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Page "European Broadcasting Union" ¶ 25
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names and broadcasting
The company operated under various names, initially as Television South plc and then following reorganisation in 1989 as TVS Entertainment plc, with its UK broadcasting arm referred to as TVS Television plc.
Laporte studied Chinese history at Yale University before dropping out in his junior year to pursue his career in radio broadcasting, where his early radio names were Dave Allen and Dan Hayes.
Kiner was known for his occasional malapropisms, usually connected with getting people's names wrong, such as calling broadcasting partner Tim McCarver as " Tim MacArthur ".
From this point all ABC Local Radio stations ceased to identify themselves according to their callsigns or other existing names, and instead use the format ( frequency ) ABC ( region ), or ABC ( region ) where there are multiple frequencies broadcasting the same service.
Instead, television companies broadcasting the game or corporate sponsors will often make donations to the scholarship funds of each school in the names of the winning players.
Premiere syndicates some of the most famous names and programs in American broadcasting, including The Rush Limbaugh Show, Coast to Coast AM, Jim Rome, Mario Lopez, Elvis Duran, Ryan Seacrest, Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Leo Laporte, and Randi Rhodes.
In November 1993 KVSC's sports department adopted the policy of not broadcasting Indian team mascot names in stories and within KVSC play-by-play coverage.
The station ’ s biggest names included former England International Phil Neal, Jamie Broadbent who was part of Chris Evans ' Virgin Radio Breakfast Show and broadcasting personality James H. Reeve.
Presenters on Smooth Radio have included many who made their names in broadcasting both at national and local level.

names and companies
Fifty of the 100 firms were selected on a random basis from 3,500 names submitted by member companies of the Aerospace Industries Association ( AIA list ) and fifty were selected in a similar manner from a list of 1,500 names compiled by the research team from the Thomas Register ( TR list ).
These names were secured from member companies by the Association from the forty-four sources listed in Appendix Aj.
The forty-four lists supplied by the AIA member companies were merged and duplicate names were eliminated.
The Arcadia 2001 was licensed to many different companies and sold under different names.
His colorful life and legacy of scientific and political achievement, and status as one of America's most influential Founding Fathers, have seen Franklin honored on coinage and money ; warships ; the names of many towns, counties, educational institutions, namesakes, and companies ; and more than two centuries after his death, countless cultural references.
Since the 1980s, following the popularization of computer technology, it has become fashionable in marketing for names of products and companies, and for 1990s online video games where players use pseudonyms ( when spaces were not allowed ).
The first successful calculators with LCDs were manufactured by Rockwell International and sold from 1972 by other companies under such names as: Dataking LC-800, Harden DT / 12, Ibico 086, Lloyds 40, Lloyds 100, Prismatic 500 ( aka P500 ), Rapid Data Rapidman 1208LC.
Maxis's name was derived from a formula suggested by Jeff Braun's father: computer game companies should have two-syllable names and should include an ' x '.
Welsh companies may instead choose to end their names with c. c. c.
A number of private companies sell names of stars, which the British Library calls an unregulated commercial enterprise.
In 1938, both companies were re-organised as Vickers-Armstrongs ( Aircraft ) Ltd, although the former Supermarine and Vickers works continued to brand their products under their former names.
Other companies manufacture similar products, often also called Worcestershire sauce and marketed under different brand or private label names.
** NASA announces the names of 4 companies awarded contracts to help build Space Station Freedom: Boeing Aerospace, General Electric's Astro-Space Division, McDonnell Douglas, and the Rocketdyne Division of Rockwell.
Also, two large tracts totaling $ 1. 5 million were sold, and smaller tracts of flatlands and cattle pastures were purchased by exotic-sounding companies such as the Latin-American Development and Management Corporation and the Reedy Creek Ranch Corporation ( Some of these names are now memorialized on a window above Main Street, U. S. A. in the Magic Kingdom ).
** Austrian East India Company, a series of companies going under the names of Société impériale asiatique de Trieste et Anvers, or Société asiatique de Trieste, based in Ostend and Trieste, founded 1775 by William Bolts and ceased 1785
The word turnpike came into common use in the names of these roadways and companies, and is essentially used interchangeably with toll road in current terminology.
These supermodels negotiated previously unheard of lucrative and exclusive deals with giant cosmetics companies, were instantly recognizable, and their names became well known to the public.
Due to recording contracts which do not permit them to openly record for competing companies, musicians may appear on other performers ' recordings using other names.
During the Microsoft antitrust trials, the names MICROS ~ 1 and MICROS ~ 2 were humorously used to refer to the companies that might exist after a proposed split of Microsoft.
Generally, modern times brought the abandonment of translation of people's names and surnames, and significant abatement in the translation of names of places, organizations, companies, projects, objects.
Some Taiwanese-owned companies or organizations established in earlier times have names containing the words " China " or " Chinese ".
In 2002, the " Name Rectification Campaign " made significant advances in replacing the terms " China ," " Republic of China ," or " Taipei " with the term " Taiwan " on official documents, in the names of Taiwan-registered organizations, companies, and public enterprises on the island, and in the names of businesses stationed abroad.

names and Roman
Sometimes, Roman numerals are still used for enumeration of lists ( as an alternative to alphabetical enumeration ), for sequential volumes, to differentiate monarchs or family members with the same first names, and ( in lower case ) to number pages in prefatory material in books.
The Roman historians Suetonius and Cassius Dio record that in 23 BC, Augustus prepared a rationarium ( account ) which listed public revenues, the amounts of cash in the aerarium ( treasury ), in the provincial fisci ( tax officials ), and in the hands of the publicani ( public contractors ); and that it included the names of the freedmen and slaves from whom a detailed account could be obtained.
The lack of correspondence between Ptolemaic and historical names known to be ancient has no defense except in the case of the two Roman colonies, Aleria and Mariana.
Many of the Scots who immigrated there were either Roman Catholics or Presbyterians, which can be seen in a number of island landmarks and place names.
The opening paragraph names a collection of goddesses, some derived from Greek or Roman mythology, others from Celtic or Arthurian legends, affirming a belief that these various figures represent a single Great Mother:
This theme echoes the ancient Roman belief that the Goddess Isis was known by ten thousand names and also that the Goddess still worshipped today by Wiccans and other neopagans is known under many guises but is one universal divinity.
" By the time of Justinian ( reigned 527-565 ), Roman Law recognized a range of corporate entities under the names universitas, corpus or collegium.
The Concordat of 1801 re-established the Roman Catholic Church in France with effect from Easter Sunday, 18 April 1802, restoring the names of the days of the week with the ones they had in the Gregorian Calendar, while keeping the rest of the Republican Calendar, and fixing Sunday as the official day of rest and religious celebration.
The last names of the respective heads of government are shown, and the Roman numeral stands for the cabinets.
Throughout the Roman world, ceramics, lamps, gems and jewellery, mosaics, reliefs, wall paintings and statuary offer evidence, sometimes the best evidence, of the clothing, props, equipment, names, events, prevalence and rules of gladiatorial combat.
Although the term " Greek fire " has been general in English and most other languages since the Crusades, in the original Byzantine sources it is called by a variety of names, such as " sea fire " (), " Roman fire " (), " war fire " (), " liquid fire " (), or " manufactured fire " ().
Though place names survived the deurbanized Sub-Roman and early Anglo-Saxon periods, and historiography has been at pains to signal the expected survivals, archaeology shows that a bare handful of Roman towns were continuously occupied.
Cities and towns which have Roman origins, or were extensively developed by them are listed with their Latin names in brackets ; civitates are marked C
A youthful exercise in Augustan heroic couplets by Thomas Cooke ( 1703 – 1756 ), employing the Roman names for all the gods.
Erinville ( which means Irishville ), Salmon River, Ogden, Bantry ( named after Bantry Bay, County Cork, Ireland but now abandoned and grown up in trees ) among others, where Irish last names are prevalent and the accent is reminiscent of the Irish as well as the music, traditions, religion ( Roman Catholic ), and the love of Ireland itself.
Historical names for January include its original Roman designation, Ianuarius, the Saxon term Wulf-monath ( meaning wolf month ) and Charlemagne's designation Wintarmanoth ( winter / cold month ).
Julius and Claudius were two Roman family names ; in classical Latin, they came second.
Such names are inherited from father to son ; but a sonless Roman aristocrat quite commonly adopted an heir, who would also take the family name-this could be done in his will.
Gradually, they adopted Roman titles, names, and traditions, and partially converted to orthodoxy ( 7th century ), not without a long series of religious and ethnic conflicts.
As with the Roman names of many European countries, Lusitania was and is often used as an alternative name for Portugal, especially in formal and literary or poetic contexts.
The Romans built a military camp, which they called Lousanna, at the site of a Celtic settlement, near the lake where currently Vidy and Ouchy are situated ; on the hill above was a fort called ' Lausodunon ' or ' Lousodunon ' ( The ' y ' suffix is common to many place names of Roman origin in the region ( e. g. ) Prilly, Pully, Lutry, etc .).
Tom Veal has noted that the early play The Two Gentlemen of Verona reveals no familiarity on the playwright's part with Italy other than " a few place names and the scarcely recondite fact that the inhabitants were Roman Catholics.
The names " Holy See " and " Apostolic See " are ecclesiastical terminology for the ordinary jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome ( including the Roman Curia ); the pope's various honors, powers, and privileges within the Catholic Church and the international community derive from his Episcopate of Rome in lineal succession from the Apostle Saint Peter ( see Apostolic Succession ).
Scholars of the 19th century tended to interpret these titles as the names of distinct works covering separate voyages ; for example, Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology hypothesizes a voyage to Britain and Thule written about in " Ocean " and another from Cadiz to the Don river, written about in " Sail Around.

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