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GOVERNMENT
HOUSE UNIT SETS HEARINGS
Deintermixture, clear channels two of four topics prepared by House Communications Subcommittee
The House Communications Subcommittee, giving every indication of intending to get off to a running start in the new session of Congress, began preparing last week for four hearings affecting broadcasters.
As disclosed by Subcommittee Chairman Morgan Moulder (D-Mo.), they will deal with:
■ The FCC's plan to deintermix eight markets by withdrawing the vhf channels.
■ Deintermixture and all-channel-set legislation. Congressional opponents of the FCC plan to deintermix eight markets by withdrawing their vhf channels have introduced nine bills to block the move. Five of the bills, however, incorporate the FCC-requested legislation to require manufacturers to build only all-channel television receivers (See story, page 27).
■ Clear channels. The FCC proposal last year to break down 13 of the 25 Class 1-A clear channels produced a rash of bills aimed at denying the commission the authority to duplicate any of the remaining clear channels.
■ Daytime broadcasters. This will mark a resumption of hearings begun last year on the perennial request of daytime-only broadcasters for permission to operate from at least 6 a.m. to at least 6 p.m.
■ Communications satellites. The full Commerce Committee held hearings on this subject last year. The planned sessions, Rep. Moulder indicated, will deal largely with the controversial question of whether the U. S. space communications system should be owned by private interests or the government.
Rep. Moulder ticked off these subjects after conferring with Rep. Oren
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Champaign campaigns to retain vhf ch. 3
WCIA (TV) Champaign, 111., claims a potential audience of approximately one million persons and the FCC can be excused if it thought 999,999 of them had descended on Washington last week. The viewers of WCIA, incensed over the commission's announced plan to delete the station's vhf ch. 3 and replace it with a uhf channel, flooded the FCC with petitions against the proposal. Above are a portion of the 21
large boxes used to air freight 523 petitions from the "undersigned viewers of ch. 3 in central Illinois and western Indiana."
Each petition bore 15 to 250 signatures. All were addressed to members of Congress in addition to the FCC. Unpacking the "strong" objections to the plan to make the area all-uhf are Clara Fairall (c), chief of the FCC's Mail & Files, Sandra Parrish (1) and Irene Sawyer.
58
BROADCASTING, January 15, 1962