Word: fcc
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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WHRB and other college radio stations may be forced to suspend operations if they do not comply with the radiation regulations of the Federal Communications Commission, an FCC official, Nathan A. Hallenstein, said yesterday...
Geoffrey M. Kalmus '56, president of WHRB, said that he had spoken to Hallenstein about the matter within the last two weeks. "At that time, he made no mention of any radiation problems at WHRB," Kalmus said. He added that the FCC had not contacted WHRB about any such problems this fall...
Hallenstein, who is Chief Engineer for FCC's Boston Office, said that the Commission was conducting radiation measurements on WHRB, and that "we expect WHRB to eliminate the spurious radiation within a reasonable time." The exact time limit will be fixed by the Commission at a later date, he added...
...Dage Television Division has announced a complete low-power station costing only $50.000, v. $250,000 and up for standard installations. Dage's station was made possible by the Federal Communications Commission's lowering of power and antenna-height requirements in August. The market looks big: FCC has assigned TV channels to 900 communities of less than 50,000 population, but because of high costs, all are still without stations...
...Richard A. Mack, 45, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission, succeeding hardbitten, brass-voiced Frieda Hennock, 50. Lawyer Hennock, a breezy, New Dealing Democrat (but no darling of the party's congressional rank and file), was the first woman to serve on the FCC, was often a center of controversy in her seven years in office. Floridian Mack, a Democrat of calmer persuasion, is former chairman of the Florida Railroad and Public Utilities Commission, a current vice president of the National Association of Railroad and Utilities Commissioners, and an experienced practitioner before the FCC...