World Radio TV Handbook


Book Description







Political Handbook of the World 1998


Book Description

Political Handbook of the World annually provides up-to-date political information on all the world's countries in a balanced, accurate and comprehensive manner. A singular and authoritative reference work for nearly 70 years, each new volume builds on the research and scholarship of previous editions, offering rare insight into stories making headlines, judiciously outlining contemporary conflicts and analysing current foreign policy within the informed context of past events and decisions. It is considered to be the single-volume reference work of choice for libraries, diplomats, academic faculties, international corporations, and others needing accurate, timely information.




World Radio TV Handbook, 1997


Book Description

A comprehensive listing of the world's long-, medium- and shortwave radio and television stations by frequency, time and language. Features include: maps of the principal transmitter sites; reviews of new shortwave receivers; and an hour-by-hour guide to b




Listening on the Short Waves, 1945 to Today


Book Description

"This book presents the histories of the major North American shortwave clubs and reviews the professional and listener-generated shortwave literature of the era. It also covers the DX programs and other listening fare to which shortwave listeners were most attracted and the QSL-cards they sought as confirmation of their reception."--Provided by publisher.




World Radio TV Handbook


Book Description

This is the most comprehensive source available on medium wave, shortwave, FM broadcast, and television broadcast information. All the world's national radio services are conveniently bookmarked, and dozens of color pages provide articles, radio reviews, propagation predictions, and maps.




World Radio TV Handbook (WRTH), 2003


Book Description

World Radio TV Handbook continues to be the guide for the serious radio listener. In this, the 57th edition for the year 2003, we have again devoted our resources to the all-important task of obtaining and providing the most up-to-date information on medium wave and shortwave broadcasts and broadcasters available in any publication. Articles on many different topics of great interest to listeners and dxers alike. - Features - Colour pages giving articles, radio reviews, propagation predictions, and colour maps - National Radio - The world's national radio services together with MW frequency lists by region - International Radio - The winter shortwave frequencies as supplied by the broadcasters together with frequency lists of international broadcasts in English, French, German and Spanish - Television - Details of the broadcasters. Now arranged alphabetically by country - Reference - DX Club information, ITU codes and other essential information







Radio and Television Broadcasting on the European Continent


Book Description

Radio and Television Broadcasting on the European Continent was first published in 1967. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. In this book Dr. Paulu provides a comprehensive survey based on firsthand study of the development and current status of radio and television broadcasting in continental Europe. He discusses the technical, organizational, financial, and programming aspects of European broadcasting in both Communist and Western countries. The material is organized, not on a country-by-country basis, but as it relates to broad basic issues, and it is presented in a framework of such interrelated factors as geography, history politics, international relations, religious traditions, language, national economic standards, and cultural and social life. The broadcasting systems studied include those of the Soviet Union and other Communist countries, France, West Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, and Switzerland. The account is particularly timely in view of the concern and discussion about the future course of broadcasting in the United States. It has relevance not only for communications specialists but for political scientists and other scholars in the social sciences as well as for the growing public which is interested in the improvement of American broadcasting.




Radio Happy Isles


Book Description

This is Radio Happy Isles... Ko e ui ‘e ni ‘a e ‘otu felenite... This is Radio Sunshine... Traveling throughout the Pacific over a period of six years, Robert Seward listened to radio wherever he went. From the Solomon Islands to Vanuatu to Fiji to Tonga to Hawai'i, he tuned in and listened. He recorded broadcasts, he sat in radio stations and newsrooms, he met the people who ran them, and he talked to folks who listened. The result is Radio Happy Isles, a highly readable, insightful, and unexpected look at the mediascape of the Pacific. What Seward discovered is surprising: in an era of satellite downloads and globe-circling communication empires, radio-the forgotten medium-is alive and well in the Pacific. Subject to political pressures and calls for privatization, its role is in constant evolution. But one thing is clear: the media rules of metropolitan dominance have not played out according to script here. Media in the Pacific has been active, not passive, in shaping its own local narratives. Full of anecdotes and engagingly written, Radio Happy Isles introduces us to an unmistakable voice, one that is varied and distinct and far from being drowned out by the noises coming from the metropolitan world.