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Grave Sight at
MSU WHAT'S CREMATION? Oliver
A.J. Stubblefield's
marriage to Priscilla
Alden Stubblefield -
1921 CHILDREN OF CAPT.
BILLY AND VICTORIA
BOWMAN: CHILDREN OF CAPT.
BILLY AND CLARISSA
JONES CHILDREN OF NATHAN B.
STUBBLEFIELD AND ADA MAE: CHILDREN OF OLIVER
(RayJack) AND CHILDREN OF JACQUELINE
STUBBLEFIELD AND WAYNE JONES
/ CHILDREN OF NATALIE OLIVE
STUBBLEFIELD AND ROBERT
NERING / CHILDREN OF KEITH
STUBBLEFIELD (TROY CORY) AND
DOROTHY SWAFFORD Alden Keith Stubblfield / DESCENDANTS OF DESCENDANTS OF THE CO-OWNER'S
of the 1907 NATHAN B.
STUBBLEFIELD Wireless Telephone
Patent MEMBERS OF THE "BIG SIX" 01. Senator Conn Linn / DESCENDANTS OF THE STUDENTS OF
THE NATHAN B. STUBBLEFIELD
industrial School and
Tele-phon-del-green 1885 -
The
Stubblefield Coal-Oil-Lamp Lighter, Patent
No. 329,864, dated November 3,
1885.
Click
to Go To US Patent Office -- then Click
Full Text to refresh
page.
This
was the first of four patents filed by the
25 year old, Nathan B. Stubblefield of
Murray, Kentucky. 1888 -
The
Stubblefield Mechanical Telephone Patent
No. 378,183, February 21,
1888.
Click to Go To US Patent Office --
then Click Full Text to refresh page.
Nathan B. Stubblefield and Samual
Holcome patents their mechanical
"vibrating" telephone system. The first
permanent mechanical telephone
installation was in Murray, Kentucky to
demonstrate and sell franchised telephone
rights or territorial deeds around the
United States. NATHAN
B. STUBBLEFIELD -- (1860-1928) Fifteen
years later, Rainey, now a judge -----But
So
What!
- MORE Part
03 /
Shortly
after receiving his earth electrolytic So
he contacted Tesla, Squire and
Collins, The
problem with Radio, -----So
What Happened? It
Was the Squier Patent give-away, With
the Why Not's! A
few weeks later, it was at Judge
Rainey's A
few days later, 10 months before "the
improvement over my own The supplements to
his finalized amended patent, Using
their 1902 Kentucky, The
government was totally convinced, The government was
totally convinced, Patent
was allowed to "Big Six" on October 17,
1907 -----By
October 17, 1907, the patent was allowed.
June and July had been hard working months
for the "big six". Along with a
prospectus, signed by Nathan, explaining
"why shouldn't everyone have a mobile
phone in their vehicle or vessel to
telephone home," helped prove Nathan had a
Kentucky team of bankers, lobbyist,
businessmen and legislators who were
ready, able, and willing to go full steam
ahead in backing the monopolistic wireless
venture. More
Articles Converging
News 162006 / TeleCom BuyOuts, Spinoffs
and Asset Seizure Boom
STUBBLEFIELD
FAMILY UPDATES General
George Squier -----Under
the guidance of his close friend and
fellow co-inventor, General
George Squier, the U.S. Army Signal
Corps, was the first to buy into
Nathan's patent to test the uses of
wireless during wartime conditions. Get
the Facts from "Disappointments Are Great"
-- The Smart-Daaf Boys. Bibliography Respectfully
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KEITH
- TROY CORY - STUBBLEFIELD
/
and JOSIE
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/
02. B. F. Schroeder /
03. R. Downs /
04. J. D. Roulett /
05. Geo. c. McLarin /
06. John P. McElrath /
and
Samuel E. Bynum /
Rainey
T. Wells /
FAMILY HISTORY
1898 0508 - Wireless
Telephone Transmission Coil Patent -
United
States Patent No. 600,457, Granted May 8,
1898.
Click to Go To US Patent Office -- then
Click Full Text to refresh page.
PATENT
WAS ISSUED TO STUBBLEFIELD FOR the
ELECTROLYTIC COIL. The Patent was referred
to as the: Electrolitic Water Battery, the
Electrolitic Oscilating Coil, the
Induction Coil, Earth Battery, Undamped
Transmitting Coils, The Stubblefield's
Electrolytic Detector.
1908
0512 - PATENT:
Stubblefield
Received His Vehicular, Ship to Shore All
Purpose - Wireless Telephone Patent,
Number
887,357
Click
to Go To US Patent Office -- then Click
Full Text to
refresh
page.
Wireless Telephony -- AM radio Firewire
-
1892 -- 1902 All-in-One Radio Patent --
1908
Nine
Years Before Smart-Daaf Boys Marconi and
Deforest
mastered sending Dit Dahs
around the
family home in Italy, and DeForest
finished his studies at Yale, Nathan
Stubblefield was the patent holder and
owner of his own mechanical telephone,
telephone company and telephone system. By
1892, Nathan's vibrating phone could
transmit voice without wires from grounded
electromagnetic wave energy, then through
the atmosphere to a companion receiver. It
was the 17-year-old Rainey T. Wells (b.
Dec. 25, 1875, d. June 15, 1958) who
attentively heard his first words over a
wireless telephone in 1892, at
Teléph-on-délgreen, now
Murray State University.
in the
Kentucky Calloway Court system, opened his
1907 Christmas Day birthday toast with the
truism that most legal scholars quote on
the first day in law school, to keep a
step or two ahead of the freshman. "De
minimis non curat lex" ("The law does not
concern itself with trifles").
-----By 1898,
Nathan's portable telephone could transmit
voice as far as one mile through the
atmosphere &endash; by means of his newly
patented firewire, "electrolytic coil
aerial" and a special loop antenna
connected to his transmitter.
battery patent, -- United
States Patent No. 600,457, Granted May 8,
1898.
Click
to Go To US Patent Office -- then Click
Full Text to refresh
page.
Nathan commenced selling
franchises to various investors, to help
finance and market his wireless
demonstrations held in Philadelphia, New
York and Washington, D.C., in 1902. He
used the orchards around his
Teléph-on-délgreen
Industrial School, and the lawn
surrounding of the Court house in Murray
to display different uses for his
telephone and wireless system. *(See
Footnote.) * .
-----By
leaving a remote wireless receiver on
overnight, sitting in the barn, the unit
operated as a wireless microphone and
listening surveillance system. The
electricity being emitted from the earth
was an unlimited free flowing
uni-directional stream of electricity,
which never switched off and did not
diminish with the time of day or length of
use. These little coils had the ability to
convert an electric current into
alternating radio-frequency waves when
passing through a field of action created
by the human voice. *(See
Footnote, John Hopi.)
-----These
series of pulses which varied in strength,
(amplitude) &endash; could then be
transmitted through the atmosphere by a
coil aerial placed near the field of
action, to one or more companion wireless
systems. One unit was designed with output
sockets to connect to the local Murray
telephone exchange for wired online
broadcasting. (See
Chapter 05, "The Phony Craze" -- for more
details.)
In
November 1906, when Nathan
turned 46, he was questioned by
people at his birthday celebration
gathering, as to why he hadn't filed for
patents on the wireless telephone right
after his public Washington demonstrations
in 1902. Others in the wireless community
bluntly stated, if he was the rightful
owner of the secret in transmitting
wireless voices, he should get his p's
& q's together and gall the nerve to
file the papers before somebody else
did.
-----Taking
the kick in the shin bones, he took the
dare. Looking at his concerned family
members squarely in the eye, he said with
a stern voice, "Why Not! It's time!" With
those words and keeping within the spirit
of the party, Ada and the kids repeated
the words and commenced singing "Happy
Birthday", and the theme song of
Teléph-on-délgreen.
and each member of the "big
six" to make it an all-inclusive
significant Kentucky business venture.
*(See
Footnote, "Theme Song".) The radio
voice demonstrations made by Stubblefield,
were made 14 years before Alexanderson and
Fessenden's, 1906, Christmas Eve radio
demonstration. Stubblefield used his
electrolytic transmitting and detector
devices, (his firewire exciters) to guide
and relay &endash; his radio signal, just
as Fessenden did with his own "exciters"
&endash; and AT&T did in 1915 with
Maj. Gen. Squier and Nathan's co-ventured
multiplex, side band wired wireless system
with 29 relay stations.
-----To
change the frequency and distance of the
signal from an electrical "sinkhole" to an
electromagnetic transmitting source, the
ground's electrical potential, had to be
manipulated. Nathan buried his "exciter"
to route his pure atmospheric wave
transmissions around and through walls and
concrete buildings.
Ben W.
Stearns said it best in his book,
"Arthur Collins, Radio Wizard".
"Radio is a science of utilizing various
types of electromagnetic waves to transmit
signals which travel at the speed of
light. How well this is done depends upon
the knowledge, techniques and equipment
used to generate and receive signals The
design of the equipment is the most
important factors of all."
-----Today,
any telephone company or radio engineer
knows how to use routers to guide the
signals from any modern-day wireless
Internet modem, AM transmitter, Wi-Fi hot
spot or a low powered station located on
any local University campus, airport
facility or in the home. *(See Footnote.)
The Road to the Wireless Wi-Fi World *
.
it was not as is sometimes
suggested, an asset and birthright of the
telephone and telegraph company enclave.
The wireless radio telephone and telegraph
arrived a little too late to become part
of telephone poles and wires monopolized
by government post offices and
AT&T.
-----So, in
1907, the U.S. government granted Nathan
B. Stubblefield and the Kentucky group of
entrepreneurs, for 17 years, the exclusive
right to the wireless telephone name and
his wireless telephone system, that would
hook into every existing telephone line in
the world. See
Stubblefield's
All Purpose - Wireless Telephone Patent,
Number
887,357
Click
to Go To US Patent Office -- then Click
Full Text to
refresh
page.
-----"In the
meantime, during the same year", said Troy
in conversation with Melvin Belli, "to
skirt around an ongoing legal action in
1907, the term 'wireless telephone' was
changed to 'radio' by the stroke of a pen
by the lawyer of DeForest."
-----In
short, under the guidance of the U.S.
Signal Corps, General Squier, convinced
the U.S. Government that by giving support
to the more effective Stubblefield /
U.S.A. low powered telephone voice
wireless transmission system, would give
America a head start in the new voice
atmospheric radio transmission technology.
Whereas, the spark generated Dit Dah
transmissions were left to the Germans and
the Italians. "It would take a war" -- to
get it from Germany and Marconi, said
General Squier. *(See Footnote.) Squier *
.
Many scholars
thought the granting
of Stubblefield's 1908 "All in
One" patent was unfair to the Marconi
theorist!
and the NEW
1912 Frequency Laws, four years later,
that officially separated Wireless
Telephony and Radio into two separate
radio wave sciences. Low Powered
Continuous Wave vs. High Power Undampened
Spark Transmissions. Free Radio
Transmission to receivers with tuner
controls vs Radio transmission to
Telephone Exchanges for program routing to
copper wire telephone pole
connections.
-----By
law, in America, hi-frequency radio
broadcasting spectrums were not sold to
telephone companies until 1999. This was a
complete about-face from what was promised
to Stubblefield and the Kentucky "big six"
in 1906, stated Melvin Belli, in "The
Tortfeasors". "In lost revenue alone,
Kentucky and the "big six" were bleached
out of the wireless picture. In today's
monetary standards, the amount erased by
the government would be in the billions to
the Stubblefield Family, as well as to the
many other Kentuckians, whom invested
money in the American dream of the 1900."
*(See footnote.) Nextel .
and the
Teléph-on-délgreen theme
song still echoing in their ears, all of
the original big six members + two met in
early December, 1906 a few weeks after
Nathan's birthday. After Nathan offered
them equity ownership in the wireless
telephone patent, it took only minutes to
bond Senator Conn Linn, R. Downs, B. F.
Schroader, George C. McLarin, John P.
McElrath, Jeff D. Roulett, [Samuel E.
Bynum], and Judge
Rainey T. Wells. The first filing of
the Idea System of Wireless Telephony
would include all forms of wireless
transmissions to and from all sea going
vessels, trains and horse and buggies.
25th of December birthday
party, mentioned before, when chance
soared in. This is where Rainey led the
group of Masons to become signatory to the
legal pact in an attempt to control
wireless telephoning. He used one of his
famous, authoritatively booming, southern
drawl speeches, to move the laid back
group of men from Murray into action.
-----With
four years of experience behind them in
ridding themselves of Nathan's first group
of fast talking promoters, "was a plus for
Kentucky", said Rainey. "Imagine, just 14
years ago", he continued, "Me!, a young
teenager hearing 'Hello Rainey' on the
telephone . . . way across the orchard,
without wires. I was one of the chosen few
to be blessed to assist Mr. Stubblefield
in those historical moments throughout
1892 . . . a gift from heaven."
Holding the
correspondence from Washington D.C.
patent attorney, E.G. Siggers,
Rainey read, "if your
[Stubblefield's] answers were
satisfactorily complied with, the
government would issue you
[Stubblefield] the Wireless
Telephone patent, that would be designed
to grant him the total control of the
rights to the trademark "wireless
telephone". The expiration date of the
Patent would be 1925. It would include all
forms for wireless transmissions to and
from all moving vehicles, that included
ships, trains, aircraft and anything going
to the office and living room that needed
his aerial.
-----Once
again, the 31-year-old Judge Rainey
assisted in giving hope to the dreams of
Nathan in making Murray a noteworthy place
on the map. Rainey charged up the men from
Murray into a scrappy "big six" team that
was about to take control of the greatest
wireless monopoly in the world. When
finished, they were all ready to take the
Northerners on. Rainey coined the word
"racers" for the group's emergency code
name. With the exception of Rainey's name,
it was agreed each name would appear on
the Wireless Telephone Patent. The
Agreement was signed on January 1, 1907.
(See Page 6 and / Glossary, Page 80, Vol
III.)
Nathan's,
"All-in-One" exclusive patent was allowed,
in October 1906, and issued on,
May 12, 1908, he was requested and advised
by Washington's U.S. Patent office, that
if he could not describe the differences
between his stationary and vehicular
coils, from two existing wireless patents,
his filings for the exclusive rights to
patent the wireless telephone would be
disallowed, making it unnecessary to
travel to Washington D.C. -- for oral
arguments.
-----Accepting
the challenge, the "big six" and Nathan
were on their way to a Murray victory.
Nathan arrived in Washington D.C. on
January 18th, with everything he needed to
win. His steamer trunk included his famous
stiff collar attire, his wireless gear,
and plenty of paper, ink, two ink pens and
a dozen of pen quills. Acting as his own
electric patent attorney, he personally
wrote and reworded all of the amended
findings required.
wireless telephone technology
patent"
was worded to read as; "the
improvement over my own wireless telephone
technology patent", granted in 1898. This
9-year-old patent was to knock out any of
the other similar patent claims relating
to his "earth battery coil" patent, as
well as any other claims that might allege
his transmission coils were an
infringement on any existing aerial or any
other antenna claims.
-----Stage
one completed, the next step was to
prove-up the differences between his
wireless electromagnetic wave, and the
wireless electromagnetic wave of others;
and as to where his electromagnetic energy
came from and where was it going?
-----Hearing
this, the coil and the telephone pole
became the priority and backbone of his
groundless aerial and wireless telephone
system. Nathan was thoroughly convinced by
his Washington and Kentucky advisers, that
by including the telephone company in his
plans for the future of wireless radio
communication, the government would give
Nathan and his wireless associates all of
the things they hoped or wished for in a
patent.
In
1907, the Scientific American had
headlined
that the DeForest team, had
already adopted the name radio for their
wireless telephone/telegraph company.
Knowing this, Nathan wired his "big six"
Kentucky racers to race to Washington
forthwith. They were to take care of
marketing, product promotions and
Washington lobby duties, while he focused
his mind on being an Electric
[Specialist] Lawyer, developing
new heavy current electricity
terminology.
-----Words
such as, small coil aerials, vehicle coils
and aerial coils of greater magnitude had
to be concise and accurate, as he
described the different aerials and aerial
coils similar to his, like the Phelps and
Conly coils. The Edison/Marconi aerial was
to expire in 1908.
-----The new
terminology became Nathan's own obvious
and distinct scientific jargon to describe
his system to the examiners. It was
exactly what they wanted to hear, before
tacitly motivating themselves to approve
his patent.
Nathan
defined Marconi, DeForest and the
others,
as electricity coming from a
basic non-continuous spark wallop, powered
by a non-battery source and too dangerous
to be portable enough to be called a
"wireless telephone". Their Tesla-type
alternator, Nathan explained, was powered
either by a water fall, such as the
Niagara Falls, or by a coal burning steam
engine, like the one used by Marconi in
his 1901 first transatlantic dit-dah
transmission of the letter "S". As for the
Phelps and Conly coils patents, Nathan
stated, "they were the fathers of a
thought." The thought being a patent that
was paragoned to a "now you see it . . .
and now you don't" magic trick. The patent
described something it could not do,
create ground energy electromagnetic
atmospheric transmissions.
-----Nathan
explained that if Marconi, Fessenden or
DeForest or any of his other popular
rivals, attempted to send a generated flow
of electric energy to his patented coils,
an act of God would be needed. Not only
would it be impossible to carry a steam
engine in his horse and buggy, but the
heavy current and high velocity of wallops
created by their spark alternator would
burn out all of the copper wires and coils
that make wireless telephone atmospheric
voice transmission workable to the
listener. *(See Footnote.) Hi-Frequency
Burnouts .
Washington D.C. and Philadelphia
demonstrations as examples,
Nathan's "big six" racer team, produced
the necessary photos from the public
demonstration to prove how portable the
wireless telephone system was, and as to
where his electromagnetic wave and power
supply was emitted from. More photos
showing Nathan demonstrating his wireless
telephone to a prestigious telephone crowd
that included, Frederick Collins,
Westinghouse, Gen. Squier and Nikola
Tesla,, was very dynamic. The wireless
telephone receiver was connected to the
local Bell telephone exchange for local
and world-wide land line broadcasting
actualities. John
Hopi of icehouse.net. *(See Footnote.)
* and * .
-----Photos
taken at Teléph-on-délgreen
Industrial School in Kentucky, picturing
the Stubblefield Family and the "big six"
together, showed the sincerity of the
invention and what it would do for the
economically strapped community. Those
taken at the public demonstrations held in
Washington and New York, featuring the
horse and carriage and ship-to-shore
wireless telephone demonstration, helped
shore-up his wireless house-to-house and
moving vehicles priorities.
that Stubblefield was there
first.
after several weeks reviewing the long
list of the 1902 to 1907, daily news
reports from the Murray Ledger &
Times, the St. Louis Dispatch, Scientific
Journal and Washington Post, that
Stubblefield was there first.
-----There
was no doubt in their minds that
Stubblefield was the winner in all
wireless transmission categories, and his
1902 public demonstrations took place 4
years before the recent Fessenden 1906,
Christmas Eve transmission. The Marconi
transmission that purportedly took place
in December, 1901, two weeks before
Nathan's 1902 wireless voice
demonstrations, was not considered as a
first, for the reason Marconi was the only
one to hear the "S" Dit Dah signal.
-----The
success story of all of the follow-up
marine wireless voice demonstrations by
his corporate partner/developer, Prof.
Frederick Collins for the Erie Railroad in
March 1902, clenched the reasons for
allowing train communication as part of
the patent.
-----The
original 1892, "Hello Rainey" broadcast
rumors began to resurface around
Washington, with promises they could meet
the famous judge, Rainey T. Wells, by
going to Murray.
-----It
provided the "big six" from Kentucky the
opportunity, as witnesses to the fact that
Nathan's earth battery coils had been used
for more than 15 years to power all of
Nathan's practical wireless telephone
transmissions into the atmosphere.
The
First Wireless Telephone Company
to commercially
exploit the invention, was Stubblefield's
own Arizona corporation, the Wireless
Telephone Company of America, established
in 1902, by his first group of investors,
and Author Frederick Collins. He was the
majority stockholder, an officer and
director of the company.
-----Nathan
and the "big six" received stock in the
Collins Corporations in exchange for the
assignment of the Canadian Wireless
Telephone patent. Frederick Collins was to
raise capital to promote, open radio
stations and to manufacture and design
radio/telephone receivers. By 1914, all of
the Collins' companies filed for
bankruptcy protection. Nathan's own
company folded in 1927, one year before
his lonely, tragic death was discovered.
He was found lying on the dirt floor of
his abode, with a cat nipping his
forehead.
At one point in Stubblefield's
life,
educators, businessmen, bankers,
inventors, the United States Army,
AT&T, and political leaders were all
attracted to Nathan in many different
ways. Sometimes he called them, miracles
from heaven, other times rascals from New
York.
The
Nathan B. Stubblefield, Registry
The
Stubblefield Family 1902 to
2006
The
Jackie Stubblefield
Family
The
Oliver Stubblefield
The
Priscilla Stubblefield
-----The
wireless telephone and radio-play music
gained the name Walkie-talkie and Muzak
from Gen. Squier, after World War I. It
was Squier who first gave Nathan the
go-ahead to design a flying machine to
utilize their two way radio for overhead
aerial surveillance. Nathan's son, Bernard
patented the helicopter version of the
flying machine, for sale to the U.S. Army
in 1912. The patent rights were granted
for 7 years.
THE
POINT IS &endash;
what
happened during the radio craze
during the early years of the 1900s,
repeated itself during the height of the
DotCom craze in the last years of the 20th
century and early years of the 21st
century. Silicon Valley in California took
the hit then, and Murray, Kentucky took
the hit in 1911.
-----With the
exception of the last 10 years of
Stubblefield's life, his world was an open
book. There was no way Nathan could hide
the stock scandal and conviction of A.
Frederick Collins, or the Stubblefield
family's destructive law suit against
Nathan right after the Squier patent
give-away and during the Collins
scandal.
-----General
Squier's 1911 patent and radio frequency
give-away to the People of the United
States, not only flipped the wave-length
spectrum away from AT&T's telephone
industry monopoly to the Marconi Dit Dah
radio industry, but flip-flopped on the
patent promises made to the Stubblefield
wireless monopoly in Kentucky. The
government gave the AM/FM hi-frequency
spectrum edge to the Marconi, GE, NBC,
Sarnoff, Alexanderson and Amateur Dit Dah
radio crowd for over 30 years. Nathan
Stubblefield's property settlement with
his wife Ada and his children was
finalized on February 17, 1914. (Suit
filed October 25, 1913). Bernard retained
the flying machine patent and Rainey
gained
Teléph-on-délgreen.
It was Al Gross in 1948,
who broke the wireless telephone radio
frequency barrier by receiving a free wave
length spectrum from the FCC for the
amateur walkie-talkie, citizen band
generation. Vice President, Al Gore's
dream of an information super-highway for
computer-wise kids in 1996, opened the
doors to telephone company frequency
ownership laws. The first auctions were
held by the FCC in 1999. The sales brought
in over $16 billion dollars for the U.S.,
from telephone companies based in the
South. *(See Footnote.) Al Gross * .
Nathan's fellow inventors, A. Frederick
Collins and Nikola Tesla,
whom he got to know fairly well during
his Philadelphia demonstrations and
throughout 1908, were all aware of his
personal ambitions and desires to bring
honor and world-wide recognition to
Murray, Kentucky. It was Tesla who helped
Nathan come up with the name
Teléph-on-délgreen, using
French accents over Telé and
dél to add a little French touch to
the Stubblefield kids'
Teléph-on-délgreen theme
song. Nathan and Ada named their baby boy
William Tesla, in 1905.
In 1992 and 2002, to celebrate the
100th
anniversary of Nathan's tours de
force, nbs100.com demonstrated how a
simple wireless telephone, a wireless
laptop computer or a handheld receiver
placed near the field of voice action,
could have rebroadcast any of Nathan's
early day demonstrations via satellite.
The 1992, demonstration held at WNBS and
at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.,
was headed by Chris Harris, Troy Cory and
rocket engineer, Rick Wood.
The 2002, Surf
Radio / Philadelphia celebration
featured
Pete Allman and the radio staff
of KSurf, and K-Mozart in Beverly Hills.
The interviews included: National Surf
Program Director, Don McCulloch and radio
personalities John Reagan, Mark Morris,
Nick Tyler/ Spencer Kaitz, president of
Broadband Plus, Troy Cory, Frank Keeney
and Josie Cory headed the ship-to-shore
celebrations at the 2002 Western Cable
Show Webcast, and in Munich, Germany, in
2002.
Josie
Cory
Publisher/Editor
TVI
Magazine
TVI
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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.
©1956-2007.
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Tel/Fax: 323 462.1099.
Troy Cory Show - DVDs
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