View
1
Download
0
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
CONSTRUCTION PERMIT AND LICENSE RECORD ..41F1M..771M181--7- 01",
i eft !wed
1.s s.-
Pon•d Friel To Pr-ill tic
••• •r•Alm • MI- -ftwim=§11■111.111m1 ••■- rhow01■■■palildImal.
4.11•05446
..• far 6•03 1.2*-3.4.6
C lawn 1400
Del aii Cord it i 311X) 5) tr Mw
lag bir
111415 111404? t las sail II up tbadi
1110-4. Bi- 2207
51444.7 1400k !Lilo to e
mow T. dote 51) ZOO l•tion of
r ttr di root
ma of 1! or %LI :Ls
dr 1 * #to
at lent
ri ty 2-11:
to roma
41210. ,1:17-27 •%.."16610 Kati ■ c_fl eve&
oarattiort %17 rd'
.411144.
Win frif '••JCA
FiliNsplit 16
4•14401k Of
• a • Ma 40 - • 4 4
•
Foss lie•tat Pies, 1 91,
At Viiitetesn Bart mei GM NIP 411P '1=1". MID 4111P• !MI U. mai
10.74411 11.1.63 11•16p62
.11•114s63 Immo 1 of Licit's, Mite171•4)
Reed Ft led
• dredti r4, 6141Wiplelf...* F * 4 • 1. • • .11. •• 4. 41- 11P4S 1.1•. 411•6 di**
LIM LAI 'CO Ctit Owe
/ Or • r IF 41 r. * .0 • • -+ bm ha.", e.••■ ft • lb • .1. • 10111111,11•11111.. 111.11..
Dated 47:11:zu. L.,44.62 1•glo•Asz
licalploft for n tat train er o
mrpeniti fron Douglas De *wry Pock •
16102
Ss turn Dim
41::4M) 4.4Si2 Kahle to 3•ww\-62
11 WI Y. %anal ln • Atty. • — dEP 1...... 4IP 41111 'Ma, 114#41r NO il. •i• .0 .el• -=JF ilb uP -OP IN in- .1M.
, •
• t ran, • •
101051 Cdpiel F
PIP I MIN' -
4
4 NM*. .6.
• V
• • lb
gb- •11. •••••■ INIMININICPMISMNIP Ilk mh • it Ai
PIMIPT" WV" far. if
•
'NM
414
4-45, r 41. ' IP
4414 4 op
•Or d•NI oft mlls ma"
411111.111 Nit
#8 APPLICATION WORD • MOADC ►STING •
Lediptirs atm ip.saiargimimp•mitiplhiwo dr* • • uro ei•41. • •
'LP
dek JD. WA" a AI va MIS ser-m&-m&-&-a. a lb I. eh& iripeww&deil t• fill emPholoare-ie 441,4
for
hArbirwa1 of ite•no•
rac;n;dr APIMID 17uw14L615 re: torrmminivt4T cogio r•ft t matter Arr:DeD 14.49 rib: C4ortiribrAPIal nattPr
1,1(rAl'is Doti
62i122
Mature Date
Gitaalk lq•Li.qutit
1.011 10111: er IMP 1111P
•0„
uinlanidric; & W rforAIYAMIEPS. MC.
Atty Wilkinson, Cr2run vasrinDr AXIDIM &a-l1 •p fitancial, i pro/reaping
ip • e. 11.2-71
GIP OM MID Oa 1.111 Ia. ". MN VW
511%0 0411 9
97-71 foe $2 00
g10 1 71 • Paid• 17 171• 11.5123402
v. ft 11011111111111111.0111 eh
gm Mop 4/Nto 4.1 Mir MN IMP' AM W. lab
APPLICATION RECORD • samocAninsc Gll
Lint
roes SC 121
119 Ave. $IMS
111
About the History Cards …
History Cards were first used by the Department of Commerce to keep track of applications filed by,
and changes to, the earliest AM broadcast stations in the early 1920s. The records were
subsequently transferred to the Federal Radio Commission in 1927, and after that to the Federal
Communications Commission when that agency was created in 1934. These cards gradually grew
into a large card file. History Cards remained in use until the creation of the first computerized
database in 1980 to track broadcast applications, the Broadcast Application Processing System
(BAPS). However, the Commission did not transfer the data from the History Cards to the new
system. Instead, it retained the History Cards in their original form – 3” by 5 “ filing cards – for
reference.
1n 1999, the Commission moved to a new location (445 12th Street SW), and also at that time
created the successor database to BAPS, the Consolidated DataBase System (CDBS). The History
Cards were transferred to microfiche by a contractor (only one set is known to exist), and the
original paper cards were destroyed. The History Cards were stored on the microfiche as negative
images, like those you see above. Generally, they have been left as negatives as those are often
easier to read.
History Cards contain very brief entries and notes about station facilities, applications, and
ownership. They are not, and never were intended to be, a comprehensive record of a station’s
operations. Nevertheless, they can be useful to help determine, for example, when a station first
went on the air and its call letters at that time. History Card comments were generally typed onto
the cards, and thus some records will show more faintly or with more smudging than others,
depending on the quality of typewriter and ribbon then used. Occasional handwritten comments,
corrections, and strikeouts may also be found. Cards may be incomplete, missing, or occasionally
out of sequence.
The History Cards are presented here as they were copied to microfiche, to preserve this record for
public use, and with the hope that they will be of value to future researchers of radio station history.
Recommended