Public Telecommunications Act of 1988: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Communications of the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, Second Session on S. 2114 ... March 15, 1988, 4. sējumsU.S. Government Printing Office, 1988 - 211 lappuses |
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American American Playhouse appropriate Bennet budget Chairman CHRISTENSEN commitment concerns Congress continue Corporation for Public costs CPB-qualified CPB's criteria cultural distribution diversity documentary dollars educational federal funds federal support fiscal Frontline funding levels gramming Hispanic Hispanic audiences Hispanic community increase independent producers innovation interest issues KALW Latinos LEDWIG major member stations million minority National Program Service national programming National Public Radio needs NFCB noncommercial NPR's outreach PBS's percent Program Fund program production Program Service projects proposal public affairs public broadcasting Public Broadcasting Service public broadcasting system public broadcasting's public radio stations public radio system Public Telecommunications public television stations public television's quality programming requested responsibility satellite interconnection system satellite system Senator INOUYE serve Sesame Street Spanish language programming Square One TV Subcommittee television programs Thank tion WNYC WVMR
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183. lappuse - Commission has devoted its major attention, includes all that is of human interest and importance which is not at the moment appropriate or available for support by advertising, and which is not arranged for formal instruction.
184. lappuse - Corporation is authorized to (A) facilitate the full development of public telecommunications in which programs of high quality, diversity, creativity, excellence, and innovation, which are obtained from diverse sources, will be made available to public telecommunications entities, with strict adherence to objectivity and balance in all programs or series of programs of a controversial nature...
92. lappuse - ... state and local governments, universities, foundations, corporations and individual listeners, all acting together to support quality programming which would not otherwise be available in our country. Public radio's support is now about half private and half public. In FY 1986, close to one million individual listeners voluntarily contributed $46 million, 20 percent of public radio's revenue, to their local stations. Listeners have now become our largest single source of support. The federal...
94. lappuse - ... greater appreciation for American performers, conductors, directors, producers and organizations. NPR'S PERFORMANCE TODAY is a perfect example of the national/local partnership that characterizes the public radio system. PEFORMANCE TODAY is a public service beyond the means of all but a few stations. It is the collective product of many contributing stations and independent producers working through a national production team. PERFORMANCE TODAY brings to local communities around the country performances...
10. lappuse - ... Ledwig follows:] STATEMENT OF DONALD E. LEDWIG PRESIDENT AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING Mr. Chairman. . .distinguished members of the Subcommittee. . .My name is Donald E. Ledwig. I am the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. I appreciate this opportunity to testify in support of reauthorization of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for fiscal years 1991 through 1993. First, I wish to express the corporation's...
96. lappuse - Hendricks; and the development and premier of CONNECTION, a weekly half-hour magazine on disability issues. FUTURE DEVELOPMENT How can Congress build on today's public radio network of excellence to meet the information and cultural needs of Americans to the end of the century and beyond? ... By strengthening and expanding the diverse pattern of local stations and national programming which is at the heart of our success to date. When Congress adopted the Public Broadcasting Act twenty years ago....
175. lappuse - Intelligently organized and adequately funded public broadcasting can help the creative spirit to flourish. It can reveal how we are different and what we share in common. It can illuminate the dark corners of the world and the dark corners of the mind. It can offer forums to a multitude of voices. It can reveal wisdom and understanding and foolishness too. It can delight us. It can entertain us. It can inform us. Above all, it can add to our understanding of our own inner workings and of one...
185. lappuse - ... to the extent practicable, proposals for the provision of assistance by the Corporation in the production or acquisition of programs or series of programs shall be evaluated on the basis of comparative merit by panels of outside experts, representing diverse interests and perspectives...
184. lappuse - House and Senate conferees stated that: "In agreeing to the term 'substantial amount' for independent producers, it is the conferees' intention to recognize the important contribution independent producers can make in innovative and creative new programming. By 'independent producer' the conferees have in mind producers not affiliated with any public telecommunications entity and especially the smaller independent organizations and individuals who, while talented, may not yet have received national...
120. lappuse - Americans, regardless of their means, their education, their social position, or their distance from theaters, concert halls, or galleries. More people watched American Playhouse's presentation of Arthur Miller's "All My Sons" last January than attended all performances of all plays appearing in all of Broadway's commercial theaters for an entire year. Live from the Met's first broadcast of Puccini's "La Boheme* was seen by more people than had attended live performances of that opera since it was...