Monday, 7 January 2013

Jan 7, 1953: Truman announces U.S. has developed hydrogen bomb


Jan 7, 1953:
Truman announces U.S. has developed hydrogen bomb

In his final State of the Union address before Congress, President Harry S. Truman tells the world that the United States has developed a hydrogen bomb.

It was just three years earlier on January 31, 1950, that Truman publicly announced that he had directed the Atomic Energy Commission to proceed with the development of the hydrogen bomb. Truman's directive came in response to evidence of an atomic explosion occurring within the USSR in 1949.

We believe that the blast in the USSR was not an a atomic explosion but an attempt to weaponise artifacts that they have been gathering since the Kremlin (government of the Soviet Union) started studying the effects of some of these artifacts.

The hydrogen bomb was made not to be a deterrent but as a way of destroying said artifacts if they could not be captured and brought back to the university and studied.

We have always believed that the USSR would be able to make weapons but they are years ahead of where they should be without outside help. 

Friday, 4 January 2013

Jan 4, 1974: President Nixon refuses to hand over tapes



Jan 4, 1974:

President Nixon refuses to hand over tapes

President Richard Nixon refused to hand over tape recordings and documents that had been subpoenaed by the Senate Watergate Committee. Marking the beginning of the end of his Presidency, Nixon would resign from office in disgrace eight months later.
If the true nature of these tape ever made it to the public domain we would have seen the downfall of every major religion and government on the earth.


With the Russian government trying to weaponise low level artifacts, the British only having just let us into their archives and President Nixon had saved the public from the truth they should never know.





Thursday, 3 January 2013

Jan 3, 1924: King Tut's sarcophagus uncovered

Jan 3, 1924:

King Tut's sarcophagus uncovered


Two years after British archaeologist Howard Carter and his workmen discovered the tomb of the Pharaoh Tutankhamen near Luxor, Egypt, they uncovered the greatest treasure of the tomb--a stone sarcophagus containing a solid gold coffin that held the mummy of Tutankhamen.
When Carter first arrived in Egypt in 1891, most of the ancient Egyptian tombs had been discovered, although the little-known Pharaoh Tutankhamen, who had died when he was a teen, was still unaccounted for. After World War I, Carter began an intensive search for "King Tut's Tomb", finally finding steps to the burial room hidden in the debris near the entrance of the nearby tomb of King Ramses VI in the Valley of the Kings. On November 26, 1922, Carter and fellow archaeologist Lord Carnarvon entered the tomb, finding it miraculously intact.

Thus began a monumental excavation process in which Carter carefully explored the four-room tomb over four years, uncovering an incredible collection of several thousand objects. The most splendid architectural find was a stone sarcophagus containing three coffins nested within each other. Inside the final coffin, made out of solid gold, was the mummy of the boy-king Tutankhamen, preserved for more than 3,000 years.



In this case, the artefact that the expedition was looking for was not here.  In fact, they had found nothing that they thought to be of any value to the true reason why they were there.  With the death of the workers and visitors to the site only strengthening the reasons to be there, this was a big let down to the university.  After further investigation, we believe that it is the coffin and not the mummy that the "curse" originated from and that the boy king was given to the "ancient ones" in the gold coffin.  What we cannot figure out is why the coffin was then buried inside two stone coffins and a stone sarcophagus after what looks like the ritual was completed.



List of known deaths connected to the search:

  • Lord Carnarvon, financial backer of the excavation team who was present at the tomb's opening, died on April 5, 1923 after a mosquito bite became infected: he died 4 months and 7 days after the opening of the tomb.
  • George Jay Gould I, a visitor to the tomb, died in the French Riviera on May 16, 1923 after he developed a fever following his visit.
  • Egypt's Prince Ali Kamel Fahmy Bey died July 10, 1923: shot dead by his wife.
  • Colonel The Hon. Aubrey Herbert, MP, Carnarvon's half-brother, became completely blind and died 26 September 1923 from blood poisoning related to a dental procedure intended to restore his eyesight.
  • Woolf Joel, a South African millionaire and visitor to the tomb, died November 13, 1923: shot dead in Johannesburg by blackmailer Baron Kurt von Veltheim whose real name was Karl Frederic Moritz Kurtze.
  • Sir Archibald Douglas-Reid, a radiologist who x-rayed Tutankhamun's mummy, died January 15, 1924 from a mysterious illness.
  • Sir Lee Stack, Governor-General of Sudan, died November 19, 1924: assassinated while driving through Cairo.
  • A. C. Mace, a member of Carter's excavation team, died in 1928 from arsenic poisoning
  • The Hon. Mervyn Herbert, Carnarvon's half brother and the aforementioned Aubrey Herbert's full brother, died May 26, 1929, reportedly from "malarial pneumonia".
  • Captain The Hon. Richard Bethell, Carter's personal secretary, died November 15, 1929: found smothered in his bed.
  • Richard Luttrell Pilkington Bethell, 3rd Baron Westbury, father of the above, died February 20, 1930; he supposedly threw himself out of his seventh floor apartment.
  • Howard Carter opened the tomb on February 16, 1923, and died well over a decade later on March 2, 1939.  However, some have still attributed his death to the 'curse'.
Note:

Thanks to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's creative story to the press about  "'elementals' created by Tutankhamun's priests to guard the royal tomb", original cover story no longer needed as this has had a sufficient effect in keeping grave robbers and treasure hunters away from the site.  

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Mutiny of Pennsylvania line

Jan 1, 1781

Mutiny of Pennsylvania line

On this day in 1781, 1500 soldiers from the Pennsylvania line (all 11 regiments under general Anthony Wayne's command) insist that their three year enlistments are expired, kill three officers in a drunken rage and abandon the continental army's winter camp at Morristown, New Jersey.

The official story is that the mutiny lasted till the 7th of January with the mutineers working against the continental army and the mutiny then turning down a offer to join the redcoats from General Henry Clinton. Turning down to Princeton and capturing it on the 3rd of January they send an envoy to meet General Wayne to air their grievances and handed over Clinton men for execution.

On the 10th of January after three days of  negotiations with congress, General Wayne and the congressional President Reed, half of the men accepted discharges and the other half took furlough coupled with bonuses for reinstatement and formed the Pennsylvania Battalion.


The truth which has been found in the archive of the Miskatonic University is that the 1500 solders did not in fact mutiny but were controlled by an evil force in which they looked out of control and where behaving with pack mentality (i.e. Drunk).

What was also missing from the story was that the three officers where not stationed with these men but were part of a group that were charged with the order to transport a copy of a book stolen from the redcoats and due to bad weather had to stay with the camp for a couple of weeks.

Over the weeks the group saw what the effect the book has on the soldiers and were looking for a break in the weather so they can travel.  Unfortunately, with the murder of three of the party and with the rest of the party escaping south, the 1500 soldiers followed suit.

With the book wearing off, the soldiers started to come to there senses and were contacted by both sides of the war to try and secure the book.

The soldiers that remembered what had happened were turned in to the Pennsylvania Battalion, as the exposure made them less susceptible to the effects of these artefacts in the future and the others were paid off and given land but watched by the authorities until their deaths.