enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Broadcasting...

    The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (French: Société Radio-Canada), branded as CBC/Radio-Canada, is the Canadian public broadcaster for both radio and television. [5] It is a Crown corporation that serves as the national public broadcaster, with its English-language and French-language service units known as CBC and Radio-Canada, respectively.

  3. Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Radio...

    The stations had been created in the 1920s by Canadian National Railways to provide broadcasting for railway passengers but were also heard by the general public and functioned, along with up two dozen stations across the country on which CNR Radio leased time, as an early national radio network. The CRBC also hired private stations across the ...

  4. Timeline of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Canadian...

    Country Canada becomes wholly owned by CBC/Radio-Canada and changes its name to CBC Country Canada. Hockey Night in Canada and La Soirée du hockey launch their 50th season on CBC Television et la Télévision de Radio-Canada. 2003 State-of-the-art broadcast centres open in downtown Edmonton and Quebec City.

  5. History of broadcasting in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_broadcasting_in...

    Radio Ladies: Canada's Women on the Air 1922-1975 (2nd ed. Magnetewan Publishing, 2012) Stewart, Sandy. From Coast to Coast: A Personal History of Radio in Canada (CBC Enterprises, 1985) Troyer, Warner. The sound and the fury: An anecdotal history of Canadian broadcasting (1980) Varga, Darrell.

  6. Radio Canada International - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Canada_International

    The idea for creating an international radio voice for Canada was first proposed as far back as the 1930s. Several studies commissioned by the CBC Board of Governors in the late 1930s had come to the conclusion that Canada needed a radio service to broadcast a Canadian point of view to the world.

  7. Milestones in radio: the first half century (1895–1945). The UNESCO courier (February 1997), p. 16–21; Radio Review/Radio Listeners Guide (1925–1929), Broadcasting Yearbook (1935–2010), World Radio TV Handbook (1947–) Berg, Jerome S. The early shortwave stations: a broadcasting history through 1945 (2013) radioheritage.net

  8. History of Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Canada

    When Canada was founded, women could not vote in federal elections. Women did have a local vote in some provinces, as in Canada West from 1850, where women owning land could vote for school trustees. By 1900 other provinces adopted similar provisions, and in 1916 Manitoba took the lead in extending full women's suffrage. [158]

  9. Timeline of Canadian history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Canadian_history

    Canada withdraws from the War in Afghanistan at the end of the first phase. [133] [134] [143] 2018: 17 October The Cannabis Act becomes law, making recreational cannabis use legal throughout the country. Canada is the second country (after Uruguay in 2013) to legalize recreational cannabis use nationwide. [144] 2020: 7 January - March