Broadcasting Telecasting (Oct-Dec 1957)

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GOVERNMENT CONTINUED KVOO dominates Oklahoma's No. 1 market — a billion-dollar market area with Tulsa right at its center. What's more, this dominant "Voice of Oklahoma" reaches beyond state boundaries to bring you bonus coverage in Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas. Get your full share; get the No. 1 market — all of it; get on KVOO! KVOO The only station covering all of Oklahoma's No. 1 Market Broadcast Center • 37th & Peoria GUSTAV BRANDBORG Vice Pres. & Gen. Mgr. Represented by EDWARD PETRY & CO. HAROLD C. STUART President Page 62 • December 16. 1957 Commission Finalizes Changes in Procedure Sweeping changes in practices and procedures before the FCC were made final last week when the Commission accepted the results of a two-year study made by an FCC committee and one representing the Federal Communications Bar Assn. The new rules, all included in Part I of the FCC"s rules, become effective Feb. 3, 1958. Among the more significant changes are these: • Written cases in comparative hearings are prohibited, unless all parties and the examiner agree. • Admission to practice before the FCC is automatic for any attorney eligible to practice before the highest court in his state. • Petitions for stay and for rehearing must henceforth be filed as separate documents. • Responses to FCC actions for nonWashington attorneys are extended three days beyond the formal requirements. The revised Part I rules — the first made by a federal agency on an omnibus basis — were the result of a study which began in 1955. The FCC committee, which included representatives of all bureaus and officers, was under the chairmanship of Associate General Counsel Edgar W. Holtz. The FCBA committee was chairmanned by Benedict P. Cottone, former FCC general counsel. The revision separates Part I into general sections and specific service sections — broadcasting, common carrier, safety and special services. The changes were dictated by court decisions, recent legislation including the 1952 McFarland Act amendments to the Communications Act, and Commission reorganizations, including the 1951 reshuffle into bureaus and offices. Red-Planned Sputnik Could Jam, Hog Earth Airwaves — Patterson Russia currently is rushing completion of a new sputnik, according to Rep. James T. Patterson (R-Conn.), which will be equipped with broadcast receivers and transmitters capable of jamming radio and tv signals "anywhere in the world" and broadcasting its own signal. Speaking last week before the Middletown, Conn., American Legion Post, the congressional atomic expert said he had learned "from the most reliable and authoritative sources" that the new Russia sputnik also will have the potential to broadcast "its own propaganda on any tv channel anywhere in the world." The satellite, weighing one ton, would circle the world every 24 hours at a height of 22,000 miles and could jam the U. S. radar warning network, Rep. Patterson stated. Rep. Patterson is a member of the House Armed Services and the Joint Atomic Energy committees. On Thursday, a spokesman at the Russian Embassy in Washington described Rep. Patterson's statements as a "wild dream." He said the science of space exploration has not reached the point to make such an Broadcasting