The Law of Radio CommunicationMcGraw-Hill, 1927 - 206 lappuses |
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1.5. rezultāts no 70.
9. lappuse
... effects . Theoretically , at least , the emanations from a trans- mitting station travel in the form of waves . The distance from crest to crest is called the length of the wave or the wavelength and is measured in meters . There is no ...
... effects . Theoretically , at least , the emanations from a trans- mitting station travel in the form of waves . The distance from crest to crest is called the length of the wave or the wavelength and is measured in meters . There is no ...
12. lappuse
... effect upon the lives and activities of individuals , their business and their interrelations , necessarily brings with it new questions of rights , duties , and liabilities . Communication by radio is no exception to the rule ...
... effect upon the lives and activities of individuals , their business and their interrelations , necessarily brings with it new questions of rights , duties , and liabilities . Communication by radio is no exception to the rule ...
18. lappuse
... effect , without extending it to anything entirely disconnected with or detached from the soil itself.3 As thus qualified , limiting title to that which may be used and occupied , the rules leave the field of abstruse theory and enter ...
... effect , without extending it to anything entirely disconnected with or detached from the soil itself.3 As thus qualified , limiting title to that which may be used and occupied , the rules leave the field of abstruse theory and enter ...
19. lappuse
... effect whatever , certainly no physical entry . The wave cannot be seen , felt , or detected by any of the senses without artificial aid . It is invisible , intangible , and imponderable . To constitute trespass , as distinct from ...
... effect whatever , certainly no physical entry . The wave cannot be seen , felt , or detected by any of the senses without artificial aid . It is invisible , intangible , and imponderable . To constitute trespass , as distinct from ...
20. lappuse
... effect on land and , in most , a resulting injury . To say that harmless penetrating radiation is an entry or a trespass is to extend legal fiction far beyond the bounds of precedent . Leaving out questions of radio interference , which ...
... effect on land and , in most , a resulting injury . To say that harmless penetrating radiation is an entry or a trespass is to extend legal fiction far beyond the bounds of precedent . Leaving out questions of radio interference , which ...
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appeal application broadcasting station cause channels character commerce clause commission common carriers common law communications or signals compensation Conference Congress constitutional convention copyrighted court of equity decision defamation defamatory determine discussion District of Columbia disturbance effect engaged ether exercise existing fact Federal foreign frequency granted instances interference interstate commerce Interstate Commerce Commission jurisdiction legislation liability libel licensing authority limited listener London Convention matter messages munication nuisance operation ownership person plaintiff police power present principles priority prohibition provisions public interest public utility purpose question Radio Act radio communication radio stations Railroad receiving set reception regulation regulatory result rule Secretary of Commerce Section ship situation slander Slander and Libel station license station owner statute Supreme Court Territory thereof tion transmission Tribune Company United vessels wave wavelengths Western Union wire York Cotton Exchange
Populāri fragmenti
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190. lappuse - Upon proclamation by the President that there exists war or a threat of war, or a state of public peril or disaster or other national emergency, or in order to preserve the neutrality of the United States...
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99. lappuse - ... 3. Businesses which though not public at their inception may be fairly said to have risen to be such and have become subject in consequence to some Government regulation. They have come to hold such a peculiar relation to the public that this is superimposed upon them. In the language of the cases, the owner by devoting his business to the public use, in effect grants the public an interest in that use and subjects himself to public regulation to the extent of that interest although the property...