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Brinkley and 325
* Brinkley Act: Section 325 ( b ) of the Communications Act of 1934 that was written into law in an attempt to halt live broadcasting from radio studios in the United States linked to high-powered " border blaster " transmitters on the Mexican side of the international border, via telephone land lines.
The Brinkley Act is the popular name given to ( originally section 325 ( b ) of the Communications Act of 1934 ).

Brinkley and b
* 2012 – Don Brinkley, American screenwriter, director, and producer ( b. 1921 )
* William C. Brinkley ( b. 1917-d. 1993 ), American writer, reporter and naval officer.

Brinkley and Act
As a result Smith began to pay his own security force to protect him, because although he lived in Del Rio, Texas, because of the Brinkley Act he had to actually broadcast from the station itself in Ciudad Acuña in Mexico.
But in 1932, Congress passed a law outlawing this practice, known as the Brinkley Act.
However, the U. S. has never required a license to listen to broadcast radio or TV ; today, it even issues routine licenses under the Brinkley Act, originally enacted to silence the border-blaster charlatan John R. Brinkley, for the operation of Mexican stations from studio facilities in the U. S.
Although the original purpose of the Brinkley Act was to shut down a broadcaster, such applications are today granted as a matter of course, and a number of U. S. broadcasters are permitted to program Mexican stations from their U. S. studios in communities such as San Diego, California and Brownsville, Texas, where as many as a third of the stations in each market are licensed in Mexico.

Brinkley and 1934
It was first published in the United Kingdom on October 5, 1934 by Herbert Jenkins, London, and in the United States on October 15, 1934 by Little, Brown and Company, Boston, under the title Brinkley Manor.

Brinkley and was
He was a frequent interviewer with Bob Clark on the ABC Sunday news program, Issues and Answers, which began in 1960 but was revamped and renamed in 1981 as This Week with David Brinkley.
I'd look at other girls my age and feel perplexed by their obvious interest in the latest fashion, which boy in class was the cutest, and who looked the most like cover girl Christie Brinkley.
Hank Azaria first based his voice for Wiggum on David Brinkley, but it was too slow and he switched it to an Edward G. Robinson impression.
The lettering in the Lion and Unicorn Pavilion was designed by John Brinkley.
In 1852, a land grant for the construction of rail lines was given to the Little Rock and Memphis Railroad Company, led by Robert Campbell Brinkley as its President.
A Petition Request was granted to incorporate Brinkley on August 6, 1872, at which time the town had 50 qualified voters.
The Texas and St. Louis Railway was built through Brinkley in 1882.
* Brinkley was the birthplace of jazz and early rock & roll great Louis Jordan.
Brinkley is located near the Cache River National Wildlife Refuge, where in February 2004 the ivory-billed woodpecker was purportedly rediscovered after having thought to be extinct for over 60 years.
A new line of the Brinkley and Batesville Railroad charged the Cotton Plant economy when it was completed in 1881.
It was anchored by Chet Huntley in New York City, and David Brinkley in Washington, D. C.
Producer Reuven Frank, who had advocated pairing Huntley and Brinkley for the convention coverage, thought using two anchors on a regular news program " was one of the dumber ideas I had ever heard.
When only Huntley or Brinkley was on the program, that one would merely say " Good night for NBC News ".
Unbeknownst to most viewers, that relationship was fairly limited — Huntley and Brinkley operated from different cities and rarely met in person, except for live coverage of events.
In these years I have often been stopped in public by a cop who was polite who knew I was either Huntley or Brinkley, but weren't sure which and so they have asked, so from now on, when somebody stops me in the street and says, " Aren't you Chet Huntley?
The owner of XER was Dr. John R. Brinkley of Kansas who moved to Del Rio, Texas, where he established a management company called Villa Acuña Broadcasting Company.
James Ledbetter calls this a " stubborn misconception " not supported by any evidence ; likewise a claim by Douglas Brinkley that it was originally " military-industrial-scientific complex ".
The radio station was built by Dr. John R. Brinkley from Kansas.
David McClure Brinkley ( July 10, 1920 – June 11, 2003 ) was an American newscaster for NBC and ABC in a career lasting from 1943 to 1997.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Brinkley was host of the popular Sunday This Week with David Brinkley program and a top commentator on election-night coverage for ABC News.

Brinkley and written
Although Paley devotes a chapter of Natural Theology to astronomy, written by his old friend John Law and the Dublin Astronomer Royal John Brinkley, they did not consider astronomy to provide sound evidence of " designedness.
Three days before the election, the Kansas attorney general ( who had prosecuted Brinkley before the medical board ) announced that the rules surrounding write-in candidates had changed, and that the doctor's name could only be written in one specific way for the vote to count ( as J. R. Brinkley ).
Brinkley has written several textbooks that are used by college and high school U. S. History classes.

Brinkley and into
However, last night the tapes were not run at all during the evening hours and all we got on TV were a few snatches which Douglas Edwards and Huntley and Brinkley could squeeze into their programs.
Historian Alan Brinkley has suggested that the most important domestic achievement of the Great Society may have been its success in translating some of the demands of the civil rights movement into law.
The construction of the rail lines between Little Rock and Memphis brought the City of Brinkley into being.
With the transition to Williams, the show recognized its past in its opening seconds, with small photos of past anchors and sets and the voices of John Cameron Swayze, Huntley, Brinkley, Chancellor, and Brokaw, as well as an orchestral version of the " G-E-C " NBC Chimes, before going into the opening headlines read by Williams.
Brinkley winds up to throw an autographed football into the audience during a USO show in the Eagle Sports Complex at Tuzla Air Base, Bosnia and Herzegovina ( December 22, 1999 ).
" ( Brinkley would go on to even greater infamy through transplanting goat testicles into men's scrotums as a virility treatment.
Newspapers of both countries voiced support for such an alliance ; in the UK, Francis Brinkley of The Times and Edwin Arnold of the Telegraph were the driving force behind such support, while in Japan the pro-alliance mood of politician Okuma Shigenobu stirred the Mainichi and Yomiuri newspapers into pro-alliance advocacy.
John Romulus Brinkley ( later John Richard Brinkley ; July 8, 1885 – May 26, 1942 ) was a controversial American medical doctor who experimented with xenotransplantation of goat glands into humans as a means of curing male impotence in clinics across several states, and an advertising and radio pioneer who began the era of Mexican border blaster radio.
As recounted in the biography that Brinkley had commissioned, he struck upon the idea of transplanting goat testicles into men when a patient came to him to ask if he could fix someone who was " sexually weak ".
He started a direct mail blitz and hired an advertising agent, who helped Brinkley portray his treatments as turning hapless men into " the ram that am with every lamb ".
Brinkley transplanted goat testicles into 34 patients, including a judge, an alderman, a society matron and the chancellor of the University of Chicago Law School, all while the press looked on.
In 1922, Brinkley traveled to Los Angeles at the invitation of Harry Chandler, owner of the Los Angeles Times, who challenged Brinkley to transplant goat testicles into one of his editors.
Brinkley continued living high in Del Rio, until in 1938 a rival doctor began cutting into Brinkley's business by offering similar procedures much more cheaply.
* Dannion Brinkley and Paul Perry, At Peace in the Light: A man who died twice reveals amazing insights into life, death and its mysteries.
In an interview with the London Daily Telegraph, Brinkley stated that Kerry had gone into Cambodian waters three or four times in January and February 1969 on clandestine missions, dropping off U. S. Seals, Green Berets, and CIA operatives.
Brinkley ’ s scholarship has focused mostly on the period of the Great Depression and World War II, although his work has moved into other areas as well.
He was well in control of the fight when in the eleventh round he was hit with a devastating hard body shot and Brinkley crumbled into the corner the referee was forced to stop the fight.
Upon travelling to Vegas, they run into the " girl in the Ferrari " ( Christie Brinkley ) who appeared in the first film, Clark is the only one who sees her, but then notices that she has a child.

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