Passport to World Band Radio 1996


Book Description

World band radio boasts a listening audience of six hundred million people worldwide. This book is the world's #1 selling shortwave publication, zeroing in on news, sports, and entertainment, from Afghanistan to Zambia, and including award-winning ratings of world band radios and "how-to" articles by experts. 100 photos, 50 in color.




Passport to World Band Radio


Book Description

World band radio is a trusted source of daily entertainment and crisis reporting for millions of Americans. Passport, the #1 seller in the field, provides exactly what world band listeners want. Entering its 21st year, it outsells all competitors combined.




Passport to World Band Radio 1998


Book Description

Elegant rusticity meets unpretentious luxury in the work of this award-winning architecture firm. Howard Backen, award-winning principal of the architecture firm Backen Gillam Kroeger, is at the center of a popular movement in home design that emphasizes comfort over pretension and elegant simplicity over complication that tends to serve the ego of architects. This volume, the first on his work and that of the firm, is an artful exploration of that this aesthetic, featuring farmhouses in the Napa Valley, hilltop homes, seaside retreats, and lakeside hideaways. Throughout the work, a sense of intimacy, warmth, and informality pervades. Natural materials, such as wood, stone, and brick form the foundations, walls, and ceilings of these subtly luxurious spaces, while nature itself plays a considered role that is at once complementary and also intricately conjoined with the work. Long vistas open outward toward sun-drenched valleys from the window-lined wall of a bedroom in one home, while more immediate scenes of steeply rising hillsides and hidden lakes appear from just beyond the back stoop--and the rough-hewn-board dock--of another. Sensitive, alluring, and wonderfully resonant with the suggestion of invitation, the work of Backen Gillam Kroeger is both thrilling to the eye and restorative to the soul.




Passport to World Band Radio 2001


Book Description

Passport to World Band Radio is the world's #1 selling short-wave publication. Like the Energizer bunny, it keeps on pulling in tens of thousands of readers year after year -- 800,000 copies of past editions have already been sold. Now expanded to nearly 600 pages, Passport covers news, music, sports and drama in English and other languages from hundreds of public broadcasters and private stations: Radio Australia to the BBC, Radio France to the Voice of Vietnam. Passport provides listening schedules in all three formats: -- Country-by-country-- Channel-by-channel-- Hour-by-hourIt includes award-winning tests and rankings of all world band radios, with detailed reports on new models. Rounding out this soup-to-nuts title are addresses, helpful how-to articles, and on-the-spot global reportage by leading personalities. Passport to World Band Radio has been hailed in hundreds of publications and broadcasts worldwide. It is richly illustrated with colorful graphics and cover artworkto entice browsers.







Passport to World Band Radio 1994


Book Description

With hundreds of world band shortwave radio stations on the air, this book makes it easy to tune in news, sports, and entertainment from Arabia to Yugoslavia--the listings are hour-by-hour, country-by-country and channel-by-channel. Includes ratings of world band radios and helpful how-to articles. 125 photos.




Passport to World Band Radio 2000


Book Description

Passport to World Band Radio is the world's #1 selling shortwave publication, pulling in tens of thousands of readers year after year.




Passport to World Band Radio, 2004 Edition


Book Description

Explains how to tune in news and entertainment from countries around the world, rates various world band radios, and provides a detailed broadcasting schedule.




Broadcasting on the Short Waves, 1945 to Today


Book Description

Shortwave broadcasting originated in the 1920s, when stations used the new technology to increase their range in order to serve foreign audiences and reach parts of their own country not easily otherwise covered. The early days of shortwave radio were covered in On the Short Waves, 1923-1945: Broadcast Listening in the Pioneer Days of Radio, published by McFarland in 1999 (paperback 2007). Then, two companion volumes were published, picking up the story after World War II. They were Listening on the Short Waves, 1945 to Today (McFarland, 2008; paperback 2010), which focuses on the shortwave listening community, and the present Broadcasting title, about the stations themselves and their environment. The heart of the book is a detailed, year-by-year account of the shortwave bands in each year from 1945 to 2008. It reviews what American listeners were hearing on the international and domestic shortwave bands, describes the arrivals and departures of stations, and recounts important events. The book describes the several categories of broadcasters--international, domestic, private, religious, clandestine and pirate. It explains the impact of relay stations, frequency management, and jamming. It also addresses the considerable changes in shortwave broadcasting since the end of the Cold War. The book is richly illustrated and indexed, and features a bibliography and extensive notes.




The World Radio and TV Handbook, 1999


Book Description

The best-selling handbook to world radio has been completely updated and provides, as always, the most comprehensive and up-to-date information for anyone seeking information about radio or television broadcasts anywhere in the world. Among the features of this guide are over 300 pages of radio listings; details of over 1000 English broadcasts; broadcaster web sites and e-mail addresses; worldwide television-station contacts and addresses; articles with detailed technical information, tuning tips, and recommended programs; and reviews of the latest and most exciting radio equipment.