Wow, turning into quite the polymath now, aren't you?
Thomas Baron is a hero.
What happened to his report? It was taken up;
"Mr. WYDLER. Could I suggest that if Mr. Baron has some concluding remarks, or if he would like to submit a statement for the record, that he may be afforded an opportunity? I see you have something before you, and perhaps you would like to put it in.
Mr. BARON. I think I have covered most of it. I have the report that I would like to be submitted as a part of the record, the 500-page report.
Mr. WYDLER. That means printing it. That is something we should leave to the committee, something of that length, whether we want to print it as part of the public documents. We can take it as an exhibit. Whether we will print it as part of the public record is something we should decide after we see it. Is that all right with you?
Mr. BARON. Yes."
It's more than likely in a box somewhere.
As for his witness' that didn't come forward, how about the one he named during his testimony?
"Mr. TEAGUE. Mr. Holmburg, are you in the room? (Whereupon, Mervin Holmurg was called before the committee, and, being first duly sworn, was examined and replied as follows:)
Mr. TEAGUE. Mr. Holmburg, did you come here of your own free will?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Yes, sir.
...
Mr. TEAGUE. Mr. Holmburg, Mr. Baron has testified, as I am sure you know, that you told him that you knew what caused the accident and all about it. Did you ever tell in anything of that nature?
Mr. Holmburg. no, sir.
...
Mr. TEAGUE. Did you ever discuss the cause of the accident in a drugstore with Mr. Baron?
Mr. HOLMBURG. No. I talked to him many times in the drugstore, but that is about it.
Mr. TEAGUE. But you did not say that you and other people know what caused the fire?
Mr. HOLMBURG. No, sir.
Mr. DADDARIO. What was the nature of your conversation with him on those occasions in the drugstore?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Well, Most of them was about his report, why he wrote it and when he wrote it and so forth. Whether he was making progress on it.
Mr. DADDARIO. Did you in any instance while he was relating this to you agree with him as to the difficulties which the Apollo spacecraft had run into and the tragedy that had occurred which would give him any indication that you did have the answer to the problem which caused the fire?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Never.
Mr. DADDARIO. Can you say that with as clear a recollection as possible of the conversation you had with Mr. Baron?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Yes, sir. I bumped into him accidentally almost every time I met him. I told him I shouldn't even be talking with him because of the report he is writing, and he is probably being watched.
He gets all his information from anonymous phone calls, people calling him and people dropping him a word here and there. That is what he tells me.Mr. DADDARIO. What caused you to come here today? We had not scheduled you as a witness. I had no idea; in fact, I can't recall that I ever heard your name before today. What brought you here?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Well, I work right outside the door here, and it is my time to come to work now.
Mr. DADDARIO. Why would you have asked that you might be allowed to testify?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Well, Mr. Baron had brought my name up a couple of times in here, and I thought I should come in here to defend it.
Mr. DADDARIO. You come here for that purpose?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Yes, sir.
Mr. WYDEN. Who told you that?
Mr. HOLMBURG. I can't recall who that was now.
Mr. WYDLER. You mean you can't recall who told you that?
Mr. HOLMBURG. There were several people right outside the door and I overheard it being mentioned.
Mr. SMART. I am Mr. Robert Smart, Assistant to the President of North American Aviation. When Mr. Holmburg's name was injected into this testimony in the manner in which all of you know, I did not feel that we could leave it unanswered at this time, if there was an answer to it, therefore I asked one of our employees here to see if he could find him. He did find him. He asked him to come out in the hall. I told him the accusations which had been made by Mr. Baron. If he wanted to appear and testify under oath, to tell the truth, that he would have an opportunity, and I then came in -- and he said he did want to so testify -- I came in, and I sent that word to Mr. Teague, and you know what has happened from that point to now.
Mr. WYDLER. I do.
...
Mr. WYDLER. Did you ever speak with Mr. Baron about the 012 fire?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Casually, yes.
Mr. WYDLER. What does that mean, "casually?"
Mr. HOLMBURG. He has ideas of what caused the fire. He did most of the talking about it and I listened to speculations on that thing. I never made any comments about what caused it or I never told him exactly what caused it. I was never near the accident when it happened.
Mr. FULTON. Mr. Chairman
Mr. TEAGUE. One question.
Mr. FULTON. You are certain at no time you gave any statement that you had knowledge of the cause of the Apollo 204 accident that killed three astronauts, that you at no time said that they were in the capsule for 5 minutes without getting out, nor that there had been 9 minutes' noticed of a fire and nothing was done about it?
Mr. HOLMBURG. No, sir.
Mr. FULTON. You are absolutely sure?
Mr. HOLMBURG. Yes, sir.
Mr. FULTON. Thank you.
That is all."
Seems like Baron wasn't such a reliable person after all.
China....
Stop listening to Rasa.
Rocks...
Seems like you're an expert on stellar and planetary formation now? I find it amusing that so many of your comments are peppered with 'it doesn't make sense to me' and that your automatic response is 'it must have been a hoax' rather than, what I would expect to be a reasonable response of, 'I guess I don't know everything about everything'.
And as for Professor Korotev, he doesn't agree that we can't tell lunar surface samples from lunar meteorites, for example (source is my personal communication with Professor Korotev);
"The meteorite will also contain some "cosmogenic radionuclides" consistent with being a small body in space that interacted with cosmic rays."
"Cosmic ray people talk about "2-pi" and "4-pi" irradiation. Samples at the surface of a planet experience 2-pi irradiation because it's all from the top down. A small rock in space experiences 4-pi irradiation because it comes from all directions. They can often tell the difference."