Draft of a letter from Dole to Senate colleagues regarding the closed captioning of TV broadcasts from the Senate chamber

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Item Archival Status (Curation)
In American Congress Digital Archives Portal
File Name (Dublin Core)
Title (Dublin Core)
Draft of a letter from Dole to Senate colleagues regarding the closed captioning of TV broadcasts from the Senate chamber
Description (Dublin Core)
Draft letter from Senators Bob Dole and George J. Mitchell announcing the Senate Resolution requiring closed captioning of TV broadcasts of Chamber proceedings.
Date (Dublin Core)
1991-11-14
Date Created (Dublin Core)
1991-11-14
Congress (Dublin Core)
102nd (1991-1993)
Policy Area (Curation)
Congress
Creator (Dublin Core)
Dole, Robert J., 1923-2021
Record Type (Dublin Core)
correspondence
Rights (Dublin Core)
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
Language (Dublin Core)
eng
Collection Finding Aid (Dublin Core)
https://dolearchivecollections.ku.edu/?p=collections/findingaid&id=54&q=
Physical Location (Dublin Core)
Institution (Dublin Core)
Robert J. Dole Institute of Politics, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS
Archival Collection (Dublin Core)
Full Text (Extract Text)
11/15/91 17:29 WICHITA
DRAFT
November 14, 1991
(Senator)
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
(End of Letterhead)

Dear Senator:

We are pleased to announce the Senate will begin realtime closed captioning of its proceedings on Monday, November 18. Realtime closed captioning is the electronic subtitling of the audio portion of the TV broadcast of Chamber proceedings. Those with hearing impairments will be able to read Senators' remarks aa they are speaking.

Senate Resolution 13, 10lst Congress, 1st Session, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (P.L. 101-336) require the Senate to make its proceedings available to the hearing impaired by January, 1992. The Secretary of the Senate's Office of Captioning Services captions the Senate from a specially-designed control room in the basement of the Capitol Building. Senators interested in visiting the control room should call the Secretary or simply stop by ST-54.

Both channel 8 and C-SPAN II will carry the captions, but a decoder is required to make the captions visible on your TV set. Decoders can be obtained from the Sergeant at Arms.

While captioning technology was developed to help the deaf, others are benefitting. Decoders are being purchased by the elderly with marginal hearing loss who regularly use them to enhance their TV viewing. Those for whom English is a second language use captions as a learning aid.

I know you will join me in welcoming our new viewers.

Sincerely,
Bob Dole
George J. Mitchell

Enclosure
11/15/91 17:29 WICHITA
DRAFT
November 14, 1991
(Senator)
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
(End of Letterhead)

Dear Senator:

We are pleased to announce the Senate will begin realtime closed captioning of its proceedings on Monday, November 18. Realtime closed captioning is the electronic subtitling of the audio portion of the TV broadcast of Chamber proceedings. Those with hearing impairments will be able to read Senators' remarks aa they are speaking.

Senate Resolution 13, 10lst Congress, 1st Session, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (P.L. 101-336) require the Senate to make its proceedings available to the hearing impaired by January, 1992. The Secretary of the Senate's Office of Captioning Services captions the Senate from a specially-designed control room in the basement of the Capitol Building. Senators interested in visiting the control room should call the Secretary or simply stop by ST-54.

Both channel 8 and C-SPAN II will carry the captions, but a decoder is required to make the captions visible on your TV set. Decoders can be obtained from the Sergeant at Arms.

While captioning technology was developed to help the deaf, others are benefitting. Decoders are being purchased by the elderly with marginal hearing loss who regularly use them to enhance their TV viewing. Those for whom English is a second language use captions as a learning aid.

I know you will join me in welcoming our new viewers.

Sincerely,
Bob Dole
George J. Mitchell

Enclosure
11/15/91 17:29 WICHITA
DRAFT
November 14, 1991
(Senator)
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
(End of Letterhead)

Dear Senator:

We are pleased to announce the Senate will begin realtime closed captioning of its proceedings on Monday, November 18. Realtime closed captioning is the electronic subtitling of the audio portion of the TV broadcast of Chamber proceedings. Those with hearing impairments will be able to read Senators' remarks aa they are speaking.

Senate Resolution 13, 10lst Congress, 1st Session, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (P.L. 101-336) require the Senate to make its proceedings available to the hearing impaired by January, 1992. The Secretary of the Senate's Office of Captioning Services captions the Senate from a specially-designed control room in the basement of the Capitol Building. Senators interested in visiting the control room should call the Secretary or simply stop by ST-54.

Both channel 8 and C-SPAN II will carry the captions, but a decoder is required to make the captions visible on your TV set. Decoders can be obtained from the Sergeant at Arms.

While captioning technology was developed to help the deaf, others are benefitting. Decoders are being purchased by the elderly with marginal hearing loss who regularly use them to enhance their TV viewing. Those for whom English is a second language use captions as a learning aid.

I know you will join me in welcoming our new viewers.

Sincerely,
Bob Dole
George J. Mitchell

Enclosure

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