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FCC Grants MCI Direct Satellite License

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Times Staff and Wire Reports

The government cleared the way for MCI Communications Corp. to beam satellite TV directly into homes, despite protests from rival cable companies concerned that the right could soon belong to a foreign company. The Federal Communications Commission approved a license for MCI to provide nationwide direct broadcast satellite even though the telephone giant has announced plans to merge with London-based British Telecommunications. The license is the last available allowing a provider of DBS service to beam TV programs coast to coast for reception over a pizza-sized dish. The FCC said the license was “entirely separate and distinct” from the decisions it later will make concerning the merger itself. Echostar DBS Corp., DirecTV Inc., cable TV giant Time Warner Inc. and other competitors had objected to the $682.5-million license for MCI because it could lead to foreign ownership of the rights. But the regulatory agency said foreign ownership complications would be considered next year when it decides whether to approve MCI’s proposed merger with British Telecom.

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