Abstract

Undoing the West in the Soviet Union

Belotserkovsky, Vadim | March 16, 1985 issue

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The article discusses the significance of broadcasting liberty. In 1982 Ronald Reagan, President of the United States, appointed George Bailey, to direct the U.S. government-financed station. To promote "creativity' among émigré broadcasters, Bailey repealed the station's strict guidelines on script content and fired several program managers of the U.S. supervising the work of broadcast editors. He also brought in a group of Soviet Unions's émigr&eacute who share Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's, exiled novelist of the Soviet Union, extreme views.

See Also:

BROADCASTING; IMMIGRANTS; SOLZHENITSYN, Aleksandr Isaevich, 1918-; EDITORS; SOVIET Union; UNITED States
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