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An Australian nominated for the Nobel Prize looks at the links with crop circles and sub-atomic particle physics. By Chris
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By Rev. Dr S. D'Montford. The history of Tibetan Buddhism tells a story of oppression and bloodshed comparable with the Chinese occupation and far from the peaceful impression many westerners have of the religion.
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Magazine Volume 2, Number 4
28 Good Morning Blues, the Autobiography of Count Basie, as told to Albert Murray. Sixteen Men Swinging Chapter, Da Capo Press
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Strange tales from on and off our world. This issue: a report on Area 51 microbiologist Dr Dan Burisch's wish to testify on designer viruses, ETs and stargates; and an item from John J. Williams, who found an anomalous electrical-type component in a rock.
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In Chicago, stained glass can feel time-bound, having enjoyed a lengthy vogue in Arts and Crafts, Prairie School and Art Deco buildings from the Great Fire of 1871 through the Great Depression. But Larry Zgoda is an artist of a different color. He has devoted himself to proving that stained glass is a living art, fully adaptable to contemporary architecture. Kevin Nance reports.
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Graham Birdsall interviews Valery Uvarov about a strange installation in Siberia that can destroy errant cosmic bodies; and Adriano Forgione talks with Prof. Alexander Chuvyrov about the mysterious 120-million-year-old stone map he found in the Urals.
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Volume 6, Number 4 - downloadable
Strange tales from around/within/beyond the world. Futurist Gordon-Michael Scallion talks to radio host Art Bell about solar flares due to hit Earth before the Y2K bug, the expected magnetic pole shifts, and the secret purpose of the Great Pyramid in Egypt.
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This edition we feature the Rainbox water generator that extracts water from air, the "Massive Yet Tiny" engine that has a high power-to-weight ratio, and Marcus Reid's crystal units that run on ambient heat or perhaps the energy of the vacuum.
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We report on Monsanto's revoked GM soybean patent, bee colony collapse disorder linked to mobile phone radiation, ocean circulation as a factor in global warming, and the next generation of video games that interact with brain waves.
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This edition, veteran paranormal investigator Brad Steiger recounts the memories and dreams of people convinced they once lived on alien worlds. Reports describe escaping from home planets during war and cataclysm, as well as Earth-seeding missions.
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We reprint a 1931 interview with Dr Sergius P. Grace of Bell Telephone Laboratories in the USA, in which he describes amazing devices to improve hearing, prevent eavesdropping and photograph living cells without the use of stains. Some of these technologies which have not seen the light of day have likely been classified as secret.
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By David Wood and Ian Campbell. New scientific discoveries are unravelling the mystery of our evolution, while the decoding of sacred landscape geometry is giving further clues about civilisations that existed on Earth and Mars in ancient times.
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Strange tales from around/within/beyond the world. This issue, we report on the controversy over the Martian landscape anomalies, and the Vatican's interest in the implications of extraterrestrial contact.
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By Gerry Vassilatos. Dangerous infrasound can be generated by both natural phenomena and the built environment. In the late 1950s and 1960s, French robotics scientist Dr Vladimir Gavreau found a way to detect it, weaponise it and defend against it.
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This issue's "out of this world" news includes Hopi "final days" prophecies compiled by John Hogue, Soviet military reports of underwater aliens and UFOs from George Filer, and the discovery of an ancient Peruvian city as old as Egypt's pyramids.
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Paradigm-expanding items, including speculations on an ancient 3D map found in the Urals, evidence for settlements in ice-age Tibet, and validation of Billy Meier's claim via the Pleiadians that Ecuador's Mt Chimborazo is the world's highest mountain.
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American Quarterly: Volume 12, Number 4, Winter 1960
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Book Details NEW WORLDS. [April] 1949 (volume 2, number 4, i.e. whole number 4). Edited by John Carnell. London: Nova Publications Ltd., [April] 1949 (volume 2, number 4, i.e. whole number 4). Octavo, pictorial wrappers. The fourth issue. Includes a story by A. Bertram Chandler and an article by Arthur C. Clarke. Tymn and Ashley (eds), Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Weird Fiction Magazines, pp. 423-37. 50 mm horizontal closed tear and several associated creases at top right edge of front cover, ...
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Tole World, July/August 2005 Volume 29, Number 4, Issue 195. Published by EGW Publishing Co, Concord, CA, 2005. Bimonthly Edition. Paperback. Size 4to. Condition: Fine. Patterns not removed from center staple. 28 painting projects. Holiday Painting Insert: Gouache; Acrylic; Watercolors. Summer designs for everyone-beginners, intermediate & advanced painters. Tools every painter must have. 90 Pgs. Description text copyright 2009 www.BooksForComfort.com. Item ID 20336.
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Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy - Volume 82, Number 4, December 1989 - American Institute of Homeopathy
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National Geographic | Washington, DC 1966 | | 1st edition | SB | Illus w/diagrams & photos | Good | 7x10 inches, c. 150pp, article length is 16pp | Nice article on the first manned rendezvous in space between Gemini 7 and Gemini 6. Typically excellent National Geographic faire. Beautiful color photos, a very interesting diagram showing the catch up orbit of Gemini 6.
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James, C. H . Springer International, 1967, Mineralium Deposita, Volume 2, Number 4 : . Softbound, previous owners name, very good condition
9163. Editor. The American Mineralogist . Mineralogical Society of America, 1966, Journal, 51 (5-6) : 651-948. Printed wraps, Myron G. Best book stamp, tears to wrap at top and bottom of spine, signs of use and age, text in very good condition. Journal of the Mineralogical Society of America Containing Many Scientific Articles on Various Related Topics. $5.00
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By John Leso. An in-depth article revealing how we are being ripped off, hoaxed, conned, poisoned, and killed by one of the biggest industries now on the planet.
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