LW/MW-Sender in Europa, Nahost Und Nordafrika 1962

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

LW/MW-Sender in Europa, Nahost Und Nordafrika 1962 Die Rundfunksender in Europa, Nahost und Nordafrika 1962 Quelle: Internationales Handbuch für Rundfunk und Fernsehen 1963, herausgegeben vom Hans-Bredow-Insititut der Universität Hamburg Die blau geschriebenen Stationen sind in Übereinstimmung mit dem "Kopenhagener Wellenplan" von 1950 (auch Spalte Kh. X). Die rot geschriebenen Stationen sind in der Frequenzliste nicht enthalten, finden sich aber in den Länderlisten. kHz m Kh. Station Land kW Rundfunkanstalt, Bemerkungen 150 2000 Moskau UdSSR 500 Moskau I 151 1987 Hamburg Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 50 Deutschlandfunk 155 1935 X Tromsö Norwegen 10 Norsk Rikskringkastg. 155 1935 X Brasov (Stalin) Rumänien 150 RTR I 155 1935 Petropawlowsk (Kamtschatka) UdSSR 164 1829 X Allouis Frankreich 250/500 Progr. Paris Inter 164 1829 Taschkent UdSSR 50 173 1734 München-Erdinger Moos Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 1000 Voice of America 173 1734 Königs Wusterhausen Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 173 1734 X Moskau I UdSSR 500 Moskau I 173 1734 Tschita UdSSR 20 180 1667 Saarlouis-Felsberg Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 200/400 R. Europa Nr. 1 182 1648 Berlin-Rehmate Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 1000 Deutschland-Sender 182 1648 X Lulea Schweden 10 Sveriges Radio 1. Programm 182 1648 X Ankara Türkei 120 Türkiye Radyosu 182 1648 Alma Ata UdSSR 10 191 1571 X Motala Schweden 600 Sveriges Radio 1. Programm 191 1571 Tiflis UdSSR 35 200 1500 X Droitwich I Gr. Brit. 400 BBC Light Programme, Europ. Services 200 1500 Irkutzk UdSSR 20 200 1500 Moskau II UdSSR 100 Moskau II 209 1435 Reykjavik Island 100 209 1435 X Kiew I UdSSR 150 Kiew I 218 1376 X Oslo Norwegen 200 Norsk Riksringkasting 218 1376 Baku UdSSR 35 Baku 218 1376 Krasnojarsk UdSSR 50 227 1322 X Warschau I Polen 500 Polskie Radio 1 227 1322 Alma Ata UdSSR Alma Ata 227 1322 Sowj. Station UdSSR Alma Ata 233 1288 Luxemburg I Luxemburg 600 Radio Luxembourg 236 1271 X Leningrad I UdSSR 100 Moskau I 236 1271 Magadan UdSSR 245 1224 X Kalundborg I Dänemark 150 Danmarks Radio 1. Programm 245 1224 Wladiwostok UdSSR 100 254 1181 X Lahti Finnland 200 Suomen Yleisradio 1 254 1181 Duschanbe UdSSR 50 254 1181 Kazan UdSSR 100 263 1141 Königs Wusterhausen Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 150 Radio Volga (Prog. für russ. Streitkräfte) 263 1141 Jakutsk UdSSR 10 263 1141 Moskau II UdSSR 20/150 Moskau I 272 1103 X Prag II Tschechoslow. 200 Programm Prag II 272 1103 Novosibirsk UdSSR 100 281 1068 X Minsk UdSSR 100 281 1068 Ulan Ude UdSSR 10 335 896 Chabarowsk UdSSR 340 882 Sowj. Station UdSSR 100 Moskau II 360 833 Juschno-Sachalinsk UdSSR 100 365 822 Sowj. Station UdSSR 20 Moskau II 375 800 Aschchabad UdSSR 10 385 779 Sowj. Station UdSSR 20 Moskau II 400 750 Minsk UdSSR 50 Moskau I 400 750 Taschkent I UdSSR 50 433 693 X Oulu Finnland 10 Suomen Yleisradio 1 520 577 Bayreuth Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 0,2Bayer. Rundfunk 520 577 Braunschweig-Salzgitter Geitelde Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 2 NDR 520 577 Kempten Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 0,2Bayer. Rundfunk 520 577 Passau Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 0,2Bayer. Rundfunk, nachts 520 577 Wurzburg Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 0,2Bayer. Rundfunk 520 577 Cottbus Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 5 520 577 Joensuu Finnland 1 Suomen Yleisradio 1 520 577 X Hamar Norwegen 1 520 577 Röros Norwegen 0,25 520 577 Aldrans 2 Österreich 2 Radio Österreich, Programm II 520 577 Bludenz 2 Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm II 520 577 Lienz 2 Österreich 2 Radio Österreich, Programm II 529 567 Schwerin Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 200 Radio DDR 1 529 567 X Beromünster Schweiz 150 Schweizer Landessender © Walter Brummer Seite 1 von 16 kHz m Kh. Station Land kW Rundfunkanstalt, Bemerkungen 539 557 Bayonne Frankreich 0,05 Progr. France III 539 557 X Budapest I (Lakihegy) Ungarn 150 Kossuth Radio 540 556 Verona AFS Italien 0,005 Armed Forces Radio Service 540 556 Vicenza AFS Italien 0,005 Armed Forces Radio Service 548 547 Colomb-Bechar Algerien 4 Radio Algerie & Arab. Progr. 548 547 Braunschweig-Königslutter Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 200 Deutschlandfunk 548 547 München AFN Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 100 (Wechsel nach 1106 kHz) 548 547 Moskau III UdSSR 100 Moskau II 548 547 Odessa UdSSR 100 548 547 Wladiwostok UdSSR 557 539 Kairo III Ägypten 50 Fremdsprachenprogramm 557 539 Touggourt Algerien 4 Radio Algerie & Arab. Progr. 557 539 Greifswald Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 5 Radio DDR 1 557 539 X Helsinki I Finnland 100 Suomen Yleisradio 2 557 539 Faro Portugal 1 Em. Nacional 557 539 Guarda Portugal 1 Em. Nacional u. Regional 557 539 Timisoara II Rumänien 1 RTR I 557 539 X Monte Ceneri Schweiz 50 Radio Svizzera 557 539 Wolgograd UdSSR 10 566 530 Berlin I-Stallupöner Allee Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 20 Sender Freies Berlin 1 566 530 X Athlone I Irland 100 566 530 Caltanissetta I Italien 10 Progr. Nazionale 566 530 Bad Ischl Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Eisenkappel Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Feistritz/Drau Österreich 0,1 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Greifenburg Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Maria Pfarr Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Mühlbach am Hochkönig Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Neukirchen Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 566 530 Radstadt Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 575 522 Laghouat Algerien 4 Radio Algerie & Arab. Progr. 575 522 Stuttgart-Mühlacker Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 100 Süddeutscher Rundfunk 575 522 Leipzig Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 100 Radio DDR 1 575 522 Tel Aviv Israel 50/10 Programm A 575 522 X Riga UdSSR 100 584 514 Paris III (Grenelle) Frankreich 1 Progr. Paris Inter 584 514 Klagenfurt II Österreich 25 Radio Österreich, Programm II 584 514 Salzburg II Österreich 10 Radio Österreich, Programm II 584 514 X Wien II Österreich 150 Radio Österreich, Programm II 584 514 Madrid I (Arganda) Spanien 200 Radio Nacional de Espana 584 514 AleppoSyrien 5 584 514 Sfax II Tunesien 1 593 506 X Sofia II Bulgarien 60 593 506 Frankfurt/M. Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 100 Hessischer Rundfunk 593 506 Hoher Meißner Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 20 Hessischer Rundfunk 593 506 Oujda I Marokko 100 Arab. Programm 593 506 X Sundsvall Schweden 150 Sveriges Radio 1. Programm 602 498 Chemnitz (Karl-Marx-Stadt) Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 20 Berliner Rundfunk 602 498 X Lyon I Frankreich 100 Progr. France II 602 498 Radio Nord Frankreich 602 498 Damaskus I Syrien 2 606 495 Sfax 100 Tunesien 5 606 495 Nicosia Zypern 20 CBC Türkisch 611 491 Grafenwöhr AFN Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 10 American Forces Network 611 491 Kaiserslautern AFN Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 10 American Forces Network 611 491 Nürnberg AFN Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 10 American Forces Network 611 491 Berlin I (Grünau, Köpenick) Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 1000 Berliner Rundfunk 611 491 X Hoefn (Eidar) Island 1 611 491 X Sarajewo Jugoslawien 100 Bosnien Regional 611 491 Sebaa-Aioun 1 Marokko 140 Arab. Programm 611 491 Frunse UdSSR 25 611 491 Krasnodar UdSSR 20 611 491 X Petrosawodsk UdSSR 100 620 484 Mansurah (Kairo IV) Ägypten 300 Voice of Arabs 620 484 X Brüssel I Belgien 150 Franz. Programm 629 477 Erfurt-Wachenbrunn Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 20 Radio DDR 1 629 477 X Vigra Norwegen 100 Norsk Rikskringkasting 629 477 Dornbirn-Lauterach I Österreich 25 Radio Österreich, Programm I 629 477 Innsbruck I (Aldrans) Österreich 25 Radio Österreich, Programm I 629 477 Lienz Österreich 1 Radio Österreich, Programm I 629 477 X Tunis I Tunesien 600 Arab. Programm 630 476 Teheran AFS Iran 0,25 Armed Forces Radio Service 638 470 San Sebastian Spanien 20 Radio Nacional de Espana 638 470 X Prag I (Liblice) Tschechoslow. 150 Programm Prag I 638 470 Limassol Zypern 100 BBC © Walter Brummer Seite 2 von 16 kHz m Kh. Station Land kW Rundfunkanstalt, Bemerkungen 640 469 Täbris Iran 5 Radio Täbris 647 464 Lages Portugal (Azoren) 1 American Forces Network 647 464 X Crowborough Gr. Brit. 150 BBC "European Service" 647 464 X Daventry Gr. Brit. 150 BBC Third Programme 647 464 X Edinburgh Gr. Brit. 2 BBC Third Programme 647 464 X Glasgow Gr. Brit. 2 BBC Third Programme 647 464 X Newcastle Gr. Brit. 2 BBC Third Programme 647 464 X Redmoss Gr. Brit. 4 BBC Third Programme 647 464 Sevilla Spanien 5 Radio Nacional de Espana 647 464 X Simferopol (Charkow) UdSSR 100 650 462 Sfax Tunesien 5 Radio Sfax 656 457 Potsdam Deutschland (Sowjetzone) 20 Berliner Welle 656 457 Tel-Aviv Israel 100 Programm B 656 457 X Bozen I Italien 20 Progr. Nazionale 656 457 X Florenz I Italien 80 Progr. Nazionale 656 457 X Neapel I Italien 80 Progr. Nazionale 656 457 X Turin I Italien 35 Progr. Nazionale 656 457 Venedig I Italien 10 Progr. Nazionale 656 457 X Murmansk UdSSR 150 665 451 Kairo II Ägypten 100 Voice of Arabs 665 451 Bad Dürrheim Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 20 Südwestfunk 665 451 Ravensburg-Wilhelmskirch Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 40 Südwestfunk 665 451 Reutlingen Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 10 Südwestfunk 665 451 Athen III Griechenland 15 EIR 3 665 451 Eidar Island 6 665 451 Lissabon I Portugal 135 Progr. Nacional 665 451 Damaskus Syrien 50 665 451 Kaunas (Kowno) UdSSR 100 674 445 X Marseilles I Frankreich 150 Progr. France II 674 445 X Bodö Norwegen 10 Norsk Rikskringkasting 674 445 Aigen Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Bischofshofen Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Bleiburg Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Gloggnitz Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Matrei Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Neumarkt Österreich 0,05 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Radenthein Österreich 0,1 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 Ried/Innkreis Österreich 0,1 Radio Österreich, Programm I 674 445 X Tschernowzy UdSSR 50 677 443 Jerusalem Jordanien 20 Hachemite Jordan Broadcasting 680 441 Rasht Iran 1 Radio Rasht 683 439 Berlin RIAS II Deutschland (Bundesrep.) 100 Rundfunk im amerik.
Recommended publications
  • Public Service Broadcasting Resists the Search for Independence in Brazil and Eastern Europe Octavio Penna Pieranti OCTAVIO PENNA PIERANTI
    Public Service Broadcasting Resists The search for independence in Brazil and Eastern Europe Octavio Penna Pieranti OCTAVIO PENNA PIERANTI PUBLIC SERVICE BROADCASTING RESISTS The search for independence in Brazil and Eastern Europe Sofia, 2020 Copyright © Author Octavio Penna Pieranti Translation Lee Sharp Publisher Foundation Media Democracy Cover (design) Rafiza Varão Cover (photo) Octavio Penna Pieranti ISBN 978-619-90423-3-5 A first edition of this book was published in Portuguese in 2018 (“A radiodifusão pública resiste: a busca por independência no Brasil e no Leste Europeu”, Ed. FAC/UnB). This edition includes a new and final chapter in which the author updates the situation of Public Service Broadcasting in Brazil. To the (still) young Octavio, who will one day realize that communication goes beyond his favorite “episodes”, heroes and villains Table of Contents The late construction of public communication: two cases ............. 9 Tereza Cruvinel Thoughts on public service broadcasting: the importance of comparative studies ............................................................................ 13 Valentina Marinescu QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS .......................................................... 19 I ........................................................................................................... 21 THE END .............................................................................................. 43 II ........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 1965-01-12.Pdf
    r/////////////////////////////////(/////////////////~ ~ · . · ~ · TOP SECRET ¥. · ~ ~ 1'\PPROVED FOR ~ ~: RELEASE- AR :;1"~ /. 70-14 - ,~ ~ HISTORICAL ,~ · .r. COLLECTION :;1"~ /_ DIVISION - :;1"~ - ~ DATE: 06-17-2013 ~ ~ ~ . ~ ~ · ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ · ~ THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS CODE WORD MATERIAL ~ .,..~- %· WARNING ~ ~ This document contains classified information affecting the national ·% security of the United States within the meaning of the espionage "~ laws, US Code, Title 18, Sections 793, 794, and 798. The law prohibits ~ its transmission or the revelation of its contents in any manner to .r~ an unauthorized person, as well as its use in any manner prejudicial % to the safety or interest of the United States or for the benefit of any ~ ;:~::~:~::::t :~:: d::i:::: o:~h~:n~:~:~::~IONS ~ ~ INTELLIGENCE CHANNELS AT ALL TIMES ~ "~ It is to be seen only by US personnel especially indoctrinated 1"/ ~ and authorized to receive COMMUNICATIONS INTELLIGENCE /"/ ~ information; its security must be maintained in accordance with /"/ % COMMUNICATIONS INTELLIGENCE REGULATIONS. 0 ~ No action is to be taken on any COMMUNICATIONS INTELLI- 0 .r~ GENCE which may be contained herein, regardless of the advantages I"/ % to be gained, unless such action is first approved by the Director 0 ~ of Central Intelligence. 0 ~ 0 ~ TOP SECRET 0 ~//////////////////////////////////////////////////.M SECRET · ·\~jt:dt. ~ - ~ )·; V /tt 1 Ap~ed For Yo epORE~'\40~'f%s§~-RDMT00472A0~0001 0002-~ OCI No. 0521/65 Copy No. 2S 12 January 1965 A Chronology of Reports Concerning the Berlin Situation (Received During the Week Ending at 1200 EST 12 January 1965) This is a working paper prepared in the 25X1A EE Division, Sino-Soviet Bloc Area, Office of Current Intelligence, CIA Prepared by Ext 7441 State, DIA, Army, JCS declassification & release instructions on file , SECRET , , App,_d For ~~a~:ftl<ft:i\\191~ s§t!MRDPMT00472A00120001 0002-6 28 Dec Moscow beamed to the UK an English language commentary reiterating the Soviet UN proposal for a nonaggression pact between NATO and Pact countries.
    [Show full text]
  • Ambassador Auditorium Collection ARS.0043
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt3q2nf194 No online items Guide to the Ambassador Auditorium Collection ARS.0043 Finding aid prepared by Frank Ferko and Anna Hunt Graves This collection has been processed under the auspices of the Council on Library and Information Resources with generous financial support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Archive of Recorded Sound Braun Music Center 541 Lasuen Mall Stanford University Stanford, California, 94305-3076 650-723-9312 [email protected] 2011 Guide to the Ambassador Auditorium ARS.0043 1 Collection ARS.0043 Title: Ambassador Auditorium Collection Identifier/Call Number: ARS.0043 Repository: Archive of Recorded Sound, Stanford University Libraries Stanford, California 94305-3076 Physical Description: 636containers of various sizes with multiple types of print materials, photographic materials, audio and video materials, realia, posters and original art work (682.05 linear feet). Date (inclusive): 1974-1995 Abstract: The Ambassador Auditorium Collection contains the files of the various organizational departments of the Ambassador Auditorium as well as audio and video recordings. The materials cover the entire time period of April 1974 through May 1995 when the Ambassador Auditorium was fully operational as an internationally recognized concert venue. The materials in this collection cover all aspects of concert production and presentation, including documentation of the concert artists and repertoire as well as many business documents, advertising, promotion and marketing files, correspondence, inter-office memos and negotiations with booking agents. The materials are widely varied and include concert program booklets, audio and video recordings, concert season planning materials, artist publicity materials, individual event files, posters, photographs, scrapbooks and original artwork used for publicity.
    [Show full text]
  • Television and the Cold War in the German Democratic Republic
    0/-*/&4637&: *ODPMMBCPSBUJPOXJUI6OHMVFJU XFIBWFTFUVQBTVSWFZ POMZUFORVFTUJPOT UP MFBSONPSFBCPVUIPXPQFOBDDFTTFCPPLTBSFEJTDPWFSFEBOEVTFE 8FSFBMMZWBMVFZPVSQBSUJDJQBUJPOQMFBTFUBLFQBSU $-*$,)&3& "OFMFDUSPOJDWFSTJPOPGUIJTCPPLJTGSFFMZBWBJMBCMF UIBOLTUP UIFTVQQPSUPGMJCSBSJFTXPSLJOHXJUI,OPXMFEHF6OMBUDIFE ,6JTBDPMMBCPSBUJWFJOJUJBUJWFEFTJHOFEUPNBLFIJHIRVBMJUZ CPPLT0QFO"DDFTTGPSUIFQVCMJDHPPE Revised Pages Envisioning Socialism Revised Pages Revised Pages Envisioning Socialism Television and the Cold War in the German Democratic Republic Heather L. Gumbert The University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Revised Pages Copyright © by Heather L. Gumbert 2014 All rights reserved This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (be- yond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publisher. Published in the United States of America by The University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America c Printed on acid- free paper 2017 2016 2015 2014 5 4 3 2 A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978– 0- 472– 11919– 6 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN 978– 0- 472– 12002– 4 (e- book) Revised Pages For my parents Revised Pages Revised Pages Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xi Introduction 1 1 Cold War Signals: Television Technology in the GDR 14 2 Inventing Television Programming in the GDR 36 3 The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Political Discipline Confronts Live Television in 1956 60 4 Mediating the Berlin Wall: Television in August 1961 81 5 Coercion and Consent in Television Broadcasting: The Consequences of August 1961 105 6 Reaching Consensus on Television 135 Conclusion 158 Notes 165 Bibliography 217 Index 231 Revised Pages Revised Pages Acknowledgments This work is the product of more years than I would like to admit.
    [Show full text]
  • Wireless World
    Wireless World Over a quarter of a million copies sold Wireless World Guide to Broadcasting Stations LONDON ILIFFE BOOKS THE BUTTERWORTH GROUP ENGLAND Butterworth & Co (Publishers) Ltd London: 88 Kingsway, WC2B 6AB AUSTRALIA Butterworths Pty Ltd Sydney: 586 Pacific Highway, NSW 2067 Melbourne: 343 Little Collins Street, 3000 Brisbane: 240 Queen Street, 4000 NEW ZEALAND Butterworths of New Zealand Ltd Wellington: 26 -28 Waring Taylor Street, 1 SOUTH AFRICA Butterworth & Co (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd Durban: 152 -154 Gale Street First published in 1946 Seventeenth Edition 1973 Published for 'Wireless World' by Iliffe Books, an imprint of the Butterworth Group R Butterworth & Co (Publishers) Ltd 1973 ISBN 0 592 00081 8 Distributed in the United States of America and Canada by Gilfer Associates, Inc. , P.O, Box 239, Park Ridge, NJ, 07656, U.S.A. Printed in England by The Pitman Press, Bath CONTENTS A GUIDE TO LISTENING 1. Receivers ... 1 2. Aerial and Earth Systems 3 3. Propagation ... 7 4. Signal Identification ... .. 10 5. Reception Reports ... ... 13 LONG- AND MEDIUM -WAVE EUROPEAN STATIONS 1. In order of frequency ... ... 16 2. Geographically 43 SHORT -WAVE STATIONS OF THE WORLD 1. In order of frequency ... 53 2. Geographically 159 EUROPEAN V. H. F. SOUND BROADCASTING STATIONS ... ... 197 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Thanks are due to the B. B.C. for the lists of broadcasting stations, which were prepared by the Tatsfield Receiving Station. A GUIDE TO LISTENING 1 RECEIVERS It is probably true that the majority of sound radio receivers spend most of their time tuned to local stations. This is a pity because much interest can be derived from listening to more distant stations and even modest receivers can pick up a number of these.
    [Show full text]
  • Must-Carry Rules, and Access to Free-DTT
    Access to TV platforms: must-carry rules, and access to free-DTT European Audiovisual Observatory for the European Commission - DG COMM Deirdre Kevin and Agnes Schneeberger European Audiovisual Observatory December 2015 1 | Page Table of Contents Introduction and context of study 7 Executive Summary 9 1 Must-carry 14 1.1 Universal Services Directive 14 1.2 Platforms referred to in must-carry rules 16 1.3 Must-carry channels and services 19 1.4 Other content access rules 28 1.5 Issues of cost in relation to must-carry 30 2 Digital Terrestrial Television 34 2.1 DTT licensing and obstacles to access 34 2.2 Public service broadcasters MUXs 37 2.3 Must-carry rules and digital terrestrial television 37 2.4 DTT across Europe 38 2.5 Channels on Free DTT services 45 Recent legal developments 50 Country Reports 52 3 AL - ALBANIA 53 3.1 Must-carry rules 53 3.2 Other access rules 54 3.3 DTT networks and platform operators 54 3.4 Summary and conclusion 54 4 AT – AUSTRIA 55 4.1 Must-carry rules 55 4.2 Other access rules 58 4.3 Access to free DTT 59 4.4 Conclusion and summary 60 5 BA – BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA 61 5.1 Must-carry rules 61 5.2 Other access rules 62 5.3 DTT development 62 5.4 Summary and conclusion 62 6 BE – BELGIUM 63 6.1 Must-carry rules 63 6.2 Other access rules 70 6.3 Access to free DTT 72 6.4 Conclusion and summary 73 7 BG – BULGARIA 75 2 | Page 7.1 Must-carry rules 75 7.2 Must offer 75 7.3 Access to free DTT 76 7.4 Summary and conclusion 76 8 CH – SWITZERLAND 77 8.1 Must-carry rules 77 8.2 Other access rules 79 8.3 Access to free DTT
    [Show full text]
  • Kristin Rebien Burned Bridges. the Rise and Fall of the Former BBC
    Kristin Rebien Burned Bridges. The Rise and Fall of the Former BBC Journalist Karl-Eduard von Schnitzler in East Germany Schnitzler’s journalistic career was closely intertwined with larger political developments. Its vicissitudes indicate major shifts in the role of politics in broadcasting. Declared anti-Nazism enabled Schnitzler to receive journalistic training at the BBC German Service during World War II. It also allowed him to rise to a central position in British-controlled post-war radio in Germany. Declared Communism caused him to lose this position at the onset of the Cold War. Schnitzler’s relocation to the East was part of a larger regional concentration of political elites. Parallel to the pressure curve of the Cold War, his career went through a second complete cycle of success and subsequent failure. When the Allies seized Germany in 1945, they brought with them not only their collective visions for a new German state, but also their national cultural beliefs. Traditional regional differences within Germany were now crisscrossed with new lines of difference between the four zones of occupation. Not only was Lower Saxony traditionally different from Bavaria, but new cultural differences arose between the British and the American, the Soviet and the French zone. This new type of regionalism became particularly virulent in the field of radio broadcasting that had to be rebuilt from scratch in all four zones. Post-war broadcasting was, in administrative organization and programming, fundamentally different from National Socialist radio. It also did not revert to the practices of Weimar Republic radio. In the vacuum that arose in 1945, each zone of occupation established its own broadcasting model.
    [Show full text]
  • DDR-Sprachgebrauch Nach Der Wende - Eine Erste Bestandsaufnahme
    Erschienen in: Muttersprache Jg. 100 (1990) Nr. 2-3, S. 266-286. DDR-Sprachgebrauch nach der Wende - eine erste Bestandsaufnahme Von MANFRED W. HELLMANN Das Neue Deutschland heute zu lesen ist, verglichen mit der Zeit vor der Wende, sprachlich ein Vergnügen. Inhaltlich mag man die im ND vertretenen Positionen ableh- nen, auch sind bestimmte Einseitigkeiten unverkennbar. So spart das ND nicht mit Kri- tik an den desolaten Zuständen z. B. in der Wirtschaft, im Medienwesen, im Wohnungs- wesen der DDR, wohl aber ist es sehr sparsam mit der Benennung der dafür Verantwort- lichen, nämlich der SED. Wohl beklagt das ND Erscheinungen wie Intoleranz, Manipu- lationen, Diffamierungen in der politischen Auseinandersetzung, thematisiert aber nicht seine eigene jahrzehntelange »Vorbildrolle« in dieser Hinsicht. Und während früher mit der üblichen Schwarz-Weiß-Technik Ängste und Befürchtungen der Bevölkerung nur im kapitalistischen Westen vorkamen, erwähnt diese Zeitung heute Ängste, Sorgen, Befürch- tungen, Furcht, Unruhe in der DDR-Bevölkerung in einer Ausgabe häufiger als früher in einem ganzen Jahrgang. Das politische Interesse hieran ist offenkundig, wenngleich nicht ohne reale Grundlage. Ebenso offenkundig ist das Interesse, die alten, völlig dis- kreditierten Schlüsselwörter real existierender Sozialismus und kommunistisch zu ersetzen durch demokratischer Sozialismus einerseits und stalinistisch/Stalinismus andererseits. Andererseits befleißigt sich das ND einer neutralen, teilweise sogar positiven Bericht- erstattung auch über die Bundesrepublik
    [Show full text]
  • ©2017 Renata J. Pasternak-Mazur ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    ©2017 Renata J. Pasternak-Mazur ALL RIGHTS RESERVED SILENCING POLO: CONTROVERSIAL MUSIC IN POST-SOCIALIST POLAND By RENATA JANINA PASTERNAK-MAZUR A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School-New Brunswick Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey In partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in Music Written under the direction of Andrew Kirkman And approved by _____________________________________ _____________________________________ _____________________________________ _____________________________________ New Brunswick, New Jersey January 2017 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION Silencing Polo: Controversial Music in Post-Socialist Poland by RENATA JANINA PASTERNAK-MAZUR Dissertation Director: Andrew Kirkman Although, with the turn in the discipline since the 1980s, musicologists no longer assume their role to be that of arbiters of “good music”, the instruction of Boethius – “Look to the highest of the heights of heaven” – has continued to motivate musicological inquiry. By contrast, music which is popular but perceived as “bad” has generated surprisingly little interest. This dissertation looks at Polish post-socialist music through the lenses of musical phenomena that came to prominence after socialism collapsed but which are perceived as controversial, undesired, shameful, and even dangerous. They run the gamut from the perceived nadir of popular music to some works of the most renowned contemporary classical composers that are associated with the suffix -polo, an expression
    [Show full text]
  • 1 the Wall of Words: Radio and the Construction of the Berlin Wall Kate
    The Wall of Words: Radio and the construction of the Berlin Wall Kate Lacey, University of Sussex This paper draws on the BBC monitoring reports of radio stations in the West and East to examine how the building of the Berlin Wall was discursively constructed in the weeks leading up to the overnight closure of the inner city frontier on 13 August 1961. It draws specifically on files relating to broadcasts from both East and West Germany over the summer months to see how the closure of the frontier hung in the airwaves. Background Of course the story of the postwar division of Germany and its capital Berlin into 4 zones is very well known, as is the fact that there had been growing tension and repeated flashpoints as the Cold War set in, from the Soviet blockade of the Western sectors of Berlin and the Berlin Airlift in 1948 that saw the end of the joint administration and led to the foundation in 1949 of the two German states. East Berlin remained as capital of the German Democratic Republic, while the capital of the Federal Republic moved to Bonn, leaving West Berlin formally to remain a territory under Allied supervision, but with open borders to the East. In May 1953 the border was closed between East and West Germany, but not between the two halves of Berlin. Five years later, Kruschchev claimed that Bonn had ‘erected a wall between the two parts of Germany’ (Wilke, p.149) and delivered his Berlin Ultimatum, demanding the withdrawal of Western troops from West Berlin so that Berlin could become a ‘free city’ in a move towards a confederation of the two Germanies.
    [Show full text]
  • 1998, 24. Jahrgang
    Rundfunk und Geschichte Mitteilungen des Studienkreises Rundfunk und Geschichte Informationen aus dem Deutschen Rundfunkarchiv 24. Jahrgang Nr. 2 I 3- April I Juli 1998 Buch und Rundfunk im Dritten Reich Rezeptionsforschung in Ostdeutschland (1945 - 1965) Gespräch mit SR-Intendanten a.D. Franz Mai Reportage aus dem KZ Oranienburg (1933) Rezensionen Bibliographie Mitteilungen des Studienkreises Rundfunk und Geschichte Informationen aus dem Deutschen Rundfunkarchiv Zitierweise: RuG -ISSN 0175-4351 Redaktion: Ansgar Diller Edgar Lersch Redaktionsanschrift Dr. Ansgar Diller, Deutsches Rundfunkarchiv Frankfurt am Main - Berlin, Bertramstraße 8, 60320 Frankfurt am Main, Tel. 069-15687212, Fax 069-15687200 Dr. Edgar Lersch, Süddeutscher Rundfunk, Historisches Archiv, Neckarstraße 230, 70190 Stuttgart, Tel. 0711-9293233, Fax 0711-9292698 Redaktionsassistenz: Dr. Stefan Niessen Herstellung: Michael Friebel Redaktionsschluß: 10. Juli 1998 Das Inhaltsverzeichnis von »Rundfunk und Geschichte« wird ab Jg. 19 (1993), H. 1, im INTERNET (http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/zeitschr/RuGe/rugindex.htm) angeboten. Inhalt 24. Jahrgang Nr. 2 I 3- April I Juli 1998 Aufsätze Annegret Bischof Zwischen Medienverbund und Medienkonkurrenz Buch und Rundfunk im Dritten Reich 105 Konrad Dussel Der DDR-Rundfunk und seine Hörer Ans~tze zur Rezeptionsforschung in Ostdeutschland (1945-1965) 122 Dokumentation »Am Ende des Jahrtausends eine multikulturelle Großfamilie« Gespr~ch mit dem Gründungsintendanten des SR Franz Mai (Wolfgang Becker) 137 Miszellen Helmut Hammerschmidt (1920 - 1998) (Stephan Rechlin) 160 Clemens Münster (1906 -1998) (Bettina Hasselbring) 161 »Wir können vielleicht die Schlafr~ume besichtigen« Originalton einer Reportage aus dem KZ Oranienburg (1933) (Muriel Favre) 164 Das Historische Archiv des Südwestfunks in Baden-Baden (Jana Berendt) 170 Rezensionen lnge Marßolek I Adelheid von Saldern (Hrsg.) Zuhören und Gehört werden.
    [Show full text]
  • Television and the Cold War in the German Democratic Republic
    Revised Pages Envisioning Socialism Revised Pages Revised Pages Envisioning Socialism Television and the Cold War in the German Democratic Republic Heather L. Gumbert The University of Michigan Press Ann Arbor Revised Pages Copyright © by Heather L. Gumbert 2014 All rights reserved This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, including illustrations, in any form (be- yond that copying permitted by Sections 107 and 108 of the U.S. Copyright Law and except by reviewers for the public press), without written permission from the publisher. Published in the United States of America by The University of Michigan Press Manufactured in the United States of America c Printed on acid- free paper 2017 2016 2015 2014 5 4 3 2 A CIP catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 978– 0- 472– 11919– 6 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN 978– 0- 472– 12002– 4 (e- book) Revised Pages For my parents Revised Pages Revised Pages Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xi Introduction 1 1 Cold War Signals: Television Technology in the GDR 14 2 Inventing Television Programming in the GDR 36 3 The Revolution Wasn’t Televised: Political Discipline Confronts Live Television in 1956 60 4 Mediating the Berlin Wall: Television in August 1961 81 5 Coercion and Consent in Television Broadcasting: The Consequences of August 1961 105 6 Reaching Consensus on Television 135 Conclusion 158 Notes 165 Bibliography 217 Index 231 Revised Pages Revised Pages Acknowledgments This work is the product of more years than I would like to admit. That it has finally seen the light of day, so to speak, is due to the support of a number of institutions and individuals.
    [Show full text]