Heinl radio business letter (July-Dec 1930)

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BUSINESS LETTER BRIEFS F. A. Arnold, Director of Development of the National Broadcasting Company, has accepted an invitation extended by the President and Board of Directors of the College of the City of New York, to deliver a course of fifteen lectures on broadcast advertising early in September, The Metropolitan Police Department of Washington has been granted authority to install a police crime detection and driminal apprehension service by radio. Directors of the Cable and Wireless, Ltd. , London, have announced they are unable to recommend payment ^ of any dividend on A or B ordinary stock in respect to the twenty-one months ended December 31, 1929. There is much interest in the announcement of a forth¬ coming Atwater Kent radio set, which is scheduled to appear on August 1st. All details of the set have been kept secret. The Louisiana House of Representatives has passed a bill "to prohibit slander over, through or by means of what is commonly known as the radio." The bill provides a penalty of a fine of not more than $100 or imprisonment in jail for not more than 30 days, or both. The recommendation of the Interdepartmental Radio Advis¬ ory Committee relative to granting the American Telephone & Tele¬ graph Company use of the 68 kilocycle frequency for trans-oceanic telephone service has been sent to the Federal Radio Commission and Secretary of Commerce Lamont. This frequency is now used by the Navy Department. The recommendation has not been made public, but it is believed it favors granting use of the frequency to the American Telephone & Telegraph Company.