February 1997

Communications-related Headlines for 2/10/97

Communications-related Headlines for 2/10/97 (too long for words)

Service note:
Over the past couple of weeks, many subscribers have contacted us with
problems receiving Headlines. Team CPP has recently hired a number of
underemployed elves -- looking for post holiday work -- who are busy fixing
these problems and punishing the guilty. We hope to have our act together
soon. Thanks for your patience. [from does not equal twenty]

The puzzle of making the Internet into a competitive broadcast medium

Internet Venture Breaks the TV Mold

Intelligent Software Finding Niche

Instead of Flood of Competition, the Communications Act Brought a Trickle

About 700 On-Line Newspapers, but Only One Charges for Everything

A Wider Public for Noncommercial Radio

In the FCC.-required children's education programs, everything
old is new again

IRS Planning More Audits of Nonprofits

Ameritech Is Dealt a Setback by FCC In Its Filing for Long-Distance Service

Time Warner-Turner Deal Gets Final FTC Approval

State of the Union? Simpson-Obsessed

White House calls for "expediting" digital licenses

Clinton's Budget: $47B from spectrum

Hundt differs with Quello, Chong on ratings hearing

Campaign reform needs constitutional fix, senators say

Battle looms over leased-access

New FCC Cable Leased-access rules

THE 1996 TELECOM ACT -- ONE YEAR LATER
*********************************************
From=20New York Times (D5) (http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: The puzzle of making the Internet into a competitive broadcast medi=
um
Author: Denise Caruso
Issue: Internet sales/services
Description: Even though there is not much demand for it, it can't yet be
done very smoothly, and it demands all of a user's attention, companies are
still promoting and designing streaming video products. Several
broadcasting corporations are supporting video on the Web in hopes of
developing the Web's capacity as a mass medium.

From=20the New York Times (D5) (http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: Internet Venture Breaks the TV Mold
Author: Steve Lohr
Issue: Internet Sales/Services
Description: The Mining Company, a start up business in New York, is
breaking the trend of offering a few big "channels" of information, a style
promoted by many of the large online service providers. The Mining
Company wants to use the Web's wealth of special interest information to
get users. It plans to offer users 500 sites to choose from, from
basketball to soap opera details. The company is hiring part-time site
leaders who would act as a human databases and offer online tips for where
to get the most reliable, interesting information on their topic.

From=20the New York Times (D5)(http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: Intelligent Software Finding Niche
Author: John Markoff
Issue: Info/tech
Description: Research in artificial intelligence and smart software is
being done more by commercial and entertainment enterprises than by
traditional research organizations.

From=20the New York Times (D7)(http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: Instead of Flood of Competition, the Communications Act Brought a
Trickle
Author: Mark Landler
Issue: Telecommunications Act of 1996
Description: The Telecommunications Act promised competition, but
delivered only millions of articles about how there is no competition.
Industry experts have stated that the bill was based on a faulty idea: "It
assumed that the cable industry was ready and willing to become a
full-fledged competitor to the telephone industry nationwide. Cable was to
be the blunt instrument that broke open the 80-year-old telephone monopoly.=
"
But Cable decided not to do that, and long-distance companies are having
difficulty leasing local lines to provide local service.

From=20the New York Times (D8)(http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: About 700 On-Line Newspapers, but Only One Charges for Everything
Author: Iver Peterson
Issue: Internet Sales/Servce/Journalism
Description: The Wall Street Journal is the only online paper that charges
subscription fees to access its site. So far, the online version has
70,000 subscribers, and other newspapers are watching carefully. Users
say that they are willing to pay for the specialized information found in
the Journal. Advertisers are trying to decide if they want to reach a
small group of paid subscribers or lots of freeloaders.

From=20the New York Times (D8)(http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: A Wider Public for Noncommercial Radio
Author: Andrea Adelson
Issue: Radio
Description: In response to shrinking Federal funds and a not-so-friendly
Republican congress, the Public Broadcasting System has upped the
requirements radio stations must meet to receive funding. These criteria
include a minimum audience size and evidence of local financial support.
In Los Angeles, three of the public radio stations were told that they had
not so far met these requirements, and each station is using different
techniques to gain listeners. Some radio supporters feel that the new
requirements will force radio stations to abandon innovative programming.
Others feel that the requirements make radio stations get their acts
together.

From=20the New York Times (D8)(http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: In the FCC.-required children's education programs, everything
old is new again
Author: Lawrie Mifflin
Issue: Children's Television
Description: When the FCC decided to require broadcasters to show three
hours of educational kids' tv a week, Chairman Hundt was hoping for a world
where "the creative community can invent a whole new art form: the art of
teaching children with television." As broadcasters present their
children's lineup for 1997, however, the main art form on display is
reruns. Most broadcasters are sticking with old shows and reruns of old
shows. CBS, who has nothing to lose since their kids' shows aren't ranked
very high, is designing some new programs.

From=20the Wall Street Journal (A3) (http://www.wsj.com/)
Title: IRS Planning More Audits of Nonprofits
Author: Elizabeth MacDonald
Issue: Nonprofits
Description: The WSJ got ahold of an IRS plan which stated that the agency
will increase the number of audits on nonprofits, and that an audit could
be triggered by a group's high media profile. The IRS is interested in
those groups it suspects could be guilty of support or opposition to a
candidate running for office. The far right is unhappy because it feels
as though the IRS is investigating primarily conservative groups,
particularly conservative religious groups.

From=20the Wall Street Journal (B6) (http://www.wsj.com/)
Title: Ameritech Is Dealt a Setback by FCC In Its Filing for Long-Distance
Service
Author: Leslie Cauley and Bryan Gruley
Issue: Telephone Regulation
Description: The FCC has rejected a section of Ameritech's filing to provi=
de
in-region long-distance service -- almost guaranteeing that the company
will have to withdraw its application. The Justice Dept has asked the FCC
to reject the application, and the FCC must weigh carefully the Justice
Dept's advice.
In its application Ameritech stated that it had reached agreements allowing
AT&T access to Ameritech's local network. In reality, however, no such
state-approved pact had been reached.

From=20the Wall Street Journal (B8)(http://www.wsj.com/)
Title: Time Warner-Turner Deal Gets Final FTC Approval
Author: WSJ staff reporter
Issue: Media Mergers
Description: The FTC approved the $7.5 billion acquisition of Turner
Broadcasting System by Time-Warner. To avoid anti-trust violations, the
new megacompany will open many of its cable systems to a second news
channel to create competition for CNN.

From=20the Washington Post (D1)(http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: State of the Union? Simpson-Obsessed
Author: Howard Kurtz
Issue: Journalism
Description: State of the media: OJ vs Bill Clinton. A look at the media
frenzy around the recent court decision and the commitment to air the State
of the Union address. Kurtz writes that OJ is the real news since the
address was only "C-SPAN verbosity." "For much of the public there is a
growing disconnect between Beltway news ... and their own lives." A second
page headline reads, "What's the Real Public Interest?"

from Broadcasting & Cable (p.7)(http://www.broadcastingcable.com/)
Title: White House calls for "expediting" digital licenses
Author: Heather Fleming
Issue: ATV/Digital TV
Description: Vice President Al Gore has restated the Administration's view
that "broadcasters are trustees of the public airwaves. Digital technology
will greatly enhance the opportunity available to broadcasters to utilize
multiple channels. The public interest obligations should be commensurate
with these new opportunities. President Clinton plans to convene a special
advisory group to study and make recommendations on what broadcasters'
public interest responsibilities should be. The group would make its
recommendations within one year. In the meantime, the Administration is
asking the FCC to move ahead on issuing digital TV licenses. House Telcom
Subcommittee Chairman Billy Tauzin agrees with moving forward, but predicts
he and the FCC will disagree on broadcasters' responsibilities. He favors
relieving broadcasters of all obligations and letting public broadcasters
pick them up.

from Broadcasting & Cable (p.8)(http://www.broadcastingcable.com/)
Title: Clinton's Budget: $47B from spectrum
Author: Heather Fleming
Issue: Spectrum
Description: In plans to balance the federal budget, the Clinton
administration will continue to auction spectrum and hopes to raise $47.2
billion by 2002. Some observers believe that those estimates are too high.

from Broadcasting & Cable (p.8)(http://www.broadcastingcable.com/)
Title: Hundt differs with Quello, Chong on ratings hearing
Author: CM
Issue: V-Chip
Description: FCC Commissioners James Quello and Rachelle Chong are
resisting Chairman Reed Hundt's call for a hearing on the new TV
content-ratings system. Their resistence is drawing fire from Rep. Ed
Markey (D-Mass.) and Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND).

from Broadcasting & Cable (p.)(http://www.broadcastingcable.com/)
Title: Campaign reform needs constitutional fix, senators say
Author: Heather Fleming
Issue: Freetime for candidates
Description: Senators Ernest Hollings (D-SC) and Arlen Specter (R-PA) say
that the Constitution needs amending to allow limits on campaign spending.
A version of an amendment will be introduced in both the House and the
Senate soon.

from Broadcasting & Cable (p.21)(http://www.broadcastingcable.com/)
Title: Battle looms over leased-access
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Cable: Leased Access
Description: "They've done it wrong a second time," says Media Access
Project President Andrew Schwartzman of the FCC's new cable leased-access
formula [see below]. The public interest group expects to take the new
rules to court.

At the FCC (http://www.fcc.gov)
IMPLEMENTATION OF SECTIONS OF THE CABLE TELEVISION CONSUMER PROTECTION AND
COMPETITION ACT OF 1992: LEASED COMMERCIAL ACCESS. Amended the
Commission's rules pertaining to cable television commercial leased
access, including the calculation of maximum leased access rates.
Addressed comments and petitions for reconsideration filed in response to
the Order on Reconsideration of the First Report and Order and Further
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. (By Second Report and Order and Second
Order on Reconsideration of the First Report and Order). Dkt No.: CS-
96-60. Action by the Commission. Adopted: January 31, 1997. (FCC No.
97-27). CSB

COMMISSION REVISES CABLE TELEVISION LEASED COMMERCIAL ACCESS RULES; ADOPTS
AVERAGE IMPLICIT FEE FORMULA -- CS DOCKET NO. 96-60, (REPORT NO. CS 97-5,
ACTION IN DOCKET CASE). The Commission has adopted an order (FCC 97-27)
revising its cable commercial leased access rules. Action by the
Commission January 31, 1997, by Order (FCC 97-27)
. News Media Contact:
Morgan Broman (202) 418-2358. CSB Contact: Rick Chessen at (202) 418-7200=

Communications-related Headlines for 2/7/97

Internet Service To Add Outlets; A Loss Is Posted

The Local Phone Monopolies Have a Strategy . . . (ad)

The Local Phone Monopolies Have a Strategy . . . (ad)

Summit Seeks to Pare Technology Worker Gap

*********************************************

Title: Internet Service To Add Outlets; A Loss Is Posted
Author: Steve Lohr
Issue: AOL
Description: AOL announced that it's adding up to 50,000 modems to help
customers hear something other than a busy signal. It also announced a
quarterly loss attributed to "one-time charges for operations and closed
offices, employees laid off and marketing materials."

Title: The Local Phone Monopolies Have a Strategy . . . (ad)
Author: MCI
Issue: phone reg
Description: Full page ad by MCI reads the "Local Phone Monopolies Have a
Strategy To Keep Their Monopolies For As Long As They Can. Here it is."
MCI lays out the eight-step hoarding strategy of local phone companies
including hoarding monopoly profits, arguing that there's no competition in
long distance, and claiming there's been an increase in long distance
rates.

From the Washington Post (A31) (http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: The Local Phone Monopolies Have a Strategy . . . (ad)
Author: MCI
Issue: phone reg
Description: Same ad in NYT clip

From the Washington Post (G3) (http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: Summit Seeks to Pare Technology Worker Gap
Author: Shortage of Employees Slows Area Businesses
Issue: Employment
Description: A March or April conference is in the works to discuss the
shortage of qualified technology workers in the DC area. A trade group
has estimated that as many as one out of every four jobs nationally is
unfilled. Locally, that could mean a 10,000-worker shortage. The
conference planners hope to increase the training programs at community
colleges and universities.

At the FCC (http://www.fcc.gov)

*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/6/97

AOL's Bottom Line

Caller ID Gains, Despite Limitation

U.S. Wants Public Interest Rules For New Digital TV Channels

Big Brother wants to manage the broadcast spectrum again

Clinton Panel to Explore Public Interest in Digital TV

One year after the Telecommunications Act became law --- (ad)

Ameritech Wins Clearance by Michigan to Sell Long-Distance Services
in State

Internet Domain: Cyberspace Expands With New Addresses

One year after the Telecommunications Act became law --- (ad)

New System for Net Addresses Proposed

*********************************************

Title: AOL's Bottom Line
Author: Robert Stein
Issue: AOL
Description: This oped by a former editor of McCalls and former chairman
of the American Society of Magazine Editors argues that AOL's plight of
lowering rates and then being unable to fully respond to the demand
parallels the challenges faced by magazines in the 1970s. Magazines like
Look and Life kept lowering subscriptions prices to compete with TV for
advertising. Many of magazines gained record numbers of readers then went
under. The question AOL faces is, are advertisers willing to invest and
how can advertisers identify an audience? Also, how will users be able to
evaluate which information is valuable in the all you can eat world of the
Internet. Users may be suffering from what Lew Mumford refers to as,
"deprivation by surfeit."

Title: Caller ID Gains, Despite Limitation
Author: Andree Brooks
Issue: phones
Description: The number of phone subscribers using caller ID is growing.
Over 1 million customers signed up for the service between mid-1995 to
mid-1996 partly because of aggressive advertising campaigns by the phone
companies. Many regional companies, however, don't have the equipment to
support the service. If you don't like caller ID, you can have your line
remain anonymous on the caller ID screens (aka line blocking). If you
don't like people who have anonymous lines, you can block their calls to
your number. Fun for the whole family.

Title: U.S. Wants Public Interest Rules For New Digital TV Channels
Author: Mark Landler
Issue: ATV
Description: The vice president announced yesterday that the
administration wants to put new public interest obligations on broadcasters
in exchange for the extra channels they will receive for the transition to
digital television. Gore said that, "Digital technology will greatly
enhance the opportunities available to broadcasters. The public interest
obligations should be commensurate with these new opportunities." In the
administration's plan, broadcasters would receive the new licenses as
planned, "but in using these new licenses for one or more channels would be
held to a public interest standard at least as stringent as the one they
usually carry." FCC Chairman Hundt has spoken up for stronger public
interest requirements and would rather not give out the licenses until the
broadcasters make a clear commitment to public service programming. The
administration's plan does not go this far. Gore proposed that the
licenses be given out and then a panel of broadcasters, educators, and
others could recommend obligations.

Title: Big Brother wants to manage the broadcast spectrum again
Author: Peter Passell
Issue: FCC
Description: This article describes the tension between competing agendas
on how spectrum should be parceled out, auctions, who should manage the
spectrum, what competition can or can't accomplish, and how the FCC fits
into to it all.

Title: Clinton Panel to Explore Public Interest in Digital TV
Author: WSJ reporter
Issue: ATV
Description: The Clinton Administration will form a panel to recommend
what types of public interest obligations broadcasters should follow as
they move towards broad use of digital television. Though Vice President
Gore did not discuss what specific standards the panel will consider, it
will most likely evaluate free time for candidates, an idea popular with
FCC Chairman Reed Hundt.

Title: One year after the Telecommunications Act became law --- (ad)
Author: America's Local Phone Companies
Issue: Phone reg
Description: Full page ad arguing that local phone companies are doing
their part to serve the American public and to open to competition. Long
distance companies, on the other hand, only want to provide local service
to businesses and the wealthy and they want to do this without "paying
the real costs of using the local phone networks every one else depends
on." The ad encourages people to let the FCC know that the long distance
companies should not be let off the hook.

Title: Ameritech Wins Clearance by Michigan to Sell Long-Distance Services
in State
Author: Leslie Cauley
Issue: Phone reg
Description: A Michigan panel of regulators found that Ameritech met the
check list required by baby bells to enter the long distance market. While
this decision moves Ameritech one step closer to being the first baby bell
in the $80 billion long distance market, the FCC still needs to approve
Ameritech's entry application and decide that the company has fulfilled all
the items on the checklist before anything can happen.

Title: Internet Domain: Cyberspace Expands With New Addresses
Author: Rebecca Quick
Issue: WWW
Description: Overcrowding on the Internet has moved a group led by the
Internet Society, a self-appointed standard setting group for the Internet,
to create a set of new domain names so the Internet won't run out of
distinct address sites. Approximately 85,000 new site names are
registered each month. There are 900,000 names so far and about 90% end in
com. Along with com, edu, gov, org, and mil, we could have seven new names
including firm, store, info, web, arts, nom, rec. There may be great
confusion as organizations decide what names to use.

From the Washington Post (A20) (http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: One year after the Telecommunications Act became law --- (ad)
Author: America's Local Phone Companies
Issue: Phone reg
Description: Same ad as described in WSJ clip

From the Washington Post (C3) (http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: New System for Net Addresses Proposed
Author: David S. Hilzenrath
Issue: WWW
Description: In order to ease crowding and release the monopolistic hold
over domain names by Virginia-based Network Solutions, a group called the
International Ad Hoc Committee, spearheaded by the Internet Society, has
introduced seven new domain names and stated that 28 organizations
worldwide would be chosen by lottery to register the addresses with the new
suffixes. Since the Internet Society has no official power, whether this
plan works will
depend on whether the Internet community goes along with it.

*********

Communications-related Headlines for 2/5/97

Lamb to the Slaughter

Canada Revises Telecom Proposal; U.S. Is Unsatisfied

Chester Cheetah Can't Have His Spots, PBS Rules

*********************************************

From=20the New York Times (A23) (http://www.nytimes.com/)
Title: Lamb to the Slaughter
Author: Frank Rich
Issue: Cable
Description: In his column, Journal, Rich argues that if the mild-mannered
head of C-Span, Brian Lamb, is upset, then something must be very wrong.
That something is that C-Span's two channels of public affairs programming
have been cut from 9 million households in last two to three years. Cable
operators are bumping off C-Span if they get a higher bid for its channel
slot. According to Lamb, Rupert Murdoch has spent more money securing
channels for his Fox News Network in the last five months than C-Span spent
in
18 years. The cable industry itself started C-Span, but now cable
companies may be more concerned about big earnings than public programming.

From=20the Wall Street Journal (A4) (http://www.wsj.com/)
Title: Canada Revises Telecom Proposal; U.S. Is Unsatisfied
Author: John Urquhart
Issue: International/phone reg
Description: Even though Canada offered to ease controls on foreign
companies operating in its telecommunications industry, the United States
said Canada's new proposal still doesn't satisfy, and therefore a world
telecommunications pact will likely not be reached at the World Trade
Organization in Geneva.

From=20the Washington Post (D12) (http://www.washingtonpost.com/)
Title: Chester Cheetah Can't Have His Spots, PBS Rules
Author: Paul Farhi
Issue: Children's Television
Description: The Public Broadcasting Service has decided to ban
"appearances by cartoon spokescharacters during brief 'underwriting'
messages before and after PBS shows." There are corporations that do
underwrite PBS shows, but signs of the underwriter's support will be
limited to generic, "value-neutral" descriptions of the their services or
product.

At the FCC (http://www.fcc.gov)

*********
=A

Communications-related Headlines for 2/3/97

Telemarketing Finds a Ready Labor Market in Hard-Pressed North Dakota

Global Phone Pact Appears Near But U.S. Conditions May Block It

New Policy by America Online Pressures Content Providers

Paving the Information Highway

Cyberspace Resumes Fit the Modern Job Hunt

Does National Public Radio feel Pressure when foundation donors
specify topics?

DARS delays at FCC

Senate to hold liquor ad hearings

Senate, FCC to hear gripes on TV Ratings

*********************************************

Title: Telemarketing Finds a Ready Labor Market in Hard-Pressed North Dakota
Author: James Brooke
Issue: Economics
Description: The spread of fiber-optic cable and advances in
telecommunications are bringing jobs to depressed, rural areas. Companies
say that the people in the Dakotas or Montana are appealing job candidates
because they have fairly high levels of education and strong work ethics.
New companies scour the region for untapped groups of farm wives or
Indians. The towns appreciate the business. For many families, a second
salary or medical benefits can help make ends meet. Omaha is the "toll
free" capitol of the nation; Rosenbluth Travel has a reservations center in
Linton, North Dakota; and Minot, North Dakota, has a reservation center for
Quality Inns.

Title: Global Phone Pact Appears Near But U.S. Conditions May Block It
Author: Edmund L. Andrews
Issue: International/phone reg
Description: Negotiators from more than 100 countries are working to
finalize an agreement to open government-protected telecommunication
monopolies to competition. Some negotiators say a deal will be reached by
the Feb. 15 deadline. The European Union's barriers between cable and phone
companies are coming down and the FCC has been pressuring countries to
lower accounting rates. "Accounting rates cover the price of completing
international calls into and out of country, and are often many times more
than their true cost. . . " The US is not certain the agreement will come
together b/c Canada may not scale back restrictions on foreign ownership.
If an agreement is forged, it would give big communications companies like
Sprint and AT&T more access to Latin America and Asia.

Title: New Policy by America Online Pressures Content Providers
Author: Steve Lohr
Issue: Internet Regulation/Content
Description: With the old AOL rate system, the longer a user stayed on a
content provider's site, the more money a content provider got. Now with
the flat rate, content providers, and AOL itself, must rely more heavily on
advertising for revenues. Content providers include businesses that post
information or speciality forums on AOL. AOL executives compare the
network's transitions to the transition undergone by cable systems in the
1970s when cable providers realized that they needed subscription fees and
advertising to stay afloat.

Title: Paving the Information Highway
Author: Seth Schiesel
Issue: Internet growth
Description: According to US News and World Report, one of the best jobs
to have these days is commercial wiring specialist (public interest
advocate for telecommunications policy ran a close second). More and more
businesses rely on Local Area Networks and the Internet to communicate.
According to a research firm in California, spending on cables and
connectors (for private as opposed to national telephone businesses) grew
from $765 million in 1993 to $1.2 billion last year.

Title: Cyberspace Resumes Fit the Modern Job Hunt
Author: David Rampe
Issue: WWW
Description: If one is planning to do an electronic resume, one should
abandon efforts to make Camp Counselor sound like Advanced Child Care
Specialist and should start using terms computers will discover on searches.
Many big tech companies are inputting the resumes they receive into the
computer and then asking the computer to search for candidates with the
desired skills. Forget verbs, work with key words (for example, UCLA,
Unix, fluid dynamics, knitter). There are several sites on the web that
can help job seekers build electronic resumes or post electronic resumes.
Some sites include: Job Smart Resume Guide
http://jobsmart.org/tools/resume/index.htm, Yahoo's Resume Area
http://www.yahoo.com/business_and_economy/Employment/Resumes/Resume_Writ...
Tips/, Career Mosaic's Resume Writing Guide
http://www.careermosaic.com/cm/crc/crc15.html

Title: Does National Public Radio feel Pressure when foundation donors
specify topics?
Author: Iver Peterson
Issue: Journalism/Radio/Media Ownership
Description: National Public Radio receives 25 million from foundation and
corporate giving. Many grants are general; some support coverage of certain
topics like jazz or campaign finance reform. NPR states the organization
has established a firewall between donors and program content. Donors can
only speak to senior editors or the development office, not with the
reporters. Many news organizations receive money from benefactors and
must establish lines
between donors and content.

From Broadcasting & Cable, February 3, 1997 pg. 10
Title: DARS delays at FCC
Author: Chris McConnell
Issue: Satellite
Description: FCC Commissioners are divided about whether to instate public
interest obligations on businesses that provide digital audio radio
satellite service (DARS).

From Broadcasting & Cable, February 3, 1997 pg. 11
Title: Senate to hold liquor ad hearings
Author: Heather Fleming and Harry A. Jessell
Issue: Advertising
Description: Conrad Burns (R-Montana) states that his Senate Communications
Subcommittee or John McCain's (R-Arizona) parent committee (Commerce) will
hold hearings on TV liquor ads. Burns has also made clear, however, that
he would like the liquor industry and the cable companies to try to work
out the issue on their own first.

From Broadcasting & Cable, February 3, 1997 pg. 11
Title: Senate, FCC to hear gripes on TV Ratings
Author: Harry A. Jessell
Issue: V Chip
Description: The Commerce Committee will hear responses to the TV ratings
system from yet-to-be-named witnesses on Feb. 27. The FCC will schedule a
hearing in April or May.

Recommended reading for the web connoisseur: Dilbert, Washington Post
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/)

At the FCC (http://www.fcc.gov)

*********