Universities, such as Columbia, began offerring radio courses in the 1920s-1930s and later courses over television during the 1960s (Criscito, 1999). During this time the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CBP) were established for children living in the inner city who were deprived of learning opportunities. One of the most well known programs that reached millions of pre-school children was Sesame Street. Again, distance education was available to help the disadvantaged (Saba, 2011). Interestingly, some students who learned at a distance included some well-known names such as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Walter P. Chrysler, Walter Cronkite, Berry Goldwater, and Charles Schutz (Criscito), creator of the comic strip Peanuts.