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As was Pat's custom, he polished his spectacles, leaned back in his chair, and closed his eyes. He was silent for about a minute, and then he started to laugh. He said, "What I see reminds me of the old joke that starts with a guy in his penthouse looking up at the 3rd Avenue elevated train." Pat then began his description: "I am lying on my back on the roof of a two- or three-story brick building. It's a sunny day. The sun feels good. There's the most amazing thing. There's a giant gantry carne moving back and forth over my head. . . . As I drift up in the air and look down, it seems to be riding on a track with one rail on each side of the building. I've never seen anything like that." Pat then made a little sketch of the layout of the buildings, and the crane, which he labeled as a gantry. Later on, he again drew the crane as we show it in the recently released illustration, Figures 7a and 7b. |
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After several days we completed the remote viewing. We were astonished when we were told that the site was the super-secret Soviet atomic-bomb laboratory at Semipalatinsk, where they were also testing particle-beam weapons. |
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The accuracy of Price's drawing is the sort of thing that I, as a physicist, would never have believed, if I had not seen it for myself. The drawing at the top of Figure 8 was made by the CIA from satellite photography of the Semipalatinsk facility. At the bottom of that figure we show Price's drawing, together with an enlargement of the crane from the CIA photo. Price went on to draw many other items at the site, including the cluster of compressed gas cylinders shown in the satellite photo, and at the top of his drawing in Figure 9. |
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One of the most interesting things Price saw was not in the CIA drawing at all, because it was inside the building that he was psychically lying on top of, and unknown to anyone in our government at the time. In this experiment he described a large interior room where people were assembling a giant, sixty-foot diameter metal sphere. He said that it was being assembled from thick metal "gores," like sections of an orange peel, but they were having trouble welding it all together because the pieces were warping. Price said that they were looking for a lower-temperature welding material. We didn't get any feedback on this for more than three years. Then we discovered how |
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