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March 8, 1992
GRAV9.ASC
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This file is from a newspaper article describing J.G.
Gallimore's Gravity Laser on August 3, 1978.
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Gravitational Laser Shoots Through Walls
by John H. Lyst
Later this month near Atlanta, an Indianapolis electronics
specialist will demonstrate what he calls the world's fist
gravitational laser.
The occasion will be the annual meeting of the United States
Psychotronic Association. The electronics specialist is J.G.
Gallimore and the laser he perfected from a few hundred dollars
worth of special parts, projects not light from its clear plastic
barrel, but what Gallimore identifies as neutrinos.
Such shooting gravity waves know no walls, says Gallimore, and they
can be sent through thick concrete or the earth itself, suggesting
that a similar laser might, among other things, be a PERFECT
COMMUNICATION DEVICE for the future.
According to Gallimore, a nationally recognized leader in the
esoteric subject of Radionics, the mathematics behind the invention
helps solve some questions posed by James Clerk Maxwell, a British
physicist of the 1800s whose theories of electromagnetism laid the
foundation for modern radio, television and radar.
While the Gallimore experimental laser may sound as wild as radar
must have seemed in Maxwell's day, what has fast become conventional
laser technology today was regarded only a few years ago as being
closer to science fiction than reality.
Lasers are widely used industrial tools and are now even being put
to work in entertainment and advertising as well as engineering and
scientific research.
Western Electric, one of the leaders in laser research and use,
likes to say that it and Bell Laboratories brought the laser out of
science fiction into the factory.
Lasers went to work for W.E. in 1965 drilling holes in diamond dies
used in wiring technology. Now about 200 lasers are used by the
firm in more than 25 manufacturing applications.
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Western spokesmen say that aside from doing previously impossible
work, lasers are doing routine tasks faster, safer, cheaper and more
efficiently than conventional equipment.
Engineers at Western say the laser has four characteristics which
give it a big edge as a production boost.
First a laser beam can be focused to form a tiny spot one million
times more intense than a similar size spot on the surface of the
sun - hot enough to drill, cut or melt any material known to man.
The second asset is that the resulting spot of light can be
positioned and controlled by computers giving the laser great
precision and capability for automation.
A third characteristic is that a laser's wavelength can be tuned to
the material being worked so that it does a job far more efficiently
than possible with a conventional tool.
Fourth is the thing engineers say may be the most important - lasers
can work in areas where only light can pass, such as inside sealed
glass enclosures.
The laser beam is already making appearances on musical stages with
rock bands and other groups among the first to use laser lighting
effects to heighten the mood of music.
A New York firm, Laser Physics, Ltd., is among the leading firms
pioneering laser lighting in advertising and marketing, using lasers
to display nighttime messages on clouds in a manner similar in
effects to daytime planes using smoke trails for skywriting.
Some see lasers for eventual use on animated billboards.
Laser Physic's first sale of an advertising laser, according to the
firm, was to a third world national political party which the
company says it is not yet permitted to identify.
Speaking of his so-called gravitational laser, Gallimore says the
device may have the capability of scientific measurement of psychic
powers claimed by some individuals sucha as faith healers.
Gallimore is among those who believe such powers may relate to the
production of gravity waves whose characteristics are similar, he
says, to light waves.
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