| This Is My Story | | 1944-06-03 | Tonight's story is submitted by A.W. of San Francisco. A wartime romance...with a married woman! What should Amy Wilson do? A Los Angeles County judge gives his opinion after the story is dramatized. Afterwards, we learn what A.W. really did. |
| The Lamp and the Spectacles | | 1956-01-12 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A well-written story about a habitual criminal who is a compulsive gambler and who finally sees himself as he really is. Possibly dated January 12, 1955. |
| Intern | | 1956-01-19 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A young intern decides to specialize in physical medicine. He gradually learns wisdom to go along with his medical knowledge. |
| Invalid By Choice | | 1956-02-02 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A series of "true life dramas." A hard driving businessman suffers a heart attack and is forced to re-evaluate what is really important. |
| Not to Die, but to Live | | 1956-02-09 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A noted humorist decides to just wait for death, after losing the use of his arms. |
| The Silent Hours | | 1956-02-16 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. Teaching deaf students is not as it easy it sounds! |
| The True Community | | 1956-02-23 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. Why do all races and religions co-operate during a flood emergency but cannot live together in an integrated housing project? First five seconds missing. |
| The Two Week Search | | 1956-03-01 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A worker for "The Jewish Board Of Guardians" tries to discover why a well-off boy was driven to steal $53. |
| To the Living | | 1956-03-22 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. The science of bio-genetics and the riddle of the blue face. |
| Dark Cry | | 1956-03-29 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. The plight of Art Golden, plagued with chronic insomnia, underscores the shocking lack of psychiatric help in this country. |
| A Time to Live | | 1956-04-19 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A new member of "The Golden Age Club" at "The Y" finds a new reason for living. Last show of the series. |
| All in a Day | | 1956-11-03 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A day in the life of a hospital, as seen through the eyes of a father-to-be. |
| Crisis of the Mind | | 1956-11-17 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A woman denies her child's existence and therefore must be placed in a mental health institution. |
| The Expectant Heart | | 1956-11-24 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A woman with a weak heart is determined to have a baby...despite all the risks. |
| Personal Discovery | | 1956-12-01 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A troubled child points to a pair of troubled parents. |
| Search for the Child | | 1956-12-11 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. A trouble child learns that indeed, "no man is an island." |
| Act of Trust | | 1956-12-29 | Produced in co-operation with The Federation Of Jewish Philanthropies. An announcement is made that the series has won the "Ohio State Award." An attempt to get a job for a prisoner, a second chance at life. |
| Arthur Stagg Saved My Son's Life | | | A young Marine fights his way across the Pacific, with the help of an unarmed man from the Red Cross. |
| A Very Busy Man | | | RCA transcription, two locked grooves are available for local fund appeal insertion. A successful and very busy Jewish businessman has no time for his family or for very little else. An example of excellent radio writing, unfortunately uncredited. The writing style does sound like Morton Wishengrad. |
| I Am a Deserter | | | A soldier confesses to a Red Cross worker that he plans to desert tonight, in order to be with his payment wife. |
| Lee Richards, 1943 Model Zombie | | | Two American soldiers in a Japanese prison camp are visited by the Red Cross when things look the bleakest. The people back home haven't forgotten. Well done! |
| Mary Elizabeth Adams | | | A nurse on Bataan becomes a prisoner of the Japanese. |
| Mrs. Laura Graham | | | Gracie visits a wartime blood donation center (George does not appear). |
| The Human Element | | | An Israeli problem: how to take advantage of an excess of peanut production. Well, there wasn't always a surplus of peanuts. The writing style sounds like Morton Wishengrad. RCA transcription, two locked grooves are available for local fund appeal insertion. |
| The Story of Mel Turner | | | A dramatic recreation of the attack on Pearl Harbor. |
| The Story of Mrs. Miguel Velasco | | | A Mexican woman and her baby start across country on a train during wartime. She wants to visit her husband in the army, and succeeds with the help of the Red Cross. |
| This New Odyssey | | | The story of a young Greek girl who leaves for America while the Italians are bombing her village. Well written and produced. |