Distinguish Cable TV Privacy ActCable Communications Act of 1984 The CableAct of 1922 ch. 411, 42 Stat. 1021, Married Women s Independent Nationality Act is a United States federal law that reversed former immigration laws regarding marriage, also known as the Married Women s Citizenship Act or the Women s Citizenship Act . Previously, a woman lost her U.S citizenship if she married a foreign man, since she assumed the citizenship of her husband a law that did not apply to men who married foreign women. The law is named for Ohio representative John L. Cable , who proposed the legislation. Former immigration laws prior to 1922 did not make reference to the alien husband s race. ref http mcel.pacificu.edu aspac home papers scholars brown brown.php3 Citation broken date January 2009 ref However, The CableAct of 1922 guaranteed independent female citizenship only to women who were married to alien s eligible to naturalization . ref Citation url http www.archives.gov publications prologue 1998 summer women and naturalization 1.html title Women and Naturalization, ca. 1802 1940 author Marian L. Smith volume 30 issue 2 year 1998 accessdate 2009 01 03 journal Prologue Magazine ref At the time of the law s passage, Asian aliens were not considered to be racially eligible for U.S. citizenship. ref Citation url http www.apa.si.edu Curriculum 20Guide Final teacherhistory.htm title For Teachers A Brief Introduction to Asian American History publisher Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program ... of Houston accessdate 2009 01 03 ref As such, the CableAct only partially reversed previous policies, granting independent female citizenship only to women who married non Asians. The CableAct effectively revoked the U.S. citizenship of any woman who married an Asian alien. The CableAct had ... still lose her right to U.S. nationality. The CableAct was amended in 1931, allowing females to retain ... ?id TREG1alRBgIC ISBN 0691089930, ISBN 9780691089935 ref In 1936, the CableAct was repealed ... more details
A cablelanding point is the location where a submarine or other underwater cable makes landfall. The term is most often used for the landfall points of submarine communications cable submarine telecommunications cables and submarine power cable s. The landing will either be direct in the case of a point to point cable system or via a branch from a main cable using a submarine branching unit . The branch can be many kilometres long. File Submarine Landed in BD.JPG thumb 200px A landing point of SEA ME WE 4 on Cox s Bazar in Bangladesh Cablelanding points are usually carefully chosen to be in areas ... infrastructure or network. A cable termination station may be the same facility as the cablelanding ... population density, rather than the usually remote locations of cablelanding points landing ... which connects Australia to Hawaii. The cablelanding point in Sydney is Tamarama, New South Wales ... operations with gently sloping, sandy or silty sea floors so that the cable can be buried ... cable systems. Examples are Widemouth Bay , near Bude in Cornwall , the United Kingdom UK , where several submarine telecommunications cables come ashore Apollo submarine communications cable Apollo North TAT 8 TAT 14 AC 2 cable system Yellow AC2 Blaabjerg , Denmark , where the following cables come ashore CANTAT 3 DANICE ODIN cable system ODIN TAT 14 UK Denmark 4 Changi , Singapore , where the following cables come ashore APCN cable system APCN ASEAN cable system ASEAN C2C cable system C2C TIISCS cable system TIISCS TIS cable system TIS Frequently, there will be a nearby cablelanding station, or cable termination station, which may well be shared between multiple cable systems, but in some cases, the cable may be laid many miles inland before reaching its termination point. A cablelanding station may or may not be required, depending on whether, for example, the submarine cable requires ... 3,000 to 4,000 volts for a typical trans Atlantic telecommunications cable system, and 1,000 ... more details
. ref name Williams As a title of the larger Communications Act of 1934 , the Cable Communications Act of 1984 has been amended and revised with the CableAct of 1992, also referred to as Cable Television ... above. ref name Lloyd See also Communications Act of 1934 Telecommunications Act of 1996 Cable Television ...Lead too long date May 2011 Infobox U.S. legislation name Cable Communications Act of 1984 fullname Cable Communications Act of 1984 acronym nickname Cable Communications Policy Act 1984 Cable Franchise ... 549 cite statutes at large 98 STAT.2780 acts amended Communications Act of 1934 title amended Title ... Co. v. Federal Communications Commission , ussc 395 367 1969 The Cable Communications Act of 1984 ... the cable industry. The act established a national policy for the regulation of cable communications ... wrote and supported the act, which amended the Communications Act of 1934 with the insertion of Title ... Impact of the Cable Policy Act of 1984, published in the Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic ... had vied for dominance. The CableAct was to be the solution to the ongoing problem of who ... of the Cable Policy Act of 1984 journal Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media volume 31 issue ... cable operators and the government, the act established regulations regarding franchise standards and proceeds that would attempt to strengthen the development of cable systems. The act gave municipalities ... for cable operations. By establishing an orderly process for franchise renewal, the act protected ..., the act specified that cable operators past performances and future proposals had to meet the federal ... journal last1 Meyerson first1 Michael I. year 1985 title The Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 ... franchise standards and procedures, the act specified that cable operators were expected to be receptive ... that inspired Senator Barry Goldwater to begin his work on the Cable Communications Act of 1984. The result of the act was an intricate, minimally influential agreement between cable operators ... more details
For the CableAct regarding immigration and Marriage CableAct The Cable Communications Act of 1984 Cable TV Privacy Act of 1984, ref http www.law.cornell.edu uscode html uscode47 usc sec 47 00000551 000 .html 47 U.S.C. 551. ref effective Dec. 29, 1984, provides for the Privacy of personal information. In particular, it prohibits cable TV providers from disclosing personally identifiable information, and allows users to view and verify their information. Notes reflist DEFAULTSORT Cable Tv Privacy Act Category Broadcast law Category Cable television in the United States US law stub ... more details
improve date December 2011 The Communications Act of 1934 is a United States federal law , enacted as Public Law Number 416, Act of June 19, 1934, ch. 652, 48 Stat. 1064, by the 73rd Congress, signed by President ..., and which shall execute and enforce the provisions of this Act. ref name act1934 http www.criminalgovernment.com ... Act of 1934 with the new Telecommunications Act of 1996 . It was the first major overhaul of American ... Act was signed by President Roosevelt on June 1934. Particular parts of it became effective ... Act of 1934 followed the precedents of trial cases set under the Commerce Clause of the US ... last Kennedy first L. J. coauthors Purcell, H.A. title Section 332 of the Communications Act of 1934 ... in a similar way and influenced Congress to pass the Communications Act of 1934. The goal was to have ... Act of 1934. ref http news.cnet.com Company challenges FCC rules on cell phone jamming gear 2100 1036 ..., 1 December 2006. Accessed 2 March 2011. ref As the law stands today, the 1934 Communications Act prohibits ... dn date March 2012 the bill attempting to amend the Communications Act of 1934 was left in committee ... This act removes the powers established in the 1934Act and gives the President the authority to stop the Internet in case of a cyber attack. Structure The Communications Act of 1934, as amended, consists ... provisions Forfeitures Title VI Cable communications added by Cable Communications Act of 1984 ref http www.museum.tv eotvsection.php?entrycode uspolicyc U.S. Policy The Communications Act of 1934 ... radio debate Before the Communications Act of 1934 was enacted as law by the U.S. Congress , there was a debate ... suspended the act of 1934 section 315, equal time provision, for a TV forum on presidential election ... 2011 Effect of Communications Act of 1934 The act established a legal base for regulating wired ... title Proposals for Revision of the Communications Act of 1934 Telecommunications Issues in 1982. ref cite web last Gilroy first A. A. title Proposals for Revision of the Communications Act of 1934 ... more details
refimprove date August 2008 Infobox UK legislation short title Incitement to Disaffection Act, 1934 ref Short title as conferred by s. 4 of the Act the modern convention for the citation of short titles omits the comma after the word Act ref parliament Parliament of the United Kingdom long title An Act to make better provision for the prevention and punishment of endeavours to seduce members of His Majesty s forces from their duty or allegiance. year 1934 statute book chapter 24 & 25 Geo. 5 c. 56 introduced by territorial extent royal assent 16 November 1934 commencement repeal date amendments related legislation repealing legislation status original text http www.legislation.gov.uk ukpga 1934 56 enacted legislation history revised text http www.legislation.gov.uk ukpga 1934 56 The Incitement to Disaffection Act1934 is an Act of Parliament Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that made it an offence to endeavour to seduce a member of HM Forces from his duty or allegiance to His Majesty , thus expanding the ambit of the law. The previous relevant legislation was the Incitement to Mutiny Act 1797 , which created the offence of endeavouring to seduce a member of HM Forces from his duty and allegiance. The 1797 Act, last significantly used against Tom Mann , 1912, and in the Campbell case s, 1924 and 1925, was not repealed by the 1934Act, but effectively became defunct. According to Geoffrey Robertson , a human rights lawyer, the most powerful incitement to disaffection was made in the UK general election, 1987 1987 election campaign by the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher , who declared that armed forces chiefs should consider resigning in protest if the Labour Party UK Labour Party were elected and sought to implement its non nuclear policy. ref Geoffrey Robertson ... UK legislation DEFAULTSORT Incitement To Disaffection Act1934 Category 1934 in law Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1934 ... more details
Infobox legislation shorttitle Status of the Union Act, 1934 image Coat of Arms of South Africa 1932 2000 .svg imagesize imagelink imagealt caption longtitle Act to provide for the declaration of the Status of the Union of South Africa for certain amendments of the South Africa Act, 1909, incidental thereto, and for the adoption of certain parts of the Statute of Westminster, 1931. citation Act No. 69 of 1934 territorialextent Union of South Africa enactedby Parliament of South Africa dateenacted dateassented 22 June 1934 datesigned datecommenced bill Status of the Union Bill billcitation A.B. 48 of 1934 billdate 23 March 1934 introducedby Oswald Pirow , Minister of Railways and Harbours South ... amendments repeals Repealed by the Republic of South Africa Constitution Act, 1961 related South Africa Act, 1909 br Statute of Westminster, 1931 summary keywords The Status of the Union Act, 1934Act No. 69 of 1934 was an act of Parliament act of the Parliament of South Africa that was the South ... until 1950. References Reflist External links s Status of the Union Act, 1934 Status of the Union Act, 1934 at Wikisource Category Repealed South African legislation Category 1934 in South Africa ... from its Parliament unlike the case in Australia and New Zealand , so the Status Act was not legally ... 191 ref The Status of the Union Act was repealed by the Republic of South Africa Constitution Act ... . Provisions The Status Act incorporated the Statute of Westminster into South African law as if it were an act of the South African Parliament. Sections 7 to 10 of the Statute were omitted because they dealt with matters specific to other realms. The act further declared that the Parliament of the Union shall be the sovereign legislative power in and over the Union, and that no act of the British Parliament would extend to South Africa unless extended by an act of the South African Parliament ..., the Status Act prescribed that the King, when exercising his executive powers in regard to South ... more details
The Unemployment Act1934 was an Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom , reaching statue on 28 June 1934. It reduced the age at which a person entered the National Insurance scheme to 14 and made the claiming age 16 years. ref http www.keele.ac.uk depts so youthchron SocialSecurity pre45socsecurity.htm ref It also separated benefits earned by paying National Insurance and those purely based on need the dole . ref name NationalArchives http www.nationalarchives.gov.uk cabinetpapers alevelstudies 1930 depression.htm UK National Archives Cabinet Papers 1930s ref . To do this, it established two bodies the Unemployment Insurance Statutory Committee to deal with unemployment benefit s earned by payment of National Insurance when in work, and the Unemployment Assistance Board to provide means tested payments for those not entitled to such benefits. ref name Epidemiology http ije.oxfordjournals.org cgi content full 32 4 500 International Journal of Epidemiology 2003 32 500 502 Commentary The context and outcome of nutrition campaigning in 1934 ref References references Category Insurance legislation Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1934 Category 1930s economic history Category Unemployment in the United Kingdom ... more details
The National Housing Act of 1934 , USStatute 84 345 48 847 1934 06 28 , also called the Capehart Act , was part of the New Deal passed during the Great Depression in order to make House housing and home Mortgage loan mortgages more affordable. ref Buescher, John. http www.teachinghistory.org history content ask a historian 21810 Home Sales During the Depression . http www.teachinghistory.org Teachinghistory.org , accessed 23 September 2011. ref It created the Federal Housing Administration FHA and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation . ref name kjhh http www.novelguide.com a discover egd 02 egd 02 00382.html ref It was designed to stop the tide of bank foreclosures on family homes. Both the FHA and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation worked to create the backbone of the mortgage and homebuilding industries. ref name kjhh The Housing Act of 1937 builds on this legislation. References http portal.hud.gov portal page portal HUD about hud history HUD Historical Background reflist New Deal Category 1934 in law Category 73rd United States Congress Category New Deal Category Public housing in the United States Category United States federal housing legislation Category Urban decay in the United States US fed statute stub fr National Housing Act ... more details
Infobox UK legislation short title Protection of Animals Act parliament long title year 1934 statute book chapter Chapter 21 Geo. 5 introduced by territorial extent England, Scotland, Wales royal assent commencement repeal date 2006 amendments related legislation repealing legislation Animal Welfare Act 2006 br Animal Health and Welfare Scotland Act 2006 status Repealed original text legislation history use new UK LEG revised text The Protection of Animals Act1934 was an act of the United Kingdom British Parliament of the United Kingdom parliament effectively making rodeo , as it then existed, illegal in England, Scotland and Wales. ref Garner Robert 1993 Animals, Politics and Morality Manchester, UK, Manchester University Press, p.88, ISBN 0 7190 3574 0 ref The law was based upon the perceived cruelty to animals exhibited at western rodeos brought by promotions such as Tex Austin s 1924 King of the Rodeo exhibition at Wembley Stadium 1923 Wembley Stadium in 1924, the first such program in England. ref name AH http www.americanheritage.com articles magazine ah 1972 3 1972 3 72 print.shtml Carson, Gerald April 1972 The Late, Late Frontier American Heritage 23 3 p.75 ref The act was repealed and replaced by the Animal Welfare Act 2006 and the Animal Health and Welfare Scotland Act 2006 respectively. Analysis The first section provided that roping any unbroken horse or untrained bull was illegal. This was followed by prohibitions on wrestling, fighting, or struggling with any untrained bull , and on stimulating a horse or bull to buck. This last provision would exclude Girth tack cinch straps specifically designed to irritate the animal or a strap cinched around its genitals ... of Animals Act1934, Chapter 21 Geo. 5 External links UK LEG title Protection of Animals Act1934 type ukpga path ukpga 1934 21 Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1934 Category Animal ... pounds, or up to three months in gaol, per violation. Geographic scope The last section of the act ... more details
The Treachery Act of 1934 was a German law established by the Third Reich on December 20, 1934. ref Reichsgesetzblatt 1934, I p. 1269f ref Known as the Heimt ckegesetz , it s official title was the Law against Treacherous Attacks on the State and Party and for the Protection of Party Uniforms Gesetz gegen heimt ckische Angriffe auf Staat und Partei und zum Schutz der Parteiuniformen . It established penalties for the abuse of Nazi Party badges and uniforms, restricted the right to freedom of speech , and criminalized all remarks causing putative severe damage to the welfare of the Third Reich, the prestige of the Nazi government or the Nazi Party. The law drew on nearly identical provisions in the Regulations of the President of Germany 1919 1945 Reich president for Defense from Treacherous Attacks Against the Government of the National Uplift , established March 21, 1933 ref Reichsgesetzblatt 1933, I p. 135f ref and expanded the range of sentences. See also Wehrkraftzersetzung The Malicious Practices Act 1933 References Reflist External links http nuremberg.law.harvard.edu php search.php?DI 1&FieldFlag 2&GAuthors 61 Reich Legal Gazette Reichsgesetzblatt Harvard Law School Library, Nuremberg Trials Project. Retrieved September 5, 2011 Category Law in Nazi Germany Category 1934 in Germany Category German criminal law de Heimt ckegesetz ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 The Flood Control Act of 1934 is an Act of Congress in the United States which granted authority to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the designing and building of flood control projects. ref haddow1 It is often regarded as a piece of legislation that had a significant impact on emergency management in the United States. ref haddow1 Footnotes note haddow1 Haddow and Bullock, 2003 note haddow1 Haddow and Bullock, 2003 References Haddow, George D. and Jane A. Bullock, 2003, Introduction to Emergency Management , Amsterdam Butterworth Heinemann, ISBN 0 7506 7689 2 Category United States federal environmental legislation US fed statute stub ... more details
The Special Areas Act was an Act of Parliament which gave aid to the areas of United Kingdom Britain which had the highest unemployment rates in the 1930s. ref http store.aqa.org.uk qual gceasa qp ms AQA HS2U W MS JUN07.PDF ref Areas which benefited included South Wales , Tyneside , Cumberland and southern Scotland but not Lancashire . ref cite book last Rees first Rosemary title Britain, 1890 1939 page 164 isbn 0435327577 ref There were two unpaid commissioners given responsibility to spend 2million via the local authorties concerned. References references Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1934 ... more details
The Road Traffic Act1934 was an Act of Parliament Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom introduced by the then Secretary of State for Transport Minister of Transport Leslie Hore Belisha, 1st Baron Hore Belisha Hore Belisha after the United Kingdom general election, 1931 1931 general election which was won by the Conservative Party UK Conservative Party by an absolute majority of the votes cast. The Act was made in a year in which there had been a record numbers of road casualties. ref name DM cite news url http www.dailymail.co.uk news article 1247543 How Thirties saw Britain fall love car nation road hogs.html title How the Thirties saw Britain fall in love with the car... and become a nation of road hogs work Daily Mail accessdate 2010 02 25 location London first Juliet last Gardiner date 2010 02 01 ref Context The Locomotive Acts of the late 1800s had placed heavy restrictions of speeds of locomotives . Under pressure from an emerging motor industry and growing enthusiasm for motor cars the Locomotives on Highways Act 1896 had reduced the restrictions and increased speed limits. Speed limits were again raised by the Motor Car Act 1903 which also introduced requirements for registration of vehicles and for driving licenses as well as new safety legislation. The Road Traffic Act 1930 had controversially removed all speed limits for motorcars in a year with record 7,305 road fatalities ref group n name DfT2008Table2 Dft2008a Department for Transport 2008 , p. 106 table ... Clauses The Act Reintroduced a speed limit for cars, of 30mph in built up areas, reversing the removal of speed limits only 4 years earlier by the Road Traffic Act 1930 . The United Kingdom driving test ... on Highways Act 1896 Motor Car Act 1903 Roads Act 1920 Road Traffic Act 1930 Road speed limits in the United ... stub UK legislation Category 1934 in law Category Car safety Category Roads in the United Kingdom Category United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 1934 Category 1934 in transport Category Transport policy ... more details
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 also called the Exchange Act , 34 Act , or Act of 34 USStatute 73 291 48 881 1934 06 06 , codified at usc 15 78a et seq. is a law governing the secondary market secondary .... It was a sweeping piece of legislation. The Act and related statutes form the basis of regulation of the financial markets and their participants in the United States. The 1934Act also established ... securities in what is known as the primary market . Contrasted with the Securities Act of 1933 , which regulates these original issues, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 regulates the secondary market .... As it developed, section 10 b of the 1934Act and corresponding SEC Rule 10b 5 have sweeping ... Section 13 b 3 A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 provides that with respect to matters ... Securities Lawyer s Deskbook Securities Exchange Act of 1934 . University of Cincinnati College ... market. Securities exchanges One area subject to 34 Act regulation is the actual securities ... , act as middlemen for the competing interests to buy and sell securities. An important function of the specialist ... s role is important to the exchange. Securities associations The 34 Act also regulates broker ... Act was amended by the Maloney Act, which authorized the formation and registration of national .... Issuers While the 33 Act recognizes that timely information about the issuer is vital to effective pricing of securities, the 33 Act s disclosure requirement the registration statement and prospectus is a one time affair. The 34 Act extends this requirement to securities traded in the secondary ... amount of assets 500 shareholders, above 10 million in assets, per Act sections 12, 13, and 15 , the 34 Act requires that issuers regularly file company information with the SEC on certain forms the annual ... While the 33 Act contains an antifraud provision http www.law.uc.edu CCL 33Act sec17.html Section 17 , when the 34 Act was enacted, questions remained about the reach of that antifraud provision ... more details
The Revenue Act of 1934 May 10, 1934, ch. 277, USStat 48 680 raised United States individual income tax rates marginally on higher incomes. The top individual income tax rate remained at 63 percent. It was signed into law by President of the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt . Tax on Corporations A rate of 13.75 percent was levied on the net income of corporations. Tax on Individuals A Normal Tax and a Surtax were levied against the net income of individuals as shown in the following table. class wikitable style text align center colspan 4 Revenue Act of 1934 br Normal Tax and Surtax on Individuals br USStat 48 684 ref http www.hiddenmysteries.org law research Revenue 20Act 20of 201934.pdf Facsimile from Statutes at Large ref Net Income br dollars Normal Rate br percent Surtax Rate br percent Combined Rate br percent 0 4 0 4 4,000 4 4 8 6,000 4 5 9 8,000 4 6 10 10,000 4 7 11 12,000 4 8 12 14,000 4 9 13 16,000 4 11 15 18,000 4 13 17 20,000 4 15 19 22,000 4 17 21 26,000 4 19 23 32,000 4 21 25 38,000 4 24 28 44,000 4 27 31 50,000 4 30 34 56,000 4 33 37 62,000 4 36 40 68,000 4 39 43 74,000 4 42 46 80,000 4 45 49 90,000 4 50 54 100,000 4 52 56 150,000 4 53 57 200,000 4 54 58 300,000 4 55 59 400,000 4 56 60 500,000 4 57 61 750,000 4 58 62 1,000,000 4 59 63 Exemption of 1,000 for single filers and 2,500 for married couples and heads of family. A 400 exemption for each dependent under 18. References references US tax acts Category 1934 in law Category United States federal taxation legislation Category History of the United States 1918 1945 US fed statute stub fr Revenue Act ... more details
The Taylor Grazing Act of 1934 ref 43 U.S. Code 315 316o ref P.L. 73 482 is a United States federal law that provides for the regulation of grazing on the public land s excluding Alaska to improve rangeland conditions and regulate their use. The law initially permitted 80,000,000 ac 32,000,000 ha of previously unreserved public lands of the United States to be placed into grazing districts to be administered by the Department of the Interior. As amended, the law now sets no limit on the amount of lands in grazing districts. There are currently approximately 162,000,000 ac 65,600,000 ha inside grazing allotments. These can be vacant, unappropriated, and unreserved land from public lands, all except for Alaska , United States National Forest national forest s, parks, monuments, Indian reservation s, railroad grant lands, and revested Coos Bay Wagon Road Lands Coos Bay Wagon Road grant lands . Surrounding land owners may be granted right of passage over these districts. Permits are given for grazing privileges in the districts. Also permits can be given to build fences, reservoir water reservoirs , and other improvements. The permittees are required to pay a fee, and the permit cannot exceed ten years but is renewable. Permits can be revoked because of severe drought or other natural disasters that deplete grazing lands. History During the administration of President Herbert Hoover , it became clear that federal regulation of public land use was needed. Since vast portions were used ... Division, advocacy was influential in bringing about the benefits of the Taylor Grazing Act. Congressman ... O. Foss on the role of local grazing advisory committees established by the Taylor Grazing Act in regulating ... as to whether grazing regulation had been captured by the regulated interests. The act was named ... about the Taylor Grazing Act from the University of New Mexico Taylor Grazing Act. http www.blm.gov wy st en field offices Casper range taylor.1.html Accessed 1 28 09. Category 1934 in law Category ... more details
Act of 1934Cable Communications Act of 1984 Telecommunications Act of 1996 Reference Cleanup link ...Infobox U.S. legislation name Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 full title ... 114 The Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of the United States Congress which was approved in 1992, required cable systems to carry most local broadcast channels and prohibited cable operators from charging local broadcasters to carry their signal. In adopting the 1992 CableAct ... in order to amend the Communications Act of 1934 to provide increased consumer protection and to promote ... 2011 06 30 ref The Communications Act of 1934 was first amended in October 1984 by the U.S. Congress Cable Communications Act of 1984 . The general purpose of Cable Communications Act of 1984 was to define ..., the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 had been enacted by the U.S. Congress. The Act had the goal to restore Federal regulation of the cable television industry and respond ... 1992 03 26 accessdate 2011 06 30 ref Provisions of the act The Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 encompassed various areas such as ensuring the growth of cable operators ... ref In order to promote competition among cable services, the act refrained Federal agency or State ... and Competition Act of 1992 also requires each cable operator of a cable system to carry the signals ... change in the treatment of such public, the Section 632 of the Communications Act of 1934 had ... name autogenerated1 Criticism After the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 ... of cable rates by the 1992 CableAct saying that horizontal integration limitation between ... hand, the Judge stated that CableAct hadn t specified limits on horizontal integration thus, ordered ... carry cable television broadcasters option stated in the CableAct of 1992, both sides showed signs ... Act of 1992 http www.fcc.gov mb facts csgen.html EVOLUTION OF CABLE TELEVISION Category 1992 ... more details
other uses Refimprove date January 2011 Infobox aviation name Landing image File PiperPA28CherokeeLanding.jpg caption Piper Cherokee landing sequence from approach to flare Image air.jamaica.a340 300.6y ... Delta Air Lines Boeing 767 400ER N834MH FRA 2011 11 26.png thumb A landing Delta Air Lines Boeing 767 ... down on that main landing gear first, which is normal procedure in a left cross wind. image ... feathers act as lift augmenters in the same way as an aircraft s Leading edge slats slats and Flap ... landing a Piper J 3 Piper J3C 65 Cub lands on a trailer as part of an airshow. File F 18 A 3 wire landing.ogv thumb 300px F 18 landing on an aircraft carrier File Soyuz TMA 20 landing.jpg thumb 300px Soyuz spacecraft Soyuz space capsule Retrorocket retro rockets cushion the landing impact Landing ... called landing, touchdown or Splashdown spacecraft landing splashdown as well. A normal aircraft ... flight cruise , descent aircraft descent and landing. Aircraft Aircraft usually land at an airport on a firm runway or helicopter landing pad , generally constructed of asphalt concrete , concrete , gravel ... to allow for a gentle touch down. Landing is accomplished by slowing down and descending to the runway ... using flaps, landing gear or Air brake aircraft speed brakes . When a fixed wing aircraft approaches the ground, the pilot will move the control column back to execute a Landing flare flare or round ... the aircraft to settle onto the runway at minimum speed, landing on its main wheels first in the case ... landing gear equipped aircraft, commonly referred to as a taildragger . This is known as flaring. ref ... aircraft , with little crosswind , the ideal landing is when contact with the ground occurs as the forward .... The stall flight stall warning is often heard just before landing, indicating that this speed and altitude have been reached. The result is very light touch down. ref name TC Light aircraft landing ... TC Crosswind landings where a significant wind not aligned with the landing area is a factor ref name ... more details
the Grand Coulee Dam throughout. An example of a heavy cable for power transmission. Image Cable tray fire sweden.jpg thumb Fire test in Sweden , showing rapid fire spread through burning of cable jackets. Of great importance for cables used in installations. Image 500mcm cable jacket marking.jpg thumb 500,000 circular mil 254 mm sup 2 sup single conductor power cable A cable is most often two or more ... cables are used to carry electric current s. An optical cable contains one or more optical fiber s in a protective ... kilometres see high voltage cable , power cable s and High voltage direct current HVDC . History ... communications cable submarine telegraph cables was done using machines similar to those used for manufacture of mechanical cables. In the 19th century and early 20th century, electrical cable ... concentric stranding adds the most flexibility. Copper wire and cable Copper wires in a cable ... stranding makes the cable extensible CBA as in telephone handset cords . Cables can be securely fastened and organized, such as by using trunking, cable trays, cable tie s or cable lacing . Continuous flex or flexible cable s used in moving applications within cable carrier s can be secured using strain relief devices or cable ties. At high frequencies, current tends to run along the surface ... cable cutaway.svg thumb right Coaxial cable. Image USB Twisted Pair.svg thumb right Twisted pair cabling Any Electric current current carrying conductor, including a cable, radiates an electromagnetic field . Likewise, any conductor or cable will pick up energy from any existing electromagnetic field ... being carried by the cable, or, if the cable is carrying power supply or control voltages, pollute ... cable lengths in buildings short, since pick up and transmission are essentially proportional to the length of the cable. The second solution is to route cables away from trouble. Beyond this, there are particular cable designs that minimize electromagnetic pickup and transmission. Three of the principal ... more details
Use mdy dates date March 2011 Year dab 1934 Year nav 1934 C20 year in topic NOTOC Year 1934 Roman numerals ... by Germany and the Second Polish Republic . The Republic of Austria 1919 1934 Republic of Austria ... 6 &ndash February 6, 1934 crisis French political crisis The French far right leagues rally in front ... right May 11 dust storm in Great Plains May 1 &ndash The de Maiverfassung May Constitution of 1934 heralds ... Delano Roosevelt Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Securities Exchange Act into law, establishing the U.S. ... Czechoslovakia 2 1 after extra time to win the 1934 FIFA World Cup 1934 World Cup . June 12 &ndash ... Primo Carnera for the world heavyweight boxing title. June 18 &ndash The Indian Reorganization Act ... Rally of 1934 September 5 September 10 10 &ndash 8th Nuremberg Rally September 8 &ndash Off the New ... 5 &ndash Miners rebel in Asturias , Spain see Asturian miners strike of 1934 . October 6 &ndash Catalonia ... http www.realclimate.org index.php archives 2007 08 1934 and all that ref Births January&ndash February ... http xroads.virginia.edu 1930s2 Time 1934 1934fr.html The 1930s Timeline 1934 &ndash from American Studies Programs at The University of Virginia DEFAULTSORT 1934 Category 1934 af 1934 am 1934 . . . ang 1934 ar 1934 an 1934 frp 1934 ast 1934 gn 1934 av 1934 ay 1934 az 1934 bn zh min nan 1934 n map bms 1934 be 1934 be x old 1934 bh bcl 1934 bs 1934 br 1934 bg 1934 ca 1934 cv 1934 cs 1934 cbk zam 1934 co 1934 cy 1934 da 1934 de 1934 et 1934 el 1934 myv 1934 es 1934 eo 1934 eu 1934 fa hif 1934 fo 1934 fr 1934 fy 1934 ga 1934 gv 1934 gag 1934 gd 1934 gl 1934 gan 1934 xal 1934 ko 1934 hy 1934 hi hr 1934. io 1934 ilo 1934 bpy id 1934 ia 1934 os 1934 is 1934 it 1934 he 1934 jv 1934 kn pam 1934 ka 1934 csb 1934 kk 1934 kw 1934 sw 1934 kv 1934 ht 1934 almanak gregoryen ku 1934 krc 1934 la 1934 lv 1934. gads lb 1934 lt 1934 m. lij 1934 li 1934 ln 1934 jbo 1934moi lmo 1934 hu 1934 mk 1934 mg 1934 ml 1934 mi 1934 mr . . ... more details
The Landing is a small mall in Kansas City, Missouri . It was built in 1960, on 63rd Street and Troost Avenue it also has frontage on East Meyer Boulevard and it was originally an open air shopping center. The architect of the Landing Mall was Edward Tanner , who was also the architect of the Kansas City Missouri School District Building on 12th and McGee in Downtown. It was enclosed in 1968, and was renamed The New Landing Mall. So far, no renovation plans have been made. The Landing was named for the landing place of Noah s Ark. There was previously a menagerie mural and play area within the mall. It is managed by Block & Company, which lists its current capacity at 131,497 square feet, with the surrounding traffic at 54,000 cars a day. ref http www.blockandco.com kc listings display 96 ref One of the mall s original tenants was Macy s , which became Dillard s in 1986. ref http nl.newsbank.com nl search we Archives?p product KC&p theme kc&p action search&p maxdocs 200&p topdoc 1&p text direct 0 0EAF3F82DBEBCABE&p field direct 0 document id&p perpage 10&p sort YMD date D&s trackval GooglePM ref It is now Gold s Department Store. ref http nl.newsbank.com nl search we Archives?p product KC&p theme kc&p action search&p maxdocs 200&p topdoc 1&p text direct 0 0EAF44A852DFAE63&p field direct 0 document id&p perpage 10&p sort YMD date D&s trackval GooglePM ref References reflist KansasCitymalls coord 39.011848 94.571891 type landmark region US MO display inline,title Category Shopping malls in Missouri Category Buildings and structures in Kansas City, Missouri ... more details
About theft of services metal theft Metal theft Cable theft is the act of obtaining unauthorized access to cable television services. ref http www.timewarnercable.com Corporate customerservice cablethefttypes.html Types of Cable Theft Time Warner Cable ref With the advent of digital cable , cases of people obtaining illegal service are less common. Digital cable can be more secure and can be very difficult to crack, although this is wholly dependent on the security of the encryption system chosen by the cable company in question. Old cable equipment used an analog signal that was scrambled by tuning the signal so the picture was unsteady, just as Macrovision does at an attempt to copy a video. The equipment would descramble the signal so that it can be viewed by the subscriber. It also is addressable, meaning that it can be remotely controlled by the company s technical staff. The first case covered by the media was when 317 subscribers were caught in 1991 ref http www.hackerscatalog.com Services TECH Notes three.html Technical Notes BULLET BUSTER ref when the company they subscribed to sent a bullet a video signal that turns off the equipment to their cable box es. The boxes were modified, but possibly belonged to the cable company. See also Theft of services References reflist tv tech stub Category Copyright infringement Category Cable television Category Theft ... more details
unreferenced date December 2006 The Cable Authority was the United Kingdom statutory body established by the Cable and Broadcasting Act 1984 to regulate the newly liberalised cable television industry. It came into existence on 1 December 1984 and took on its functions with effect from 1 January 1985. Its responsibilities were taken over by the new Independent Television Commission on 1 January 1991. The Authority consisted of a board of members appointed by the Home Secretary under the chairmanship of Richard Burton, former chairman of Gillette UK, and an executive staff headed by Jon Davey as Director General. The Authority had two main functions. The first was the grant of licences, following a competitive franchising procedure, for the provision of services over a new broadband cable system in a specified geographical area. Franchises were to be exclusive, and were granted after examination of the applicants financial capacity and their plans, according to a series of criteria laid down in the Act of Parliament. By the end of the Authority s life, 136 cable franchises had been awarded, embracing about 15 million homes of the 22 million in the UK. The second main function was the regulation of the programme services carried by cable systems. To this end the Authority was required to draw up codes on programme standards covering taste and decency, accuracy and impartiality of news, etc , advertising practice and sponsorship, and then monitor programme services to ensure that the rules were kept. Although this was achieved through the licences granted to cable operators, they were usually but the local retailers of national services, and the Authority s dealings were in practice with those who provided the programme channels. So, for example, Sky Digital UK & Ireland Sky Television publicly cited the Cable Authority as its regulator, even though no formal relationship existed between them. The Authority submitted annual reports to the Home Secretary, which were laid ... more details
Works Skidder Swing yarder Ax Men External links http www.cnr.vt.edu visser cable logging index.htm Cable Logging Category Log transport Category Logging Industry stub Forestry stub fr D bardage par ... more details