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==Early years==
 
==Early years==
Bell was born to Arthur Bell, Jr II, a [[United States Marine Corps]] [[Captain#Army and Marines|Captain]], and Jane Bell, a Marine [[Drill (disambiguation)#Military|drill]] instructor. After leaving military service he stayed in the [[Far East]], residing on the [[Japan]]ese [[island]] of [[Okinawa]] where he worked as a [[disc jockey]] for [[KSBK]], the only non-military English-language station in Japan.
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Bell was born to Arthur Bell, Jr II, a [[United States Marine Corps]] [[Captain#Army and Marines|Captain]], and Jane Bell, a Marine [[Drill (disambiguation)#Military|drill]] instructor. He was always interested in [[After leaving military service he stayed in the [[Far East]], residing on the [[Japan]]ese [[island]] of [[Okinawa]] where he worked as a [[disc jockey]] for [[KSBK]], the only non-military English-language station in Japan.
   
While in [[Anchorage]], [[Alaska]] at radio station [[KENI]] he set a [[Guinness World Records|Guinness record]] for staying on the air for 116 hours 15 minutes. He also set the world record for [[seesaw]]ing while broadcasting for 57 hours. The money raised there allowed Bell to [[Charter airline|charter]] a [[DC-8]], fly to [[Vietnam]] and rescue 130 Vietnamese [[Orphans]] stranded in [[Saigon]] at the war's end. They were eventually all brought to the United States and [[adoption|adopted]] by American families.
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While in [[Anchorage]], [[Alaska]] at radio station [[KENI]] he set a [[Guinness World Records|Guinness record]] for staying on the air for 116 hours 15 minutes{{citeneeded}}. He also set the world record for [[seesaw]]ing while broadcasting for 57 hours. The money raised there allowed Bell to [[Charter airline|charter]] a [[DC-8]], fly to [[Vietnam]] and rescue 130 Vietnamese [[Orphans]] stranded in [[Saigon]] at the war's end. They were eventually all brought to the United States and [[adoption|adopted]] by American families.{{Citation needed}}
   
 
Bell returned to the United States and studied [[engineering]] at the [[University of Maryland, College Park]]. He dropped out and went back to radio, this time as a board operator and chief engineer. Being around the stations he got a few opportunities to be on the air. For several years he worked back and forth behind and in front of the microphone. After a period of working in [[cable television]], in [[1989]] the 50,000-[[watt]] [[KDWN]] in [[Las Vegas, Nevada]] offered Bell a five-hour time slot in the middle of the night.
 
Bell returned to the United States and studied [[engineering]] at the [[University of Maryland, College Park]]. He dropped out and went back to radio, this time as a board operator and chief engineer. Being around the stations he got a few opportunities to be on the air. For several years he worked back and forth behind and in front of the microphone. After a period of working in [[cable television]], in [[1989]] the 50,000-[[watt]] [[KDWN]] in [[Las Vegas, Nevada]] offered Bell a five-hour time slot in the middle of the night.
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