REPRESENTATIVE UDALL FAILS TO RESPOND

REPRESENTATIVE UDALL FAILS TO RESPOND

A comprehensive briefing package on the aerosol issue containing photographs, testimonies, research references and petitions for congressional action on this issue was hand delivered by a prominent media person to Congressional Representative Thomas Udall of New Mexico on September 2, 1999. After no response for evaluation was received back by late November 1999, second and third letters were sent asking for a reply from Representative Udall. Mr. Udall finally sent a form letter back in March of 2000 to the deliverer of the material, stating that he had made a request for Congress to hold hearings on this matter. A spokesman for Representative Udall later stated no such request had been made to Congress by Representative Udall.
WORLD NET DAILY ‘PASSES’ FOR THE TIME BEING

WORLD NET DAILY ‘PASSES’ FOR THE TIME BEING

Notice has been received on 01-13-00 that the World Net Daily, a leading internet newspaper, will be 'passing' on the presentation of an article on the aerosol issue. Two days prior to this announcement, an impending article on the aerosol issue was indicated by this same newspaper. No specific reason for the cancellation or postponement of the article was stated, other than that the issue had been forwarded to higher editorial management.
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CLASSIFIES INQUIRY AS ‘HARASSMENT’

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CLASSIFIES INQUIRY AS ‘HARASSMENT’

University of Michigan Correspondence with Individual Seeking Information on Nano Technology Research Program: TIME LINE OVERVIEW: 1. Letter to Dr. Jones - DARPA - Nov. 15th from A. C. Griffith. 2. Reply from the Director of DARPA, Lawrence H. Dubois, Nov. 16th to A.C. Griffith. 3. A.C.Griffith made one telephone call and one e-mail to Univ. of Mich., News and Information Service, Ann Arbor, Michigan, Nov. 17th. 4. E-mail to A.C. Griffith received from Officer Sura on computer in Winston-Salem. 5. Telephone message to A.C. Griffith on answering machine in Richmond from Officer Sura, University of Michigan, sometime between Nov. 19 and Nov. 21, 1999. 6. Reply letter to Officer Sura dated Nov. 22, 1999.
AEROSOL GROUND SAMPLE PHOTOGRAPHS

AEROSOL GROUND SAMPLE PHOTOGRAPHS

Photographs depicting clumps of fibrous looking material scattered on the ground are presented in this paper, and were taken by a witness in Sedona, Arizona on July 10, 1999. These samples were found on the ground after numerous townspeople reported hearing low flying aircraft the previous night. The samples, which reportedly made some people ill, had a petrochemical odor, and dissipated by mid-morning.
AEROSOL GROUND SAMPLE: MICROSCOPIC VIEWS

AEROSOL GROUND SAMPLE: MICROSCOPIC VIEWS

Microscopic views are presented of two filaments taken from a ground fiber sample after aerial spraying in eastern Oregon on November 2nd and November 4th, 1999. Observation and analysis indicate that the samples appear to be a polymer of some type, being both extremely elastic and adhesive, raising the possibility that this material may act as a carrier mechanism. The materials are white, and look like spider webs. The materials, under magnification, show individual strands that are wave-like in nature, and tend to coalesce and congeal easily. Ill health effects have been reported in association with the handling of this material. This material is reported to dissipate within a few hours of falling on the ground, and in being exposed to the weather. The ground fiber sample images are compared to and found not to be spider webs, and to be fully synthetic. Common health effects associated with this spraying include severe respiratory problems, burning eyes, feeling tired, and some people coughing up blood.