Walter Russell and the New York Times Articles
In the summer on 1930, Walter Russell announced via The New York Times, that he was self-publishing the first of a series of pamphlets to embody his speculations about the universe and the constitution of matter, which Russell said, differs radically from many commonly accepted scientific beliefs. Within a week, a well respected scientist, Dr. John E. Jackson, wrote an editorial to the Times, refuting everything that Walter Russell had stated in his article a week earlier. This initial exchange of letters set in motion communications which went on through October of 1930. Please read these editorial letters, and you will read how Walter Russell influenced a more “expansive thinking” from Dr. Jackson and other scientists, who joined in on the debate about Newtonian Theory and other scientific principles.
Michael P. Hudak
President
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