WIRELESS.
INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS NEW ZEALAND HONOURED. (BY CABLE—PRESS ASSOCIATION—COriBIOHT.) (EEUTES'S TELJSdBAHS.) PARIS, April 20. The International Radio CongreßS elected Mr Hiram Maxim president and Mr Frank Bell, of New Zealand, a member of the committee. The congress adopted Esperanto as the auxiliary language, in spite of the Scandinavians favouring English. The judicial section of tho congress resolved that the right to intellectual property, recognised by the International Convention of Berne, applies to the wireless diffusion of all intellectual works. Tho congress also approved a series of recommendations by which specific wavo lengths should be assigned to amateurs in different regions, with a view to obviating the confusion caused by similarity in wave lengths. A subcommittee suggested the following wave lengths, -which are slightly different to those already cabled:— Europe, 115 to 95, 75 to 70, and 47 to 43.
Canada, 120 to 115, and 40 to 41.5. United States, 85 to 75 aad 41.5 to 37.3.
The rest of the world, 96 .to 85 and 37.5 to 35.
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Press, Volume LXI, Issue 18363, 22 April 1925, Page 9
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168WIRELESS. Press, Volume LXI, Issue 18363, 22 April 1925, Page 9
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