ATTACHMENT C Instructional TV fixed service Permittee or licensee Plainview-Old Bethpage public schools, Central School District No. 4, Plainview, Long Island, N.Y. Central High School Distrlet No. 2 of the towns of North Hempstead and Hempstead, N.Y., Franklin Square, N.Y.1 Plainedge Union Free School District No. 18, North Massepequa, N.Y.2 Parma Board of Education, Parma City School District, Parma, Ohio. Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., Rockville Centre. Long Island, N.Y.I Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., for Roslyn Heights, N.Y.1 Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., for New Huntington, N.Y.! Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., for Central Islip, N.Y. Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, N.Y., Brooklyn, N.Y.1 Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, N.Y., Jamacia, N.Y.1 Union Free School District No. 10 of the town of North Hempstead, N.Y., Mineola, N.Y.1 Diocese of Miami, Miami, Fla 1 Dec. 16, 1964 .....do KRL-41 Oct. 27, 1965. .....do.. KRL-43 A-1 Boynton Beach, Fla.1 Diocese of Cleveland, Akron, Ohio 1.. of Cleveland, Chardon, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Mifflin County Board of School Di- Rio School District, Oxnard, Calif. Board of Public Instruction of Palm Anaheim City School District, Ana- Alpena public schools, Alpena, Mich. Regents of the University of Cali- City Board of Education of Hunts- Boston Catholic TV Center, Inc., A-1 F-2 C-1, C-2, C-3, C-4; D-1, D-2, D-3, D-4 Jan. 18, 1967 KVO-24 A-1, A-2, A-3, A-4 .do.. KHP-68 D-1, D-2, D-3 D-1, D-2, D-3, D-4 Fulton-De Kalb Hospital Authority, State of Minnesota, Osseo, Minn. 1 Denotes cases where construction permit held longer than 6 months before operations commenced. ? Denotes permittees of multiple-channel authorization where operation commenced within 6 months but fewer channels than authorized. '10 watts. ATTACHMENT D FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, WASHINGTON, D.C., PUBLIC NOTICEB94094, JANUARY 4, 1967 FCO ANNOUNCES MEMBERSHIP OF 1967 INSTRUCTIONAL TELEVISION FIXED SERVICE COMMITTEE FCC Commissioner Robert E. Lee, Chairman of the Committee for the Full Development of the Instructional Television Fixed Service, announced today the members of the national Committee for 1967. The Committee, consisting of individuals who have been active in the ITFS (2500Mc/s) field in various parts of the country and on various academic and organizational levels, was established on October 6, 1965. The increasing growth of the ITFS and actual and potential frequency saturation in several metropolitan areas has required the work of regional, state and local ITFS subcommittees in coordinating frequency planning, in assisting po tential users of the service in developing their plans, in advising the Commission on problems and developments that may affect rules and processing, and in conveying information to the field on Commission policies ad practices. The committee is composed wholly of representatives of State and local agencies, and educational, charitable, religious, civic, social welfare and other similar nonprofit organizations. Dr. Robert L. Hilliard, Chief of the Commission's Educational Broadcasting Branch, is Executive Vice-chairman of the Committee. Members of the Committee Executive Board are Dr. Bernard Cooper, Chief, Bureau of Mass Communications, New York State Education Department, and Chairman, ITFS Committee Northeast Region; Rev. John Culkin, S.J., Director, Communication Center, Fordham University, and Chairman, ITFS Committee National Groups; Dr. Lawrence Frymire, Coordinator of Television, State of California, and Chairman, ITFS Committee Western Region; William Kessler, Consulting Engineer, Florida ETV Commission, and Chairman, ITFS Committee Southern Region; Dr. Robert Shultz, Director of TV, Illinois State Office of Public Instruction, and Chairman, ITFS Committee Midwest Region; Lewis Rhodes, Director, National Project for the Improvement of Televised Instruction, National Association of Educational Broadcasters; and Dr. Harold Wigren, ETV Consultant, National Education Association. Other Committee members are: Paul A. Andereck, Director, Audio-Visual Project, St. Louis County Schools; Dr. Ben Bohnhorst, General Manager, Midwest Program on Airborne Televised Instruction, Lafayette, Indiana; Harry M. Brawley, Executive Secretary, West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority; Rev. John Burke, O.P., Director of Television, Archdiocese of Washington, D.C.; Dr. Mark Ellingson, President, Rochester Institute of Technology; Allan Fink, Coordinator of Learning Materials, Pasadena (California) City Schools; Miss Martha Gable, Director of Radio-TV, Philadelphia (Pennsylvania) Board of Public Instruction; Mr. E. H. Gillis, Jr., Executive Secretary, Ohio ETV Network Commission; Dr. Hyman H. Goldin, Carnegie Commission on ETV, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Dr. Barton Griffith, Director of TV, University of Missouri; George L. Hall, Director, Teaching Resources Center, University of Delaware; Mr. Harold R. Hickman, Director, Project Innovate, Nevada Instructional TV Network; Mrs. Marion Lowry, Coordinator of Instructional TV, Broward County, Florida; Dr. Irving Merrill, Coordinator of TV, University of California Medical Center, San Francisco; Msgr. Joseph T. O'Keefe, Coordinator of TV, Archdiocese of New York; James E. Parker, Director, Audio-Visual Center, North Carolina College; O. Leonard Press, Director, Kentucky Authority for ETV; Robert F. Schenkkan, Director, KLRN and Southwest Texas ETV Council, Austin, Texas; Msgr. Ralph Schmit, Director of ETV, Archdiocese of Milwaukee; Miss Betty Smith, Coordinator of TV, Mineola (New York) Public Schools; and Rev. John C. Urban, Secretary, Department of Communications, Los Angeles Archdiocese. The Committee will meet in Washington, D.C. on January 10, 1967. Any interested person concerned with the ITFS may attend this meeting. Details may be obtained from Ben Waple, Secretary, Federal Communications Commission, 12th and Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. Among the items to be discussed by the Committee are increasing saturation problems, preplanning and coordination on the local level, relationship of the ITFS to other technology, including satellites and computers, and primary and allowable services. ATTACHMENT E PUBLIC NOTICE-B94474, JANUARY 16, 1967 RECOMMENDATIONS OF ITFS COMMITTEES TO BE SOUGHT ON INSTRUCTIONAL TELEVISION FIXED APPLICATIONS The Federal Communications Commission has announced changes in Form 330P, "Application for Authority to Construct or Make Changes in an Instructional Television Fixed Station," designed to achieve more efficient use of available frequencies. The revised form calls for additional information concerning if and when additional channels (up to four) will be applied for, the boundaries of all adjoining school districts, and the location of proposed transmitters. An extra copy of Sections I and V of the form will be filed and forwarded to the appropriate subcommittee of the Committee for the Full Development of the Instructional Television Fixed Service, and their comments and recommendations solicited. Because of the increasing saturation of ITFS, the Committee for the Full Development of the ITFS was established to, among other things, set up coordinating subcommittees on regional, State and local levels throughout the country for cooperative preplanning and siting in order to achieve maximum efficiency in the use of available channels. The subcommittees are composed of all users and potential users of the ITFS who wish to cooperate in properly conserving and using this natural resource. The revised forms are not immediately available, but will be ready for distribution on March 1, 1967. The CHAIRMAN. Mr. Nelsen. Mr. NELSEN. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. A telegram came into my office from the E. F. Johnson Co. of Waseca, Minn., relative to the radio frequencies for the industrial type of a signal suggesting that more frequencies be available. I want to call it to your attention, since this is a tremendously valuable facility for industry, and would like to have this telegram made part of the hearings record. The CHAIRMAN. Would the gentleman yield there? Mr. NELSEN. Yes. The CHAIRMAN. I want to make part of the record several letters on the same subject. Mr. NELSEN. If the Chairman wishes to join The CHAIRMAN. Yes. In my area this is one of the complaints. (The telegram and letters referred to follow :) Hon. ANCHER NELSEN, House of Representatives: Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce interviewing FCC on March 14. It is important to two-way radio users that more frequencies be made available to reduce congestion, your attention to this matter would be appreciated. E. F. JOHNSON CO. KUYKENDALL'S RADIO & TV SERVICE, Hon. HARLEY O. STAGGERS, Washington, D.C. Dear Congressman STAGGERS: As a user of two-way radio to expedite service calls in the business of commercial refrigeration service, I would like to solicit your full support of the requests of National Association of Business and Educational Radio, in trying to secure additional frequencies. I have been advised by NABER that there will be a meeting with FCC on the date of Mar. 14th. So if you can give us some support to help correct some of the crowded conditions, please do so. Sincerely, CHARLES B. KUYKENDALL. TWO-WAY RADIO SERVICE, INC., Ridgeley, W. Va., March 9, 1967. Hon. HARLEY O. STAGGERS, House of Representatives, Washington, D.O. Dear HARLEY: We understand that you have a meeting with the FCC on Tuesday March 14th 1967. We hereby request that you state the need for additional radio frequencies for business radio use, and see if any relief from this crowded situation may be obtained. Thanking you for your attention, Sincerely, TWO-WAY RADIO SERVICE, INC., THE MOOREFIELD VOLUNTEER FIRE CO., Hon, HARLEY O. STAGGERS, House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. DEAR SIR: In behalf of the Moorfield Vol. Fire Company, a user of a two-way radio, I have been requested to contact you and urge your support in the request by the National Association of Business and Educational Radio in its request for additional frequencies. The meeting of the association and FCC will be held on March 14, 1967 and as chairman of the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee, your support in this matter will be greatly appreciated. Respectfully, G. C. CHARLTON, Corresponding Secretary, MVFC. TRIMOUNT BITUMINOUS PRODUCTS CO., Hon. TORBERT H. MACDONALD, DEAR MR. MACDONALD: We are a company whose operation depends on efficient communication. It is becoming increasingly apparent that the efficiency of our two-way radio communication is going to be seriously hampered, if not made impossible, by increasing over-crowding of frequencies. May we respectfully request your attention to the relief of this problem, in the hope that more channels may be assigned for the use of two-way radio. Yours very truly, M. M. JENNINGS, Executive Vice President. MASTER FUEL CO., INC., Everett, Mass., March 6, 1967. Hon. TORBERT MACDONALD, DEAR CONGRESSMAN MACDONALD: We have had two way radio mobile communications in our oil business for approximately four years, and it is a business tool that we cannot afford to be without. It is this subject that I wish to talk to you about in my letter today. The number of users on the frequency four years ago made our assigned wave length (assigned by the Federal Communications Commission) very crowded. |