Page 20 - Nick Begich - Angels Don't Play This Haarp Advances in Tesla Technology
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           Although he continued to invent and to learn, he was kicked out of the spotlight.
           Corporate moguls who were interested in creating monopolies and metering electrical
           power blackballed him.

                  Golka  spoke  about  his  own  "Project  Tesla",  which  involved  building  a
           122-foot  resonating  tower  high  in  the  mountains.  Manning  struggled  to  understand
           what  he  meant  by  his  efforts  to  get  "earth  resonance".  She  could  visualize  the  more
           familiar  resonance  in  musical  instruments,  and  that  helped  to  picture  the  earth
           vibrating as if its note was struck, If someone strikes a piano key of the same pitch as
           a string on her violin nearby, for example, the string will vibrate. The pitch of a note
           comes  from  how  many  times  per  second  the  sound  vibrates.  Similarly,  the  earth  may
           have  a  resonant  frequency;  if  electrical  oscillations  pound  through  the  earth  at  a
           certain  rate  for  a  long  enough  time,  the  small  periodic  input  may  build up  to  a  large
           vibration.  Could  Tesla's  knowledge  about  resonance  really  be  used  for  advanced
           technologies?

                  "We're  losing  to  the  Japanese,"  Golka  insisted.  "We  have  the  technology
           and we're sleeping on it,"

                  Another  short,  lively  speaker,  an  engineering  professor,  said  there  is
           "definite  evidence  that  Nikola  Tesla  did  excite  the  Schumann  cavity  in  1899".  (This
           cavity is the area between the earth and the electrically- charged ionosphere.)

                  A man from Albuquerque, New Mexico, brought the talk down to earth again
           with  a  demonstration  of  a  squat  piece  of  equipment  called  The  Tesla  Earthquake
           Oscillator.  Stroking  his  beard  -  a  trim  gray  goatee  -  he  assured  onlookers  that  the
           oscillator  would  not  be  coupled  to  the  earth  during  the  demonstration  and  therefore
           would not cause any earthquakes. The mechanical device had a frictionless piston in a
           heavy  casing.  "This  oscillator  pounds  the  earth  and  impresses  on  it  rhythmic
           vibrations  of  certain  controllable  frequencies,"  he  said.  The  sound  vibrations  would
           bounce  back  and  forth  "in  a  reflection  pattern  which  produces  standing  wave
           overlappings,  or  nodes,  which  act  as  lenses  to  propagate  waves  which  set  up  a
           resonance condition."

                  There  was that word "resonance" again. The electrical engineers talked about
           a buildup of ever more powerful effects. Manning may have had a puzzled expression
           on her face, because one man turned to her and offered to further explain resonance. He
           gave  the  example  of  a  child  pushing  a  larger  person  on  a  swing.  Small  pushes,
           correctly  timed,  gradually  increase  the  distance  through  which  the  swing  speeds.  In
           other words, small input at regular intervals can produce big effects. Resonance would
           turn  out  to  be  an  important  concept,  used  deliberately  or  inadvertently  by  men  who
           try  to  tame  the  sky  and  in  the  process  accidentally  interfere  with  our  weather,  health
           and minds. But Manning wouldn't encounter the skybusters until five years later.

                  In  another  meeting  room,  a  graduate  student  from  Montana  State  University,
           Kyle  Klicker,  talked  about  the  hypothesis  of  William  Hooper,  who  gave  new  twists
           on magnetic theory. In the early 1970's,   Hooper had been showing that not all
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