Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Programming. Operated by the KPD and largely staffed by Germans, German People's Radio broadcasts were designed to demoralize the German military and to inspire subversive acts within Germany. [1] In order to inflate perceptions of the operational capacity of the underground resistance to the Nazi Party, programs were presented as though they ...
Radio Oberland Hohenpeißenberg: 0,1 97.5 Deutschlandfunk Kultur: Itzehoe 0,1 97.5 Deutschlandfunk Kultur: Damme 0,32 97.5 Deutschlandfunk Kultur: Münster/Fernmeldeturm 0,1 97.6 Bayern 3: Gelbelsee: 25 97.6 Bayern 3: Würzburg/Frankenwarte, BR 5 97.6 Planet Radio Limburg-Staffel 0,4 97.6 N-JOY: Visselhövede: 30 97.6 WDR 5: Siegen/Kindelsberg ...
Iowa Public Radio & Classical KICL: 96.3 FM: Pleasantville: Iowa Public Radio, Inc. Iowa Public Radio & Classical KICP: 105.9 FM: Patterson: Iowa Public Radio, Inc. Iowa Public Radio & Classical KICW: 91.1 FM: Ottumwa: Iowa Public Radio, Inc. Iowa Public Radio & Classical KIFG: 1510 AM: Iowa Falls: Times-Citizen Communications, Inc. Classic ...
Golden Age-emulating Canadian radio programs. Nero Wolfe (a.k.a. Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe) Nightfall; The Vinyl Cafe; Australian Golden Age programs. Argonauts Club; Dad and Dave from Snake Gully; See also. List of films based on radio series; List of U.S. radio programs; List of old-time radio people; Radio portal; References
Radio daytime drama serials were broadcast for decades, and some expanded to television. These dramas are often referred to as "soaps", a shortening from "soap opera".That term stems from the original dramatic serials broadcast on radio that had soap manufacturers such as Procter & Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive, and Lever Brothers as sponsors and producers.
Radio MIR – in Russia, Yerevan (Armenia), Kazakhstan (planned) and Bishkek (Kyrgyzstan) Radio S1 – in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro. Radio S3 - in Serbia and Montenegro. TDI Radio - in Serbia and Montenegro. Play Radio – in Serbia and Montenegro. European Hit Radio (EHR) – in Latvia and Lithuania.
The RKO Radio Network, a subsidiary of RKO General, was the first commercial radio network to distribute programming entirely by satellite. When it began operations on October 1, 1979, the initial RKO network was the first new full-service American radio network in 40 years.
Comparable to the American SCR-508 tank radio, which covered a similar frequency range (20-27.9 MHz) at 25 watts and the SCR-608 artillery variant (which operated in the 27-38.9 MHz frequency band) The major difference between German Army tank sets and US Army tank and artillery sets was the American use of FM for the high-HF/low-VHF bands.