Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 54 Part 2.djvu/397

 54STAT.] MULTILATERAL-TELECOMMUNICATION-APR. 8, 1938 PART B. DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF STATIONS (Name of the countryin alphabetical order) Name of the stationtcal order) Name of the Call station signal 1 2 Fre- quencies (wave- lengths) kc (m) 3 Exact geo- graphical location of the trans- mitting antenna! 4 Power in the antenna kw 5 Name and address of the administration or enterprise mak- ing the transmission 6 I Greenwich meridian, in degrees, minutes, and seconds. Frequency List This document is to appear in the following form: I Greenwich meridian, in degrees, minutes, and seconds. I The figure to be shown in column 9 should make it possible to determine the widths of the frequency band occupied by the transmission. This figure shall not be preceded by any sign, when the transmission uses both sidebands. If the trans- mission uses only the carrier and one sideband, this Is to be indicated by placing the sign + before the figure (sideband with higher frequency than the carrier frequency) or - (sideband of lower frequency than the carrier frequency). I The speed in bauds for the International Morse Code is approximately equal to 0.8 times the speed in words per minute. ' Note the definition shown in the first article [Nos. 11, 12, 13, and 14]. APPENDIX 9 Service Symbols [See articles 15 and 21 §4 (3) (a).] X station on board a warship or a war aircraft automatic alarm apparatus A radio direction-finder on board a mobile station station classified among those located in a heavy-traffic region for which traffic on 500 ke (600 m) is limited in accordance with article 21, §4 (3) (a) [No. 486]. Ante, p. 1421. Ante, pp. 1499,1525. Ante, p. 152. 1617 Remarks 7 I I I

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