Examples of Broadcasting Corporation in a sentence
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 1983 No. 7 of 1983 - SECT.
The Reporting Person, by virtue of his affiliations with Advance Long-Term Management Trust, a New Jersey trust ("ALTMT"), Advance Publications, Inc., a New York corporation ("API"), and Newhouse Broadcasting Corporation ("NBCo"), and affiliation with and interest in other non-controlling holders of equity of API and NBCo, may be deemed to beneficially own the shares of Class A Common Stock of the Issuer and Class B Common Units of Charter Holdings owned directly by A/N.
According to the EU Electoral Observation Mission (EU EOM) report, the government-controlled Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) Radio coverage gave the PNU 76% share of coverage, compared to the opposition ODM 13% and ODM-Kenya 5%.
These include:□ Bona fide newspapers: they fall within the ambit of the Publications Ombudsman□ The South Africa Broadcasting Corporation (SABC): it falls within the ambit of ICASA and the Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa (BCCSA) Extra-Territorial Jurisdictionµ-XULVGLFWLRQ¶ LV WKH JRYHUQPHQW¶V JHQHUDO SRZHUwithin its territory.
Copyright is not infringed by the making or use by the British Broadcasting Corporation, for the purpose of maintaining supervision and control over programmes broadcast by them, of recordings of those programmes.
The tenderer may modify or withdraw its tender after the tender’s submission, provided that written notice of the modification, including substitution or withdrawal of the tenders, is received by the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation prior to the deadline prescribed for submission of tenders.
Newhouse, III, who beneficially owns 538 shares of Class A Common Stock, is a Trustee of Advance Long-Term Management Trust, a Director and Executive Vice President of Newhouse Broadcasting Corporation, a Director and Co-President of Advance Publications, Inc.
To assist in the examination, evaluation and comparison of tenders the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation may, at its discretion, ask the tenderer for a clarification of its tender.
The scope of the derogation was considered by the Court of Appeal in the case Sugar v British Broadcasting Corporation and another [2010] EWCA Civ 715, and later, on appeal, by the Supreme Court (Sugar (Deceased) v British Broadcasting Corporation [2012] UKSC 4).
However, the media have also been a bed partner in unspeakable atrocities as was the case with KANU’s regime where former President Moi and Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC) were synonymous (Makali, 2004).In the worst case scenario, some media professionals have been indicted as it is the case with journalist Joshua Arap Sang- now facing trial at the ICC Hague for inciting the masses.