1930-11-09: Mr. Russell May Be Right
New York Times, November 9, 1930, Sunday
Section: Editorial, Page E2, 5899 words
MR. RUSSELL MAY BE RIGHT
Dr. Jackson Withdraws Criticism of "Two-Way" Universe and Seeks Proof
New York Times, November 9, 1930, Sunday
Section: Editorial, Page E2, 5899 words
MR. RUSSELL MAY BE RIGHT
Dr. Jackson Withdraws Criticism of "Two-Way" Universe and Seeks Proof
SCIENTIST AND ARTIST DISPUTE NEWTON AND KEPLER FINDINGS
Dr. Jackson Sees Something Profane in Mr. Russell's Attack on Laws of Science
To the Editor of The New York Times
The Times of July 21 contains an article stating that Walter Russell challenges the Newtonian theory of gravitation.
This artist, who is admittedly not a scientist, goes on to say that "the fundamentals of science are so hopelessly wrong and so contrary to nature, that nothing but a major surgical operation upon the present primitive beliefs can ever put them in line for a workable cosmogenetic synthesis."
If you are interested in perceiving the type of splash that Walter Russell made when he started writing to The New York Times, here are a few articles that might get you started.
Request//TODO: If you are able to grab PDFs or the full text of these articles, please share with us ( esaruoho@icloud.com )
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New York Times, April 18, 1930
Page 23, 1162 Words