Word: fcc
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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DuPont and Supino acted as counsel for the FCC. The were opposed by Katrina Renouf and Fred C. Scribner III, who served as advocates for a South Carolina radio station which was appealing the FCC's decision not to renew its license. The case was heard by the "United States Court of Appeals for the District of Ames Circuit," which included White, Judge Elpert P. Tuttle of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, and Judge Sterry R. Waterman, of the Second Circuit Court...
Each Club spent an hour delivering its presentation, and responding to the judges' questions and objections. At issue was the FCC's right to grant or revoke a station's license on the basis of its programming. Counsel for the appellant (the radio station) maintained that its client's rights under the First Amendment had been infringed by the Commission...
...major services had yet to have their full say. The subsurface theme (and threat) of the hearings: the possibility of FCC regulation of rating services...
Until recently most broadcasts have been limited to short distances, since the FCC permitted ham stations to operate only on 50 watts. This year they have raised it to 1,000 watts (WNBC New York operates on 10,000 watts). Under certain weather conditions, however, remarkable things happen. Larry Mueller once made visual contact with a fellow in Fort Recovery Ohio, 170 miles away...
...less time watching "light entertainment" shows than grade-school addicts, only 2% more time watching news, only 1% more time watching public affairs shows. To Steiner, the difference among educational groups lies "not in what they do, but how they feel about it." Essentially, the Harvard lawyer, or FCC Chairman Newt Minow, selects the same programs and spends as much prime time in front of his set as the kids from Kenosha, Wis. But Newton Minow-or so this survey implies-feels worse about...