52) * "Claudia" is really "Murder Prophet" (7/27/52) * "Corpse in a Cab" is really "The Corpse Nobody Loved" (9/21/52) * "Death Rides a Carousel" is really "The Murder Carousel" (9/13/48) * "Death" is really "Detour to Terror" (5/21/46) * "El Fortuna Diablo" is really "The Devil's Fortune" (1/31/49) * "Florida Keys" is really "Appointment With Death" (3/28/49) * "Ghosts Always Get the Last Laugh" is really "The Dead Laugh" (9/23/46) * "Highgate" is really "Murder By Prophesy" (9/27/48) * "Homicidal Maniac" is really "Lady Killer" (3/29/48) * "Jane Carter" is really "The Meek Die Slowly" (9/7/52) * "Kathleen Bryan" is really "The Magic Tile" (8/10/52) * "Lady and the Corpse" is really "The Corpse Nobody Loved" (9/21/52) * "Lady is a Witch" is really "The Black Art" (5/15/45) * "Last Refrain, The" is really "Murder Prophet" (7/27/52) * "Lion Reigns at Hillcrest" is really "Murder By Prophesy" (9/27/48) * "Raymond Meets Gideon Blake" is really "Dead Man's Vengeance" (10/7/44) * "Raymond Receives a Call From a Dead Man " is really "Dead Man's Vengeance" (10/7/44) * "Razor's Edge" is really "The Corpse Nobody Loved" (9/21/52) * "Richard Fenner" is really "The Color Blind Formula" (12/6/44) * "Ship of Doom" is really "Murder Ship" (8/2/48) * "Skull That Walked' is really "The Walking Skull" (4/15/44) * "Stardust" is really "Strange Passenger" (8/31/52) * "Switch" is really "Death Pays the Freight" (10/5/52) * "Terror Out of the Fog" is really "Beyond the Grave" (12/19/49) * "The Three Steps" is really "Murder By Prophesy" (9/27/48) * "Thing From the Sea" is really "Dead Reckoning" (1/18/42) * "Undertaker" is really "The Meek Die Slowly" (9/7/52) And it gets worse. Just last month, a good friend brought to my attention a company operated by Darryl Hawkins of Berea, Kentucky (www.originaloldradio.com) who is selling an MP3 that contains (gasp!) twenty-five “lost” Inner Sanctum episodes! Well, after purchasing the disc and reviewing those lost episodes -- guess what? They are not lost! Once again, someone is offering pre-existing recordings and re-assigning them new titles and airdates. Only the person responsible this time (assuming Hawkins did not do this himself) purposely consulted a reference guide and used convincing titles and airdates. Here are a few examples: * “The Case of the Blood Type” (with an assigned airdate of 2/25/41) is really “Beyond the Grave” (12/19/49) * “The Corpse Who Came to Dinner” (with an assigned airdate of 11/16/41) is really “The Undead” (12/18/45) * “Death is the Murderer” (with an assigned airdate of 7/13/41) is really “Musical Score” (5/29/45) * “Death in the Zoo” (with an assigned airdate of 4/6/41) is really “The Listener” (7/20/52) * “Death Has a Sculptor” (with an assigned airdate of 1/25/42) is really “Detour to Terror” (5/21/46) * “The Man Who Hated Death” (with an assigned airdate of 3/23/41) is really “The Color Blind Formula” (12/6/44) * “The Man Who Painted Death” (with an assigned airdate of 6/29/41) is really “Musical Score” (5/29/45) * “Murder in the Air” (with an assigned airdate of 2/4/41) is really a 1955 Suspense broadcast titled “The Waxwork” with William Conrad. How do we know his listings are wrong? After listening to them, the plots do not match what is found in a reference guide. The cast is wrong. Paul McGrath is the host (but Raymond Edward Johnson was the host till 1945) and the sponsor is Lipton (Lipton began sponsoring in 1945) and the recordings, plots, cast and sponsor does match what exists from the episodes we are disclosing. The list above represents the first eight previewed -- we didn’t bother with the rest of the 25. OTHER CORRECTIONS TO BE NOTED: The June 10, 1944 broadcast of "Death is a Joker" stars Peter Lorre in the drama - NOT Boris Karloff. This was an AFRS broadcast that played an excerpt of a Karloff performance from a different radio show, AFTER the Inner Sanctum drama. Reference works still continue to list Karloff as the star of the drama. He was featured in the recording, but NOT in the drama. If someone was to find the original CBS aircheck, you would never hear Karloff in that Inner Sanctum broadcast. People insist that the broadcast of October 7, 1944 entitled "Dead Man's Vengeance" was not an Inner Sanctum episode because Raymond Edward Johnson plays the lead role as well as the host. Well, it was an Inner Sanctum episode. Raymond Edward Johnson was the star and lead actor in more than one Inner Sanctum episode, he did not remain as the host for all of the episodes. He got into the act a number of times. Closing comments: Material for the listings above often originated from the book, INNER SANCTUM MYSTERIES: BEHIND THE CREAKING DOOR (OTR Publishing, © 2003). Reprinted material with permission. For more info about the Inner Sanctum series, this book comes highly recommended. The book documents the history of the radio series, television series, mystery magazine, mystery novels, movies, and much more. Lots of photos and radio advertisements reprinted, tons of trivia, episode guide for both radio and television, and so much you’ll fall in love with the book. Available $24.95 plus $4.80 postage. INNER SANCTUM BOOK, Po Box 252, Whiteford, MD 21160 Martin Grams Jr. is the author of other books about old-time radio including: The History of the Cavalcade of America (1999, Morris Publishing) The CBS Radio Mystery Theater: An Episode Guide and Handbook (McFarland, 2000) Information Please (Bear Manor Media, 2006) The I Love A Mystery Companion (OTR Publishing, 2004) The Sound of Detection: Ellery Queen’s Adventures in Radio (OTR Publishing, 2004) I Led Three Lives: Herbert Philbrick’s Television Series (Bear Manor Media, 2007) The Twilight Zone: Unlocking the Door to a Television Classic (OTR Publishing, 2008) If you have a question for the author that does not involve a request to clarify the exact title and airdate of a recording on an MP3 disc, he can be contacted at mmargrajr@hotmail.com.