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    haslach

    Explore "haslach" with insightful episodes like "Schwarzwälder Trachtenmuseum Haslach - mehr als nur Bollenhut", "MN.10.11.1983. Robert Haslach - UN Geneva" and "MN.23.03.1988. Clandestine Special Haslach & Campbell" from podcasts like ""Schwarzwald-Podcast", "The Media Network Vintage Vault 2023-2024" and "The Media Network Vintage Vault 2023-2024"" and more!

    Episodes (3)

    Schwarzwälder Trachtenmuseum Haslach - mehr als nur Bollenhut

    Schwarzwälder Trachtenmuseum Haslach - mehr als nur Bollenhut
    Der Bollenhut ist weltbekannt – doch Schwarzwaldtrachten sind weitaus mehr als das. Im Trachtenmuseum in Haslach sind zahlreiche Trachten ausgestellt, die genauso zur Tradition des Schwarzwalds gehören, wie der Bollenhut aus Gutach. Der ehrenamtliche Museumsleiter Alois Krafczyk ist ein echtes Schwarzwälder Original und setzt sich für den Erhalt der Trachten wie kaum ein anderer ein. Was das Besondere an den Trachten aus dem Schwarzwald ist und welche Ausstellungsstücke auch zu seinen Favoriten gehören, verrät er uns in diesem Interview.

    MN.10.11.1983. Robert Haslach - UN Geneva

    MN.10.11.1983. Robert Haslach - UN Geneva
    Updated description; December 2019. This early edition of Media Network starts with the news that a postal strike in the Netherlands is delaying listener mail. We carried an interview with Owen Garriott, the first amateur radio operator in space.  While attending the World Telecom Expo in 1983, Jonathan Marks walked down the hill to the Palais de Nations, the UN HQ in Geneva. The goal was to solve the mystery of SSB transmissions in Russian on 14500 kHz USB emanating from the gardens of the building. We spoke with Anthony Kernow of the UN to find out what goes on "radiowise" in the building. This edition also includes an interview with a former producer and translator in the English section of Radio Netherlands, the American Robert Haslach. In 1983 he published his account of Dutch World Broadcasting (still available via Amazon) which traces the early years of PCJJ and PCLL with transmitters in Eindhoven and Huizen. His book is quite critical of one of the early announcers/hosts on the radio station, Eddy Startz of Happy Station fame. He points out that Startz was born in Aachen right on the Dutch border and was never clear about what he did in World War 2. However, the work he did through Happy Station in positioning the Netherlands as a friendly nation is not disputed. It certainly covers the period when the English department was mainly operating to explain how the Dutch were reconstructing after the war, playing lots of music and tourist features interspersed with a short news bulletin and commentary. The book stops in the mid-seventies when transmission times were reduced and emphasis changed to more news and feature programmes. This edition concludes with African Media news from Richard Ginbey. He reports that South Africa is making more use of mediumwave, with Radio 5 appearing on 683 kHz. The test transmissions on 7295 kHz from Botswana were officially commissioned on November 3rd. Voice of Mozambique National resistance has moved their transmitter to a new frequency 4772 kHz. Radio Bardai has returned to 6009 kHz. There have been changes to the Spanish language broadcasts from Luanda aimed at Cuban troops in Angola.

    MN.23.03.1988. Clandestine Special Haslach & Campbell

    MN.23.03.1988. Clandestine Special Haslach & Campbell
    This programme was one of several in the period to look at clandestine radio broadcasting. Although there were later programmes that went into detail about number stations, the remarks by Professor John Campbell of the University of London Computer Science Dept were spot on. I wonder if there is any on-line evidence of that oil company using numbers for communications with Nigeria? He also reviews the book Nish No Kaze, Hare by American writer Robert Haslach. I can still see copies of the book listed in antique book shops here in the Netherlands, though I don't know of any English language translations. Robert worked at Radio Netherlands, when it was "Radio Nederland" and later wrote a history of the station. The programme also includes the news of the start of , a new educational TV network for Africa.The English language pages of the current CFI website must have been done by a machine! We also discuss the rather confusing Sony shortwave line of 7600 receivers. Sony is launching the ICF7601.  You can probably skip the RN Hertzian adjustment file - there was no Internet to announce all that schedule information. And even though we printed thousands of programme schedules, the postal services have never been that good at delivering this kind of information.