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			 by 
			
            
			Tim Swartz
 9/2001
 
			Full text published by 
			
			Global Communications 
			In 1899, Nikola Tesla, with the aid of his financial backer, 
			J.P. 
			Morgan, set up at Colorado Springs an experimental laboratory 
			containing high-voltage, radio transmission equipment. The lab had a 
			200 ft. tower for transmission and reception of radio waves and the 
			best receiving equipment available at the time.
 
			 One night, when he was alone in the laboratory, Tesla observed what 
			he cautiously referred to as electrical actions which definitely 
			appeared to be intelligent signals. The changes were taking place 
			periodically and with such a clear suggestion of number and order 
			that they could not be traced to any cause then known to him.
 
			 Tesla elaborated on the subject of Talking with the Planets in 
			Collier’s Weekly (March 1901):
 
				
				"As I was improving my machines for 
			the production of intense electrical actions, I was also perfecting 
			the means for observing feeble efforts. One of the most interesting 
			results and also one of great practical importance, was the 
			development of certain contrivances for indicating at a distance of 
			many hundred miles an approaching storm, its direction, speed and 
			distance traveled.  
				"It was in carrying on this work that for the first time I 
			discovered those mysterious effects which have elicited such unusual 
			interest. I had perfected the apparatus referred to so far that from 
			my laboratory in the Colorado mountains I could feel the pulse of 
			the lobe, as it were, noting every electrical change that occurred 
			within a radius of eleven hundred miles.
 
				"I can never forget the first sensations I experienced when it 
			dawned upon me that I had observed something possibly of 
			incalculable consequences to mankind. I felt as though I were 
			present at the birth of a new knowledge or the revelation of a great 
			truth. My first observations positively terrified me as there was 
			present in them something mysterious, not to say supernatural, and I 
			was alone in my laboratory at night; but at that time the idea of 
			these disturbances being intelligently controlled signals did not 
			yet present itself to me.“
 
				"The changes I noted were taking place periodically and with such a 
			clear suggestion of number and order that they were not traceable to 
			any cause known to me. I was familiar, of course, with such 
			electrical disturbances as are produced by the sun, Aurora Borealis, 
			and earth currents, and I was as sure as I could be of any fact that 
			these variations were due to none of these causes.“
 
				"The nature of my experiments precluded the 
				possibility of the 
			changes being produced by atmospheric disturbances, as has been 
			rashly asserted by some. It was sometime afterward when the thought 
			flashed upon my mind that the disturbances I had observed might be 
			due to an intelligent control.
 
				"Although I could not at the time decipher their meaning, it was 
			impossible for me to think of them as having been entirely 
			accidental. The feeling is constantly growing on me that I had been 
			the first to hear the greeting of one planet to another. A purpose 
			was behind these electrical signals."
 
			This incident was the first of many in which 
			Tesla intercepted what 
			he felt were intelligent signals from space. At the time, it was 
			surmised by prominent scientists that Mars would be a likely haven 
			for intelligent life in our solar system, and Tesla at first thought 
			these signals may be originating from the red planet. He would later 
			change this viewpoint as he became more adept at translating the 
			mysterious signals. Near the end of his life, Tesla had developed 
			several inventions that allegedly could send powerful amounts of 
			energy to other planets.  
			 In 1937, during one of his birthday press conferences, Tesla 
			announced,
 
				
				"I have devoted much of my time over the years to the 
			perfecting of a new small and compact apparatus by which energy in 
			considerable amounts can now be flashed through interstellar space 
			to any distance without the slightest dispersion."  
				(New York 
			Times--July 11, 1937.)  
			Tesla never publicly revealed the technical details of his improved 
			transmitter, but in his 1937 announcement, he revealed a new formula 
			showing that  
				
				"The kinetic and potential energy of a body is the 
			result of motion and determined by the product of its mass and the 
			square of its velocity. Let the mass be reduced, the energy is 
			reduced by the same proportion. If it be reduced to zero, the energy 
			is likewise zero for any finite velocity."  
				(New York Sun--July 12, 
			1937, pg. 6.)  
			After his initial Colorado Springs experiments in 1899, 
			Tesla 
			started experimenting with better radio transmitters and receivers 
			in order to repeat his reception of the anomalous signals he picked 
			up in Colorado. Tesla considered his methods of reception and transmission utilized 
			not Hertzian waves, or what we now refer to as transverse 
			electromagnetic waves (radio), but another type of signal 
			transmission.  
			 He described them as faster-than-light (FTL) longitudinal wave 
			transmissions. Tesla may have been receiving on the ELF spectrum 
			(Extremely Low Frequencies). The ELF spectrum is below the 10 KHz. 
			boundary of internationally regulated frequencies. It is usually 
			considered to be the spectrum of 3 Hz. to 30 Hz.
 
				
					
						
							
							
							VLF-3 to 30 KHz.
							
							ULF-300 to 3000 Hz.
							
							ELF-3 to 300Hz. 
			The wavelengths in the ELF 
			range are from 100,000 Km. to 1,000 Km. and the wavelength for the 
			earth’s 40,000 Kms. Circumference falls within that spread.  
			 By the 1920’s Tesla had grown confident that he was able to make 
			sense of the strange radio broadcasts from space. However, soon 
			afterwards, Tesla began to expressed great concerns about beings 
			from other planets who had unsavory designs for planet Earth.
 
				
				"The signals are too strong to have traveled the great distances 
			from Mars to Earth," wrote Tesla. "So I am forced to admit to myself 
			that the sources must come from somewhere in nearby space or even 
			the moon. I am certain however, that the creatures that communicate 
			with each other every night are not from Mars, or possibly from any 
			other planet in our solar system."  
			Several years after Tesla 
			announced his reception of signals from space; Guglielmo Marconi also claimed to have heard from an 
			alien 
			radio transmitter. However, Marconi was just as quickly dismissed by 
			his contemporaries who claimed that he had received interference 
			from another radio station on Earth.  
			 Tesla, on the other hand, had perfected his equipment to such a 
			degree that he was soon receiving voice transmissions. These 
			transmissions he speculated were originating from people on other 
			worlds. Tesla gave a few public hints about these interplanetary 
			transmissions, such as in 1937, he announced:
 
				
				"I have devoted much 
			of my time during the year past to the perfecting of a new small and 
			compact apparatus by which energy in considerable amounts can now be 
			flashed through interstellar space to any distance without the 
			slightest dispersion."  
				(New York Times, Sunday, 11 July of 1937).
				 
			A degree of confirmation of Tesla’s interplanetary communications 
			came from Arthur Mathews who claimed that Tesla had secretly 
			developed the "Teslascope" for the purpose of communicating with 
			Mars. Matthews’ father was a laboratory assistant to the noted 
			physicist Lord Kelvin back in the 1890s.  
			  
			Tesla once came over to 
			England to meet Kelvin to convince him that Alternating Current was 
			more efficient than Direct. When Matthews was 16 his father arranged 
			for him to apprentice under Tesla. He eventually worked for him and 
			continued this alliance until Tesla’s death in 1943.  
			 It’s not generally known, but Tesla actually had two huge magnifying 
			transmitters built in Canada, and Matthews operated one of them. 
			People mostly know about the Colorado Springs transmitters and the 
			unfinished one on Long Island. I saw the two Canadian transmitters. 
			All the evidence is there.
 
			 The Teslascope is the thing Tesla invented to communicate 
			with 
			Beings on other planets. In principle, it takes in cosmic ray 
			signals and eventually the signals are stepped down to audio. Speak 
			into one end, and the signal goes out the other end as a cosmic ray 
			emitter.
 
			 With the exception of Matthews‘ statements, there has been no 
			concrete evidence that Tesla managed to communicate with 
			extraterrestrials or whoever was transmitting to
			Tesla’s ELF 
			receiver. It seems that Tesla was on the receiving end only. 
			Nevertheless, Tesla managed to glean a substantial amount of good 
			information from these transmissions, enough to influence his 
			research and inventions for the remaining forty three years of his 
			life.
 
			 It was during this period that Tesla found himself ostracized by 
			most of the scientific community. His efforts to interest others in 
			such wild inventions as:
 
				
					
						
					 
			No doubt led to him being considered a 
			crackpot. Sadly, Tesla had become the epitome of a mad scientist.
			 
			
			Yet, it was obvious that his letters to the government and military 
			had aroused some interest. A young American engineer engaged in war 
			work consulted Tesla on a ballistics engineering problem because he 
			could not get time on an overworked computer, and Tesla’s mind was 
			known to offer the nearest thing to it. Soon he became fascinated 
			with Tesla’s scientific papers and was allowed to take batches of 
			them home to his hotel room where he and another American engineer 
			pored over them each night. They were returned the next day, a 
			procedure that continued for about two weeks prior to Tesla’s death.
 
			
			Tesla had received offers to work for Germany and Russia. After the 
			inventor died, both engineers became concerned that critical 
			scientific information had fallen into foreign hands and alerted 
			United States security agencies and high government officials.
 
			 Just how much of Tesla’s work remains hidden in the top secret 
			bowels of the military is unknown. It can be deduced that Tesla’s 
			theories of extraterrestrials and global warming
			were taken 
			seriously by some in high-levels of authority, because it is now 
			known that the United States government and military were the first 
			to give credence that UFOs were spacecraft from other planets.
 
			 It is interesting to note that between 1945 and 1948 an exchange of 
			letters and cables occurred among the Air Technical Service Command 
			at Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio, Military Intelligence in 
			Washington, and the Office of Alien Property. The subject? Files of 
			the late Nikola Tesla.
 
			 On September 5, 1945, Colonel Holliday of the Equipment Laboratory, 
			Propulsion and Accessories Subdivision, wrote to Lloyd L. Shaulis of 
			the OAP in Washington, confirming a conversation and asking for 
			photostatic copies of the notes and papers of the late Tesla. It was 
			stated that the material would be used "in connection with projects 
			for National Defense by this department."
 
			 Shaulis made the material available to Air Technical Service 
			Command, but there is no record of how many copies were sent. Nor 
			was the material ever returned. These were full photostatic copies, 
			not merely the abstracts. The Navy has no record of Tesla’s papers; 
			no federal archives have records of them.
 
			 Four months after the photostats had been sent to Wright Field, Col. 
			Ralph Doty, Chief of Military Intelligence in Washington wrote 
			James 
			Markham of Alien Property indicating that they had never been 
			received:
 
				
				"This office is in receipt of a communication from 
			Headquarters, Air Technical Service Command, Wright Field, 
			requesting that we ascertain the whereabouts of the files of the 
			late scientist, Dr. Nikola Tesla, which may contain data of great 
			value to the above Headquarters.  
				  
				It has been indicated that your 
			office might have these files in custody. If this is true, we would 
			like to request your consent for a representative of the Air 
			Technical Service Command to review them. In view of the extreme 
			importance of these files to the above command, we would like to 
			request that we be advised of any attempt by any other agency to 
			obtain them.    
				"Because of the urgency of this matter, this communication will be 
			delivered to you by a Liaison Officer of this office in the hope of 
			expediting the solicited information."  
			The "other" agency that had the files, or should have had them, was 
			the Air Technical Service Command itself. On October 24, 1947, David 
			L. Bazelon, Assistant Attorney General and Director of the Office of 
			Alien Property, wrote to the commanding officer of the Air Technical 
			Service Command regarding the Tesla photostats. They had not been 
			returned and the OAP wanted them back.  
			 Obviously at least one set of Tesla’s papers had reached 
			Wright 
			Field because on November 25, 1947, there was a response to the 
			Office of Alien Property from Colonel Duffy, chief of the Electronic 
			Plans Section, Electronic Subdivision, Engineering Division, Air 
			Material Command, Wright Field.
 
			 He replied:
 
				
				"These reports are now in the possession of the 
			Electronic Subdivision and are being evaluated. This should be 
			completed by January 1, 1948. At that time your office will be 
			contacted with respect to final disposition of these papers." 
				 
			They 
			were never returned or even acknowledged to have ever existed at 
			all.  
			 In response to a Freedom of Information Act request in 1980, 
			Wright-Patterson Air Force base stated:
 
				
				"The organization (Equipment 
			Laboratory) that performed the evaluation of Tesla’s papers was 
			deactivated several years ago. After conducting an extensive search 
			of lists of records retired by that organization, in which we found 
			no mention of Tesla’s papers, we concluded the documents were 
			destroyed at the time the laboratory was deactivated." 
				 
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