Sunday, March 04, 2007

STS-65

STS-65

Launch: July 8, 1994
Landing: July 23, 1994



I have examined space shuttle flight STS-65 several times because it occurred during the 25th anniversary of the Apollo 11 flight. The Apollo 11 flight featured the first time humans set foot on Earth’s moon.

Today I have been examining it again for clues about 9/2/65, the date I think I began college at Princeton University. I have been thinking this flight might have some clues about my theory of attending Princeton University because I would have been 6.5 years old on 9/2/65.

The first clue I found is in relation to the birth date of the STS-65 commander and it is a rather complext clue but I believe it is logical. There is a leap year that could throw it off by one day, but if you count ahead by years and then count the remaining days, it works out perfectly.

First, the thought came to me to look for clues that represent a time period of 9 years, 265 days. That is a familiar combination of numbers because I believe my first day at Princeton was 9/2/65.

I calculated that the period 6/11/49 to 3/3/59 was 9 years, 265 days, or 3552 days. Then I calculated that the commanders birth date of 1/23/49 was 139 days before 6/11/49. That piqued my interest because I would have been 10 years, 139 days, old on 7/20/69, the date the Apollo 11 landed on the Earth’s moon.

Following that notion, 10 years later was 6/11/59. So that means the commander of STS-65 was 10 years, 139 days on 6/11/59. That was the same age I was on 7/20/69, when Apollo 11 landed on the Moon.

The I noted that the period of 6/11/59 to 7/20/69 was 10 years, 39 days.

The commander of STS-65 was 10 years, 39 days, old on my birth date of 3/3/59.

The key to this was the 9 years, 265 day, period. How I knew to even consider that particular combination is beyond me.

This clue might be better explained by the following list, where the beginning dates should have precisely 10 years added to the first date. For example, the first date would be the STS-65 commanders birth date of 1/23/49. From 1/23/49 to 6/11/59 was 10 years, 139 days.

From 1/23/1959 to 6/11/1959 is: 139 days
From 3/3/1969 to 7/20/1969 is: 139 days
From 1/23/1959 to 3/3/1959 is: 39 days
From 6/11/1969 to 7/20/1969 is: 39 days

Robert Donald Cabana (Colonel, USMC, Ret.) is the Deputy Director of NASA's Johnson Space Center and veteran of four space shuttle flights.

Born January 23, 1949



Next, I looked for a “9265” clue in relation the to STS-65 pilots birth date. As I wrote earlier, 9/2/65 is the date I think I started college at Princeton University when I was 6.5 years old.

Following a hunch, I calculated that from 9/29/56 to 2/10/82 was 9265 days. That got my attention because I believe I attended the U.S. Naval Academy – but cannot actually remember any of that – with the Class of 1982. There is some confusion about when I graduated though and the dates 4/30/82 and 5/28/82 are confusing me. My theory is that I graduated on 4/30/82 before the class officially graduated on 5/28/82.

I noted that the period of 2/10/82 to 5/28/82 equals 3 months, 18 days, which I calculate to represent 3.59 months. Multiplying 30 times 0.5933 equals 17.799 days.

So, from the STS-65 pilots birth date, 9265 days later was a day that was 3.59 months before 5/28/82. That could be a connection to the date I started at Princeton University and then the graduation date of the U.S. Naval Academy Class of 1982. I believe I graduated from both, as well as Oxford University, in between those two.

James Donald Halsell, Jr. (born 29 September 1956) is an American astronaut and a veteran of five space shuttle missions.

He piloted missions STS-65 (1994), STS-74 (1995), and commanded missions STS-83 and STS-94 in 1997 and STS-101.


The next crew member puzzles me. I found some good clues, but yet I think there is something still more complex here. It’s possible he has multiple connections to my space activities and there might be a larger clue here that I am not seeing. But for what I see now, the most obvious one is that he was 5934 days old on 11/26/76. That was the date I think I landed on the Jupiter moon Callisto. The 3/4/59 date could be relevant because I believe it was 3/4/59 in England when I was born and my family there observed 3/4/59 as my birth date. I think I was actually born in Hawaii, though, on 3/3/59.

Another clue I noted about this astonaut onboard STS-65 was the he was 5 years, 5 days, old on 9/2/65. The period of 65 months is 5 years, 5 months. I think the primary reason he was on STS-65 was because of this clue. One of his other shuttle flight assignments might connect to my visit to the Jupiter moon Callisto, since he also has that “5934” clue.

One, if not the primary objective, probably was to create clues that would be very hard to discover mathematically. And that is why Microsoft-Corbis has been stalking us all these years. To discover the secret formulas. The fact that I am even describing any of these details here means Microsoft-Corbis and accomplices have obviously been very effective at stealing our intellectual property.

Leroy Norman Chiao, Ph.D. (born August 28, 1960) is a former American NASA astronaut


The next crew member of space shuttle flight was 10 years, 119 days old on 9/2/65. As I wrote earlier, 9/2/65 is the date I think I began college at Princeton University at the age of 6.5 years.

I was 10 years, 119 days, 6/30/69. From 6/30/69, 3 weeks, 3 days, later was 7/24/69. That was the day Apollo 11 returned to Earth from the first landing of humans on Earth’s moon.

There might be other complex clues here as well but I am not seeing it right now.

Dr. Donald Alan Thomas, Ph.D., is a NASA astronaut.
...
Born May 6, 1955



For this next astronaut from STS-65, the thought occurred to me that his birth date might connect to 9/2/65 - my first day at Princeton University - in the form of 926 weeks, 5 days.

I noted that the time period from his birth of 9/21/1955 to 6/25/1973 computed to 926 weeks and 5 days.

From there, I calculated that the time period 3/3/1959 to 12/5/1976 was also 926 weeks and 5 days.

I recognized that 12/5/76 because that would have been a few days after I have been thinking that I left the surface of the Jupiter moon Callisto and began my trip back to Earth, probably after circling around the Sun to intercept the Earth.

Next I calculated that the number of days in the time period 12/5/1976 to 4/14/1977 was a total of 131 days. The date 4/14/77 is the date I think I returned to Earth after my 17-month mission to intercept the comet in the outer solar system. So then I saw the objective of this clue: that time period of 12/5/76 to 4/14/77 represents 0.359 year. Multiplying 365 times 0.359 equals 131.035

So the connection to my first day at Princeton, on 9/2/65, was a date 926 weeks, 5 days, from his birth date which was a date that was 0.359 year before my return to Earth on 4/14/77.

Richard James Hieb (born September 21, 1955) is a NASA astronaut and a veteran of three space shuttle missions. He was a mission specialist on STS-39 and STS-49, and was a payload commander on STS-65.

UPDATE: I found myself somewhat confused about that last one. The overall clue is correct but I couldn't see how it connected to astronaut Hieb.

Now I have it figured out although the 926 weeks, 5 days, must connect to another person on that flight and I don't have that one figured out yet. I am not going to remove the original post, as it is a valid clue, but here is the clue that connects to him specifically. I might post the other one later when I figure it out, but I don't know. Why the hell am I having to do any of this any way?

The number of days from his birth of 9/21/55 to 9/2/65 - my first day at Princeton - was 3634 days.

I then applied that result to 3/3/59 and from there, 3634 days later was 2/12/69. From 2/12/69, counting ahead 5 months, 9 days, was 7/21/69, the day Apollo 11 stepped onto the Earth's moon.