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Post by Steve on Feb 14, 2012 10:55:27 GMT -6
Houston was dead already years ago. Suspicious causes surrounding a death seem to occur often in this profile too. It must have been something other than the horrendous drug addiction...ignoring somehow the huge elephant in the room. GMAB! The drugs make the subject paranoid too. Either this or they want to deflect partly the tainted image from the drug addiction. Micheal Jackson was addicted to a number of drugs as well. Now they are trying to deflect much of that on the MD who was foolish enough legally to be involved with that patient. But MDs are sworn to help and do no harm. Society seems to have this twisted reality with many such 'celebrities'. Like I said, they were dead already.
Steve
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Post by skywalker on Feb 15, 2012 21:15:18 GMT -6
I think it is very appropriate that they call celebrities "stars" since that is pretty much the pattern that a lot of them follow. They start out young with just a very dim glow then gradually gets bigger and brighter until they finally get so bright they go supernova and explode, after which they turn into a black hole that destroys everything they once were. Some burn out sooner than others...maybe because they are brighter than the rest.
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Post by bewildered on Feb 17, 2012 6:27:53 GMT -6
I think it is very appropriate that they call celebrities "stars" since that is pretty much the pattern that a lot of them follow. They start out young with just a very dim glow then gradually gets bigger and brighter until they finally get so bright they go supernova and explode, after which they turn into a black hole that destroys everything they once were. Some burn out sooner than others...maybe because they are brighter than the rest. My take on it: movie studios, record companies, entertainment magazines, etc., want you to think they're brighter than everyone else, because that helps to sell movies, albums, magazines, etc. Celebrities are a product like most everything else in our society. The cult of personality adopts them as deities, and helps them to appear to be something they are not. Do all celebrities willingly submit to that? No, of course not. Many can't handle it, either. They are, after all, merely human beings. Everything they do - good, bad, or indifferent - makes someone, somewhere, a great deal of money. I'm not surprised when I hear of one imploding.
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Post by skywalker on Feb 17, 2012 22:18:38 GMT -6
I know what you mean, BW. I have known a few celebrities in their natural environment away from the lights and cameras and it always amazes me how normal they are. They are just people like you and me but they have this larger than life image that makes them appear...well, larger than life. It's all image though. I suppose the problems occur when they start beleiving all of the hype and try to live up to what everybody thinks they are instead of who they really are.
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Post by auntym on Jun 14, 2012 13:16:24 GMT -6
UFOTV Presents : Ray Bradbury the Last Word - (1920 - 2012) RIP
Published on Jun 13, 2012 by UFOTVstudios
In a career spanning more than seventy years, Bradbury was one of the most celebrated writers of our time, as well as a Pulitzer Prize Winner, an Emmy Award Winner and was nominated for an Academy Award . His groundbreaking works include Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, The Illustrated Man, Dandelion Wine, and Something Wicked This Way Comes. He wrote the screen play for John Huston's classic film adaptation of Moby Dick, and was nominated for an Academy Award. He adapted sixty-five of his stories for television's The Ray Bradbury Theater, and won an Emmy for his teleplay of The Halloween Tree.
Ray Bradbury is recipient of the 2000 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, the 2004 National Medal of Arts, and the 2007 Pulitzer Prize Special Citation, died on June 5, 2012, at the age of 91.
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Post by auntym on Jul 23, 2012 16:42:31 GMT -6
www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/23/sally-ride-dead-dies_n_1696459.html?1343080404&icid=maing-grid7 Sally Ride Dead: First American Woman In Space Dies At 61[/color] The Huffington Post By Timothy Stenovec 07/23/2012 Sally Ride, the first American woman to travel into space, died Monday at the age of 61, the Associated Press reported. The cause of death was pancreatic cancer, according to a statement posted on the website of Sally Ride Science, a science education company she founded in 2001. She had been battling the disease for 17 months. SALLY RIDE On June 18, 1983, Ride became the first American woman to fly in space when she blasted off on the Challenger as part of the STS-7 crew, according to NASA. She flew her second shuttle mission on October 5, 1984, again aboard the Challenger. That mission, STS-41G, was the first shuttle crew to include two women. After she retired from NASA in 1987, Ride became a member of the faculty of the University of California, San Diego and the California Space Institute, according to a statement posted to Sally Ride Science. According to its website, Sally Ride Science is "dedicated to supporting girls’ and boys’ interests in science, math and technology." Ride is survived by her partner Tam O’Shaughnessy, as well as her mother, sister, niece and nephew. MORE READING: www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/23/sally-ride-dead-dies_n_1696459.html?1343080404&icid=maing-grid7
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Post by skywalker on Jul 23, 2012 20:51:26 GMT -6
That kind of bites. 61 isn't old at all. At least she got to go into space though. I guess when somebody lives like that it doesn't really matter how long they live but how much they do in the time they have.
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Post by auntym on Jul 24, 2012 12:10:55 GMT -6
www.ufodigest.com/node/3998 Good-bye, Sally Ride, May the Wind Be at Your Back![/color] By Diane Tessman Sally Ride is a hero of mine and of women everywhere who want to boldly go where no ONE (not “no man”), has gone before! I dare say, many men also view her as “hero.” Before Sally Ride, American astronauts were an old boys club – then came Sally Ride. She continued to work for the progress of humankind in space and on Earth after her retirement in a number of exciting, innovative ventures. Sally battled pancreatic cancer for 17 months, she was only 61 when she died. Her family says she was ready to travel on, she considered her work here, done. Still, she died too soon! Sally was of Norwegian ancestry, born in Encino, California. At Stanford University, she received her bachelor’s degree in English and physics, then her master’s degree and a Ph.D. in physics while doing research in astrophysics and free electron laser physics. Sally Ride joined NASA in 1978 after answering an advertisement in a newspaper to which 8,000 people responded. Prior to her first space flight, she was asked during a press conference "Do you weep when things go wrong on the job?” On June 18, 1983, she became the first American woman in space as a crew member on Space Shuttle Challenger; she was preceded by two Soviets, Valentina Tereshkova in 1963, and Svetlana Savitskaya in 1982. Above photo: The Crew of Ill-fated Challenger Ride was the first woman to use the robot arm in space and the first to use the arm to retrieve a satellite. Her second space flight was in 1984, also onboard Challenger. She spent a total of more than 343 hours in space. Ride had completed eight months of training for her third flight when the Space Shuttle Challenger explosion occurred. Her friend Christa McCauliffe died aboard the Challenger. Sally was appointed to the presidential commission investigating the accident and headed its subcommittee on operations. Following the investigation, Ride was assigned to NASA headquarters where she led NASA's first strategic planning effort and authored a report entitled “Leadership and America’s Future in Space.” She also founded America’s Office of Space Exploration. In 1987, Ride left NASA and took a position at Stanford University Center for International Security and Arms Control; she also became a physics professor. In 2003, she was asked to serve on the Challenger Accident Investigation Board. According to Roger Boisjoly, the engineer who warned of the technical problems that led to the Challenger accident, Sally Ride was the only public figure to show support for him when he went public with his pre-disaster warnings, after the entire workforce of Morton-Thiokol shunned him. Sally Ride hugged him publicly to show her support for his efforts. Ride wrote or co-wrote five books on space aimed at children, with the goal of encouraging children to study science. She believed that humankind’s future has to lead into space. CONTINUE READING: www.ufodigest.com/node/3998
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Post by Deleted on Jul 24, 2012 16:17:49 GMT -6
R.I.P Sherman Hemsley(AKA George Jefferson) He passed away today at his home in El Paso, Texas at the age of 74.
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Post by skywalker on Jul 24, 2012 16:53:56 GMT -6
I didn't know George Jefferson lived in El Paso. That's kind of cool that he was a fellow Texan. I used to watch the Jeffersons quite a bit, not because I really wanted to but because it was on and there was nothing else to do, but it wasn't a bad show. It was one of the early TV shows in the 70s that centered around black characters in an effort to use entertainment to promote civil rights and racial equality. It wasn't easy living for black folks and actors way back then. This show helped pave the way for them. I guess Sherman is finally getting to do what the show's theme song said: "We're moving on up...to that deluxe apartment in the sky..."
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Post by Deleted on Jul 24, 2012 19:11:02 GMT -6
It seems like it wasn't that long ago that Sally Ride took the shuttle trip into space and the t.v. show the Jefferson's aired on primetime. Time fly's and life seems so short,,,,,,,,
In the last 2 years Ive lost several family members and some very close friends, 2 of them I'd known for well over 20 years who just recently passed. There's only one other best friend that Ive known that long who is still here,,,he is like a brother to me. I think I'll give him a call.
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Post by skywalker on Jul 24, 2012 21:08:12 GMT -6
Go for it, dude. Life is way too short to forget about your friends.
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Post by Deleted on Jul 24, 2012 23:26:05 GMT -6
I agree with sky. I was thinking about posting essentially the same thing but I got distracted and didn't do it... now it's too late...
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Post by Deleted on Jul 25, 2012 8:04:29 GMT -6
He must've been thinking the same thing because I didn't call him last night .He showed up for coffee early this morning which is kind of unusual and coincidental. We both had a good long talk about how we've raised our kids through the years and how life is so short. Now it's our kids turn to face this tough world raising their kids,,,and tough it is !
A true life long friend is hard to find these days,,,
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Post by Deleted on Jul 26, 2012 2:16:06 GMT -6
He must've been thinking the same thing because I didn't call him last night .He showed up for coffee early this morning which is kind of unusual and coincidental. We both had a good long talk about how we've raised our kids through the years and how life is so short. Now it's our kids turn to face this tough world raising their kids,,,and tough it is ! A true life long friend is hard to find these days,,, Mental telepathy Cliff. ~huggggz~
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Post by Deleted on Jul 26, 2012 4:27:11 GMT -6
He must've been thinking the same thing because I didn't call him last night .He showed up for coffee early this morning which is kind of unusual and coincidental. We both had a good long talk about how we've raised our kids through the years and how life is so short. Now it's our kids turn to face this tough world raising their kids,,,and tough it is ! A true life long friend is hard to find these days,,, Mental telepathy Cliff. ~huggggz~ ~Hugz~ Speaking of mental telepathy,,,, ;D One night we were on a back road that he wasn't familiar with and he was driving. The road took a sharp 90* turn to the right but for some reason he went straight and didn't see the curve He looked at me while I was looking at him while we were airborne ,,,,,we both were thinking ( We could read each others mind at this point and time had literally stopped ),,,this is it,,,. We landed on a gravel road that just happened to luckily continue through and skidded to a stop. ;D ;D ;D
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Post by Deleted on Jul 26, 2012 14:51:29 GMT -6
Wow... Yea that does happen in moments of crisis... a similar thing happened to me when I was on the school bus in high school and its brakes caught on fire... I found myself staring across the aisle at a friend of mine and he was staring at me we were both like this: Time literally stopped when our eyes met... it was creepy!!
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Post by auntym on Aug 25, 2012 13:34:30 GMT -6
www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/25/neil-armstrong-dead-age-82_n_1830343.html Neil Armstrong Dead At Age 82: Report[/color] Posted: 08/25/2012 ..... Neil Armstrong Dead Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon and a pioneering astronaut, has died according to sources. Neil Armstrong, Commander of the space ship Apollo 11, speaking to a technician during a suiting at the Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida, shortly before he set off for the Moon with fellow astronauts Michael Collins and Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images) According to NBC News, Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon, has died at age 82. He reportedly died at 2:45p.m. on Saturday, suffering complications following his recent cardiac bypass surgery. This is a breaking news story. More to follow... CLICK TO SEE PICTURES: www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/25/neil-armstrong-dead-age-82_n_1830343.html
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Post by auntym on Aug 25, 2012 14:17:25 GMT -6
hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_OBIT_NEIL_ARMSTRONG?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2012-08-25-15-37-51Aug 25, 4:02 PM EDT Neil Armstrong, 1st man on the moon, dies at 82[/color] By LISA CORNWELL and SETH BORENSTEIN Associated Press AP Photo Armstrong died following complications resulting from cardiovascular procedures, his family said in a statement Saturday. It didn't say where he died. Armstrong commanded the Apollo 11 spacecraft that landed on the moon July 20, 1969, capping the most daring of the 20th century's scientific expeditions. His first words after setting foot on the surface are etched in history books and the memories of those who heard them in a live broadcast. "That's one small step for (a) man, one giant leap for mankind," Armstrong said. CINCINNATI (AP) -- Neil Armstrong was a quiet self-described nerdy engineer who became a global hero when as a steely-nerved pilot he made "one giant leap for mankind" with a small step on to the moon. The modest man who had people on Earth entranced and awed from almost a quarter million miles away has died. He was 82. CONTINUE READING: hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_OBIT_NEIL_ARMSTRONG?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2012-08-25-15-37-51
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Post by skywalker on Aug 25, 2012 15:36:01 GMT -6
Bummer. We just lost another of our heroes.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2012 15:38:46 GMT -6
"That's one small step for man ; One giant leap for mankind"
One giant leap it was and always will be ! Farewell and may you R.I.P. Mr. Armstrong .
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Post by auntym on Aug 27, 2012 14:53:04 GMT -6
(HD Footage) Restored Apollo 11 Moon Landing Video - via PRC media Uploaded by mrmovieman34 on Oct 9, 2010 Digitally remastered footage of the 1969 Apollo 11 moonwalk has been shown publicly for the first time..... some of which was found in Australia.... The video highlights of the three-hour moonwalk include a clearer picture of Neil Armstrong's descent down the stairs of the lunar module, which was taken from the Parkes Radio Observatory and the Honeysuckle Creek tracking station outside Canberra on 21 July 1969 (Australian time). The long-forgotten video footage was uncovered during a decade-long search for the original recordings of the moonwalk, and involved lengthy detective work and clandestine meetings, says astronomer and telescope operator John Sarkissian from the CSIRO at Parkes, who headed up the search..... At the time of the Moon landing, three stations - Goldstone in California, Honeysuckle Creek in Canberra, and Parkes in New South Wales - simultaneously recorded the events onto magnetic data tape. The direct recordings were not of broadcast quality, says John, so they had to set up a regular TV camera pointed at a small black-and-white TV screen in the observatory to obtain higher-quality images that could be relayed to television stations around the world. "Original signals weren't HD quality TV. They weren't even broadcast quality, even by 1969 standards," he says. "They were better than what was broadcast to the world; that's why we went looking for them...". The Goldstone camera settings to convert Neil's descent down the stairs were not correct and showed an image too dark to see. So the decision was made to switch to the Honeysuckle Creek footage, and after eight minutes, to the Parkes footage, which was used for the rest of the moonwalk. It was this clearer footage, which had not been seen since 1969, that John and his search team were hoping to recover from the NASA archives, where the tapes had been sent. Unfortunately, they hit a roadblock. "We discovered, to our horror, that in the 1970s and 80s NASA had taken the tapes in the national archive and erased them all to record other missions." About 250,000 tapes from the Apollo era, likely including the 45 tapes of the moonwalk, are likely lost forever.... After some digging, they found that in the 1980s someone made a VHS tape of the Honeysuckle Creek magnetic tape, "a bootleg copy if you like, that was severely degraded," John says. A copy of that copy was given to an Apollo enthusiast who was tracked down to Sydney by the search team. This footage included a brighter and clearer version of Apollo 11 mission commander Neil Armstrong's descent to the lunar surface and was used to replace the darker Goldstone images at the start of the broadcast. At the awards ceremony, select scenes from the entire restored video will show Neil's first step on the Moon's surface, Buzz Aldrin's decent of the lunar module ladder, the plaque reading and the raising of the US flag..... ... An Australian awards ceremony made history when it publicly screened digitally restored extracts of the Apollo 11 mission to the moon for the first time. Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin, who walked on the moon, attended the Australian Geographic Society Awards in Sydney as guest of honour, and watched highlights of the re-mastered footage shown.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 27, 2012 21:46:44 GMT -6
Fly high Neil Armstrong..you have all the answers now
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Post by plutronus on Aug 31, 2012 13:42:49 GMT -6
Fly high Neil Armstrong..you have all the answers now 'Blue moon' on same day as Neil Armstrong service
Thu, 08/30/2012 - 8:47am
SETH BORENSTEIN, AP
WASHINGTON (AP) -- There's a rare `blue moon' on Friday, a fitting wink to Neil Armstrong by the cosmic calendar.
That's the day of a private service for Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, who died last Saturday in Ohio at age 82.
A blue moon occurs when there's a second full moon in one calendar month. It won't happen again until July 2015. The full moon cycle is 29.5 days so a blue moon is uncommon and has come to mean something rare. The moon actually won't be colored blue.
Harvard University astronomer Avi Loeb said the moon is far more important to lovers, literature and folklore than to science.
Armstrong's family has suggested paying tribute to him by looking at the moon and giving the astronaut a wink.
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Post by skywalker on Aug 31, 2012 16:52:40 GMT -6
It's good that the moon is full. Now the man in the moon will be able to say goodbye to an old friend.
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Post by auntym on Sept 13, 2012 12:04:03 GMT -6
NATION SAYS 'GOODBYE' TO NEIL ARMSTRONG[/color]
Published on Sep 13, 2012 by AssociatedPress
The powerful of Washington, the pioneers of space, and the everyday public crowded into the Washington National Cathedral on Thursday for a public interfaith memorial for Neil Armstrong. (Sept. 13)
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Post by auntym on Oct 18, 2013 10:09:00 GMT -6
www.openminds.tv/biophysicist-and-crop-circle-researcher-w-c-levengood-passes-1971/Biophysicist and crop circle researcher W.C. Levengood passesPosted by: Open Minds October 15, 2013 William C. (“Lefty”) Levengood
March 13, 1925 – September 28, 2013“Lefty” Levengood, a pioneering biophysicist and long-time resident of Grass Lake, Michigan (and the “L” in the original “BLT Research Team”), has died at the age of 88. Educated at the University of Toledo (B.S. in Physics and Mathematics, 1957), Ball State University (M.A. in Bioscience, 1961) and the University of Michigan (M.S. in Biophysics, 1970), Levengood worked as a research physicist at the now-defunct Institute of Science & Technology and the Dept. of Natural Resources at the University of Michigan from 1961 through 1970, after which he was employed as the Director of Biophysical Research and as a consulting scientist for various private-sector companies. Because of his wide-ranging scientific curiosity he maintained a well-equipped laboratory at his home in Grass Lake, where he pursued a variety of interests and obtained multiple patents, several relating to seed germination and vigor and the development of new plant varieties through genetic transduction. He also authored more than 50 peer-reviewed papers published in professional scientific journals, including several in the preeminent journals Nature and Science, as well as in a diverse selection of other professional publications, ranging from The American J. of Physics and the J. of Applied Physics to The J. of Experimental Botany, The J. of Chemical Physics, The J. of Physics and Chemistry of Solids, Bioelectochemistry and Bioenergetics, The J. of Geophysical Research, to The J. of Insect Physiology and many others. In December of 1990, after his wife Glenna had seen a TV crop circle show (which he then subsequently also watched), Levengood contacted Pat Delgado (one of the original British investigators of the phenomenon) and they arranged for Delgado to begin shipping plant samples and controls to “Lefty’s” Michigan laboratory. Almost immediately Levengood began to find multiple anomalies in the plant samples from within the crop circles as compared to the control plants taken at various distances outside the formations (but in the same fields). In these early trial stages of his crop circle research some approaches were non-productive, while others began to build a consistent data set of abnormal changes characteristic of the crop circle plants. By 1992 both John A. Burke, a New York businessman with a strong avocational interest in electromagnetic theory and Nancy Talbott, a New England music festival producer with a research background at Harvard College and the University of Maryland, had both also become aware of the circle phenomenon and Levengood’s involvement and–encouraged by WCL’s early laboratory results and the indication that something highly unusual was taking place in the crop fields of England—an informal research collaboration was formed which became known as the “BLT Research Team.” CONTINUE READING: www.openminds.tv/biophysicist-and-crop-circle-researcher-w-c-levengood-passes-1971/
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Post by swamprat on Oct 18, 2013 10:42:52 GMT -6
DeVoid
At peace in obscurity
By Billy Cox, Herald-Tribune / Thursday, October 17, 2013 So how will the groundbreaking research of biophysicist William Levengood ultimately be regarded? For colleague Nancy Talbot, writing an obituary tribute on the controversial crop-circle investigator who died in September at 88, Levengood will go down as a visionary when science decides to catch up. “His work has laid a foundation upon which future scientific efforts will build,” she wrote, “and he will be remembered by many other people with whom he worked on additional not-yet-understood ‘anomalous’ phenomena.” But Levengood’s passing went largely unnoticed otherwise, with barely a shrug from the UFO crowd. His death now leaves Talbot as the sole survivor of the BLT Research Team, which began making news in the Nineties for documenting truly remarkable biological abnormalities that appear to be percolating inside some crop circles. John Burke, the “B” in the BLT acronym, died in 2010. Today, Talbot carries on from Cambridge, Mass., despite that fact that her resources “have dwindled to almost nothing.” Levengood’s critics actually wrote his obituary a decade or so ago during a heated row over his academic credentials — did he or did he not falsely claim he had a doctorate? But the sideshow couldn’t alter some inconvenient facts, chief among them that dozens of his unrelated botanical research papers had been accepted and published in mainstream peer-reviewed science journals. It’s unlikely Levengood’s CV would’ve incurred any scrutiny at all had he not immersed himself in cereology, a discipline so new, the word is a 21st century addition to the Oxford Dictionary. Undaunted by hoaxers confessing to creating wheat-field patterns with boards and ropes in 1991, and BLT plunged headlong into the wrangle and subjected the grains to systematic inquiry. They would eventually collect affected and controlled samples from 17 countries, from Australia to Scandinavia. And the data they compiled was solid enough for publication in the Journal of Scientific Exploration, and twice in Physiologia Planatrum. Combing through fields with and without the ornate geometric patterns, BLT discovered the targeted areas had been subjected to intense heat, of the electromagnetic variety. Plant-stem joints directly below the seed heads revealed the sort of drastic elongation and bending that could not be induced by mechanical flattening; samples collected at the circle centers tended to be the most egregiously affected. Sometimes the microwave temps were so high, moisture inside the stalks turned to steam which escaped by blowing holes through the nodes. Levengood and Burke managed to replicate this activity in the lab by bombarding plants beneath an “ion avalanche” of energy that generated complex plasmas. Without her knowledge, Talbot tells De Void, they patented the process under the trademarked name Stressguard. “Levengood and Burke both knew that if I found out they were trying to patent it, I would’ve been upset,” she says. “I would’ve given it to the world and made it available to farmers for free.” That’s because, according to the data, seeds from exposed corn, carrots and other vegetables exhibited accelerated growth rates, up to five times faster than normal. The faster growth rates also disrupted pest-infestation cycles, and produced higher yields. Which makes you wonder why Monsanto hasn’t glommed onto this thing. Hmm. Anyway, analysis of surrounding soil augmented the crop-circle data in unanticipated ways. Clay minerals scanned through X-ray diffraction revealed crystalline structures previously undocumented in surface soil. The atomic architecture was more consistent with crystallinity created by centuries of heat and pressure from layers of sedimentary rock, at temperature levels you'd expect to incinerate the plants. “Obviously, I’d love to get more data,” says Talbot. “But XRD costs thousands and thousands of dollars, and that’s just money I don’t have.” Bottom line: These findings have been out there in the refereed literature for well over a decade and, to the best of De Void’s knowlege, they’ve yet to be formally challenged. “Debunkers, of course, have responded negatively, but nobody has refuted the data,” Talbot says. “Mostly what they do is ignore it. It’s never brought up, it’s never discussed.” Well, after all, research is expensive. On the other hand, jeez, you’d think, if we can spend $159 million on a single F-35 jet fighter ... devoid.blogs.heraldtribune.com/14168/at-peace-in-obscurity/
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Post by lois on Oct 18, 2013 20:25:10 GMT -6
My condolences to the Levengood family.. When he first appeared on tv back in the early 90s telling all he had discovered about crop circles got my attention very fast. I have every appearance he did on crop circles on vhs. He told how the wheat seeds were all gone in these circles. I could hardly believe it. I wish I could share all those videos here. They are hard to find on the net. He also showed how the soil was actually melting.
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Post by auntym on Dec 16, 2013 13:59:21 GMT -6
Starchild Skull - UFO Researcher Memorial - Lloyd Pye
Open Minds Production
Published on Dec 11, 2013
The truth is something Lloyd Pye has been searching for his entire life. Born September 7, 1946 in Houma, Louisiana he earned a football scholarship to Tulane University in New Orleans as a Running back and Punter.. He graduated with a B.S. in psychology and from there joined the U.S. Army as a military intelligence specialist.
Pye began writing in 1975, and became a screenwriter in the 1980s. He worked on the TV Series 'Scarecrow and Mrs. King' about a spy and a housewife. In 1995 he transitioned from fiction to non-fiction.
His career as researcher, speaker and author led him to his work with the Star child Skull and since 1999, Lloyd Pye and The Star child Project have studied a 900-year-old human-like skull trying to find answers about it's true origin. That has been his primary focus and in 2011 at the IUFOC he spoke about his about findings.
One of the more frustrating aspects to Pye's work was going up against what he described as the "brainwashing" that goes on in the education system as well as his frustration with breaking beyond the barriers of contemporary science's viewpoints.
On July 21st of this year Pye posted this video on his Facebook page. In the video he spoke about his plans to search for alternative healing practices outside the US. His nephew posted this message on December 9th.
This is Lloyd's nephew. Lloyd Pye passed away at approximately 6:15 PM CT USA. Lloyd was surrounded by family and died in his mother's arms. The family is asking for privacy at this time as we deal with the loss. We will post additional information in the near future. Thank you to all of his friends and fans for your support, prayers and love. He loved you all deeply.
That message was then followed by this one:
We have had requests for a way to send cards and letters to the family. Cards and letters can be sent to Lloyd's family care of Bryan S. Stone, PO Box 1413, Destin, FL 32540.
Lloyd Pye truly had a gift at taking complex information and delivering that information in a way that everyone could understand. His enthusiasm for his work was infectious and it was something he held on too until the very end.
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