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3.
THE
WINDS OF
CHANGE /
1913-1914, the winds of war were not only ruffling
in Europe, but also in America.
The Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914 was enacted in
the United States to remedy deficiencies in
antitrust law created under the Sherman Antitrust
Act of 1890. So . . . the "Kingsbury Commitment,"
was confirmed by the U.S. Department of Justice to
permit the growth of AT&T -- "One Policy, One
System Universal Service" theme.
The signs of the times allowed AT&T to buy-out
local telephone companies in the U.S. -- and were
the years the Stubblefield Family Trust, opted-out
to sell the Trust's NBS Industrial School and the
85-acre Teleph-on-delgreen campus.
The Agencies that took control of the Radio-wave
industry included: The U.S. Navy, the Post Office
Department, the Department of Commerce, and then in
1934, Congress created the Federal Communications
Commission, (FCC).
4.
DID
AL GORE INVENT THE
INTERNET?
In 1996, sixty-two years after Congress created the
Federal Communications Commission, (FCC) in 1934,
Congress created the Telecommunications Act of
1996, which successfully rewrote the Act of
1934.
"In a way, when Vice-president, Al Gore was
bragging that it was he who invented the Internet,
he was right on; said MacFarlane, "he made it
happen." The bill rewrote all of the prior Acts of
Congress dating from 1910 to 1934, including the
"Kingsbury
It was in 1898, that the 38-year-old, Nathan, his
wife, Ada Mae and Clarissa Jones-Stubblefield, his
step-mother, established the NBS Industrial School
campus at Murray to train telephone related
installers. The "Teléph-on-délgreen,"
campus was established in 1907 to advance his
Troy is the co-founder of several NBS related
campuses; Vine Street Video Center, The Rosemont
FiWi Internet Center, and the WNBS- LookRadio
campus, located in Hollywood, Pasadena, and Murray,
Kentucky. (Troy is the son of Oliver Ray Jack
Stubblefield, and Priscilla Alden
Stubblefield).
4.
How Will The FCC Selltle the Regulatory
Problem?
When the $27-Billion Dollar amount collected
finally became part of a public record, the NBS
Family Trust filed its claim with the FCC. For the
record, - CLICK
FOR MORE STORY - Read the NBS100 Regulatory Seizure
Study and the FCC/Portz
Story.
As for 1931, "that's the year when Clerk Maxwell's
Ether theory was bleached by the Radio industry and
hi-tech publications," said MacFarlane in his
NBS100, "white paper." November 13, 1931, marked
the one-hundredth anniversary of Clerk Maxwell's
birth, and the date the scientific world, "dug the
grave for Maxwell's theory of ether waves."
5.
NBS100 Review WiFi / Land-lines
To Send A
Voice, said Stubblefield, in 1902,
More
About Stubblefield's Patents, and some of his
wireless telephone associates, including, Gen.
Squire
and
A. Frederick Collins.
NBS100
TeleComunication Study - Regulatory Frequency
Seizure
Radio
Patent Information & Public
Demonstrations
----Prove
to yourself that Nathan B. Stubblefield invented
the Wireless Radio Telephone that made it possible
to broadcast and receive voice and music without
wires from your Home, Automoble, Ships and from
Trains. His "Smart Telephone" had the ability to
connect to AT&T's land line telephone system,
-- just as todays Cell Phones and Smart
PDAs,
(Personal Digital Assistant). See the
Surf
Radio / Kmozart MPEG-4 Demonstrations - August
2002.
----
Please note
the horse carrage and telephone poles in the Patent
drawing. At the time, there were no automobles.
(Click
Here or On Image To Get free copies of
Stubblefields' 1908 Wireless Telephone Patent from
the U.S.
Patent Office)
More
Articles Converging
News AUGUST 2007 / TeleCom BuyOuts, Spinoffs and
Asset Seizure Boom
Respectfully
Submitted
Josie
Cory
Publisher/Editor
TVI Magazine
TVI
Magazine, tviNews.net, YES90, Your Easy Search,
Associated Press, Reuters, BBC, LA Times, NY Times,
VRA's D-Diaries, Industry Press Releases, They Said
It and SmartSearch were used in compiling and
ascertaining this Yes90 news
report.
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