Safety of Life at Sea Through the Use of Radio: Hearing Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Commerce, United States Senate, Seventy-fourth Congress, Second Session, on S. 3954, a Bill to Amend the Communications Act of 1934 Approved June 19, 1934, for the Purpose of Promoting Safety of Life Through the Use of Radio, and for Other PurposesU.S. Government Printing Office, 1936 - 60 páginas |
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Página 2
... signals or radio communications containing profane or obscene words or language or transmitted a call signal or call letter which has not been assigned by proper authority to the station he is then operating ; or " ( E ) has willfully ...
... signals or radio communications containing profane or obscene words or language or transmitted a call signal or call letter which has not been assigned by proper authority to the station he is then operating ; or " ( E ) has willfully ...
Página 4
... signals from ship to ship over a range of at least two hundred nautical miles by day under normal conditions and circumstances . " ( e ) Sufficient power shall be available at all times to operate the main radio installation efficiently ...
... signals from ship to ship over a range of at least two hundred nautical miles by day under normal conditions and circumstances . " ( e ) Sufficient power shall be available at all times to operate the main radio installation efficiently ...
Página 5
... signals and of taking bearings from which the true bearing and direction may be determined . It shall be capable of receiving signals on the frequencies prescribed for distress , direction finding , and radio beacons by the General ...
... signals and of taking bearings from which the true bearing and direction may be determined . It shall be capable of receiving signals on the frequencies prescribed for distress , direction finding , and radio beacons by the General ...
Página 13
... signals . Senator WHITE . As I recall it , that is a rule of the 1929 conven- tion , also . Mr. WEBSTER . Yes , sir . Senator WHITE . That means that we generally accept the certifi- cate of another nation that the equipment of the ship ...
... signals . Senator WHITE . As I recall it , that is a rule of the 1929 conven- tion , also . Mr. WEBSTER . Yes , sir . Senator WHITE . That means that we generally accept the certifi- cate of another nation that the equipment of the ship ...
Página 14
... signal and receive at a rate of 16 groups per minute . As a practical matter , these particular matters I have mentioned will not change the present situation in regard to the United States passenger ships in that the present Ship Act ...
... signal and receive at a rate of 16 groups per minute . As a practical matter , these particular matters I have mentioned will not change the present situation in regard to the United States passenger ships in that the present Ship Act ...
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Términos y frases comunes
1934 is hereby Amend to read authority autoalarm bill cargo ship cargo vessels Chairman Communications Act comply Congress distress DUNBAR duty efficient radio emergency or reserve enacted equipped with radio exempt Federal Communications Commission foreign ship gross tons HADDOCK HAGEMAN harbor or port hereby amended JOHNSON Lake Huron leave any harbor leave or attempt legislation master means ment nautical miles navigated OHIO Senator open sea operating condition passenger ship permit person prescribe present law promoting safety property at sea proposed qualified operator radio apparatus radio compass radio direction finder radio equipment radio installation radio log radio officer radio operator's license radio operators radio service radiotelephone read as follows revoked safety convention safety purposes sailing section 355 Senator WHITE Ship Act shipowners signals steamship Subparagraph subsection suspension or revocation telegraph tion transmitter United United States Navy violation voluntarily equipped voyage WALLACE H watch WEBSTER wireless telephone words