EXCERPTS
>From "The PK Man", about Mr. Ted Owens,
Modern Moses.
(Perhaps the Person feared most by the
Big Money War Criminal Government ruling
over the U.S. during and after the
Big Money US/USSR/Vietnam War.)
Chapter 3
Ted Owens Recalls His Early Years
(pp. 56-61)
"While resting in Myrtle Beach (South Carolina ?),
an idea occured to me. A hurricane had appeared
off Florida, so I called my kids together, drew a map
and a course for the hurricane to follow (using
Southern Florida as a bull's-eye) or else no one
would believe me later on, and wrote to government
agencies and scientists about what I was doing.
To the amazement of our family, the hurricane (Cleo)
followed my map to the letter. If it would start to
deviate from its target, I would communicate with
Nature and get it back onto the course I had prescribed.
During that season, I successfully
directed three hurricances to our improvised target."
For instance, in 1967, he wrote to Timothy Green
Beckley, the editor of "Searchlight" magazine,
claiming that he had asked the Space Intelligences
to produce THREE SIMULTANEOUS HURRICANES during the
year. This had happened only five times since the
1880's. But it happened again in 1967. Owens
also made this prediction to the U.S. Hurricane
Center in COral Gables, Florida. Hurricanes Beula,
Cloe and Daphne were all active over one weekend
in September, thus fulfilling a a claim that had
low probability of being realized.
By 1968, Owens' power of weather control had reached
a peak, and in that year, he gave several documented
demonstrations of his abilities. This was a year when
the psychic made a number of successful predictions
about weather activities in the East.
Sometime in early June, for instance, Owens wrote to the
director of the National Hurricane Center in Florida
informing him that he was about to bring a hurricane
to Philadelphia where the psychic was then living.
The hurricane did'nt materialize immediately, but by
June 13 a freak storm stunned the city. The
"Philadelphia Daily News" headlined their story on
the storm, "Baxter Gives Storm Once-In-A-Century
Rating" and reported that the city's water commisioner,
Samuel Baxter, had announced that a storm of such
intensity occurs only once in a hundred years.
Over $100,000,000 worth of damage was caused by this
storm.
After this apparent success, Owens made a renewed
prediction. Before two fellow workers at the law
firm for which he worked as a typist, he announced
that he would now make a hurricane appear off the
coast during the week of June 22. By Sunday, June 24,
local Philadelphia papers were announcing that a newly
developed tropical storm named Brenda was heading for
Bermuda. By that evening, Brenda had become a hurricane,
but it headed safely out to sea and spared
the coastal areas of Florida. This prediction and
its fulfillment may not sound too impressive,
BUT BRENDA ONLY SPRANG INTO BEING ON FRIDAY, June 21,
just one day after Owens had announced his intention
of producing one. Even more interesting is the fact
that Brenda was the second hurricane of the month.
The end of June is early for hurricanes, and NOT SINCE
1959 had two hurricances formed in the Atlantic so
early in the year. So if Owens was making his
announcement in the hope that it would come about by
chance, he was way off base. (sic) Nor could the
hurricane have been predicted through normal inference.
Brenda was an unusual storm, and unusualness is Owens'
trademark.
The psychic made his next prediction in October 17
when he told one of his contacts,
a Philadelphia lawer named Dennis Kapusin,
that he was about to interfere with the course of a hurricane
then bellowing off Florida's western coast.
He thereupon drew a map
of the hurricane area for his friend, showing Gladys,
then still only a storm, veering away from Florida
as it had been doing during its normal Northwest bearings.
Owens told Kapusin that he was planning
to erect a "wall" in front of the hurricane and make
it turn towards the east, right into Florida.
The very afternoon of Owens' visit to Kapusin, Gladys
came to a complete stop, began changing direction
and proceeded to head directly for Florida.
This was quite a suprise to weathermen, who had
already announced that Florida was out of danger
from the storm's wrath. The reason for Gladys's abrupt
about-face, according to the National Hurricane Center,
was the formation of a high-pressure area that had
developed west of the hurricane. This, itself,
might sound reasonable, but Gladys was behaving in
a peculiar fashion by hurricane standards. An October
18 story about the storm, printed in the "New York Times",
especially noted that he hurricane "veered--suddenly"
and had "caught many of the city's
[St. Petersburg's] more than a million residents
by suprise." The story further related that, because
of its prior due north course, Florida residents had
already relaxed their guard and even weathermen
were taken by suprise.
Owens gave up steady employment in 1969, even though
he had a family to support, so that he could devote
himself solely to his psychic work.
"I had to decide whether I would work in an office
eight hours a day while trying to do what I'm doing
for the Space Intelligences," he explained.
"Immediately I knew I couldn't. You only have so much
energy, and to do what I would have to do for the SI's,
I need all my energy. It's turned out that's been right.
***
SO THAT WAS THE BEST DECISION I'VE MADE IN MY LIFE."
***
>From Chapter 6 of The PK Man
Dancing with Hurricane David
pp. 111, 124-129
"Over a more-than-five-year period, Owens
phoned me several times a week, usually after
midnight, and predicted dire events about to
happen, including earthquakes, hurricanes,
tornados, and violent events worldwide.
Within two days or so, I always received the same
prediction via letter, often accomapnied with some
strange drawing of unknown symbols and signed
"The PK Man". The predictions usually were about
five-to-ten days before actual events took place.
When the event took place, he copied the news
stories and sent me copies. At one time,
I estimated that--with some flexibility on the matter
of timing--Owens' predictions were about 80 percent
ACCURATE."
Wayne Grover, "National Enquirer" journalist
"One of the Mightiest Storms of the Century"
As far back as February, Owens had promised Grover
(freelance reporter for the "National Enquirer")
that he would raise a hurricane in the Atlantic
and guide it directly into Florida. This prediction
was also published as part of the "Palm Beach Post's"
May 28 story on the psychic, which reported that Owens
would attempt to bring a hurricane to Florida but that
it would be especially programmed so that it would not
cause any "unneccessary" deaths among the Florida
population. Now, since late summer initiates hurricance season
in the Atlantic, Owens's forecast
was a safe one. Only if a hurricane of dramatic
proportions were to develop in the Atlantic and were
to crash into Florida could it be inferred that Owens
had something to do with the catastrophe. On the
other hand, no hurricane had struck Flrida since 1966,
so this was no mean order!
As you might be suspecting by now, just such a hurricance
hit Florida during the 1979 season, and it
was category five--the most intense. Despite the fact
that Owens had promised that the hurricane would
avoid unneccessarily causing deaths,
this hurricane soon became known as the "killer storm" because of the
high fatality rate it left in its wake as it meandered
northward from the Caribbean to the Florida coast. In
fact, according to a report published in the
September 17 issue of "U.S. News and World Report",
1979 BECAME ONE OF THE MOST ACTIVE HURRICANE SEASONS
OF THE CENTURY. But this is getting a little ahead
of ourselves.
Although he had first announced his plan to bring a
hurricane to Florida in February, Owens phoned Grover
on August 22 from Washington warning him that the
promised hurricane was no in the making. "Stand by
for a ram, people of Florida", he jotted down in a
quickly scrawled note he mailed to Gover the next day.
"The real action begins during the next month or two."
But as is so typically the case, it did'nt take thirty
to sixty days for the psychic's word to come true.
On August 26, only four days after his prediction,
a tropical depression formed about 1,500 miles east
of the Windward Islands. The National Weather Service
quickly announced that the storm could turn into a
full-fledged hurricane.
It turned out the National Weather Service was being a
little conservative. By August 29, tropical storm
David had become a hurricane of immense proportions.
Headlining its story, "Monster Hurricane Menaces Caribbean",
the "Miami Herald" was already noting that the storm was
acting peculiarly:
Hurricane David, a monster storm with 140 m.p.h. winds
and 10-foot storm tides, struck a glancing blow
early today at the resort island of Barbados and
headed for Martinique and St. Lucia.
The eye of the hurricane passed within 50 miles of Barbados,
bringing hurricane-strength winds of more than 75 miles per hour
over the island, according to the National Hurricane Center.
A hurricane watch was issued at noon for Barbados as
David, traveling at a steady 15 m.p.h., gathered
strength 150 miles to the east. By midnight,
its core was just 50 miles east-northeast of the
island, with its strongest winds boring along 50 miles
in front.
For reasons not immediately clear, pressure at
center increased between 6 P.M. and 9 P.M. from 942 to 954
millibars, and maximum wind strength dropped from 150 m.p.h.
to 140 where it held steady.
"We don't have much of a handle on why it happened",
said John Hope of the National Hurricane Center in
Miami. The decrease should not be taken as too hopeful
of a sign. He added : "We've seen these kinds
of punctuation quite often. If it gets out in the
Caribbean, it could very well intensify again."
The paper quoted Neil Frank,
speaking for the National Hurricane Center,
who admitted that David was
"the strongest storm to threaten this group of islands in
this century."
Already it was lashing out at the Texas coast,
producing huge waves and intense wind currents.
And as the storm grew in intensity, Florida went on
alert, especially when the "Herald" reported on
August 29 that David had become
"one of the mightiest storms of the century"
with winds blowing at 150 miles per hour. No other
storm of such magnitude had struck the Caribbean
since 1831 and 1891, according to the National Weather
Service.
Owens eagerly took credit for producing Hurricane David.
He certainly cannot be faulted for doing so since,
admittedly, the storm had formed almost immediately
after the psychic had predicted its materialization.
But Owens wasn't satisfied merely with producing
the storm. On August 29, securely situated in his
Washington home, he drew a map of the Caribbean
and started attempting to guide the storm directly
into Florida as he had vowed to do months before.
So far, Hurricane David had struck Barbados, Martinique,
and Dominica as well as other islands of the Antilles
with devastating force, and Florida weathermen were
at a loss to predict just where it would go next.
On August 30, for example, the "Herald" reported
that the storm might strike the lower tip of Florida
but added that it was "too early to know where the
hurricane will go". Later that day, though, the
hurricane started to bend northward from Barbados
towards Puerto Rico. The National Hurricane Center
had by this time designated David as a Class Five storm.
***
This is the highest rating that a hurricane can acheieve,
and only two other such storms had formed in the
Caribbean anytime during the twentieth century.
***
Florida residents began to feel even more uneasy
when, by August 31, Hurricane David seemed to be moving
towards Florida after passing Puerto Rico. Guided
by steering currents in the Atlantic, the storm
gradually made its way northward and then veered
westward toward open ocean, but U.S. weather experts
were still worried that it might touch Florida
on the way. Their fears became more intense when,
on September 1, it became apparent that the storm was
behaving erratically. While following a northwest
course,
the hurricane startled weathermen by veering sharply
north and thereby ramming directly into the Dominican
Republic. Several people were killed by the storm
as it thundered ashore, but even this did nothing
to alter Hurrican David's course.
Weathermen were not taking any chances and, on
September 2, Florida was placed on alert. Even the
Red Cross began publishing a list of shelter locations.
A major disaster now seemed inevitable.
"We Were Expecting It to Intensify....
Instead It Has Weakened"
By this time, even Grover was getting concerned since
he could not intellectually reject the idea that
somehow the hurricane's erratic behavior was being
caused by Owens. So, on the evening of September 2,
the "Enquirer" reporter called Owens and advised
the psychic that thousands of residents would be killed
if the storm struck Florida. This information seemed
to cool Owens' ire against Florida in general and
towards the "National Enquirer" in particular.
He brooded over what Grover had told him and then
agreed to "let go" of the hurricane before it wreaked
destruction on the state. Owens wrote to Grover
the next day:
"After you phoned and told me that the [hurri]cane
would kill 20,000 people if it came through Miami,
I brooded and brooded about it all day long;
worried about you and your wife and kids, then
cooled the cane so that it wouldn't come through
and kill a bunch. After all, that wasn't what I
was after. I did get it onto "target"... I wanted
to run it right over [the] "Enquirer", but it
wasn't worth killing people to do so."
This is pretty much what happened, too.
Hurricane David struck Florida on September 3, but
suddenly just weakened! The "Herald" reported that
the hurricane "baffled forecasters" after the
"once fierce storm weakened as it passed meekly 50
miles off Miami". The paper went on to say that
"Forecasters earlier had warned that the hurricane,
around at the South Florida coast, would intensify
as it entered the warm waters of the Gulf Stream.
Instead, the storm's sustaining winds dropped from
115 m.p.h. to barely 100 m.p.h., and meteorologists
say the hurricane might be downgraded to tropical
storm today."
Weathermen throughout the country were puzzled by
the storm's sudden decrease in magnitude. "We were
expecting it to intensify", reported Jim Gross of
the National Hurricane Center. "Instead it has weakened,
and the trend appears to be continuing.
We have no reason why.
Your guess is as good as mine."
In the words of Neil Frank, at the National Hurricane Center,
the hurricane "just died".
The only possible explanation meteorologists could come up with
was that perhaps the storm had power when it had struck Andros Island
in the Caribbean earlier. The eye of the storm had
hovered over the island for three hours, and since
hurricances are adversely affected when they travel
over land, a few weathermen thought that this critical
moment in the hurricane's life might hold a clue to
the mystery.
But no one was taking bets as to what really happened,
and on September 4, the "Herald" ran a story headlined,
"Hurricane's Fizzle Still Bewilders the Forecasters".
Noting that Florida residents had made extensive
preparations for the beating they expected to take,
the paper reported that no one had anticipated that
the storm would just fade away.
Perhaps the most notable statement was made during the
ruckus was by Neil Frank. "This was oneo of the most
dramatic changes in strength that I've seen in my
20 years of tracking hurricanes", he told a reporter
for U.S. News and World Report.
During a telephone conversation, Grover described what
had been happening to Florida's 1979 weather as the
"wierdest in the state's history". It's hard to
disagree. Here is Wayne Grover's own account
of events.
"In September 1979, when Hurricane David was heading
for West Palm Beach, I spoke to Owens about two A.M.
the night of the approach. I told him thousands
of people would be made homeless because of the
"manufactured" hurricane was bearing down on us.
In an unusual softening, he said something like
"I don't want to hurt you or your family or others
needlessly. I'll ask my SI's to turn the cane away
from you. Keep watching the TV to see what happens."
By five in the morning, the local TV weatherman had
the National Hurricane Center on the air with new coordinates
for the storm.
It had suddenly stopped moving toward West Palm Beach
and was veering northward away from us. We got fringe
winds but nothing more. Owens called about seven and
said "That was for you, Wayne." I didn't believe it
was possible, but the series of events went as
Owens said they would.
(Note: In the above situation the "National Enquirer"
had previously angered Mr. Owens by portraying him as a "crackpot"
or a lunatic.
Apparently Mr. Owens did not like being
portrayed in this way. May 1979, p. 120)
Reference:
http://www.williamjames.com/pkman.htm
THE ABOVE EXCERPTS from
The PK Man,
by Dr. Jeffrey Mishlove :
the only person in the US
to have a doctorate in paraPsychology
from an accredited US university.
(Uni. of Berkeley, California 1980)