Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Public_Broadcasting_Act_of_1967 an entity of type: Thing
Der Public Broadcasting Act ist ein 1967 verabschiedetes US-Gesetz, das die Grundlage für den öffentlichen Rundfunk in den USA bildet. Nach der Verabschiedung entstanden zahlreiche TV- und Radiostationen als Public Broadcaster. Bis heute senden über 150 TV- und über 800 Radiosender als freie und hörerfinanzierte Institutionen unter dem Public Broadcasting Act.
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La loi sur l'audiovisuel public de 1967, ou Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, est une loi fédérale américaine, approuvée en 1967 par le et signée par le président Lyndon B. Johnson, statuant de la création de la Corporation for Public Broadcasting, organisme américain qui a, entre autres, donné naissance au réseau de télévision public américain PBS et au réseau de radiodiffusion NPR. La loi était soutenue par diverses personnalités dont l'animateur de télévision Fred Rogers et le sénateur démocrate John O. Pastore.
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The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 (47 U.S.C. § 396) issued the congressional corporate charter for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), a private nonprofit corporation funded by taxpayers to disburse grants to public broadcasters in the United States, and eventually established the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR). The act was supported by many prominent Americans, including Fred Rogers ("Mister Rogers"), NPR founder and creator of All Things Considered Robert Conley, and Senator John O. Pastore of Rhode Island, then chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Communications, during House and United States Senate hearings in 1967.
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Public Broadcasting Act
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Loi sur l'audiovisuel public de 1967
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Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
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Public Broadcasting Act of 1967
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3079576
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1121780810
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47
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90
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1967-10-26
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1967-11-07
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Warren G. Magnuson
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1967-03-02
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Senate
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House
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Senate
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1967-05-16
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1967-09-21
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266
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1967-11-07
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Senate Subcommittee on Communication and House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce
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90
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An Act to amend the Communications Act of 1934 by extending and improving the provisions thereof relating to grants for construction of educational television broadcasting facilities, by authorizing assistance in the construction of non-commercial educational radio broadcasting facilities, by establishing a nonprofit corporation to assist in establishing innovative educational programs, to facilitate educational program availability, and to aid the operation of educational broadcasting facilities; and to authorize a comprehensive study of instructional television and radio; and for other purposes.
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Der Public Broadcasting Act ist ein 1967 verabschiedetes US-Gesetz, das die Grundlage für den öffentlichen Rundfunk in den USA bildet. Nach der Verabschiedung entstanden zahlreiche TV- und Radiostationen als Public Broadcaster. Bis heute senden über 150 TV- und über 800 Radiosender als freie und hörerfinanzierte Institutionen unter dem Public Broadcasting Act.
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La loi sur l'audiovisuel public de 1967, ou Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, est une loi fédérale américaine, approuvée en 1967 par le et signée par le président Lyndon B. Johnson, statuant de la création de la Corporation for Public Broadcasting, organisme américain qui a, entre autres, donné naissance au réseau de télévision public américain PBS et au réseau de radiodiffusion NPR. La loi était soutenue par diverses personnalités dont l'animateur de télévision Fred Rogers et le sénateur démocrate John O. Pastore.
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The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 (47 U.S.C. § 396) issued the congressional corporate charter for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), a private nonprofit corporation funded by taxpayers to disburse grants to public broadcasters in the United States, and eventually established the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR). The act was supported by many prominent Americans, including Fred Rogers ("Mister Rogers"), NPR founder and creator of All Things Considered Robert Conley, and Senator John O. Pastore of Rhode Island, then chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Communications, during House and United States Senate hearings in 1967. The act charged the CPB with encouraging and facilitating program diversity, and expanding and developing non-commercial broadcasting. The CPB would have the funds to help local stations create innovative programs, thereby increasing the service of broadcasting in the public interest throughout the country.
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§§ 390-397, 609
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20551