PURSUIT Newsletter No. 14, April 1971 - Ivan T. Sanderson

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SCIENCE

~-

,....-;

IS

VOL. 4, NO.2

THE

PURSUIT

OF

THE

UNKNOWN"
APRIL, 1971

SOCIETY FOR THE INVESTIGATION OF THE UNEXPLAINED


Columbia, New Jersey 07832
Telephone: Area Code 201 496-4366
ORGANIZATION
The legal and financial affairs of the Society are managed by a Board of Trustees in accordance with
the laws of the State of New Jersey. These officers are four in number: two Vice-Presidents, a Trea&urer,
and a Secretary.
'
General policy and administrative matters are handled by a Governing Board which consists 9f the four
Trustees, a President elected for 5 years, and five other officers elected annually. These are: ,an Executi ve Secretary, and Assistant Directors for Membership and Regional Affairs, Publicity, Pro~otion, and
Public and Press Relations. The First Vice-President is the Administrative Director, and the Second
Vice-President is in charge of the physical establishment. The Executive Secretary is also the'Librarian.
In addition, there are three standing committees: an Activities Committee, a Library Commit:tee, and a
Publications Committee. The Society is also counselled by a panel of prominent scientists, which is
designated the Scientific Advisory Board.
Ti'te Society is housed on eight acres of land in the Township of Kno.wlton, Warren County, New Jersey.

PARTICIPATION
Participation in the activities of the Society is solicited. All contributions are tax exempt, pursuant
to the United States Internal Revenue Code. Memberships run from the 1st of January to the 3tst of December; but those joining after the 1st of October are granted the final quarter of that year gratis. The
means of participation are various, as follows: (1) Honorary (including Founding Members). . . . .
. . . . (Free for life)
(2) Sponsors ($1000, or more) . . . . . . .
. . . (Free for life)
(3) Contributing ($100; for special privileges) . . .
. . . ($10 p.a. thereaften
(4) Corresponding (including data withdrawal service) . . . . . . . . $10 per annu:m
(5) Contracting (for individual projects). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (By contract)
(6) Reciprocating (for other societies). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (By exchang~)
All of these except No.5 receive PURSUIT and all other Society publications.

II)

YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE A PROFESSIONAL OR EVEN AN AMATEUR SCIENTIST TO JOIN US.

PUBLlCATJONS
The Society publishes a quarterly journal entitled PURSUIT. This is both a diary of current ~vents and
a commentary and critique of reports on these. It also distributes an annual report on Society affairs to
members in categories (I), (2), (3), and (4) above. T-he Society further issues Occasional :Papers on
certain projects, and special reports in limited quantity on the request of Sponsors or contrib~ting Members. (Subscription to PURSUIT, without membership benefits, is $5 per annum, including postage.)

PUBLISHING RECORD
Our publishing schedule is four quarterly issues of PURSUIT, dated January, April, July, and October,
and numbered as annual volumes - Vol. 1 being 1968 and before; Vol. 2, 1969. and so on. These are mailed on the last of the month. third class. If you do not receive your copy within two weeks - in Canada and
the U. S. - please inform us.
It is regretted that the current supply of back issues is so limited, that copies are available only to
libraries. Issues prior to 1968 are not available. However, the cost of photocopies will be ~uPPlied
on
I
request.

IMPORTANT NOTICES
The Society is unable to offer or render any services whatsoever to non-members. Further, the Society
does not hold or express any corporate views, and any opinions expressed by any members in its publications are those of the authors alone. No opinions expressed or statements made by any memb~rs by word
of mouth or in print may be construed as those of the Society.
There have been a number of articles recently on the problem of junk mail and the way in Which one's
name gets on such a mailing list. We should like to assure our members and subscribers that our mailing
list is available only to resident staff at our headquarters.

PURSUIT

Vol. 4. No.2
April. .1971

THE JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR THE


INVESTIGATION OF THE UNEXPLAINED
DEVOTED TO THE INVESTIGATION OF -THINGS
THAT ARE CUSTOMARILY DISCOUNTED

Editorial Director: Ivan T. Sanderson


Managing Editor: Marion L. Fawcett
Associate Editors: Daniel F. Manning
Alice J. Gleason
CONTENTS
The Taxonomy Q.f Knowledge
Editorial
Maw QI Moloch? Another Editorial
Ufology
Seeds from a "Contactee"
Chaos and Confusion
A Splendid Rain of 'Voims'
Into "Thin Air" - and Out Again
Damned Track s
More on Those Mt. Etna Tracks
Just Plain Chaos
Caveat Emptor - in I.!i The "Bermuda Triangle"
Disappearing Plane - Well: Not Quite
Phvsics
Nikola Tesla, by Gaston Burridge
Geology
Why the Rocks Ring
"Fairy Crosses"
Biology
"Nessie" is Alive and Well and Living in
Urquhart Bay, by Jack A. Ullrich
The 'Bigfoot' Hunt - New Style
Anthropology
Archaeologists - and Others - Beware!
Noah's Ark(s), Again
A Stone Age "First"?
~ Retraction, and !!!! Apology, by Ivan T. Sanderson
~ Pursuits
Book Reviews

ill

Memory, .Keith Tavernor

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27
28

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30
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35

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38

if[

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45
46
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48

50
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The Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained 1971

THE TAXONOMY OF

THE

TANGIBLES

KNOWLEDGE

GEOLOGY

VI
Atmospherics and MeteoroIOl";
Oceanolol[y, Hydrology, and Glaciology; Tectonics. VulcanoloilY, Seismology, Geophysics
and Geomorphology; Pe_
trology and Mineralogy;
Geodesy, Geography.
Cartography;
Protogeano logy. Botany. ZOO
Dating.
09Y. Ex .. biolagy; H,stology.
Physiology and Biochemistry;
Anatomy (Inc ludi"; Man); Genefics and Evolution .. Physical Anthropology;
Palaeontology;
Ethology ond
Ecology.

MATTER
Atomics, Molecular
Chemistry, Crystallagral!hy.

APPLIED
KNOWLEDGE

PERFORMANCE
Theoretical Physics, Nucleonics,
Clos,ieal Physics, Electrica,
E I.ctromagne'ics, Magn_tics,

TECHNOLOGY AND
THE USEFUL ARTS

HUMAN
ENTERPRISE
Cultural Anthropology and
Ethnology (Archaeology is a
technique); Pre .. History.
History, and Fol~lore; ,Philology and Linguistics.

MENTAL CONCEPTS
Logic and Epistemology;
Psycho log)'; ethics and Aes ..
thehcs; Comparahve 1"'.lIi98"C"";
Porapsychlcs.
.

Mechanics.

MEASUREMENT
Number, Quontity.
Arithmetic, Algebra.
Geome,ry, Trigonome.,y.

Calculus. Topology. Theory


of Game S Probob iii ty, Coincidence.
I

THE

INTANGIBLES

Eyerything in existence, including 8 ex istence 8 itself. and thus all of our possible concepts and all knowledge
that we possess or will eyer possess, is contained within this wheel. Technologies and the useful arts lie
within the inner circle, haying access to any or all of the ten major departments of organized knowledge.
From the KORAN: -Acqui ..e knowledge. It enables its possessor to know right from wrong; it lights the way to
heayen; it is our friend in the desert, our society in solitude; our companion when friendless; it guides us to
happiness; it sustains us in misery; it is on ornament among friends. and an armour against enemies. e _
The Prophet.

26

27

EDITORIAL

What was probably the most shocking statement made by anybody in authority during this century emanated from Chicago on the 2nd of January of this year and, as reported by the wire services, came out of
the mouth of none other than the retiring President of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, in his departure speech to that most august of all bodies at its annual meeting. So appalling is
this pronouncement that we give it verbatim, so that there can be no possibility of misapprehension or
misinterpretation. It went, believe it or riot, as follows: "Dr.. H. Bentley Glass, the retiring president of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, is one wh~ views science as having discovered all the basic laws. He said in a speech: 'We are
like the explorers of a great continent who have penetrated to its margins in most points of the compass
and have mapped the major mountain chains and rivers~ There are still innumerable details to fill in but
the endless horizon !lQ "longer exists.' " (Emphasis ours)
Words almost fail us, but we will endeavour to interpret the true Significance of this horror for you, who
doubtless never read of it, but who are still sane. :
Not only uneducated buffoons but persons allegedly of higher learning have been making this statement
since the later days of the Ancient Greek civilization. It reached a crescendo about the middle of the 18th
Century when the mechanists sincerely thought that they had discovered everything. About that time,
'thought' in what we now call the Western World split; the so-called scientists going one way, the religionists and other mystics the .other. Then, both parties became paranoiac' in that they became ever more
aggressively pedantic on the one hand and increasingly humble on the other. They clashed repeatedly as with the famous debate between Prof. Huxley and Bishop Ussher - but they always retreated on a raft
of compromise. During this century they have kept strictly apart, bowing towards each other and mouthing
platitudes. Now comes this. :
First off, it is manifest that this Dr. Glass is not a scientist. Second, it looks very much as if the
AAAS has ceased to be a scientific outfit. Third, this shocking outburst may go a long way to explaining
just what is basically wrong with our so-called civilization. The British, who started all this, may indeed
have been a nation of shopkeepers; we who have put the findings of science to work have manifestly become a nation of button-pushers and bottle-washers. Just as manifestly, the very objective and the horizon of science - defined by even Webster as "Possession of knowledge as distinguished from ignorance
and misunderstanding; knowledge obtained through study and practice; systematized knowledge" - has to
an alarming degree been lost, at least in our American so-called scientific community.
Be it known, to ordinary rational people, that this Dr. Glass' form of "science" has made considerable
inroads into an understanding of one aspect of our physical universe, but let us be equally assured that
even technology is still almost half-an-infinity away from reaching the borders of Dr. Glass' 'continent'.
Science has not yet even considered the tangible matters that are the concern of us forteans. And when it
comes to the intangibles, it just has not yet recognized the possibility that they might exist - apart from
some tentative dabblings in the muddy waters of brain control and mind patrol. :
We know nothing of the world of the intangible (commonly and somewhat erroneously called -the
occult") nor of other matters mystical, but this is no excuse for ignoring them scientifically. Thus, half of
reality - at least according to more than half of humanity - has not yet even been approached by this
much vaunted "science". This is bad enough, but when this same self-appointed establishment refuses
even to contemplate, let alone investigate, tangible items that are unexplained, we can but deplore the dry
rot that seems not only to have set in but which has seemingly taken over. The saddest aspect of all is,
however, that the technologists themselves are the first to admit that they have only just nibbled at the
fringes of the possible in .their solid, concrete world of reality. And yet they are the ones that this Dr. :
Glass refers to when he says that all we have left to do is "fill in the sPots". :
If this type of so-called 'science' won't wake up to realityand get out of its little ivory privy, it would
be well advised to transfer to the late Department of HEW, and let the philosophers take over.
So, we know the parameters of everything, indeed! Phui!

Ivan T. Sanderson.

28

MAW OR MOLOCH? ANOTHER EDITORIAL


For some time now we have been carrying on a running correspondence with a number of our (sort 00
founding members, who may perhaps be described as 'professional' forteans. Our objective was to seek
advice on policy. This inter-change has proved most fruitful, and we wish to thank these consultants for
their frankness. Those to whom we refer will know that we are referring to them but, in accordance with
our policy as reiterated below, we do not herewith give their names.
Two major points have emerged from this interchange. The first we quote from a recent letter: "Columbia, N. J. ~.e. SlTU-HQ] is seen as one huge vacuum cleaner, taking a lot in, and not giving too
much out", and it goes on to liken it to a Maw. This is quite true; and, what is more, we might legitimately be accused of being a Moloch, considering the volume of mail and other material we receive. We do not
offer any excuse for this, but we will present a (the) reason.
SITU has a pretty fair, and very fast growing, worldwide membership. These are more or le.ss equally
divided between professional and amateur scientists on the one hand, and 'non-scientists', melU'ling people
in other walks of life, on the other. SITU is pleased not to include any of the Three Ks in its ranks, but
it does assiduously transfer any approaches from them, if frankly stated, to affiliated organizations who
will treat them with respect and consideration, and who will understand what they are talking about. Ours
is what used to be called a "free citizens organization"; and to this end, we have to protect the 'privacy'
of our members. Not only is there today a gross invasion of privacy through the sale of mailing lists; the
vast majority of our members prefer that their names not be advertised. Both scientists and non-scientists
have to think of their reputations and, therefore, it is one of our primary duties to protect their names and
addresses - as is clearly stated in both our flyer and our journal. Thus, we credit information we publish
by membership number only, and the name of that member will not be given to anybody without his or her
written permission. Thus, the greater part of what is given out is not apparent to the membership as a
whole. It goes from member to member, confidentially, so that working scientists and journalists and hobbyists may establish individual contact.
The second pertinent observation made in this correspondence is relative to "credits". This falls under
two heads: (i) information, and (ii) illustrations. As to the first, we cannot credit any person for any
specific information that we publish, unless they submit such material for publication above their own
name. The basic reason for this is that the bulk of our journal is a compendium of all that we know
or have received on each subject, and the writing originates in this editorial office - and from now
on is to be copyrighted, we should add. Full credit is always given for anything quoted from previously published material. As to the matter of illustrations, credit is given only when we can trace the actual
originator; not just the member, or other, who sent us the item.
There is also a third matter that should be explained. Many members seem to be both dismayed and
considerably annoyed that we do not offer lending facilities for our library contents. This we cannot and
will not do, for several reasons. First of all, most of our material is unique and has been donated by members on the understanding that it be preserved. Second, we don't have adequate copying facilities even for
our filed material, let alone whole books. Third, we simply don't have the staff to package material like
books. Fourth, the insurance people refuse to cover any material if we start sending it out. As we advel'tise: all members are welcome to visit our HQ, by prior arrangement, to make use of our research facilities, and, within limits, members can receive precis of material on request, or estimates for copying at
CO:3t. Major research projects can be undertaken only for Contributing Members, again with copyipg at cost.
Thus, let us put on record that anything sent by anybody to us does indeed go into a Maw and is digestedas opposed to going into a Moloch and being incinerated. It is held in trust here for the Soci:ety, which
means each and all of its members. If we could afford a 96-page monthly magazine, we might ~erhaps be
able to put out as much as we take in; but we can't. At the same time, we try to shove out as much as we
call to all true and legitimate fortean organizations, as well as to all working scientists, as can demonstrate to us that they are both true and legitimate. We do this not only by a free interchange of publications but also by a constant flow of correspondence. Also, we have loaned many most valuable files (such
as our original reports on Acambaro to Ron Willis of INFO) on trust, and in the sincere wish that any and
all fortean material may be reviewed and published. We can't do everything ourselves, and we most certainly don't want to attempt Ix> do so. We were set up to be a clearing house, and we offer in our prospectus
to do all we can to aid any others who may apply to us. We believe that this is not only the best but the
only way to build a fortean pyramid without infringing upon anybody else's prerogatives, status, or progress. We were set up to, and aim only, to help. Be it noted also, we are a "non-profit" organization, and
we refuse to indulge in rivalry or chauvinistic secrecy, but we do aim to protect our members' reputations
and 'possessions' in the form of written or other materials.
.
Hans stefan Santesson
President

29

NOTICE
From now on, unless valid contrary reasons for not so doing are brought to light, columns such as that
on Ufology, which are basically of an editorial nature, will be moved up front.

UFOLOGY
In accordance with our expressed policy, we once
again have nothing of -a factual nature to offer in this
department. However. we do have something to say
of - we believe - a practical nature. It is in this
field that we feel we may be of most use to this department of enquiry. And we make so bold as to
suggest that a spot of practicality is sorely needed
herein.
Reports of observations of unexplaineds and in
some cases of inexplicables of a ufological nature
are pouring into amateur. scientific, and official
centers and onto newspaper desks, from allover this
country and from allover the world. However, the
general public is bored unto death with the whole
subject; the newspapers find it unworthwhile; and
officialdom is apparently only too delighted that
matters remain this way. Nonetheless, this does not
mean that those interested in this natural phenomenon
should abandon their efforts to further investigate it.
To this end, we once again ~rge all of you to aid
APRO (The Aerial Phenomena Research Organization)
of 3910 East Kleindale Road, Tucson, Arizona 85716
- phone: (602)-793-1825, in its endeavour to collect
all reports, past. present, and future, for computerization. Never mind how whacky you ma.y personally
think the stories you hear or read in your local newspapers ma.y be; send them in to APRO anyway, and
let them judge. They really are experts and of long
standing; they are not starry-eyed believers, nuts, or
screwballs; they have been in this business too long
now and, backed by a roster of working scientists
and technologists they - probably alone - are in a
position to evaluate such reports. Give them achance.
Why?
Again, as we have said before and repeatedly,
the best and most constructive thing that all of us
can now do is help to assemble this massive overall
compendium of what has been said and reported on
and about this troublesome matter. Unless there
really is some monumental hanky-panky going on, we
still, after half a century, have nothing concrete to
show for or of this whole business - but reports.
This. however, does not mean that said whole thing
is a fake, a phoney, or a gas. The very mass of reports itself is worth proper scientific recording,
analysis, and enquiry; and the best wa.y to do this
is by careful listing on pragmatiC grounds and with
the best modern techniques, so that our thinking
machines (the computers) can have something to work
with. Ma.ybe said machines, if they are truly sensible
and honest. will tell us, when all is said and done,
that the whole thing is nothing but a monumental

slice of baloney. Well, even that would be something;


but we will never know unless we at least try to do
what we can. So, back to our plea.
People interested in.this business (of UFOs) fall
into four classes: - (1) the "Saucerians" who state
that they have found a mystical, out-of-this-world
connotation involved, (2) the sincere buffs who have
been designated "Ufologists", (3) the publicists who
make money out of the business, either deliberately
or unwittingly for mere copy as newsmen, and (4) a
small body of professional scientists who are truly
interested in the matter as a (natural) phenomenon and
who sincerely believe that there is something in all
of it that demands proper scientific investigation.
Only classes (2) and (4) are outright dedicated to an
endeavour such as APRO has set up. The other two
parties are variously disinterested or actually averse
to any such hardboiled approach to the subject. This
is unfortunate as both might contribute a lot to an
ultimate solution; No. 1 by not being shy and by dropping their personal theories and beliefs; No. 3 by
dropping their facetiousness, and dredging up what
they have on file, even if they consider it pure
rubbish.
The really sad aspect of this whole business is,
however, of another nature. This is what I can only
call "back-biting".
There are a lot of very intelligent and well-informed people interested in this matter, and all of them
are personally rather exceptionally charming indi viduals; yet, we are sorry to have to relate, we cannot,
as of this time, name any two who agree on anything
connected with the business! Presumably they are all
roaring individualists, but do they all have to demand
that their ideas are the only valid ones? Scientific
enquiry, like any other, must proceed by argument and
debate, but can not personal dogma be relegated to
its proper place, and open debate be maintained. And
do misunderstandings due to the standard exigencies
of professionalism, as in publishing, have to fractionate the sincere labourers in this field. even if it is
grossly esoteric? Can't at least the publishers of the
magazines, fanzines, and journals devoted to this
business overlook such annoying circumstances,
accept thei~ inevitability, and get on with the job?
Why should anybodY,let alone everybody, be "jealous"
of APRO? Can't we all cooperate?
Let us make it quite clear that we - SITU - are
doing everything that we can to cooperate in this
endeavour of APRO's, and we ask only that all of our
members do likewise, either directly and personally,
or by trying to get other organizations to do so. If

30

only we could get a computerized analysis of all this


mass of material, we might be able to find out what
it is all about; and also how we can further the true
scientific investigation of the problem.

SEEDS FROM A "CONT ACTEE"


A man in California has been giving away. with no
strings attached. seeds which he claims he was given
by "Space People". He states that they are not native
to this planet and that the mature plant. if properly
prepared and ingested. will prolong a person's life to
a thousand years or more. He also claims that the
seeds have "defied identification by Ph.D. botanists".
Well ...
Our member 755 sent us several of these seeds.
asking our opinion. One hopes devoutly that the contactel~ has never actually asked a botanist for an
identification of his "longevity seeds". We are none
of us at HQ practicing botanists. but our immediate
impression was Bur-Marigolds. approximately 75

species of which are found in North America. Our


dogs come in covered with the seeds - commonly
called 'beggar-ticks' - in late summer and fall. A day
later. one of our advisors on botany turned up and we
tossed the seeds to him. Said he. "Oh. that's Bidens
frondosa" - Bur-Marigold (specifically Stick-tight)
in English. Not wishing to leave anything to chance.
we sent two seeds to a specialist recoinmended by
the New York Botanical Gardens. His report: Bidens
frondosa.
While waiting for this report. member 755 got bus:,
on his own and identified his seeds as being those of
a Mexican hybrid with the common name tagetes.
We frankly don't know whether the contactee is an
out and out fraud, whether he was the butt of practical jokers. or whether he did in fact encounter some
"Space People" who chose to make him a gift of
ordinary weed seeds as the best possible ,way of discrediting him and any information he mig~t hand out
about them. In any case. his claims hardly merit
further investigation.

CHAOS AND CONFUSION

A SPLENDID RAIN OF 'VOIMS'


OnE! of old Charlie Fort's favourite items was/were
unauthorized things that were said to have fallen out
of the sky. Among this mess - and. believe thou u~.
it is -- were worms of all manner of sorts, kinds. and
colours. Of course. these when found littering snowfields. were immediately 'explained' by the almighties
as being a form of Nematode that somehow manages
to proliferate in the curious montane ecosystem found
under glaciers and so forth. Fair enough. but .....
That most excellent British publication entitled
the Flying Saucer' Review - what an idiotic name;
but they have been stuck with it for sixteen years is primarily devoted to ufological matters. but it
occasionally launches into other fortean-type realities. Now. it comes thr()ugh with a real "worms from
on high" classic. This appeared on page 16 of their
November/December. 1970 issue (Vol. 16. No.6). in-

IU1

cluded in the body of a most interesting article entitled "Mariannelund Ufo and Occupants", by Anders
Liljegren. This is a careful report on events allegedly witnessed by a solid Swedish citizen: named Mr.
Gideon Johansson. It concerns a classic 'fall'; but.
since it emanates from Sweden. we take the frivolous
liberty of announcing it in the way that we pronounce
Svenska around here. We give the account in toto. as
published in FSR: "On May 1. 1945. Mr. and Mrs. Johansson went to
visit a family living at Lonnebarga. It was a beautiful
day. the sky was cloudless. there was no wind and
it was unusually warm. In the afternoon the two
couples sat out on the balcony to have coffee and
cake. As they sat they 'heard a sound like falling
hail. The surface of the pond was in turmoIl. Suddenly. worms were raining on us out of a clear sky. Two
of them landed in the cream cake. The shower of
worms passed over us and rained down on the other
side of the house and on the wood. The area covered
with worms measured. as far as we could tell. about
100 metres by 300 metres. There was not a square
metre of ground free of worms. There was another
extraordinary thing. Numbers of birds, such as crows.
dived down towards the worms, but as soon as they
got close to them. they turned and flew away. Our
neighbor let his hens out to have a feast. but they
didn't touch a single worm - they refused 'to go near
them. I fetched a bottle, filled it with spirit. and put
two worms into it. Later I showed it to a :teacher of
biology. but he couldn't identify the worms. He told
me to send them to stockholm. and I did so - but I
never had a reply. The worms (see drawings) were

31

deep frozen, transparent and reddish in colour. Along


their length one could see their green intestine. They
were about 12 centimetres long, and were composed
of conical segments, one fitting into the next. The
worms soon thawed out, but they were dead. I visited
the place two weeks later and the worms were still
there - dry carcasses on the ground.' "
That is the sum total of Mr. Johansson's report.
What to make of it? First, let us assume that there
was a rain of "voims" at that time and at that place,
witnessed by the persons there assembled. If one is
prepared to accept this, then one has also to accept
the fact that said things came from somewhere. Did
they just come down out of our sky (and, if so, what
were they doing up there), or did they come from somewhere far beyond said sky (atmosphere), or were they
teleported from some other point on the surface of
this our little planet? If they did appear, as stated,
they must have come from somewhere. So let us proceed.
The origin of these things is by no means the only
mystery in this case. How come they were "deep
frozen", and just what does this term mean in this
case, and who said so? We suspect that they appeared to Mr. Johansson to be "frozen solid", a condition
that would be well known to him from a lifetime of
observation in the cold northern winters of his
country. However, they appeared iJ!. May and apparentlyon a warm sunny day. Then again, why would wild
predatory and domestic animals avoid touching them,
although at first attracted to them presumably by
sight? And this, moreover, after they had thawed out
and lain about long enough to become dessicated. As
a matter of fact this is behaviour that has been reported innumerable times when animals have been
observed approaching 'unauthorized' things or stuff
that has been seen to fall from the sky. Animals do
not seem to be frightened by the actual falling of
these things but rather by some Quality which they
can detect only at short range. Could this be odor,
or might it be some aberration of ionization?
But most curious of all in this case is the form of
these 'voims' - the second reason, incidentally, why
we do not call them worms. The subject of Worms is
complex to the pOint of incomprehensibility to any
but a systematic zoologist, and to many of even those
if they have not gone rather thoroughly into the invertebrate forms of life other than the insects. The
term "worm" is a very general popular one, almost on
a par with the word "machines", encompassing as it
does a v ery wide variety of completely different
creatures having nothing in common but their vermi
form. There are, in fact, vermiform members of 19 of
the 26 great major groups or phyla into which animals
are divided, including even the backboned' animals
or Chordates. Thus, worms range in shape and size
in a bewildering manner. Many of several groups are
ringed or annulated like the common earth and lug

worms. However, there just is no known worm that


looks in any way like this item from Sweden.
On the other hand, it can possibly be matched,
though in rather general terms, with some other things.
For instance, there is a kind of seaweed - a very
dangerous aphrodisiac, one should add - found on
sandy beaches in the Caribbean that is composed of
multitudinous stems just about this size and shaped
just like this. As a matter of fact, the curious step
like arrangement with a central canal is altogether
more in accord with vegetable, as opposed to animal,
construction, and if of a vegetable origin, its dessication would be more understandable. If these things
had not been said to have been deep-frozen, we would
have suggested that they were a part of the inflorescence of some local tree or shrub. They still might
be, if they were shed during the passage of a powerful twisting updraft that carried them up to an altitude
where hail could form, then along at that altitude,
and finally dropped them when the (pure water) hail
melted. If so, these frozen items would still carryon
down.
There remains a dependent mystery, though of a
somewhat different nature. This is, how could a
biology teacher confirm the belief that they were
worms? Perhaps he didn't. He may Quite well have
simply stated that he didn't know of any worm that
looked like that. If is often very hard to disabuse
people of their "beliefs" and if Mr. Johannson, solid
citizen that he obviously is, first thought that they
were worms, he would doubtless stick to his theory
unless somebody could demonstrate to him not only
that they were not worms but categorically what they
actually were. Perhaps this was the reason for the
suggestion that they be sent to Stockholm.

INTO "TIDN AIR" - AND OUT AGAIN


We have dealt before with items that disappeared
from their accustomed place and reappeared, sometimes years later, someplace else (see for instance,
wedding rings, PURSUIT, Vol. 1, No.4): and there
are other items, such as my mother's eyeglasses,
which disappeared and were never seen again. But
instances in which the object's disappearance is
witnessed are in very short supply. We are happy to
be able to present such a case - one, moreover, in
which the object later reappeared. This comes from
our forteana-prone (as opposed to accident-prone)
member 380. His account goes as follows: "Have a (to me, anyhow) somewhat odd little incident, though no doubt there is a perfectly natural
explanation. To begin with, I lost a pocket knife. As
I mentioned in my last letter, I own a little rural
acreage. About November 1 while strolling across an
orchard plot, I noticed a clump of small (pencil-thick)
sassafras sprouts had grown up at the edge of a small

32

brush pile composed of similar bushes cut a year or


two ago. I decided to cut down the sprouts, using my
pocket knife in my right hand while bending the little
saplings over with my left. I was wearing cotton
gloves on both hands. At the edge of the brush pile,
I bent over one of those sprouts, applied my knife
edge to the bent portion - and suddenly I had no
knife. I literally felt the knife twist in my gloved
hand just as I applied pressure to the wood; and while
I was looking at my hand, the knife left it so swiftly
that 1 did not actually see it. There was a sort of
blurring effect, but I didn't really see the knife go.
Nor did I hear any sound of its impact on the dry
leaves or the piled dead brush. It was just gone.
"Well, while only a standard model stock knife,
the three-bladed type, it ~ould have cost five dollars
to replace, and in addition I have a quite considerable sentim ental attachment to this particular knife,
as it was the last birthday present given me by my
late mother several years ago. Consequently, I began
a determined search to find it.
"If momentum or throwing force had been applied
by the springiness of the bent sassafras stem, the
knife could only have been propelled in one direction,
into the brush pile, so I systematically began dismantlIng said heap, working into it from the nearest
point. Some hours of work later, each and every bush
in the heap had been individually picked up and
carried away, leaving a patch of bare ground, though
admittedly it was still the site of some leaves,
broken bits of half-rotted wood, etc. But I had found
no tra.ce of the knife, though it was four inches long
when all blades are closed, has bright stainless steel
ferrul13s, and when open has a brightly honed blade a
trifle more than two inches long and a half-inch broad.
It should have stood out like the proverbial sore
thumb, but it didn't. I spent the rest of that afternoon
on my knees, winnowing and sifting through my fingers
the dirt and minor debris left on the brush pile site,
and found nothing whatsoever.
"During the next month, I returned four other times
and made the same painstaking inch by inch search,
with euriosity by now aiding and abetting my sentimental tie to the lost item. I still found nothing, and
I'd swear I did not miss going over a single inch of
that site. In the event that I'd been wrong about the
direction the knife went, I also carefully searched
all th'3 surrounding terrain. for a good ten feet in each
direction. and was confident I'd not overlooked it
there either. Finally. after a month of repeated searching, I acknowledged defeat and did not visit the site
for sllveral days. It so happens that meantime some
unknown person had abandoned a small dog at a nearby unoccupied cabin, and I am soft-hearted enough
not to want the pup to starve, so I had been bringing
food to it on each trip there. After giving up the
search for the lost knife, I some days later went to
the house to put out a few days rations for the stray
pup. While so engaged, I felt the traditional impulse
to make one last trip to the lost-knife locale. though

I had given it up as irrevocably lost. But the impulse


persisted and I knuckled under to it and walked across
to the orchard. By the Pipes of Pan. I swear that I
saw my knife while I was still some 20-odd feet away.
"It was lying on the perfectly bare so~l. about 18
inches from the bush that I'd been cutting when it
vanished. There was nothing on it; it stood out like
the sore thumb, ferrules and open blade gleaming.
But that site had been looked over and raked over by
hand numerous times. Some of the damp black soil
was stuck to the underside of the knife, but it was
not rusty to any extent. despite the mon~h (approximately) it had been lost and the fact that several
rain showers had fallen during that month. On the
open blade there were three yellowish rust freckles
but they hadn't eaten into the metal and a few
swipes with a pocket hone removed them."
We know this gentleman well enough to state
positively that he is not a liar; his account must
therefore be taken at face value. And we believe that
everyone will agree that we can dismiss t~e possibility that he simply overlooked the knife in his search.
This leaves us with the appalling Question: where
was the knife during the month it was m~ssing? Obviously. we have no nice neat answer to this, and
can only speculate.
:
We are particularly intrigued by his statement that
he felt the knife twist in his hand just before it disappeared, and that, though it disappeared so swiftly
that he did not "actually see it go", he did see a
"blur" as it disappeared. In a way, this suggests
that it was 'grabbed' by "something". On the other
hand, the fact that when it turned up again it was
just about where it ought to have been, suggests that
either it did not go very far or it was 'deliberately'
returned to its place of origin.
His letter continues:
"I find it amusing to speculate that the knife spent
that month 'out-of-this-world'; that a 'window' to
some other parallel universe or space-time continuum had opened just a wee crack and my knife had
been sucked through; but it didn't go far into that
other world, maybe coming to rest on the 'windowsill'. and then a month later tumbled bac~ almost to
its original place when some gust of interdimensional
wind again rattled the 'window'."
This is probably as good a speculation as any.
but, to go a bit further, perhaps 380, bec!luse of his
particularly strong sentimental attachm~nt to the
knife was unconsciously practicing "interdimension,
al"- PK - or psychokinesis. the ability tp influence
the movements of objects at distance. If objects do
disappear into other space-time continu:a, and occasionally come back. there would seem to be no
reason why parapsychical 'forces' coul~ not do so
too.
Please bear in mind that all this is speculation

33

and nothing more. We have, as yet, only the facts that


things appear, disappear, reappear, etc., with not the
foggiest notion how they do it.
DAMMED TRACKS
A correspondent in England sends us the following
from the Sunday Express of the 3rd January, 1971:
"Animal experts and police are baffled by mysterious tracks, the size of a man's hand, which have
been found in the snow at Farnborough, Hampshire,
England. The footprints, measuring 8 in. by 4-'h in.,
appeared overnight in the back garden of a council
house ~he equivalent of public housing]. Farnborough
police admit it may be a hoax, but a spokesman said,
'If it is a prank, we can't see how it was done'. The
owner of the house, Mr. John Fraser, and his wife
Gwendoline, were awakened by the noise of their dog
Sheena whimpering. Mrs. Fraser, aged 56, of Harbour
Close, Farnborough, said: 'In the morning I had the
shock of my life. When I opened the kitchen curtains,
I saw these huge footprints allover the garden. They
seemed to show seven [!] claws and were far bigger
than those of any dog.' One theory is that the tracks
belong to the elusive puma which has been seen in
Surrey over the past seven years. But animal experts
yesterday scorned the idea."
This is really most unsatisfactory. What we need
more than anything else, of course, is a drawing or
photograph of one of these prints; but we can do nothing about this until the British mail strike - still on
as of the time of writing this - is over. In the meantime, we have a few comments.
The first thing that really 'annoys' people is the
remark that there seemed to be seven claws, but this
does not automatically invalidate the report. No
known animal normally has more than five, but polydactyly - the presence of extra digits (fingers or
toes) - is by no means a rare condition. On the other
hand, to have an animal that makes unrecognizable
tracks and suffers from this condition, turn up in
somebody's back yard in England is a bit much. Or
could the seven claws be the result of prints of hind
feet being partially superimposed on those of front
feet? And were the tracks only in the back yard, or
did they pop in from outside - and if so, where did
they come from and where did they go?
In this case we do agree with the experts that

these are not puma tracks. As we have noted before,


the imprint of a cat's foot does not show claw marks
except in unusual circumstances; those of dogs do.
But 8 x 4-'h inches is, as the lady says, much too big
for a dog.
Frankly, we don't have any good ideas on the
matter. We have great faith in the police, and if they
cannot figure out how the tracks could have been
produced artificially, we certainly can't - particularly at this distance. And the "animal experts" don't
seem to have any ideas either - which is really
rather refreshing; usually, in cases such as this, the
"experts" come up with explanations! Thus, for the
. moment at least, we are right back where we started,
with another unexplained.
There is one other point we should like to make
here. This is the matter of pumas. We have been
carrying as a Current Pursuit an item entitled "Large
'Cats'on the Loose", which has been studied assiduously by Dan Manning. In North America most of the
reports almost undoubtedly indicate merely a comeback on the part of the Eastern Puma, long thought to
be extinct except in Florida and in certain parts of
Canada. Some of these reports, however, seem to
suggest something else (for this, see a splendid
article in the March 1971 issue of Fate Magazine by

.~. 1\..."
.-.... -.:.L""'I!

-:.~~
_. ..~--..

;.-~.~~

~C(;ll~"'J""'.Y' .. ti:. ....... .

',:

.":

.........
___

t .. "" ... , .... -

Just for Fun


A batch of radio shows - mostly by telephone (known as 'beepers') - on Ivan T. Sanderson's Invisible
Residents and on SITU (pronounced variously) has resulted in some rather extraordinary addresses which
our local P. O. has identified as belonging to us. On being told of this, Jan Rubinowitz went to work and
presented the sign shown here to the Society as "A Postman's Guide". It now hangs in a place of honour
inside the front door.

34

our member Loren Coleman ~lOJ). This is a very


sticky business with implications O:f ITF (sQ-called
teleportation) and 'worse'. There is also, apparently,
wides.pread melanism - i.e. whereas pumas are
generally tawny in colour, many of these are described as very dark, even black. Problem is, there never
has been any large 'cat' of that type native to Great
Britain. The Northern Lynx (Lynx lynx) was found in
Great Britain but is believed to have been extinct for
a very long time, though it may not be - and we
quote from Charles Fort:
"Mountainous districts of Inverness-shire, Scotland -- mysterious footprints in the bogs - sheep and
goats slaughtered. 'A large, fierce, yellow animal of
unknown species' was seen by a farmer, who killed
it. More mysterious tracks in the bogs, and continued
slaughter - another large, fierce, yellow animal was
shot. Soon a third specimen was caught in a trap.
'The body was sent to the London Zoo, where it was
identified as that of a lynx.' See the London Daily
Exprel~, Jan. 14, 1927."
However, it is unlikely that anyone would mistake
a lynx for a puma and. as noted in the article quoted
above, "pumas" (or, as elsewhere, "leopards") have
been sighted in various parts of England, particularly
in Surrey (just south of metropolitan London). for
years. No such animal has ever been reported missing
from any zoo, menagerie, circus, etc. - and don't
assume that such an escape could be hushed up. So
where do large 'cats' in England come from? The
description of these animals in no way fits the Lynx
with its tufted ears. short tail, and chunky body. Thus
even .if these are not extinct, this would not solve
the problem.
We have no answer to this last. but we hope to
report further on those "damned" tracks.
MORE ON THOSE MT. ETNA TRACKS
We have been gently chided by our advisor Professor George C. Kennedy for suggesting that the
enormous tracks allegedly found on Mt. Etna were the
natural.ly enlarged tracks of someone who rode a lava
flow down the mountain. He points out that until a
crust forms on the lava, no amount of asbestos will
do you any good; and that once it does form, the crust
itself is so efficient an insulator that one can walk
about on it in rubber-soled shoes without scorching
the rubber. Also, the crust is too hard to take prints.
Professor Kennedy sums it all up by stating "I will
make the categoric remark that it is impossible for
any hum an to put a footprint in lava".
We are grateful for Dr. Kennedy's advices, though
they leave us with a batch of unexplained tracks.
Very nasty ones too. It is not impossible, of course,
that this was someone's idea of a joke; and one
stateml~nt in the original report is most curious:

"They (the prints] were 13 feet apart and one was


more than five feet long .... " That anything that leaves
footprints changes the size of its feet between steps,
is doubtful. to put it mildly. Again. we need photographs and first-hand information - and, in fact, confirmation that the tracks actually exis~. We have
written to the University of Catania but have not yet
had a reply. Hence, hopefully. more l~er on this
riddle.

The following letter was received just in time for


inclusion in this issue:
Dear Sirs.
With reference to your letter, I should correct your
reports in the folIo wing way: the "footprints" were
discovered by college students and not iri hard lava
soil but in loose pyroclastic material.
,
My personal opinion is that college st:udents are
very nice and inventive fellows. Unfortunately I
didn't collect any pictures of them but maybe you can
ask fO"l' them from: La Sicilia, Via Odorico da Pordenone, Catania. It is the local newspaper.
/S/

Sincerely.
Dr. Marcello Piuscetti
Istituto de Vul,canologia
Uni versita di Gatania

This would seem to settle this one, and we do not


propose to investigate this further.

JUST PLAIN CHAOS

CAVEAT EMPTORIN RE THE "BERMUDA TRIANGLE"


Most newspapers can be trusted; they 'attempt to
present only factual information, though uno one is
perfect". On the other hand, there are some weekly
newspapers which deal in sensationalism and apparently do not hesitate to concoct stories !It the drop
of a hat. One such is a rag called Midnight which
published in its 22 March 1971 issue a p,articularly
irresponsible - even pernicious - article .on the socalled "Bermuda Triangle". This takes up the center
spread, with a booming headline: "Government
Physicist Discovers: UFO BASE OFF FLORIDA
COAST", and alleges that "Flying Saucer.s" are rasDonsible for disappearances in the. "Bermuda
Triangle". Much of the article consists of quotations
attributed to a Dr. Jonathon [sic] Wright, of whom it
is said "Dr. Wright heads a special-priority UFO
investigative department in NASA. He also :participat-

35

ed in the UFO study carried out for the air force


[sic] at the University of Colorado two years ago."
Because of the allegation that NASA has interested itself in UFOs, we determined to track down "Dr.
Wright". Our first step was to check the Condon report: no Dr. Wright listed anywhere. So we called Dr.
Thornton Page, who is now permanently attached to
NASA. He had never heard of Jonathon Wright and
very generously stated that he was "going upstairs"
to check all NASA directories and would call us
back. He did: no Dr. Jonathon Wright. In fact, Dr.
Page was so intrigued that he had also called Dr.
Carl Sagan - who had never heard of him either.
Despite the cheery photograph of "Dr. Wright" included in the article, he may be a figment of someone's
imagination. And Dr. Page informs us, categorically,
that NASA has no such department within its ranks
and wants nothing to do with UFOs - they are not
interested in joining the "burnt fingers club" started
by the Air Force.
Much of the rest of the material in the article is
either puzzling (because inaccurate) or pure drivel;
e.g. it is stated that all disappearances in this "Vile
Vortex" took place in December, which is rubbish.
But what really disturbs us is the wholly unwarranted'
emphasis on "I'm never going to fly across the
'Bermuda Triangle' again because I'll disappear". It
is perfectly true that planes and ships have vanished
in the lozenge-shaped area off the southeastern
coast of the U.S. It is equally true that thousands of
people cross that same area safely every week! Of
course it is dangerous to go to Bermuda: you may be
hit by a truck on your way to the airport, your plane
may crash on take-off or landing, or you may slip on
your hotel steps and break a leg. Anyone of these
is far more likely than that you will disappear into
thin air. Admittedly, the possibility of a 'mere' accident causes much less distress than the last simply
because an accident is considered a "normal hazard"which onl.Y happens to other people anyway. If we
could say that when someone 'disappears' in a Vile
Vortex, he slips into another 'universe' or space-time
continuum where the land runs with milk and honey
and there are no income taxes, traffic through these
areas would - or at least might - increase. It is, of
course, the uncertainty that unnerves people. But no
one gives up shopping for groceries because of the
dangers of being hit by a car, despite the fact that
far more people are 'disposed of' in this way every
year than have vanished in the vile vortices in a
century.
You want a vacation in Bermuda? Go ahead! The
so-called "Bermuda Triangle" is not a triangle and
has, so far as we can determine after considerable
study, nothing to do with Bermuda.
DISAPPEARING PLANE - WELL! NOT QUITE
Shortly before midday on the 8th of January, a
sleek USAF FB-111A plane was flying at 6000 feet

in a cloud bank along a regular test route, east from


Texas to Mobile, Alabama, when the pilot, Lt. Col.
Bruce D. stocks, requested permission from ground
control to go up to 18,000 feet to get above the soup.
This he did, and then radioed back: "I'm in the clear
now and would like to cancel IFR" - i.e. instrument
flying rules. That was the last heard from him.
Naturally, there was a massive scramble to start
a wide search, and various forms of associated hell
broke loose, caused by a factor that was pounced
upon by some knowledgeable reporters. This was the
fact that this type of plane has an automatic ejection
globe for a cockpit; this is supplied with its own
power for broadcasting and is automatically activated
in case of accident. Only in the case of total dissolution of the whole plane, is this expected to fail. It
did.
Immediately, all manner of other personages got
into the act, ranging from the "Flying Saucer boys"
to the "They defected to Cuba" lot, and including the
"Bermuda Triangle" enthusiasts. However you stretch
the last named anomaly, it is very hard to include
Alabama! The poor Air Force took an awful beating
before it had even had time to so much as complete
its first search. At first it was thought that the whole
'bird' might have ditched in the Gulf, and so air-sea
search was concentrated upon. However, early in
February they found both the plane and the capsule
nor'nor-east of Lake Pontchatrain, La. For some
reason, best known to the Fourth Estate, this fact
was not widely reported - if at all. We heard of it
only vaguely from a member who said he picked it up
on a late night newscast, once. After rather protracted enquiries through normal news channels without
being able to obtain any confirmation ofthis report, we
rang an old friend in the Pentagon - Col. William T.
Coleman, Jr., Chief, Public Information Division,
USAF - and asked for the facts. As usual, these
were immediately forthcoming.
The capsule was found in a swampy area and had
apparently come down at a low trajectory. Both pilots
were dead (c auses not asked); its parachute had not
operated. Some time later, the plane was found only
about 700 yards distant, "under ~ three-tier woods Q!"
forested area". It had apparently come down at an
extremely steep angle, but it had not disintegrated
or burned. Please note the underlined statement
above. As Col. Coleman said, "Three-tier forest isn't
much outside Florida". You can say that again,
Colonel; but there are such growths, and they constitute something that we have been talking about for
years.
Our member 384 quit his job as a police officer
three years ago, and went to South America for
several months for practical firsthand experience of
multi-tiered forests with a view to devoting his
life to the problem of survival in just such areas when
planes ditch. Coincidence maybe; but when such a
forest faults, for a month, the most intensive search

36

that we can put on in our own country where such


growth is rare, it surely prompts us to get behind
said member 384 in his work. (When you see his preliminary report of just what ! known or alleged to be
known about what is commonly called "jungle survival", you will probably be outraged. Frankly, we
know practically nothing; and what is published ~n
military manuals almost exclusively] is pure bilge. So
don't blame the Air Force on this score either.) But
now comes the fortean bit.
We asked Colonel Coleman about three points that
have exercised our (perhaps over-enquiring) minds to wit: (1) What could have caused the first "blankout" of Col. Stocks' air-to-ground communications;
(2) Why was no falling plane (of that size) reported in
a fai.rly well, though thinly, populated area in daytime; and (3) why did not automatic devices in the
capsule come on? His answer was that those were
just the points they are working on. We suggested
that the failure of the capsule devices might have
been purely mechanical, and he agreed that this was
still the first choice. We then asked: If the 'bird'

itself suddenly developed some trouble that necessitated eviction of the capsule but had noti itself blown
up or otherwise disintegrated, would not its automatic
"alarms" have sounded? This, we were told, was
another of the matters still primarily concerning the
investigators. Our third question was really too
vague; namely, was there yet any idea as to what
circumstances might have caused an' experienced
pilot to "pull the plug", as the RAF used to say? The
answer was a straightforward: "We don't know yet
and we may never find out for certain, but there are
lots of possibilities that might come to: light by the
time the 'remains' have been thoroughly examined
and the results analyzed".
,
Please, let us not forget that a job like this takes
time. So, in this case, don't bray about ~"anomalies"
in the Bermuda or any other "triangle", or lozenge
as we call these strange natural phenomena. Could
be as simple as that somebody bumped th~ appropriate
button with his elbow, got evicted, and then the
machinery in the capsule failed. There have often
been stranger coincidences than that.

III. PHYSICS

NIKOLA TESLA
by Gaston Burridge
Gone - and almost forgotten - is Nikola Tesla
(185i-1943), electrical wizard of the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. The alternating electric power
which we use and the ubiquitous fluorescent tube
both result from early discoveries by Tesla. Every
alternating-current electric motor now in use is the
result of his mastery of the riddle of the "rotating
magnetic field" - an idea that elicited hoots of
derision when he first suggested it.
Thomas Edison was a "direct current" man, Tesla
an "alternating current" man. Because these two men
held almost opposite views relative to what basic
electrical current should be used, they were not
friends. Edison fought alternating current vehemently
- and lost.
TI~sla manufactured the first man-made lightning
on earth, so far as is known now. In Colorado, in

1899, he created "sheets of yiolet electric flame" 30


feet long (see cut), whose "thunder" w'as heard 15
miles away. Using the knowledge he gain~d from making this lightning and combining it with h~s discovery
of "stationary or standing waves" in the earth, Tesla
was able to transmit 13 electric horsepower more
than 25 miles without wires, using only ,the earth as
a conductor, in a model plant constructed in Colorado.
He said this method of power transmission took place
at better than 95% efficiency - considrably higher
than the best transmission systems w~ use today
with wires. Tesla believed that with thi~ method one
could stab the right sort of rod and lamp into the
earth anywhere and the lamp would light - providing,
of course, his specially designed system was operating. So far as we know, no other resea~ch has ever
been carried on along these lines anywhere in the
world since.
These results, coupled with further research and
thought, led Tesla to conclude that several other
dramatic possibilities lay in store for his system of

Attention Anti-Digit-Dialers:
Herb Caen reports a fiendish 'device' used by W. B. Chase of Sacramento, California, in his campaign
against all-number dialing, as follows:
"... when he asks information for a number, the conversation generally goes as follows: Operator: 'The
number is 485-6 Oh 4 Oh.' Chase: 'Ab yes, 485-6646. Op: 'No, 485-6 Oh 4 Oh.' Chase: 'Th:at's what I
said - 485-6646.' Op, desperately:' 'NO. The number 0, not the letter 0.' Chase, innocently: 'My dear,
thl!re is no number O. Do you mean the digit zero? The letter 0 corresponds to the digit 6.' And :so on. It's
awful and splendid."

37

generated, very high frequency, high potential alternating currents. One of these was termed the "death
ray". Today it might be called a "giant laser beam" or
even an "E-" or "Electric-bomb"! Tesla claimed that
this proposed weapon would be capable of destroying
an army of 250,000 men as soon as that force showed
above the horizon - on land, sea, or in the air. Presumably this device was never demonstrated even in
model form.
While Edison did invent and perfect his incandescent electric lamp first, Tesla invented the "carbon
button lamp" which gave off an intense white light
rather than the then weaker and much more yellow
light of Edison's lamp.
Tesla looked at the sun and saw an incredible
source of energy. On the 5th November, 1901, he was
granted two U. S. Patents, No. 685,957 and No.
685,958, covering devices for extracting power from
the sun, under the title "Methods of utilizing Radiant
Energy". As earth pollution grows and power sources
become restricted, we may find ourselves using still
more of Tesla's 'discarded' ideas.
Guglielmo Marconi received a Nobel Prize for inventing the "wireless" - i.e. what we call "radio"
today. But Tesla had already described this several
years before. He also did basic research in radiocontrolled robots and successfully produced and
demonstrated them in model form.
But Tesla's inventive mind did not deal exclusively with things electrical. He devised a steam turbine.
Its rotor was a completely smooth plate rather than
a "wheel-of-cups" or vanes as used in conventional
turbines. His machine was said to perform very
efficiently and was much smaller and less expensive
to produce as well. Tesla patented this (No. 1,061,206,
issued 6 May 1913): but by that time conventional
steam turbines were so well established that the
manufacturers, fearing economic disaster to themselves, refused to change over, and nothing was ever
done commercially with Tesla's machine.

l'i!t;la2U:.flllllllaDtv N....

~rAlk.

NIKOLA TESL.A, WHO IS TRYING

ro

TALK WfTH MARS.

Photo taken 27 January 1901, in the Leadville Herald


Democrat: from the state Historical Society of
Colorado Library.

Tesla produced a mechanical "vibrator" about the


size of a derby hat: it was so powerful that it could
shake a building to pieces in a few minutes. Once he
saved his own New York laboratory from destruction
only by the quick and effective application of a
sledgehammer!
But perhaps the most remarkable and mysterious
thing about Nikola Tesla was his 'mind' per se. That
it was prodigious there can be little question. He
could - and did repeatedly - think out complete
machines, down to the closest measurements of all
fitting parts, without ever drawing a single diagram.
Those who knew him testify that he could read a
page once, close the book, and repeat verbatim what
he had read, even years afterward! Because of this
phenomenal memory we know little today about his
work: he kept no notes. It seems strange that Tesla
is not even mentioned in Fred Barlow's book Mental
Prodigies, for surely Tesla ranked as high as many
others mentioned there.
This year marks the 115th anniversary of his birth.
For those who wish to know more of him, the following reading list is offered.
Martin, Thomas Commerford. The Inventions, Researches and Writings Qf Nikola Tesla, Milwaukee,

38

Wis., Lee Engineering Co., 1952 (reprint), 483 pp.,


illustrated extensively, indexed.
Tesla, Nikola. Experiments ~ Alternating
Cummt of High Potential and High Frequency, New
York, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1904, 146 pp., illustrated. Appendix outlines some of the Colorado experiments.

Hunt, Inez, and Draper, Wanetta W. Lightning in


His Hand - The Life story Q!' Nikola Tesla, Denver,
Col., Sage Books, n.d., 269 pp., illustrated, index,
extensive bibliography.
.
O'Neill, John J. Prodigal Genius - Nlkola Tesla,
New York, Ives, Washburn, Inc., 326 pp.; index, list
of Tesla's u.S. Patents. Frontispiece, Tesla at 77.

Gravity Amended
Edsel Murphy has been credited with propounding the law of selective gravitation (" A dropPed tool will
land where it can do the most damage"), but our member 240 sends us the following from Newsweek of the
5th September, 1949:
.
"The pure flame of scientific curiosity burned in the breast of Benson Perdue, a student :at the University of British Columbia. He, like many others, had observed that buttered toast, when dro'pped, more
often than not defied the law of probability by landing butter-side down. Could this perverse tendency be
demonstrated scientifically? To find the answer, he rigged up a simple apparatus in his Vancouver home.
He suspended a vertical clamp 4 feet above the floor and equipped it with a mechanical trip lever to release the toast.
"Placing a piece of plywood underneath the clamp, he proceeded to drop the toast 175 times. The results were inconclusive. The toast landed butter-side down only 91 times (52 per cent). When, however, he
substituted for the plywood a piece of worn-out carpet, the butter-side-down incidence increased sharply
to 71.4 per cent. And when a valuable Persian rug was placed under the clamp, he insisted the toast landed butter-side down 156 times in 175 trials (89.1 per cent of the time).
"To his figures Perdue applied rigorous inductive reasoning and last week propounded the following
amendment to the law of gravity: 'When an object falls, it tends to fall in such a manner as to cause the
most damage' ...
Inasmuch as Murphy did not publish until 1967, the credit for this valuable contribution to knowledge
clearly belongs to Benson Perdue.

VI. GEOLOGY
WHY THE ROCKS RING
An excellent article appeared in the December
issue of Natural History, the popular magazine published by the American Museum of Natural History in
New York, entitled "Rock Music", by John Gibbons
and Steven Schlossman. This purported to explain
why some of the rocks "ring" in the now famous
Bucks County rock fields in Pennsylvania. While the
reasons they put forward for this phenomenon are
doubtless precisely so from the mechanical, mineralogical, and even possibly the geologicill points of
view, their hypothesis, as given in this article and in
a lengthier scientific paper published previously, is
unfortunately founded in part on some false observations or assumptions. Further, they failed to investigate the biological aspects properly, and especially
the botanical. Then there is another matter which
they did not take into account, but doubtless because
it had not been recorded when they wrote their paper.
Let liS dispose of this first.
When satisfactory aerial photographs were taken
of th.e rock field at Upper Black Eddy, and proper

maps were drawn from them, a number of: highly suspiciOUS conformations came to light. This field turned
out to be precisely circular when cert~n features,
other than the bare vegetationless area,' were taken
into account. Further, there is a deep moat, with a
high ridge on the inside, going more than two thirds
of the way round this area. There is also a double
extension of this wall going down a valley to the
northwest, ending around a small basin k~pt fed by a
year-round spring. On a subsequent survey of this
location, one of our :nembers, a stone mason (and also
a keen spelunker) crawled into a small "cave" between the tumbled boulders on the other :side of this
ridge and discovered two traces of enormous cutstone blocks that were laid horizontally and morticed.
From this we can but assume that, at least at this
location, somebody did some building in very ancient
times. We are urging further controlled professional
excavation by the appropriate authorities to ascertain
whether the whole moat and its inner ridge might be
man-made, and the latter have a cut-ston~ footing all
around it.
.
This discovery does not, of course, 'explain the

39

Fig. 1. Upper Black Eddy Rock Field. Showing general land form and the possible courses of underground
streams. The tableland to the west is slate. and the
bluff appears to be an old fault. The contour lines.
showing descent from the southwest. are only approximately of ten feet. Some onion-tree-boles have
only recently been reported from the area north of the
eastern tine of the rock field.

"ringing" properties of some of these rocks and probably has nothing to do with it. The map of this location looks very much like that of a European copperage hill fort. and early settlers might simply have
made use of these convenient places where rocks did
not have to be dug out of the ground or quarried.
Coming to the rocks themselves. we must point
out that in describing their occurrence. Messrs. Gibbons and Schlossman omitted one vel'y pertinent fact.
Their statement that "The peculiar ability of the
rocks in some of the fields to ring .... " should have
read: "The peculiar ability of ~ of the rocks on
the fields to ring " There is a world of difference
between these two statements. and this is of the
utmost significance. And, pertinent to this are two
gross misstatements that they repeat several times.

Fig. 2. The same, showing a possible ground plan of


a neolithic hill fort, based on the conformity of the
apparent moat and double dykes. It should be noted
that the center of this apparent circle falls exactly
upon, or very close to. the assumed junction of the
upper group of underground streams. An internal
source of water that could not be poisoned was a
feature of copper and early bronze-age defensive
points.
These maps were drawn from a series of aerial
photographs taken at an altitude of about 500 feet. in
1969.
Legend:

",f.";.;'q -

Closed-canopy woods.

11/1/// - steep bank.

- Underground stream.
H. P. - High point.
S.H. - Spring house.
C. S. S. - Cut stone blocks.
~ - Marked tree (low point).

Centers of arcs of high-density copper.

X - Areas of onion-shaped tree boles.

40

The J:irst is that the rocks cease to ring if removed


from the fields - an observation that is contradicted
by their further statement that "Ringing rocks kept
dry ill geologic [sic] collections continue to ring indefini.tely". Second, they state that, if left in moist
situat.ions in "rock gardens or other shaded spots,
the boulders are soon overstressed and break up".
They also make several other flat statements that are
just plain nonsense, such as that these rocks are
usually flat topped, and that, when broken up with a
sledgehammer, they soon stop ringing, and so forth.
By actual counts, about 30% of the rocks in these
fields ring (though this seems to vary throughout the
year), and ringers are found occasionally under the
trees, but only in those two areas inside the circle
(see map). We have yet to find a boulder that has
ceased to ring (and with the same tone) when removed
to our HQ, forty miles away; and we brought the first
set from Upper Black Eddy in 1961. Further, we have
had some of these rocks completely submersed in one
of our ponds, lying about under trees, suspended on
wires or set in concrete in a damp cellar, on shelves
in ouI' laboratory, and even in our house which is
exceptionally dry; and they all continue to ring. Also,
we have smashed up innumerable boulders of all
sizes, and all the parts continue to ring, even down to
cut slices three inches by one inch and I inch thick,
as always. The explanation for the phYsical properties
of the ringers, as given by Gibbons and Schlossman
may bl~ valid to a point; but the basic premises upon
which they erected their theory are (to coin a phrase)
all wet.
Thlm again, they appear to have done nothing
whatsoever about the petrological aspects of the
matter, which causes us to doubt what mineralogical
findinl~s they allege. The constitution of the diorite
'family', of which the diabase country rock of these
fields is a member, is "a soda-lime or lime-soda
felspa:r approximating to an andesite in composition,
together with hornblende. The possible minerals are
oligoclase, andesine, labradorite, hornblende, biotite,
augite, enstatite, quartz, apetite, and magnetite"
[see Minerals and the Microscope, H. G. Smith, London: Thomas Murby, 1922]. Our member 229, chief
technieian of a large ceramo-metal products manufacturer, ran a considerable number of series of tests
of thrE'e sets of specimens, identified only by numbers, t.o wit: (1) ringers, (2) non-ringers from inside
the circle, and (3) non-ringers from outside the circle,
some from as far away as a mile. In developing gross
samples of glasses by fusion from these, it was
found that the melting point of (1) differed markedly
from (~!) and (3). Much more significant was the fact
that different metals - in the form of amorphous

globules - appeared in these two groupings. The nonringers gave what appeared to be copper,: the ringers
a white metal of very high lustre. We hav!! so far obtained only one report on the analysis of the latter,
and this claimed that it was molybdenum!
Turning to the biological aspects, we fear we must
be much more critical. We have had the Upper Black
Eddy field under surveillance on a fairly "regular and
seasonal basis for ten years, and we 'have run a
series of laboratory experiments. These will eventually be reported on in full, so suffice it to state now
that ringing rocks kept (in fish tanks) alongside nonringers, and in open pond water (filtered), in well
water, and in distilled water, in all cases inhibited
both contamination and growth of all kinds, while
developing from themselves large patches of pure
white fungoid mycelia that, in the absenc'e of fructification, cannot be identified. The absence of both
animal and plant life on this field - as diametrically
opposed to screes and other bare rock fields in the
area - is even more peculiar than it at first appears
to a non-biologist. The list of animals is comprised
solely of a number of species of spider, 'two microlepidoptera ("mini-moths"), and (so far: collected)
seven species of Diptera (flies). The last, however,
appear all to be of one Family.
It should also be put on record that while neither
domestic nor wild-caught animals (both local and imported) on leashes, show any disinclinatic~n to cross
the rock field, birds seem most reluctant to do so,
and may often be observed flying halfway :around the
circle in order to cross it. We have never: found any
bird droppings on the field. Turning then to the botanical oddities we must put on record a really most
remarkable phenomenon, one that we have never
heard of elsewhere - outside a laboratory. This is
that a very high percentage of the trees growing in
the two areas marked "X" on the map, have what is
called onion-bulb trunks, in that their bases immediately above ground are swollen just like a fat onion.
Such a condition has been reported in laboratory experiments in which plants were grown in soil containing high concentrations of artificially introduced
compounds of (or native) copper. Finally, we should
add that trees that either fell onto the edge of the
bare rocks, or apparently tried to grow out over it
when saplings, perform the most extraordinary horizontal gyrations, usually leading their grow:ing points
back under the trees, and all of them develoi:>!branches
only on the upper side, while these go straight up
and then bend back into the shade. This 'defies all
known laws for woody plant growth, and on several
scores.
Altogether, while the explanation of the mechanics

Gummed address labels have become a sort of major industry in this country. We were therefore rather
gleefully startled to find on the back of an envelope one such reading "This Label Was Applied: by Mistake".

41

of the ringing by some of these rocks as given by


Gibbons and Schlossman may be perfectly feasible
despite so many mistaken premises, it does nothing
to explain the incidence of the fields themselves,
nor even to explain why only ~ of the rocks ring.
And when it comes to other things not observed by
them - such as that there are some larger rocks
which, when hit appropriately, give rise to a whole
scale; that most of the curious scalloped erosion is
on their undersides; that two different ringers when
knocked together while suspended on wires produce
(invariably, it seems) but one tone, however many
different combinations are used; and so on - it is
manifest that we have a very long way to go yet before we explain these singular natural phenomena.

"FAIRY CROSSES"
From time to time there is a sort of outburst in
regard to what are commonly called "fairy crosses"
found in several areas of the world, and a lot of nonsense is published in less reputable magazines and
papers about these having been formed either "supernaturally" or being the work of some vanished race
of (pigmy) "supermen". One legend has it that woodland nymphs heard of the crucifixion of Christ and
their tears solidified into miniature stone crosses.
Charming as these stories may be, these stones are
perfectly natural formations, and are properly known
as Staurolite. This is an iron aluminum silicate and
occurs in metamorphic rocks. The major deposits are
in the Tyrol, in Switzerland, Brazil, and in Virginia
and other eastern states. (And don't use this limited
distribution as an 'excuse'; black opals are found
only in Australia, and there only in a very limited
area, Lightning Ridge.)
Staurolite is a particular kind of crystal, specifically a compound penetration twin. This is really not
as complicated as it sounds. Crystals are either naturalor man-made solid bodies of matter that are
bounded by regularly arranged natural plane surfaces,
resulting in a definite geometrical form or outline.

Staurolite crosses.

Diagrammatic.

Most are single individuals, but crystals consisting


of several individuals also occur - called compound
crystals. And there are two types of these: parallel
groups and twin crystals. Twin crystals come in two
varieties also. If the crystals are simply in contact
with each other they are called contact twins (what
else?); if, on the other hand, the crystals are so intergrown that they penetrate one another, they are called
penetration twins (again, what else?). Staurolite is
almost the standard example of a penetration twin;
some of the 'crosses' are at roughly 60 angles, the
best at almost exactly 90. Should you like to have
one, and happen to be near Ball Ground, Georgia, a
chap named Oscar Robertson - better known as "the
Rock Man" - will, for a fee, let you take your chances
on finding one by digging in his "back yard".
And, while we're at it, what bothers us most about
the article that brought all this on, is the statement
by the newsman who visited the site that "they paid
Oscar a digging fee, even rented digging tools, and
aimed (Qr ~". Obviously, no one knows any geography: if you dig down from Georgia you'll end up
in the Indian Ocean about midw8 between Amsterdam Island and the southwestern tip of Orstrailia!

Words Should Convey Meaning.


An ad in the National Observer reads "Perfect for home or office, this captain's chair can be moved
from one room to another as needed .... " We have been under the impression that portable chairs were the
rule rather than the exception. If they mean that it fits any "decor", why don't they S8 so?

Semantics
One must, we suppose, become accustomed to calling janitors "custodians" and garbage men "sanitation workers"; but there should be limits to this kind of thing. From a college publication we learn that
"At the Faculty Senate Meeting the faculty decided the word Library should be dropped in favor of the
term Learning Resources Center". Yccch!

42

VII. BIOLOGY

"NESSIE" IS ALIVE AND WELL AND LIVING IN


URQUHART BAY
by Jack A. Ullrich
Late last summer I led the Black & White Scotch
"Expedition" to find a Loch Ness Monster. We went
to Sc:oUand because the sponsors are intrigued by
the mystery and because their blended spirits have
too long been given too much of the credit for this
monster's existence. Disbelievers usually assume
that the "legend" is perpetuated as a tourist attraction to help keep the Highlands green (pound
notes, as well as dollars, are green). This sounds
like a logical course for the canny Scot to follow,
but it. just isn't so. At no point for over 50 miles, on
either. A82 (the road on the western side of Loch
Ness), or General Wade's Military Road (an old road
on the eastern side of the loch) is there a single sign
to identify one of the two most famous lochs in
Scotland - the other being Loch Lomond. But Loch
Ness is much bigger than Loch Lomond - 24 miles
long by I-%. miles wide; deeper - 970 feet at the
deepE!st point with an average depth of over 700 feet;
and in many a visitor's opinion, more beautiful and
far less commercial. Not only is there no sign anywherE! to identify this ominous body Of water - so
murky from a colloidal suspension of peat that there
is tot.al darkness just 20 feet down - but one has to
search for "monster" souvenirs to send back to the
kiddit~s. This hardly classifies "Nessie" as a tourist
attraction. If it is, the Scots haven't yet realized it!
A perennial question is "If such a thing as a
monst.er is really there, how come nobody has ever
taken a picture of it?" The fact is that hundreds of
pictures do exist, not only still photographs but also
motion pictures, and even an excellent motion
picture of a sonar tracking taken by Bob Love who is
in charge of underwater research for the Loch Ness
Phenomena Investigation Bureau, founded nine years
ago to try to shed some light on this mystery.
The major problem is that most photographs of
"Nessie" result from someone being in the right place
purely by chance. This accounts for the blurred and
grainy pictures that have appeared. Most were taken
by amateurs with box cameras. One unpublished
picture in my possession was taken by B. Mitchell
on a beautiful sunny day just last August. She was
on a picnic with her family and a monster suddenly
rose up within 30 yards of where they had spread
their l.unch. The young lady, showing great presence
of mind .in the circumstances, immediately grabbed
her In:~tamatic camera and took a Single picture.
"Why did you take only one picture?" I asked her.
"Did you run out of film?" "Oh no," she replied. "I
had p]enty of film, but that was my last flashcube."

The hazy, grainy pictures we see ar~ the result


of blowing up a negative that was taken with nonprofessional equipment by an amateur W;ho can't be
expected to do all of the things necessary to get
good documentation. This is whY very few pictures
of the monster have something in the foreground from
which a comparison can be made as to its size and
its distance from the camera. Blowing up, the section
of the negative that shows a creature five or six
hundred yards away results in a blurred, unsatisfactory print unless a telephoto lens is used.
Then there is the problem of ambient: light. Loch
Ness is frequently dark from rain clouds that seem to
provide a continuous somber cast to the area. This
light leaves a lot to be desired for good photography.
but even more aggravating is the fact that "Nessies"
are such shy creatures. Over half of the sightings
take place at twilight or just before da~n when the
photographer is at a disadvantage.
That is whY our expedition put such emphasis on
an infra-red camera that is capable of taking pictures
in total darkness. We stood I-R watches from dusk to
midnight and from 4 a.m. until daylight' every day.
Even this sophisticated ploy was not successful because we weren't in the right place at the right time.
Our only sighting was on the 21st September 1970 at
- naturally, in view of all our careful arrangements!
- 2:45 p.m. on a bright, sunny afternoon when the
loch was dead calm.
Our chauffeur, Ron Chapman, well-known London
photographer, headed toward Urquhart' Castle, a
thirteenth century ruin that overlooks the :home of the
"monsters". With us was New Yorker Hank: McAllister,
a born cynic who is sceptical of everyone and everything. If Hank didn't see it - it didn't happen.
The road on the northwest side of Urqtihart Castle
is about 100 feet above the water and ther,e is a great
view of Urquhart Bay belOW. As we were nearing the
Carey cottage at Achnahannet, I was stattled to see
a huge wake start moving in the Bay ~elow. As I
watched the V-shaped wake forming I shouted to Ron
to pull over. McAllister laughed and said:; "Come on,
Jack! You don't have to carry it this far!" I kept insisting and at the first open place on the ~arrow road,
Ron pulled up. Both he and Hank now saw what had
attracted my attention. We jumped from the car 'and
started down across the pasture below us.
There in the water was an amazing sight. We saw
a pronounced V-shaped wake similar to a wake that
might be formed by a motor boat moving, across the
loch. But there wasn't any boat and we ceuld plainly
see the point of origin of the disturbance. In fact,
there were no birds in the water, no !people, no
ripples, nothing. The loch was mirror-calm except
for the huge area below us that was beIng churned
up by something of immense size just, under the
surface.

43

Drumnadrochit
Urquhart Bay

Fort Augustus

Loch Ness, showing spot from which Jack Ullrich


photographed Nessie's wake.

As the disturbance continued moving out into Loch


Ness, I could see back to the left where the wake
was already beginning to deteriorate and I could still
see the front where the wake was being newly formed.
I shot several pictures with a telephoto lens to verify
this sighting.
The wake moved at about 6 miles per hour and reminded me of wakes I had seen caused by whales
swimming just below the surface. Ripples were forming in circles where the wake had passed. The
patterns were like swirls made by oars or as if something had surfaced momentarily, though we saw nothing. We continued watching the wake for several
minutes as it progressed out into Loch Ness. Suddenly it just ceased. Whatever had caused the disturbance
either stopped moving or, and this is more likely,
slowly descended into the murky depths. Just off
Urquhart Castle is the deepest point in Loch Ness.
It was our belief that there was a very large body
just under the surface that created this massive disturbance. That was as close as we were to get to
"Nessie", the creature that has defied identification
for over 1.400 years. But McAllister became a believer.
Editor's!iQR: Several newspaper accounts erroneously announced that Jack Ullrich was "representing the
Smithsonian Institution" on this jaunt; in fact, he
represented SITU. The error was 'caused' by an overenthusiastic PR man, who may (or may not?) have
been confused by the fact that Jack Ullrich did do
some free-lance collecting for the Smithsonian in
Guatemala several years ago.
"Our Man at Loch Ness" also tells a rather
hilarious story of having been, equally erroneously,

Photograph taken on the 21st September 1970, by Jack


A. Ullrich. Reproduced from original colour transparency.

connected by some with a blithering group from New


England which intended using sex attractants to
catch Nessie. The attractants used were from sealions, eels, and whales - which is perfectly splendid,
provided you wish to attract sea-lions. eels, and
whales!

THE 'BIGFOOT' HUNT - NEW STYLE


A fascinating article appeared in the July 1970
issue of a publication named Oregon Outdoors formerly "Gun and Creel". Said article has no byline
but it ends: - "I'm really kidding. I believe in Bigfoot, and I wish Lee Trippett and his associates all
the luck in the world." This is pretty decent. considering the content of the preceding article.
Lee Trippett who, as explained in this article,
graduated from the University of Oregon in 1959 with
a degree in physics, became interested in the early
1960s in this everlasting business of so-called "Bigfoots" or "Sasquatches", or very large. very primitive,
fully haired hominids which are alleged still to exist
in some numbers in the wilderness areas of our and
Canada's northwest. Lee, and his then bride, came to
visit us at our HQ some years ago, and we had the

44

pleasure of discussing this funny business for a


couple of weeks. Lee is a quiet man and a pragmatist.
He went back to his home state to put his ideas as
to thE! pursuit of this 'phenomenon' into action. Apparently he did just that. This article seems to give
a prel,ty fair exposition of just what Lee Trippett did
do. It goes as follows: "A lot of people think Bigfoot is only an Indian
myth, or maybe an out and out hoax, but Lee Trippett
believes in the 800 pound, seven foot tall, hairy
creatures to the extent that every month or two he
disappears into the wilderness to search for them.
He goes alone because he feels that while he is sure
of his own lack of fear, he could not be sure that
other persons wouldn't panic at the sight of Bigfoot,
or that they wouldn't frighten the creatures away.
Lee's method of searching consists of establishing a
lonely camp in an area where Bigfoot is reported to
have been seen, then quietly waiting. He thinks
Bigfoot has a sort of extra-sensory perception and
seem::; to know when a man is -there to harm him. He
[says he] knows a gold prospector who has gained
the trust of the creatures, and has even exchanged
food with them by putting Trippett's theories into
practi,ce. The prospector, according to Trippett, has
seen as many as 14 E>f these] creatures at a time,
and has watched them hunt. Since Bigfoot is nocturnal" Lee stays awake at night watching for him.
He fe'els that over a period of time he has gotten to
know Bigfoot, and that Bigfoot knows him. 'We are
sort Cof waiting for a chance to shake hands' he says.
"Trippett, 38, has formed a non-profit organization
called Flora-Fauna Research Corp. which will c ategorizl! available data and coordinate research. The
Eugene [Oregon] centered organization hopes to
gather a convincing body of evidence and then ask
certain professional scientists to be consultants on
an overall program to study Bigfoot. As things stand,

he says, professional scientists are f!. little bit


afraid to get involved in this phenomenon because
their reputations would be at stake."
Maybe Lee Trippett has the best idea of how to
bring this seemingly everlasting businesl; to a successful conclusion. Let us face this problem frontally: either such things as Sasquatches exist, or they
don't. If they are only the product of MY~h, Legend,
and Folklore, let them be examined as such. If, on
the other hand, they might be real, then anyone who
has any idea as to how to come up with t:hem should
be assisted. Lee Trippett, I know, leans very strongly to the notion that such living entitie~ exist but
also to the idea that they are so "human'" that they
may be maintaining themselves by a cOll!bination of
what we call straight "bushcraft" plus an equally
inborn expertise in what we have come to call "ESP",
meaning frankly a combination of super-sensory
abilities and (to us) super-perceptive abil~ties.
Lee Trippett's opinions on this problem verge on
what is commonly called "the occult". This is unfair.
What Lee Trippett means is that "if thes~ creatures
exist" (and please note that qualifying word), they
could (another qualifying word) have built into them,
abilities that we (over-civilized as we are) sometimes
admit that other animals have but which we deny ourselves. Lee believes - and we are willing to go along
with him on this - that our best hope in contacting,
or just plain 'discovering' these creatures; is to shut
up and go sit out in the field and see if any such
"thing" might come by. Considering the npw dozens
of so-called expeditions that have gone out west from northern California to the Canadi~ Yukon during the past decade, to look for this 'oddity and
found nothing, we frankly believe that Lee Trippett's
idea is not only as good as anybody else's but probably more worthwhile.

VIII. ANTHROPOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGISTS - AND OTHERS - BEWARE!


Our member 634 has sent us the following, which
we reprint here as a warning to archaeologists and
everybody else - and also because it's fun! We
begin with the pertinent part of his letter:
"Yesterday, in Guns and Ammo (Dec. '70) I ran
acros::; an item which I believe would have thoroughly
delighted dear old Charles Fort. On page 36, in an
articll!, "I Knew the World's Greatest Shots", author
Ernie Lind relates an anecdote concerning the late
Adolph Topperwein, often called "The Father of
Exhib.ition Shooting". The 'italics' are mine:

"'One time, while hunting down in Arizona, "Topp"


noticE'd a cave entrance and over it a smooth under-

cut area about 12 feet square. This was about 2D.


feet 1!l! the wall with !!Q. ~ ill getting 1m tQ ti.
I<
'The next day, he returned with hi~ .22 rifle.
Climbing out on a ledge opposite the smobth "blackboard", he proceeded to shoot his famous outline of
an Indian chief. As each bullet hit, it would flake
off a chip of weathered stone, exposing Ii bright red
spot.
" 'A couple of years later, the rancher who owned
the property where this had occurred wrote and told
"Topp" that a famous archeologist had studied the
drawing. This man had then stated that :it was the
work of nomadic prehistoric Indians. who; must have
travelled hundreds of miles, as it was the: picture of
the headdress of a Sioux chieftain and not' typical of
the Indians who roamed and lived in that area.
" '''Topp'' remarked that he had been c~lled many

45

things but never before had he been called a roaming


Indian!'
"Wonder who the 'famous archeologist' was? And
did he make any 'published pronouncements' concerning his find? No doubt the Arizona sun would have
weathered the drawing in two year's time. and archeologists don't normally carry 20-foot ladders - or at
least I don't think they do."
If this is not sufficient warning to SITU members
investigating 'things', perhaps the following will
serve as an adequate reinforcement.
During the Depression the WP A provided work for
a number of professors by sending them out to collect
American folktales. One of these gentlemen had the
'misfortune' to run into a frightfully helpful old chap
on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. This chap. by the
name of Edward (?) Hunn. did not in fact know of any
local folk tales but disliked disappOinting the professor and promptly concocted three splendid ones which were duly published in a volume of folktales
from the Eastern Shore! The talent for spinning tales
ran in the family, but Mr. Hunn's exploit was a matter
of considerable family pride. Crhe writer. MLF. learned of this from his nephew, Bill Hunn. whose attitude
was: "You think I can tell stories; you should meet
my uncle!]
-

NOAH'S ARK(S), AGAIN


Our member 281 has come up with some most
interesting and pertinent ideas concerning the various
"arks" strewn around the Turko-Russian-IraquiIranian frontier. His first letter was written before he
received the October issue of PURSUIT (he is in the
Armed Services abroad). hence his reference here to
only one ark.
"I would like to make a comment on the so-called
Ark that has been reported on Mt. Ararat. If anyone
does any thinking on the subject he will come to the
conclusion that however the 'Ark' got there it wasn't
by a world-wide flood. Human history and natural
history simply cannot be fitted into such an event.
"The question is. what is it doing there? I think a
little analysis of beliefs prevailing in the area at the
time this object was built might shed some light on
the subject. As you know, it was widely believed at
the time that the sky was a firmament which was holdback the 'waters' of the heavens. Windows in this
firmament were opened to let rain fall. Perhaps some

tribe thought that if they built a boat high enough on


a mountain, during a rain storm they could be picked
up by the waters and carried to heaven. This might
explain the traditional view that the ark was completely enclosed and sealed. i.e. a submarine. It would
need to be so to pass through the waters above. When
the project failed to produce any results the tribe
abondoned the ark. and it was found by later travellers
who described it. The tale of this ark was combined
with the tales of the flood from the epic of Gilgamesh
and the whole modified to produce the Flood story in
the Bible. One other thing. Climatic conditions were
different then and trees might have been growing close
by as a source of lumber. I understand they are scarce
there now.
"One other Biblical narrative fits in with this.
That is the story of the tower of Babel. Tn this story
mankind tries to build a tower to reach heaven. This
shows how close heaven was thought to be. It is even
possible that the two events are related."
Following receipt of our October issue. this
gentleman wrote again, as follows:
"One might ask why the arks were so large. It
stands to reason that if one is going to go calling on
the gods one should not go empty-handed. Perhap s
the builders reasoned that if they built a large ship
and filled it with goods such as animals and grain as
gifts, the gods would assist the ship in its journey.
Or perhaps the ship was loaded with gifts for the
gods (a sort of Cargo-Cult in reverse) while the
builders remained on the earth to reap the benefits
O{ their bribery. This is all speculation of course, but
in light of the beliefs of the time it is not unreasonable."
Admittedly, dates assigned to "the" ark on Mt.
Ararat and to the other arks in the area. vary depending on who is claiming what. The best dates - based
on radiocarbon analyses - suggest that they are in
fact a bit late to be 'Biblical' in origin. But the
general suggestion that they were intended either as
vehicles which would carry their owners up to hobnob
with the gods or frankly as bribes is certainly not
invalidated by this factor. Indeed, considering the
lengths to which all peoples - ancient and modern have gone to propitiate their god(s). it provides the
most reasonable explanation we have come across for
the expenditure of so much effort and, one assumes,
money. One does not build enormous constructions in

From International ~ News, Vol. 17-7/8, 10th, Dec. 1970.


" 'Copito de Nieve', the only white Gorilla Gorilla gorilla gorilla, Savage and Wyman, arrived at the
Barcelona Zoo .... " A highly knowledgable non-zoologist once asked us: "Tell me, if a Rattus rattus rattus
meets a Gorilla gorilla gorilla, what Happens happens happens?" This is what comes of failing to use
italics and brackets ('parentheses' to Americans).

46

out of the way places just for the heck of it. Even if
lumbl3r was more readily available then than now, it
was still a monumental piece of work.
A STONE AGE "FIRST"
The following item was sent to us by a local member and was found in that rather splendid paper ~
ExprE!., of Easton, Pa., and was dated the 8th
January of this year. We have been unable to find
out where they got it from, as ticker material is
thrown out whether it is used or not. It reads: _
"Archaeologists have recovered eight-foot ivory
javelins from stone Age graves in Russia dating back
20,000 to 30,000 years. The remarkable thing is not
that stone Age men made javelins but that they made
straii:ht javelins out of radically (sic) curved ma~moth
tusks. For this reason, the weapons are of as much
intemst to dentists as 10 archaeologists since ivory
is basically the same material that forms the core
of human teeth. How prehistoric men did it is something that continues to elude modern science, notes
Dr. Reidar F. Sognnaes, professor of oral biology at
the School of Dentistry of the University of California
in Los Angeles. 'The ability to soften the dense
dentin of ivory, to fashion it, and then to harden it
again into a strong weapon to pierce the mammoth's
hide has been lost,' he laments.* 'If we could recapture this secret today, it might mean much to
dentistry and bone repair.' Either that, or there used
to be a type of mammoth with straight tusks."
We! could be wrong, and even if we are not we will
probably provoke a howl of anguish for the following
comments from all sorts of people like dentists and
archaeologists, but we cannot abstain from making
them. First off, where in the heck have the dental
technicians been for the past few centuries? Ap*Marion Fawcett notes that he was making the same
lament in the early 1960s, when she was employed as
an editor of medical books at the J. B. Lippincott Co.
She still remembers his article for DePalma's Clinical ClrthoDaedics, a bound journal.

Self-starting

parently they have not been collecting old ivories.


That's for sure, because anybody in the ivory trade you know, billiard balls, and all that -, would have
pointed out to them that a basic usage' of their industry has always been the softening of ivory, and
the moulding of it either into curves from the straight
or to the straight from the curved. The ~cients used
to soften not only elephant tusks but also hippopotamuses tushes and other dentine (not dentin; incidentally) with muriatic acid, and then harden it with white
vinegar; the same method is still used today. The
Ancients then straightened the tusks and slit them
longitudinally, separated each of the layers (which
are like those in onions), and flattened thm out under
boards with weights on top. Even more fascinating to
contemplate is the discovery that they then further resoftened these ivory planks or veneers, on occasion,
and moulded them over their marble or other stone
statues. Their objective in this case was t.o make said
statues as lifelike as possible because ivory can be
delicately tinted with dyes and other pigments to
exactly imitate the tints of so-called "white" human
flesh. Actually, there was a straight-toothed elephantine, now named scientifically Anancus,: which survived into the Pleistocene and was apparently contemporary with palaeolithic man in Eurasi,a. However,
as we have pointed out, its straight tus~s were not
needed to make straight javelins.
The particular piece of jibberish in this story is
the dentist's lament. Anybody can soften dentine,
and it does not have to be elephantine either. Further,
somebody in Britain, about five years ago, developed
a method of grinding bone, dentin, and: even tooth
enamel very finely, and then filling tooth cavities
with it, or even moulding whole teeth fro~ it. Funny
how one technology can miss the basic facts of another. Just consider fluorides promoting tooth decay;
and fresh orange juice, so beloved of nutritionists
and mothers, dOing the same. For this, see The New
Scientist, Vol. 49, No. 736, of the 28th January,
1971, p. 173, wherein no less a person than Dr. Linus
Pauling sounds off on the matter. And, incidentally,
the British Government has 'canned' the supplying of
fresh orange juice to welfare tots as being thoroughly
dangerous. Vitamin C will in future be, 'old'. and
bottled, in tablet form.

Aren't Necessarily Unexplained

From the Chicago Today Magazine, 20 January 1971: "Winter Car Trouble? Try This Bargain.. : A
school bus, empty and unattended, suddenly went crazy in the parking lot of T~e Dalles [O~e.] HIgh
School. Apparently started by an electrical short, it charged across the lot, scattenng students: "thundered
down a 20-foot embankment, stalled .. and started again. An employee caught the bus and npped some
wiring to stop it."

47

A RETRACTION, AND AN APOLOGY

On page 89 of our October 1970 issue, Vol. 3, No.


4, in a paragraph numbered (8) in our column entitled
"Current Pursuits", we stated, "If anybody should be
seriously interested, we refer them to (a) Mr. Frank
D. Hansen ... (c) Dr. John Napier, and some others . ,
These are the gentlemen who have now claimed that
they have all the answers. Ask them." This was in
reference to the case of a corpse preserved in ice
and exhibited by said Mr. Frank Hansen, which has
become popularly known as "Bozo, the Iceman".
Our purpose in publishing this statement here is
to apologize to Dr. John R. Napier for wording the
statement that we quoted above as we did. What we
meant to imply in our column in the October issue
was simply that we (Ivan T. Sanderson and SITU)
have nothing further to say and that, therefore, anybody who wants further information should apply to
the persons listed. It was primarily from those persons that we obtained our information; and therefore
it should be to those persons that you apply for
further information - if there is any. Let it be clearly
understood that we did not intend in any way to imply

that Dr. Napier, particularly, might have information


that we did not have.
The basic question is really very simple. This is
whether or not the" specimen that Heuvelmans and
Sanderson saw was a genuine corpse of a (previously)
living entity. If it was, it was one of the greatest
discoveries of all time. If it wasn't, it was a fraud
so incredible that it calls for some real explanation.
Nothing will ever be proved one way or the other
until and unless the specimen seen by Heuvelmans
and Sanderson is produced and examined by true experts such as Drs. Napier, Coon, Hill, Agogino, et
al. Meantime, we have nothing further to offer; and,
as we said in our original statement that started all
this, please apply to the people who know as much
or more about the case than we do.
Nonetheless," we wish to apologize to John Napier
for having worded that statement as we did. It was
deplorable and censurable, and the undersigned takes
full responsibility for having penned it.
Ivan T. Sanderson.

CURRENT PURSUITS

As was explained in our last issue, these items


have been numbered purely chronologically; and, as
of our last issue, there were 21 of them. We stated
also, in that issue, that nothing would be published
on any unless we had something cogent to report. To
this end, and also to still further save space, we are
from now on going to list only those on which we do
have something to say. This we will do by number.
(5) CHAIN IN ROCK
The exact location, within give or take a square
mile, of this has now been pinpointed on a C&G
survey map by our member 459. Further, this gentleman has finally dug out the facts of the discovery of
this item, and has interviewed local citizens who
have seen it since then. Said member is a retired
forester. Once again, he advises that it would be
perfectly useless to try to locate this item until May
when the snow is off the ground and before the trees
have leafed.

(13) ENTOMBED TOADS (AND OTHER ANURA)


At long last Marion Fawcett has received a definite statement from a working, professional scientist
- in the Republic of South Africa, to be precise - to
the effect that he was a witness to the sealing in of
a concrete floor which, when broken up five years
later yielded a 2-1/z-inch frog in a completely enclosed
'pocket'. The details of this and other cases will be
more fully written up in due course.
(15) SOUTH NEW JERSEY TREE STUMPS
A very great deal more has eventuated on this, and
quite apart from a number of very fine photographs of
same taken by Jerry Bentryn for which we had been
looking. Member 585, a D.Sc. but also a very careful
amateur (in that it is not his profession) photographer
has offered to obtain further photographs, including
aerial shots. At the same time, a most curious fact
has emerged. This is that even those local citizens

From the New York telephone directory: "Animal Bites Health Department".

48

who are engaged in the shingle industry cannot, as of


now, tell us whether the sunken logs from which they
make shingles have roots or not. In fact, -this whole
business is proliferating in many directions.
(19) THE BOSSBERG SASQUATCH
Not only have we been in personal touch with Mr.
Ivan Marx, we have received reports and visits from
several members who have seen Mr. Marx's film and
still pictures. These members are the best informed
on "Basquatchery" that we have; are hard-nosed investigators, two of them with police training; and all
lean i;o the sceptical though retaining an open-minded
approach to the problem. All of them state that they
could find no evidence of fraud, nor could they think
of any way in which what is shown in these pictures
could have been "set up" to perpetrate a fraud. Mr.
Marx initially accepted an option on the film rights
from a company in Salt Lake City, but by mutual
agreement, contract has not been drawn, and negotiations are under way with another organization. Mr.
Marx tells us that he has, in addition to the film, some
hundreds of stills on which we still have first offer,
but nothing will be released until July. In the interim,
however, Mr. Marx may be able to arrange to come
east to show his material to a closed session of
interE!sted members of our Scientific Advisory Board.
(21) THE THUNDERBIRD PHOTOGRAPH
Our member 17 has searched his files but not
found! the item; member 49 has married and moved
away from his family home but his files are still
stored somewhere there. He has promised to try to
locate them and go through them with a view to retrieving this damned photo if he has it. But we still
appeal to all of you to try to locate a copy. One other
lead which we are following comes from member 117
and is that he believes this photograph was published in none other than the National Geographic ~
~ (!) in the 30s.
(22) TIME ANOMALIES
A!; a result of the publication of a book entitled
Invisible Residents by World Publishing, Inc., a considerable amount of latent interest has been brought
to light on this subject. The initial impetus for this
interE!st came from a phenomenon to which the catchy
title "The Bermuda Triangle" has been applied. This
is an area off the southeastern coast of North
America, in which an excessively large number of
ships, planes, and now some submarines have vanished - as opposed to simply foundering, ditching,

or being wrecked. After checking the al~egations of


such exceptionally high incidence of disappearances
therein, we initiated a critical survey of :the reports.
The result was that there appeared to be ten such
areas precisely di stributed around the earth - five in
the northern hemisphere, and all center~d some 72degrees apart longitudinally; and five others similarlY apart in the southern hemisphere but all shifted
about 20 degrees to the east. Next, the location of
these ten anomalous areas was plotted, and correlations were found only with surface ocean currents.
However, both military and commercial pilots began
supplying us with factual data of another nature. This
was to the effect that in, or immediately around, these
ten areas there appeared to be factual evidence of a
time anomaly. By this is meant (to over-s~mplify) that
a plane may appear to have arrived at itsl destination
either much too soon or much too late; according to
its instruments on the one hand, and by ground records on the other. This "anomaly" is becoming
apparently more frequent, and we therefore want to
receive any and all reports of such incidents. However, please keep in mind that we are interested only
in cases which are backed up with and by factual
statistics or records.
We are also, of course, interested in receiving
reports of ships or planes that vanish w'ithout trace
anywhere - either new reports or old ones, since we
have certainly not got a complete record of these.
Then, something else connected with this wretched business has cropped up. This came up after a TV
show - Dick Cavett of ABC - broadcast ;on the 16th
of March, on which our director was to debate this
whole business with Arthur Godfrey. On two previous
occasions Arthur had told Dick, and his audience,
that he would be willing so to do but, in his good old
style, referred to it as being "a lot of ~:Jloody nonsense" or words 1D that effect. Arthur Godfrey has
been just about the loudest front for aviation during
the thirty years he has been on radio and: television,
but he certainly slammed down the SST tl~at evening,
and everybody expected him to let the poor old
"Bermuda Triangle" have it just as forcefp.lly. But to
everybody's amazement, he not only ~reated the
matter with the utmost conscientiousness and sympathy, but went further to give three flat: statements
confirming this mystery from his own personal experiences. Also, at the end of the show, in reply to
a query from Dick Cavett as to whether he felt the
matter warranted proper scientific investigation,
he
I
replied - directly into camera - with a flat "Yes".
The three cases that Arthur related on the air
were demonstrated on a small globe we had provided
on which the (then) ten known areas of a~omaly were
clearly marked. The first was of the instant and
complete disappearance of a great pl~ne, called
simply "The Mars", northeast of the Hawaiian Islands.
Arthur told us that he was to have been on this

49

~
, ,,

OUR WORLD

AND AROUND WE GO A(JAfN

(SK,,.

'j' '

--1---1

IT]

- - t- - - - - - -

-1- :- ' - -

/1",
........

flight but missed it and so watched its departure on


radar. Snapping his fingers at camera he said: "The
darned thing just went 'puiff', and they never found a
trace of it". His second personal experience was
when he was on his round-the-world flight in a twoengined jet, and started to fly across the infamous
"Devil's Sea" north of the Bonin Islands in the west
Pacific. He told us that this time they lost radio
contact and all other instrument contact with the
'outside' world for an hour and a half, and with only
four hours of gas to go. Arthur stuck his finger on
that blob on our globe and said simply: "And that's
not nice, I'm telling you".
His third case was even less expected. Arthur
asked for the globe again and, turning to Dick, he
outlined the Bermuda blob and pointed out that the
east coast of North America really leans way over
till it almost points south. He told us that he and
other experienced fliers en route from New York to
Florida usually cut across the ocean, so saving a
hundred miles or so, but he then volunteered the information that whenever he did so he kept an awfully
wary eye on his instruments! And that is just what
other pilots have told us, including Bob Durant, who

o/IIIEAS OF

..:. - _' _"_1- __ ~;


~- I':'
i.

j~!NS~ A~LI~S,

used almost the same words on Barry Farber's radio


show.
This information and confirmation given us by
Arthur Godfrey set off a sort of chain reaction among
scientists and engineers. And it was one of the latter
fraternity who came to us the very next day with an
observation that has necessitated our dropping just
about everything else. His suggestion: simply that the
earth is a gigantic static electrical machine having
not just five dipoles - represented by the ten
lozenges, "triangles", vortices, or whatever you want
to call them - but six; the sixth pair represented by
the north and south magnetic poles.
Immediately upon starting to work on this assumption, all sorts of extraordinary things came to light,
and some very "old saws" cropped up. We are loath
to bring one of these up but it is none less than the
very old "hollow earth" business. This we will be reporting on later but, in the meantime, we beg that you
do not suddenly think that our earth is hollow, or
believe any other of the ravings of those who have
suggested that it is. No: the matter at hand is a
great deal more subtle than that. It also stems from
true and proper scientific theorizing.

50

BOOK REVIEWS

Michel Gauquelin. The Scientific Basis


HUI~hes). $5.95.

Qf Astrology. New York: stein and Day, 1969 (translated, by James

Our regular readers, knowing of our attitude toward astrology, may be somewhat startled to see this
titlE! among our reviews. In fact, it is must reading for all forteans for the simple reason that it is, and I
quote from Aime Michel's preface, "the most conscientious, profound and convincing of all the refutations
of journalistic and traditional astrology yet produced".
The book is divided into three sections - first, the early history of astrology; second, an analysis of
astrology as practiced today; and third, some new discoveries. The first section is interesting but frankly
not 'spectacular'; and you may wish to skim the second section, though I strongly recommend that you
read Chapters IX through XI which present statistical analyses of the astrologers so-called predictions.
ThE'se should prove an eye-opener to anyone who is under the impression that astrology 'works'. And I
cannot resist noting that the author points out that all sorts of "influences" are attributed to the planet
Pluto - which was not actually found until 1930! One wonders which planet governed these aspects of
life before Pluto was discovered.
'
However, it is the third section which is of greatest interest, and for several reasons. As t:he author
says in his Introduction, "In the twentieth century our ideas about the relation between man and the
cosmos have ended up in one of two dead-end streets: an unyielding science and a market-place astrology
... The feud between these two groups has been endless, but of late a new school of scientists h:as managed to break the vicious circle. For some years now these scientists have been discovering that'there are
certain unexpected but close connections between man and the solar system, and between man and the
galaxy... beside the superstitions of astrology there is a place for a 'new and different cosmobiology' "
and, if one may coin a word, 'cosmochemistry' that he treats in this last section; and some of thEl findings
are indeed extraordinary - and in one case, utterly fortean. We cannot go into this in detail, but: this last
item concerns the cleaning of boilers - i.e. removing the scale that forms on the walls - by using "treated
watl~r"; no one knows how or why this works but it does. However, it works better on some days than on
others. An Italian chemist spent years making daily tests in an effort to find out why this variation occurred. His irrefutable conclusion is that the efficacy of the treatment varies with the relative positions
of the Earth, the Moon, and the Sun! And this is not kookery but established fact.
Get the book.
Marion L. Fawcett.
Charles Berlitz. The Mystery

Atlantis. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1969. $5.95.

There have been a great many books published on the subject of the "Lost Continent of Atlantis". Far
too many consist of insufferable drivel written by persons whose enthusiasm is matched only by their lack
of knowledge. Many others simply attempt to prove that Atlantis was not in the Atlantic but in'the North
Sea, the Sahara, etc., wherever the author has 'discovered' it. In fact, one would think there have been
quite enough books about the subject, but Charles Berlitz has produced the "exception that proves the
rule". His is an eminently sane and remarkably objective presentation and analysis of the evidence for
and against Atlantis, and is also surprisingly complete for a book of non-encyclopaedic size.
The author is, of course, at his best when he deals with linguistics - he speaks "30 languages, give
or take a few". He points out that much of the linguistic (so-called) evidence is absolute baloney - e.g.
Le Plongeon's use of a Mayan word list which he thought was an alphabet, to translate various documents
that "proved" the existence of Atlantis (according to Churchward, these same documents provEi!d the ex-

* The latest in this marathon is an ad sent us by our member 582. This appeared in the Sunday NY ~
Book Section (Book Exchange Columns) for a number of weeks in April 1970 and read as follo~s: "FOR
SALE material for most historic book, the mile posts of the legendary Atlantis and its parent civilization.
Price' $250,000. ~o, that's not a 'typo'.J Edward Jackson, 79 Ocean st., Woollahra, Sydney, Au;stralia."
Our member wrote to Mr. Jackson on the 19th April 1970, by air mail, but never received a reply. For that
price we would want a large chunk of Atlantean real estate and an ironclad guarantee that it would stay
above water!

51

istence of Mu!). On the other hand, he notes that there are certain valid linguistic 'links' between the Old
and the New Worlds which need explaining rather badly.
His knowledge of both cultural anthropology and archaeology is good (one can only assume that he
suffered a complete "mental block" when he put Stonehenge and Avebury in Cornwall rather than in Wiltshire) and he does not stretch the evidence as so many authors do. He is undoubtedly pro-Atlantis but his
bias is rarely obvious. The fact is that there are a large number of knobbly little problems which could be
solved by the previous existence of a continent - or a large island - occupied by a people with a fairly
advanced culture. And we are not here postulating a super-civilization with ray guns and other appurtenances of the woollier science fiction.
Even those who have reached the "saturation point" on the subject of Atlantis will find this book of
value as a reference. Unhappily, there is no index.
MLF
Hans Stefan Santesson. Understanding Mu. New York: Coronet Communications, Inc. Paperback Library,
1970. 75.
This is an exceedingly difficult assignment. It should be clearly ulJderstood that it purports to be a review of this book, not of its contents. Regarded in this light, said book should be appreciated as a very
real contribution to our overall, so-called cultural appreciation. In fact, an exposition such as this of the
"content" is long overdue.
The subject of this book is a mass of drivel published over many years by a slightly demented British
ex- Army officer who spent some time in India and became obsessed with some aspects of its mysticism
and its renowned forms of intellectual jargon. His name was Colonel James Churchward. Just about everything this poor man ever said was not only rubbish but as near mad as you could wish. Based on nothing
more than some alleged conversations with a "priest" of a cult virtually outlawed even by the tolerant, and
long-suffering Hindoo hierarchY, and endless borrowings from, and even plagiarisms of, such other mystics
as Madame Blavatsky and Le Plongeon, this amaible old gentleman made a profound indent, through his
writings, upon our modern world. Trouble is, an awful lot of people have believed what he said.
What Churchward did say is so appallingly idiotic as to be pathetic but, so help us all, he has been so
believed by a very large audience. These were those who had either not had cause to read the known facts
about that of which he spoke, or were too abyssmally ignorant to understand that the poor man was talking
complete nonsense. This man thus was, and still is, a major menace; so it is greatly to the credit of the
author of this book that he has brought all this pernicious drivel out into the open, and displayed it to the
general reader for what it is. Hans Stefan Santesson is an historian and in this book he gives us a compendium of the ravings of Churchward; and then lets us judge these for ourselves.
If you still believe this compounded mass of inexactitude, there is nothing further that even the erudite
author of this book can do for you. Colonel James Churchward was undoubtedly a remarkable man, and
probably rather a charming one, but he was quite mad. Unfortunately, he managed to slip his nonsense in
at a time in history when scientific exploration had not yet brought to light the realities of the past, even
as now known. Thus, he was able to erect theories, and claim "evidence" for them, when nobody had the
.
time or the facts to check his statements or to refute his arguments.
The really terrifying thing is that countless people, and especially intelligent young people, still get
hold of Churchward's effusions and take them as "scientific" fact. Indeed, many people seem to feel that
because he spent his entire life "investigating" this, that he must have "known what he was talking
about" and was somehow automatically admirable! A moment's thought by any sane person will reveal the
idiocy of this notion.
Would that this little book could be made not just preferred, but essential, reading in all schools and
the basis for intelligent schoolroom debate. The author has cast the first stone at this monstrous effigy
of insanity. Would that others should follow.
Ivan T. Sanderson.
New Scientist and Science Journal: We most strongly recommend this publication to all our members. It's
full of good solid stuff, as well as the hilarious, and it gives very good coverage of American affairs
scientific, as seen by intelligent Anglo-Saxon-speaking foreigners. It may be ordered from New Scientist,
128 Long Acre, London WC2E 9QH, England; the price is $16 by air - not bad for a weekly journal.

52
if,,,,,,,,.iI'..,.""."'Ii!iji!,.....""'U.,,............_

IN MEMORY

_lIiIiI_~

_________

Keith Tavernor

All of us have but one life to lead, and what we call death must indubitably come to al~ of us. When
we have lasted our allotted span, we should both accept it and perhaps even welcome it. But we who are
left here, have a duty to report the passing-on of any of our members.
This morning, the 30th March of this year 1971, we had just finished reading a letter from our member
No. 665 - namely, Keith Tavernor - when the phone rang and our member No. 385, whose name is John G.
Borowczak, of Beavercreek, Oregon, told us that Keith had been knocked down by a car a few hours previously and - the Good Lord be praised - had died instantly. The "coincidentiality" of ~his chain of
events is onerous to bear: but, as of the moment, we can think qnly of his family.
Keith's father died in 1945 of wounds sustained in the defense of his country; we know only his
brother, James, and this only by long distance. Keith came to us literally "out of the blue", ;and we were
his only contact in this country. He worked for our mutual benefit, and on a matter that is of great interest
to all of us. When he left for the west coast, we "appointed him officially" as our representati!ve in charge
of those matters - to wit, the Sasquatches. When this shocking phone call came in today anhouncing his
death, we naturally went to his file in order to inform his family. But what did we find?
In a letter of recommendation that we gave him, the third paragraph read Any help or as!Sistance you
might render the bearer would be most gratefully acknowledged by our Board of Directors; and, ~ M
~ with!!! accident [emphasis added]; or, for other reasons, be unable to communicate with us, we
would ask you to phone the above number." Though this sad business is now irrevocably ov!!r, we would
like to take a few moments to contemplate it.
Keith Tavernor was born on the 8th of July, 1944, in stockport, England. He quit school at the age of
15, with what they call over there, an Advanced Certificate with five Credits". Then, he plu~ged into the
following somewhat extraordinary career.
II

II

1959 Trip to France; research and exploration of ice caves in Pyrenean Mountains.
1961-64 Enlisted in H.M. Royal Marines, during which time served fourteen m'onths active service in Aden
Protectorate; extensive field work in Africa on field survival, jungle warfare, etc., esp~cially in Mt.
Kilimanjaro Province. Places visited: Persia, Yemene, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanganyika, Uganda,
Somalia, Saudi Arabia, Muscat, and Oman.
1964-67 Yorkshire Zoological Federation, England (Flamingo Park Zoo) - employed as aviculturist and
vivarium keeper. During which time discovered techniques in breeding certain species :in captivity.
1967-68 Free-lance field study and conservation work in England, Scotland, and Wales.
1968-69 Trip to Africa alone for further field work; via Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Sud~n, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia. Worked with Zambia Game and Fisheries, based ~hilanga and
and did field work involving Eland (Taurotragus derbiana) on the Kafue River Reserve.
1969-70 Employed by Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust, Jersey, Channel Islands; Director, Gerald
Durrell, F.Z.S. etc. Working with Simians and Pongids.
In the summer of 1970 he just "upped" and climbed aboard a boat to come to this country.' He had been
corresponding with John .Borowczak about this everlasting (and seemingly endless) pursuit of the Sasquatches and Bigfeet of our Northwest; and he had decided to drop everything and come over here, and get
into the act. By the merest chance, he got into conversation with another of our members '- the famous
big-game photographer and film producer, and also Charles Darwin's great-grandson, we mig~t add! - No.
181, aboard a liner. As a result, he was with us four hours after he landed in America for t~e first time!
He spent a month with us, last Christmas and New Year. He reorganized all our files on North American
ABSMs, and he offered to take over control of all activities in the Northwest on our Society"s behalf. He
then submitted monthly reports up to the one that we received this morning. But this came ;no more than
five minutes before the phone call announcing his untimely death.
Romance is not yet dead; but Death can be romantic.
Your Colleagues.

THE SOCIETY FOR THE


INVESTIGATION OF THE UNEXPLAINED
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
President (and Chairman ofthe Board) (*)
First Vice-President (u.)
Second Vice-President ( ..... )
Third Vice-President (U)
Secretary ( )
Treasurer ( ... )
Elected Member for One Year
Elected Member for One Year
Elected Member for One Year
Elected Member for One Year

Hans stefan Santesson


Edgar o. Schoenenberger
Ivan T. Sanderson
Michael R. Freedman
Marion L. Fawcett
Alma V. Sanderson
Walter J. McGraw
Daniel F. Manning
Allen V. Noe
Adolph L. Heuer, Jr.

(*) Elected for Five Years.


(**) Permanent, without re-election.
(U*) Trustees and Life Members.

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Director (General Administration)
Deputy Director (Establishment)
Executive Secretary (and Librarian)
Assistant Director (Communications)
Assistant Director (Science & Technology)
Assistant Director (Field Operations)
Assistant Director (Public Relations)

Ivan T. Sanderson
Edgar o. Schoenenberger
Marion L. Fawcett
Michael R. Freedman
Adolph L. Heuer. Jr.
Jack A. Ullrich
Daniel F. Manning

gr ANDING COMMITTEES

Richard W. Palladino
Alfred D. Bielek
Keith Tavernor

The Ringing Rock s


Brain Control
Physical Anthropology
SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARD

Dr. George A. Agogino - Chairman. Department of Anthropology, and Director. Paleo-Indian Institute, Eastern
New Mexico University. (Archaeology)
Dr. N. Burtshak-Abramovitch - Academician, Georgian Academy of Science. Palaeobiological Institute; University of Tblisi. (Palaeontology)
Dr. Carl H. Delacato - Associate Director, Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential, Philadelphia.
(Mentalogy)
Dr. W. C. Osman Hill - Dublin and London (Comparative Anatomy)
Dr. J. Allen Hynek - Director. Lindheimer Astronomical Research Center. Northwestern University. (Astronomy)
Dr. George C. Kennedy - Professor of Geology. Institute of Geophysics, U.C.L.A. (Geomorphology and
G~hy~~
.
Dr. Martin Kruskal - Program in Applied Mathematics, Princeton University. (Mathematics)
Dr. Samuel B. McDowell - Professor of Biology. Rutgers University. Newark. New Jersey. (General Biology)
Dr. Vladimir Markotic - Professor of Anthropology. Department of Archaeology. University of Alberta. Canada
(Ethnosociology and Ethnology)
Dr. Kirtley F. Mather - Professor of Geology. Emeritus. Harvard University. (Geology)
Dr. John R. Napier - Unit of Primate Biology. Queen Elizabeth College. University of London. (Physical
Anthropology)
Dr. W. Ted Roth - President. Roth Research-Animal Care. Inc . Washington. D. C. (Ethology)
Dr. Frank B. Salisbury - Head. Plant Science Department. College of Agriculture. Utah State University.
(Phytochemistry)
Dr. Roger W. Wescott - Professor and Chairman. Department of Anthropology, Drew University, Madison, New
Jersey. (Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics)
Dr. A. Joseph Wraight - Chief Geographer, U. S. Coast & Geodetic Survey. (Geography and Oceanography)
Dr. Robert K. Zuck - Professor and Chairman, Department of Botany, Drew University, Madison, New Jersey.
(Botany)

HICKS PRINTING COMPANY.

37 BELVIDERE AVENUE. WASHINGTON. NEW JERSEY. TELEPHONE

201-689-0194

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