From thebob@tulsa.com Sat Jan 27 21:22:20 1996 From: Perkins_Benson@msn.com (Robert Benson) Subject: Russian experimentation with Tesla's 'terrestrial standing wave' hypothesis. Date: 21 Jan 96 20:58:47 -0800 Message-ID: <000020c8+00007700@msn.com> Path: lurch.sccsi.com!news.sccsi.com!academ!news.sesqui.net!imci2!newsfeed.internetmci.com!news.sprintlink.net!news.msn.com!msn.com Newsgroups: sci.skeptic Organization: The Microsoft Network (msn.com) Lines: 28 This is not submitted by a scientist, but by a curious scientific 'groupie' if you will. So forgive and move on if you are offended by the presence in these august ranks of a non PhD. In the winter of '77 Buffalo got four feet of snow in one storm, there were days when it was colder in Miami than Anchorage, El Nino, etc. The following spring or summer I saw on the tube an interview with some scientist (channel surfing, I tuned in too late to find out who,) who remarked re: the curious weather, that at an international conference on weapons systems, the Soviet delegate suddenly, and with no previous warning proposed an international ban on attempting to influence the weather. It turned out that they, the Soviets, had been experimenting with Tesla's hypothesis about very low Hz radio waves possibly influencing global weather, and their experiments went out of control, and resulted in earthquakes in Fiji. I am fascinated. Has anyone any knowledge of, information on, clues to, references about the above facts? Your tolerence is appreciated! Robert Benson Perkins_Benson@msn.com