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Wilmington (Del.) Morning News, Tuesday, April 9, 1957; page 27, column 6 of 8 CALLING DR. KILDARE. BOSTON (AP) -- A $10,000 doctor-radio paging system has been installed at Beth Israel Hospital. Pocket radios are now standard equipment for all physicians serving the hospital. A doctor's code number is beeped to the radio clipped to his pocket. This signal comes from a transmitter installed near the telephone switchboard. [TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: My first experience with pagers was around 1960 or so when I was working at the University of Chicago and they installed a paging system in the hospitals. My first personal pager was a few years after that when Illinois Bell started selling a service called 'Page Boy'. It was just a beeper without voice or text capability. Around 1970 or so I got one of the (then) new 'talking pagers'. On those the caller's voice actually came out through the speaker. Everyone had to dial the same seven digit number if they had touchtone service, and then enter the five digit number of the paging unit. After a 'beep tone' they had ten seconds to record a message which was then relayed over airwaves to the pager a few seconds to a minute later as air traffic permitted. After getting the message you had to press a little button on the unit to squelch it again; otherwise you got to listen to all the other pages which followed yours, along with dead air (what little there was of it). There were only a couple of answering services in Chicago which offered paging services. If your answering service did not offer paging, then they brokered it for you from an answering service which did. I subscribed to Annex Answering Service for a couple of years and they had pagers. Their antenna was on the roof of the Chicago Temple Building, which was also the building where Annex Answering Service was located. There was only one frequency for all voice paging units, and it was quite busy. If you left your unit unsquelched just to listen, there was rarely any dead air except maybe in the middle of the night. The answering service operators would never shut up, and they had to contend for air time with each other and with the general public using touchtone phones to page directly. Rotary dial users called a certain number which went to Rogers Radio Paging and passed their message to operators who repeated it over the air for them. The frequency was so busy that sometimes pages were delayed 5-10 minutes in getting out; even the ones sent directly via touchtone phone in the caller's voice would get backlogged in the machine, which itself contended with the live operators ... and those women were fast at seizing the circuit going across town to Annex's tower on the Chicago Temple Building downtown. To make it worse, the frequency was shared by two mobile phone users who had some type of radio equipment long pre-dating cellular phones. There were just two of them, but they would sometimes makes calls from their car and tie up the frequency for five minutes or so. I gave myself a test page one day and five minutes later it had not come through the unit I was carrying, so I opened the squelch to see what was going on. This guy with his car phone was talking! He gave some sort of signal to the answering service serving him that he was finished. The operator came on, "This is Rogers are you clear?" No he says, I need to make another quick call. He passed that number to her and she dialed it then must have gotten busy and forgotten to supervise the call, since the number turned out to be disconnected and an intercept recording came on. He hung up right away, but the answering service operator forgot all about him and that blasted intercept recording played for five minutes over and over and over .... 'the number you have dialed is not in service please check the number and dial again.' Someone must have called from one of the other answering services and told them to pull the cord down; after endless repeats of the 'not in service' recording all of a sudden it stopped and a woman's voice came over the pager, "This is Rogers are you clear?" and getting no response after asking a second time saying "Rogers is clear, KOH761 the Rogers Telephone Answering Service is clear" ... Of course *instantly* it was seized again and the long backlog of pages pushed through the circuit. All the operators from Annex, General Telephone Answering Service, Illinois Bell and everyone else with pager subscribers started their stuff moving; stuff that had been sitting for 15-20 minutes in the queue waiting. My test page came through about 15 minutes after that. The operators all had a little light on their switchboard which illuminated when the circuit to the tower was in use. They'd sit there staring at that little light; when it went out the one with the fastest response to the keys on her switchboard was the winner and got her page out next. The automated machine for touchtone subscribers was the fastest of all. It always got the circuit first if it had stuff waiting. Some days the system did not work right at all; in theory the person getting the circuit to the tower excluded everyone else in the process; if that did not work the answering services would keep a radio turned on listening for dead air to get their chance; but the operators did not care. Very discourteous at times and overwhelmed with pages, they would walk all over each other's transmissions; some would just open the key and start talking. Individual, or DID numbers for pagers did not start until sometime in the 1980's. Before then it all went through answering services on a single switchboard number at each service, and until the middle or late 1970's to a tower-in-common shared by all and actually owned by Annex, at least here in Chicago. The individual units we carried weighed about five pounds and were about six inches long by two inches or so wide. We used big Ni-Cad batteries that sort of resembled 'C' batteries today. You put the unit in the charger at night and got 10-12 hours of use the next day provided you did not leave the squelch open all the time to snoop on other subscribers and the messages they were getting. PAT]