01110nam0 22002893i 450 VAN0010570020240806100729.37815-8488-171-220160530d2002 |0itac50 baengUS|||| |||||Subset selection in regressionAlan Miller2. edBoca Raton [etc.]Chapman & Hall/CRC2002XVII, 238 p.24 cm.001VAN000553262001 Monographs on statistics and applied probability210 London [etc.]Chapman & Hall/CRC95USBoca RatonVANL000070519.521MillerAlan J.1936- VANV082170721378Chapman & Hall <editore>VANV108038650ITSOL20240906RICABIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI ECONOMIAIT-CE0106VAN03VAN00105700BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI ECONOMIA03PREST VCc22 03 7171 20160530 Subset selection in regression1413499UNICAMPANIA04547nam 22007095 450 991104781660332120251117120411.0978303192994610.1007/978-3-031-92994-6(CKB)43368454600041(MiAaPQ)EBC32419915(Au-PeEL)EBL32419915(DE-He213)978-3-031-92994-6(EXLCZ)994336845460004120251117d2025 u| 0engur|||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDomestic Broadcasting in Wartime Nazi Germany, 1939-1944 The First Five Years /by Gerald Kirwin1st ed. 2025.Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,2025.1 online resource (339 pages)History Series9783031929939 The Easy Months -- Real War' and Single Programme -- The Winding Path to Reform (May 1941-February 1942).-The Great Reform (Early 1942).-High Hopes and Disenchantment (Summer and Autumn 1942) -- Reception Problems -- Unwelcome Competition -- A Sudden Turn of Fortune (Winter 1942-1943).-Coping with Bombing -- 1943: Carrying On -- Hopes Raised and Dashed (January-August 1944).The book provides an account of German domestic broadcasting in the period from September 1939 to August 1944. It is the product of extensive research in German and British archives and constitutes a case-study into a broadcasting service in a dictatorship in wartime. Its principal focus lies in radio policy and tactics, as echoed in the conferences held in the Radio Department of the Propaganda Ministry, the programmes themselves, and the response of German listeners to both programmes and broadcasting policy. Descriptions of shows such as Wünschkonzert (‘Request Concert’) and the magazine Zeitspiegel (‘Mirror of the Times’) are included. Detailed attention is paid to two obstacles hampering the entire broadcasting effort: reception problems; and the illegal practice of tuning into enemy and neutral stations. Both grew in the same degree as Nazi fortunes diminished. The Stalingrad debacle in winter 1942-3 unleashed a time of almost uninterrupted setbacks, compelling Nazi domestic radio to fight an uphill battle on an increasingly slippery slope, with reality increasingly at odds with the picture painted by the media. Continuity and ‘normality’ now took on a vital role. Moreover, with the growing intensity of Allied bombing, broadcasters had to cope with a matter uppermost in the minds of urban populations faced with a nightly struggle for survival. The period covered ends with the western Allies and the Red Army approaching the frontiers of the German Reich, thereby ushering in a wholly new situation. Gerald Kirwin's professional career consisted of lecturing in history in Germany and freelance radio work for both domestic and external German radio stations. He has published three articles dealing with retaliation propaganda before and during the V1 and V2 attacks on London in 1944-5, Nazi propaganda’s treatment of the Allied bombing campaign, and a more recent account of German radio in the final months of the Second World War.History SeriesWorld War, 1939-1945Radio broadcastingCivilizationHistoryMass media and historyEurope, CentralHistoryHistory, ModernHistory of World War II and the HolocaustRadioCultural HistoryMedia and Communication HistoryHistory of Germany and Central EuropeModern HistoryWorld War, 1939-1945.Radio broadcasting.CivilizationHistory.Mass media and history.Europe, CentralHistory.History, Modern.History of World War II and the Holocaust.Radio.Cultural History.Media and Communication History.History of Germany and Central Europe.Modern History.940.5488743Kirwin Gerald1862360MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9911047816603321Domestic Broadcasting in Wartime Nazi Germany, 1939-19444468616UNINA