-Caveat Lector-

------- Forwarded message follows -------
Date sent:              Tue, 25 Jun 2002 08:53:06 -0400
From:                   ronald kramarz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:                Re: IMAGES: Hum Haunts Indiana City; Its Source Is a Mystery
To:                     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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The below report I found sounds similar:
http://www.freezone.org/timetrack/data/psychopolitics/bowart_iw.htm

X. THE EUGENE WAVELENGTH
"A powerful radio signal that may be affecting human health has been
monitored in several Eugene locations and in the air three thousand feet
above the city," proclaimed the Eugene Register-Guard on March 26, 1978.
"The source of the radio signal is unknown." Thus came to light news of the.
first electromagnetic biohazards suffered by a major population center (34).
Shortly before the Register-Guard printed the story, a middle-aged Eugene
man, Walter Deposkey, came down with symptoms remarkably similar to those
attributed to microwave sickness (35). He noted a strange vibration
emanating from within his home. He heard voices. He could not sleep. He
suffered burning of his cornea. University of Oregon industrial hygeinist
Marshall van Ert, called to investigate Deposkey's complaints, suffered the
same symptoms in the man's home. Disturbed, van Ert recruited several local
engineers to investigate. The engineers measured an unusual radio signal
they determined was capable of producing potential biohazards. After dogging
public health agencies to investigate further, van Ert broke the story in
the papers (36).

The Eugene Signal was described as a radio frequency pulse at 4.75
megahertz, 1,100 cycles per second, recorded within at least two local homes
as well as 3,000 feet above the city (37). The signal's strength was rated
at five hundred thousand watts -- ten times the FCC AM licensed limit. The
signal extended as far away as the next town, Corvallis. 150 documented
complaints about the signal prompted Governor Bob Straub, Senator Mark
Hatfield, and Congressman Jim Weaver to demand an EPA investigation (38). A
data analysis by the State Health Department's Radiation Control Section
suggested "probable cause" linking the complaints to the strange frequency
(39). "I was surprised," said Clifford Shrock, a Textronix, Inc. radio
frequency analyst who had written CIA and NSA electronics manuals, "I'd
never seen anything like it before." (40) Reactions to the story" flooded in
from around the world. Calls came in from people telling similar stories
about their own distant areas. Several calls came from technicians offering
their hypotheses about the signal, suggesting a possible link to secret
weapons readiation. The people of Eugene began to learn about
Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR) biohazards in a hurry.

No one, however, could get to the bottom of Eugene's problem. The FCC's.
Enforcement Division Assistant Chief, Richard Smith, laid the blame squarely
on a naval transmitter at Dixon, California -- the "Dixon Duck" (41). Van
Ert and others disputed this conclusion. The Navy denied it. When the EPA
technicians finally arrived, they decided no real Problem existed and denied
that there was any mystery signal. Van Ert, Shrock, and others strongly
disagreed with them. They had felt the signal and had measured it. But,
after holding a cursory press conference, the EPA investigators returned to
its Las Vegas headquarters and dodged reporters. Then the investigation
folded.

While some of the citizens of Eugene, Oregon say they continue to suffer
from the signal effects, the Eugene Signal remains an official mystery.
Marshall Van Ert left Eugene after he began suffering from EMR symptoms.
Today he is still convinced he was-victimized by secret IW radiation and a
government coverup.

The people of Eugene aren't the only ones complaining of EMR biohazard
effects. Similar symptoms have been reported in such places as Timmons and
Kirkland Lake in Canada. These effects were traced to a notorious Soviet
radio broadcast dubbed by amateur radio operators "the woodpecker." (42)
These effects bear a strong resemblance to the biohazards inherent in
Invisible Weapons like the electromagnetic pulse (EMP) under development by
the Pentagon. Although the people of Eugene didn't know it, both the U.S.
and Soviet military had been working for years to perfect the use of
electromagnetic frequencies as lethal psychological weapons.

------- End of forwarded message -------

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