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Microcap & Penny Stocks : EDIS

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To: Invessi who wrote (3036)1/29/2003 12:46:58 PM
From: Savant   of 3043
 
FYI-Scientist Details Method of Detecting Concealed Weapons of Mass Destruction

PALM BEACH, Fla., Jan. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- If Iraq has weapons of mass
destruction well concealed, United Nations weapons inspectors may face great
difficulty in finding them.
But there is a way to determine where these weapons are, even if they're
concealed and even if Iraq does not cooperate, according to Richard R. Sills,
a computer scientist from New York and Palm Beach who has patented an "Analog
Processing System" (APS) which re-analyzes the visual data coming from
observation satellites through the process of "spectrometry."
In late summer of 2002, Mr. Sills made a presentation to Dr. Leslie J.
Deutsch, the Chief Engineer of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) at the
California Institute of Technology. The terms of the meeting were that Mr.
Sills would not receive any compensation, nor would he be exposed to any
"sensitive" information. The proposed technology was considered for a few
months and then on November 6, 2002, in a letter to Mr. Sills, the "Analog
Processing System" was ostensibly turned down by the JPL.
This letter poses serious concerns as to why the U.S. is not providing
specific evidence to verify Iraq's possession of these weapons, even if hidden
by any means, if we have "other techniques" to do so, as Dr. Deutsch clearly
states in his letter. This APS would seem to be the exact method the
President and the UN need to locate nuclear bombs and biological warfare
agents, hence, it is now being offered to the world scientific community.

SOURCE Richard R. Sills

/EDITOR'S ADVISORY: Mr. Sills is available for personal interviews orprivate
meetings./

/CONTACT: Susan G. Reymond of Susan Reymond Enterprises, Inc.,+1-561-659-1426,
or sreymond@compuserve.com, for Richard R. Sills/
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