|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
DID THE PUBLICATION OF THIS RARE MANUSCRIPT CAUSE FAMED ASTRONOMER
DR MORRIS K. JESSUP TO 'COMMIT SUICIDE?" Or was he murdered because
of what he knew? Only a handful of copies were originally printed
on an office copier by a private government contractor. NOW
AVAILABLE AFTER NEARLY 50 YEARS On the evening of APril 20, 1959,
an astronomer committed suicide in Dade County Park, FLorida.
Inhaling automobile exhaust fumes which he had introduced from the
tail pipe through a hose into his station wagon, he died in the
same academic obscurity in which he had lived, unheralded and
almost unrecognized in his discipline. Ironicallly, the scientists
only public recognition had come from lay people, who had read his
series of four books about UFOs. Morris Jessup's first book, THE
CASE FOR THE UFO, had tended to alienate him from his colleagues.
It was a paperback edition of this volume published in 1955 that
enmeshed Jessup in one of the most bizarre mysteries in UFO
history. An annotated reprint of the paperback was laboriously
typed out on offset stencils and printed in a very small run by a
Garland, Texas manufacturing company with military ties. Each page
was run thrugh the small office duplicator twice, once with blank
ink for the regular text of the book, then once again with red ink,
the latter reproducing the mysterious annotations by three men, who
may have been gypsies, hoaxters or space people living among
humankind. The spiral bound volume contained more than 200 pages
ane became known as the Annotated Edition. A reprint quickly became
legend. A few civilizan UFO enthusiasts claimed to have seen
copies, but there were only known to be seventeen in existence one
of which Jessup possessed. . . but which mysteriously disappeared
after his death. . . never to be seen again. This is a once in a
lifetime offered reprint of the Case For The UFO with all the rare
notes exactly as presented by these "strangers." The big mystery is
why the government would go to so much trouble to reprint a book
that had been rejected by the scientific community and further to
include mysterious letters to the author and even more bizarre
annotations. This manuscript is the first to hint at the
Philadelphia Experiment, Time Travel and other scientifically
"oddities." It is a manuscript which has been long searched for
because of its quite peculiar nature and its rarity among "those in
the know." There are some who say this book is among the weirdest
ever published on unidentified flying objects. One copy is known to
have been sold for $1200. This reprint is but a fraction of the
cost.This edition also contains a rare introduction by Gray Barker.
|
|