A Bowl of Cherries



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "Jack Sarfatti"
Date: 16 Feb 2004 09:33:45 PM
Object: A Bowl of Cherries
In the thick of it!
“The documents on Terletskii’s meetings with Niels Bohr in November,
1945 – consisting of Beria’s cover letter to Stalin, twenty-two
questions” [Not Wheeler’s “Twenty Questions” of the Quantum
Observer-Participator bringing itself and the Multiverse into being and
becoming as a “self-excited circuit.”] “posed by Soviet intelligence
officer Yakov Terletskii and answered by Bohr … Jack Sarfatti, a
theoretical physicist who was a student of Hans Bethe and who worked
with several scientists of that generation reviewed the documents …
Sarfatti found that …” Report on the Bohr-Terletskii Meetings,
Documents from the Russian State Archive, “Special Tasks” with “Updated
Edition” paperback with “New Foreword” by Robert Conquest of the Hoover
Institution, Stanford University, p. 483
“Dr. Sarfatti, first I want to inform you that I am a Qabalist.” (with
mischievous wink of his eyebrow … brief pause, clearing his through
assuming a more somber pose) “Dr Sarfatti, it is my duty to inform you
of a psychic war raging across the continents between the Soviet Union
and your country and you are to be in the thick of it.”
Dennis Bardens to me in the Blue Boar Inn, Cambridge University after
Ted Bastin’s ANPA/Psychical Research Society Meeting attended by Brian
Josephson, Bernard Carr and other very smart people. Bardens, a London
journalist wrote many books, one a biography of Winston Churchill.
“LONDON Freelance Branch presented a bottle of champagne to Denni
Bardens, probably our oldest member, on the occasion of his 92n
birthday on 19 July. The crowd testified to a colourful and productive
life including as it did the King of Burma, assorted ghost-hunter
contacts from his books and perhaps the odd actual spook from his time
attached to the Foreign Office" at the end of the Second World War.
He went on to be founding editor of Panorama. As he told a Branch
meeting in 2001, ‘the BBC often forgets this, and when they do I sue.’
By one account he coined the name of the programme as he stared out of
an upper-storey office window at the, er, vista of London in search of
inspiration. The list of apologies was dominated by the entire roster of
Fleetwood Mac - the band got started with his offer of rehearsal space.
…... Although Dennis is very ill he did manage a smile or two and just
before we drove him back to hospital he sang, in a fading voice, 'Life
is Just a Bowl of Cherries':
Why are we here?
Where are we going?
It's time that we found out.
We're not here to stay;
We're on a short holiday.
Life is just a bowl of cherries.
Don't take it serious;
it's too mysterious...
The picture of all his friends at the back of the ambulance waving and
cheering and him singing will stay with me forever. I'm glad I've shared
a couple of hours with this lovely man."
“Dennis Bardens (19th July 1911 - 7th February 2004) was a London
journalist who worked as reporter and feature writer on leading British
newspapers, including the Sunday Express and Daily Mirror. For over a
decade he contributed a column to the US-based British Digest and
contributed to newspapers and magazines world-wide, including the New
York Times.”
http://media.gn.apc.org/fl/0309db.html?i=flindex&d=2003_09
“For many years he was Editor of the BBC radio programme Focus and was
the co-founder and first Editor of the BBC’s longest-lasting and
internationally famous programme, Panorama.
Dennis Bardens is the author of fifteen books, including biographies of
Sir Anthony Eden ('Portrait of a Statesman'; Frederick Muller, 1955);
Sir Winston Churchill ('Churchill in Parliament'; Hale, 1962/63);
'Elizabeth Fry' (True Books; Muller, 1961); 'Famous Cases on Norman
Birkett'; K.G. (Hale, 1963); 'Princess Margaret' (Hale, 1964); Henri
Landru (The Lady Killer; Peter Davies, 1972).
From childhood ghosts and mysteries of the paranormal have interested
him, and 'Ghosts and Hauntings' has had many editions and been described
as a classic of its kind. 'Psychic Animals' (Hale, etc. 1985) has been
published in ten languages; while 'Mysterious Worlds' (Hale, 1970)
covering a wide spectrum of mysteries, has received wide acclaim. He is
a member of The Society for Psychical Research and The Ghost Club.
'Ahead of Time' (a study of precognition that included research
conducted on behalf of the Parapsychology Foundation of New York) was
published by Robert Hale in 1991.”
http://www.paranormal-discussion.co.uk/authors/dennis_bardens.html
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