Are injured. We also know the Greater Manchester Police Department is treating the explosion as a possible terrorist incident. Now, pink balloons came down during the final song and initially concert goers thought popping balloons had set off a panic, but then as they exited arena, witnesses reported seeing people covered in blood and bodies of those killed in the explosion. Now, Ariana Grande is a 23year old american pop star, and many of her fans are teenagers. There are accounts on social media from parents frantically trying to locate their children after the concert. And Ariana Grandes representatives says the singer herself was not injured. Some witnesses reported hearing two blasts. So far police are only confirming there was one. There are reports doctors are working through the night and taxi drivers are taking frightened concert goers home for free so there are signs people are pulling together to help out in the aftermath of this tragedy. We understand there was some kind of
On the communicators, the impact of that decision 30 years later on telecommunications. Joining us in a round table discussion is professor roger noll of stanford, as well as professor Jerry Hausman of mit. Both of these gentlemen were involved at various levels in the breakup or the decision to break up at t. Joining us here in our washington studio is Paul Barbagallo of bloomberg. Professor noll, first of all, what was your role or activity during the breakup of at t, and what led to that decision . Guest well, the roots of the antitrust case were in a president ial task force that was formed during the Johnson Administration in the late 1960s called the Telecommunications Policy task force. It had concluded that the telecommunications industry, at least the part of it that was in the federal jurisdiction, could be competitive and made recommendations both to the mainly to the federal Communications Commission about how to cause that to happen. Then when the Nixon Administration came
Pacific. It was in 1982 that judge Harold Greene issued a decision which led to the breakup of the at t corp. That is our topic this week on the communicators, the impact of that decision 30 years later on the telecommunications. Joining us is professor roger noll of stanford, as well as professor Jerry Hausman of mit, both of whom were involved at various levels in the breakup or the decision to break up at t. Joining us in the washington studio is paul. Professor noll, first of all, what with your activity during the breakup of at t and what led to that decision . The antitrust case was formed during the Johnson Administration the late 1960s and a president ial task force called the Telecommunications Policy task force. It concluded the telecommunications industry, the part in federal jurisdiction, should be competitive and made recommendations both mainly to the fcc about how to cause that to happen. Then when the knicks and the administration can along, the holdover staff of the an
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