COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING (CRVT)
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96-00788R001400790001-1
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
10
Document Creation Date:
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date:
May 8, 2000
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
October 28, 1982
Content Type:
REPORT
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP96-00788R001400790001-1.pdf | 1.14 MB |
Body:
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001400790001-1
COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING (CRVT)
CRVT Report:
DATE/TIME CONDUCTED: 281030 Oct82
SOURCE #: 63
FILE #: 114
SITE: Ineshmaan - Middle Island) Ireland
EVALUATION: Valid S1's and S2's
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huffetinl; wifld I'assag( In ;a liehl mcalls a linal
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clown. The child and shawl-clad woman trudge toward a distant venter {ama- unc of
the daily chores on this tininess isle that even fo(hL cnjov, f(W modern
CPYRGHT
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Field-girdling fences of nIIII-0a1-ed Slone, built of rocks cleared from the haul,
ri me a ray ma/k, un [ni,hmaan--Middle Island, '[ he hundreds of miles of gatcless
vk,ilk th,it hmn('ronih .Aran Ir,taures and ; H'dcns shield the shallow soil from
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788RO01 400790001 -1
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788RO01 400790001 -1
Eeragh 1.
Aran Islands
North.
Sound
Limestone snaggleteeth rooted in Gal-
way Bay, the Aran Isles preserve vestiges
of early Gaelic civilization. About 1,600
persons inhabit the tiny islands, which
total only 18 square miles.
'~ _.. AL ; /
s 16Straw Inishmaan andlisheer
-Ki!l~ "'T Island
Inishmore FJrty when weather permits.
Aran Islands
Elevations in feet
O S
STATUTE MILES
Inishee
\v
c_,e
South. Sound
Fierce love of a dog, moistly proclaimed, delights a farmer in his stone-walled
field on Inishmore--Big Island. Colorful wild flowers help relieve the slate-hued
sameness of its nearly treeless landscape, constantly filled with the roar of the sea.
Irish mainland, 30 miles away, is the good
ship Naomh Lonna (pronounced NAVE hNT;-
uh). There's a touch of South Seas excitement
about steamer days. The clock at Galway
seethes with action as cargo and mail are
loaded and passengers arrive. Capt. Leo Ty-
nan runs a tight little ship, but there's a pleas-
ant sizzle of informality that a big British
transatlantic line wouldn't go for at all, at all.
"Well, now, is that everyone?" shouts a
navy-jerseyed sailor to the man handling the
lines on the quay below. Apparently it is, for
down rolls the gangway, throb go the engines,
and off sails the Naomh Eanna, her whistle
blasting across Galway Bay.'"
Only the harbor of Kilronan on Inishmore
can accommodate a ship the size of the Naomh
''See "'rhe Friendly Irish," by John Scofield, NATtONAI.
GEOGRAPHIC, Septcrriber 1969.
CPYRGHT
Eanna. There is no way to land at Inisheer or
Inishmaan except with a smaller boat or a
curragh. Curraghs, made from wood covered
with tarred canvas, have been in use for as
long as men can remember.
THE STEAMER'S WHISTLE sounds;
we are nearing Inisheer. I decide to go
up on the bridge and meet the skipper.
Captain Tynan is so hancjsome that he
reminds me of a movie star dressed up for the
role of captain. He has blue eyes and longish
gray hair with sideburns. He wears a yellow
slicker over his gold-braided uniform.
A Galway man, Leo Tynan has been master
of the Naomh Eanna for three years and,
before that., her first mate for ten. Despite this
solid experience, I still can't help thinking
of him as an actor and the bridge a film set.
Approved For Release 2000/08/07 : CIA-RDP96-00788RO01 400790001 -1