Word: fcc
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Federal Communications Commission regulations proscribe "obscene, indecent or profane language" on the air, but the agency has not prosecuted broadcasters for using Carter's particular colloquialisms. At stations throughout the U.S., news directors seemed less daunted by the FCC than by local canons. In liberated Los Angeles, for example, all television stations broadcast Carter's Playboy quotes verbatim. But in more decorous Atlanta, hardly any local stations violated the "screw" taboo...
...passed by Congress in its present form, the bill would squelch several annoying bits of static on the phone companies' line. One of them: the so-called specialized common carriers-non-Bell communications companies that grew out of a 1959 FCC decision opening a new spectrum of microwave channels to private business. Currently, there are three such carriers in operation-the biggest is MCI Telecommunications Corp., based in Washington, D.C.-that run microwave transmission facilities for Government and business clients in competition with AT&T. The bill, by ruling out "wasteful or unnecessary duplication of communications lines," would apparently...
...also be lessened for Ma Bell's Western Electric manufacturing subsidiary-currently the target of a massive Government divestiture suit (TIME, Dec. 2, 1974). The bill might knock out some of the 400 independent telephone-equipment suppliers that have sprung up in the past eight years since the FCC first allowed non-Bell gadgetry, from entire corporate phone systems to replicas of antique French telephones, to be plugged into AT&T lines...
...growing market: Wall Street, where stock traders can reach one another at a touch of a button, using consoles made by non-Bell companies. Present regulations require approval of these devices by the FCC. That is not a major burden even to small manufacturers, but the new bill would take the FCC out of the picture and require equipment approval by utility regulators in all 50 states. Ma Bell is well prepared for these laborious procedures; the smaller companies...
...notion that home phones were subsidizing other services, instead of the other way around, was supported in a report last week by the FCC. Opponents of the bill also point out that in the company's third quarter (ending Aug. 31), AT&T earned $1.01 billion, up 25% from the same period last year-the largest amount ever earned in a single quarter by a U.S. company...