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8105
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=== **Page: 1 of 7**
April 27, 1980
Mr. Steve Kelley,
Oregonian Sports Columnist.
I enjoyed the composition of your article re my parapsychological work (psi)
"The Force Be Agin' You."
And your piece of work was most accurate.
The only mild rebuttal that I might make would be with regard to "He calls it
documentation." Your readers might have been interested to learn that all of
those pounds of books and magazines wrote about me and my work only after the
authors had researched carefully the proper documentation in the various matters.
I.e., I would certainly consider Stan Hochman's newspaper article "documentation."
After all...as with the rest of those pounds of "documentation"...I earned it by
performing for Hochman, as you know.
It also would have been nice if your readers had been told that I have proper
affidavits from prominent scientists to the effect that I have produced
startling parapsychological phenomena...such as controlling a huge radar
installation with my mind; producing UFOs to be seen by the police or to be
photographed by scientists; and so on.
Now, I have given the matter of the Trailblazers some thought.
Since I am "treading water", so to speak...until I somehow get that Mountain
Base that I told you about...I have made a definite decision with regard to
the Trailblazers next year.
I am notifying my scientist-contacts today...that I will use all of my psi-force
powers to influence the Trailblazers next season (Fall and Winter of 1980/1981)
culminating in their falling apart at the seams a la Eagles, Squires, Rams...and
being eliminated at the Championship Playoffs, if they in fact get that far.
I will track them, game by game, via TV and radio...and the scientists can watch
the results of the psi-force attack, which should be devastating.
The early part of next season for the Trailblazers should be easy for me to
handle, due to the "lag effect" from my earlier work on them (that is what
devastated them early in the season this year...the lag effect from the attack
last season.) "Lag effect", by the way, is not my term...it is a scientific term,
applicable to certain parapsychological phenomena. Dr. Mishlove and D. Scott
Rogo discuss "lag effect" in the book which they have written about my work,
"Earth's Ambassador".
My UFO connection also approves of my stopping the Trailblazers cold next season
because it will give me "combat practice" for the time ahead when my powers must
be used against formidable foes (re the Otto Binder article in Saga).
Cordially,
Ted Owens (RK Man)
200 NE 76th St.
Vancouver, Washington 98665
=== **Page: 2 of 7**
The Oregonian
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 19
Morning after
Steve Kelley
The Force be agin' you
Ted Owens had retired from sports. After using his supernatural power to put whammies on the Philadelphia Eagles, the Baltimore Colts and the Virginia Squires in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Owens was content to leave the world of sports and spend his time ending droughts and helping mankind.
But Owens was forced out of retirement this season. Like Muhammad Ali, Owens came back to fight again. This time the opponent was the Portland Trail Blazers.
The popular belief after the Blazers lost their playoff mini-series to Kansas City was that inexperience, impatience and troublesome shooting were responsible for Portland's early vacation. Owens says he knows better.
The truth, according to Owens, is the games were out of the Trail Blazers' hands. They were the victims of PSI (psycho-kinetic) force. The force was against them.
"They had no chance once the PSI force was applied to them as only I know how," said Owens, a Vancouver, Wash., resident, who says he carries out the earthly game plans of other-world intelligences.
Owens predicted the Blazers' doom early in the season in a letter to The Oregonian and reaffirmed his belief in March that they were heading for a quick playoff exit.
Blazers got away
"I had a hell of a time beating them," admits Owens, a member of the high IQ club Mensa. "I had them zeroed-in early in the year (when they were 7-19), but then they managed to get away from me.
"Against Kansas City I let them have everything I had. When Kansas City would have the ball, I would sit (in front of the television) as quiet as a mouse. I didn't want to draw attention to the court. But as soon as a Trail Blazer touched the ball, that's when I went to work.
"I put the PSI force on the floor and an intelligence attaches itself to the Trail Blazers and makes them drop balls, make mistakes and miss the basket. It's beautiful. As the power builds up on the floor, the team falls apart. It follows along like a bird dog and waits until it spots a weakness. Then it jumps in and takes advantage."
But why the Trail Blazers? What did they do to have this close encounter of the worst kind? Why did they have to meet Dr. No?
"They didn't do anything," Owens said. "But I was supposed to be a guest on the TV show AM Northwest. I got to the show and they told me they were overbooked. I couldn't go on.
"I was in shock. I decided I was going to have to play rough and teach them some respect. Since the Blazers are the symbol of Portland, I decided I was going to have to use the PSI force against them."
For those who doubt Owens' mumbo jumbo about other-world intelligences, whammies and the like, he produces pounds of newspapers, magazines and books. He calls it documentation.
Blazers powerless
Philadelphia sports columnists write about the damage Owens did to the Eagles. Norfolk, Va., writers discuss the ruin he wrought on the Squires and Colts. Owens provides a book that lists him among the world's top 40 psychics.
"I think that left alone, without the PSI force, the Blazers would have been successful in the playoffs," he said. "But once the force was built up, they were powerless to do anything about it. Poor (Jack) Ramsay would jump up and down in frustration when his players would fumble the ball, but it was out of his control."
Now, Owens says his point has been made and the force is off the Blazers. "Sports is a superficial thing, but it's an excellent way to demonstrate PSI's power over a small group of men."
In an effort to leave nothing to chance in their quest for a championship, maybe the Blazers should draft Owens and use his PSI power. If there's room for a team dentist, surely there is room for a team psychic.
"Work for (owner) Larry Weinberg? You mean the Beverly Hills flash?" Owens asked. "Never. I think he has treated them very badly. To run a team properly you have to be near the team.
"I think he (Weinberg) should be aware of something. I used the force on the Eagles and (owner Jerry) Wolman went broke. I used it against the Squires and (owner Earl) Foreman went bankrupt. . . .
"I'm just saying that he should be aware that his fortunes could take a turn for the worse. It's very problematical."
Kelley named sports columnist
Steve Kelley, a sportswriter for The Oregonian since 1976, has been named the paper's daily sports columnist, Sports Editor Larry Shaw announced Friday.
Kelley, who has covered the Portland Trail Blazers the past three seasons, will write a daily column appearing Thursday through Monday, Shaw said.
The 32-year-old Kelley was named Oregon sportswriter of the year in 1979 and before covering the Blazers covered the Portland Timbers soccer team.
He began his newspaper career with the York Dispatch in Pennsylvania and worked in the sports departments of The Daily Chronicle in Centralia, Wash., and The Daily Olympian in Olympia, Wash., before joining The Oregonian's sports staff.
Kelley spent one year at the University of South Carolina and graduated from the University of Delaware in 1971.
"Kelley will give The Oregonian an added dimension to its overall sports coverage," Shaw said.
Steve Duin (pronounced dean) will assume Kelley's responsibilities of covering the Trail Blazers, Shaw said.
Oreg. 4/18/81
=== **Page: 3 of 7**
Bird, defense
spark Celtics
past 76ers 91-90
By ALEX SACHARE
BOSTON (AP)
The Boston Celtics, led by Larry Bird's 23 points and brilliant team defense down the stretch, completed their remarkable playoff comeback Sunday by wiping out an 11-point second-half deficit and beating the Philadelphia 76ers 91-90.
The victory moved the Celtics into the National Basketball Association's championship series against the Houston Rockets.
"If you were writing a Hollywood script for the last game between Boston and Philadelphia, you couldn't write a better one," Celtics Coach Bill Fitch said. "I said it before the game and I'll say it again now: It's a shame somebody had to lose this series."
Boston, which has had to rally in each of the last five games of this brilliant series, erased a seven-point deficit by holding Philadelphia without a field goal in the final 5:23.
"That defense is no surprise," said M.L. Carr, Boston's rugged reserve guard. "We've been playing that kind of defense all year."
And when it ended, the victory touched off a wild celebration that saw more than a thousand fans spill onto the court, surround the Celtics and usher them off the floor.
"This is the greatest feeling that have ever had as a professional athlete," Carr said. "When it ended, I felt like Sugar Ray Leonard when he won the gold medal at Montreal and blew kisses to the crowd."
"I did the same thing," Naturally, the mood was entirely different in the Philadelphia locker room.
"We had some opportunities," 76ers forward Bobby Jones said. "We had our chance but couldn't do it. It's an awful feeling. I can't say we choked because we were there at the end with a chance to win. But we lost and they won -- that's the bottom line."
The 76ers led 67-56 during the third quarter and clung to an 89-82 advantage with 5:23 left in the toughly fought seventh game of the Eastern Conference finals. But Boston scored nine straight points, the last four by Bird, while holding Philadelphia scoreless for 4:54.
Cedric Maxwell sank one free throw and Nate Archibald sank two, center Robert Parish made a turnaround jumper and Bird converted two free throws to tie the score 89-89 with 2:51 to go. Bird, the 1980 rookie of the year, then came back with a 15-foot bank shot from the left side for a 91-89 lead with 1:03 to play.
Following a pair of turnovers, Philadelphia had a 3-on-1 fastbreak, and Maurice Cheeks was fouled by Gerald Henderson with 21 seconds on the clock. He made just one of two free throws to leave Philadelphia trailing by one.
Carr missed a 20-footer for Boston, and Philadelphia's Bobby Jones gathered in the rebound and called timeout with one second left. Jones' inbounds pass bounced off Maxwell and hit the top of the backboard, and the Celtics had the emotion-charged victory.
As the final buzzer sounded, more than 1,000 spectators from the capacity crowd of 18,276 at Boston Garden poured onto the famous parquet floor in a jubilant celebration.
By winning, the Celtics became the fourth team in NBA history to capture a best-of-seven playoff series after falling behind 3-1. The others were the 1968 Boston Celtics, 1970 Los Angeles Lakers and 1979 Washington Bullets -- all of whom also did it in the semifinal round.
Of the three previous comeback clubs, only the 1968 Celtics -- who also beat Philadelphia in the semis -- went on to take the title. The current Celtics are hoping to match that and win the 14th championship in the history of the tradition-steeped franchise when they take on the Rockets in the final, which opens here Tuesday night.
The Celtics began their comeback by beating Philadelphia 111-109 Wednesday night, hitting the last eight points of the game and holding the 76ers scoreless for the final 1:51. Friday night, the Celtics ended an 11-game losing streak in Philadelphia by rallying from a 15-point second-half deficit to win 100-98.
And Sunday, they applied the finishing touch.
May 5/81
PHILADELPHIA 90 -- Erving 11-22 2-3 24, C. Jones 6-12 0-0 12, Dawkins 7-13 2-3 16, Hollins 1-10 0-2 2, Cheeks 3-7 1-2 7, Henderson 1-5 0-0 2, B. Jones 5-5 3-3 13, Toney 4-10 0-0 8, Mix 7-7 0-0 14. Totals 39-89 12-15 108.
BOSTON 91 -- Maxwell 9-15 1-5 19, Bird 8-17 7-7 23, Parish 7-12 2-2 16, Archibald 3-7 1-1 7, Ford 3-12 2-7 8, Robey 1-2 4-4 6, Carr 1-1 0-0 2, McHale 0-1 1-2 1, Henderson 2-2 2-2 6, Fernsten Totals 34-72 22-35 91.
Philadelphia 31 22 22 15 -- 90
Boston 26 22 23 20 -- 91
Three-point goals -- Bird. Fouled out -- None. Total fouls -- Philadelphia 27, Boston 18. Technical -- Bird. A -- 18,320.
May 5, 1981
KNOWING
SCIENTISTS AND CONTACTS
After attending Duke University and Dr. J. B. Rhine in parapsychology, and learning that time and space are irrelevant in ESP...I went on through the years doing my own unique research in that field and discovered that not only time and space are irrelevant...but so is MASS.
Now I have stumbled upon another amazing fact during my own research in psi-force. I have discovered "Displaced Lag Effect." "Lag Effect", as you know, is the continuation of psi phenomena after the psi-force project has been terminated for a period of time.
In 1968 I notified sports writers and others in authority that I would personally beat the Philadelphia 76'rs team by using my mind, over television and radio. At the time I notified them the Celtics were down 3 to 1 in the championship playoffs. That meant that I had to use my powers to make Philadelphia lose three straight games. And I did just that. My deed was documented and is on record.
Now, just recently I stepped once again into the sports arena to use psi-force to stop the Portland Trailblazers in the championship playoffs. That, too, is documented.
Following that, the Celtics once again lined up against the 76'rs...and once again the games became 3-1 in favor of the 76'rs. At that point I told my son, "You know, thirteen years ago this same thing happened and at that time I was in the picture with psi-force. Wouldn't it be something of my recent work with psi-force against the Trailblazers re-activated that 13-year-old psi-force form, or mechanism, that I used then, now at this time in the Celtics/76'rs series?" And so it happened. The games became 3 and 2; 3 and 3...and last night, one more time, the Celtics came from 3-1 behind to win over Philadelphia. (See newsclip.)
Since such a happening is a rarity (only the 4th time in history) I am convinced that the 13-year-old psi-force mechanism was re-activated. Thus, psi-force in this case worked like the displacement effect in the Zener card experiment. I.e., once a psi-force mechanism is constructed it can once again come alive under the proper situation or conditions, if the original creator of the mechanism is tied into it.
Ted Owens (PK Man)
T Owens
=== **Page: 4 of 7**
May 4, 1981
Scientists and Contacts
Note: my UFO's communicated with me... to write this, below, at 12:15 P.M. today.
- Gwens
You must remember... that I am able, with my half-alien mind... to apply Psi-force to an idea, to make that idea come to pass.
(Recall that it was published in a book some years ago that I would cause all whites to be driven out of Africa. Since then all hell has broken loose in Africa and whites have left that Country in tremendous numbers.)
Now, my UFO's want their Base.
Do you realize that I am entirely capable of transferring terrorism from Ireland, Africa, etc etc here to the United States?!!
The U.S. govt. got their Space Shuttle back safely. Now my UFO's want their Base.
- Gwens
=== **Page: 5 of 7**
May 6, 1981 10:30 PM.
Called P. Scott Rogo - he didn't pay attention - said he had company.
Called Dr. Mishlove - told him the same thing:
1. A terrible political/military blow will be struck against the U.S. in 30 days.
2. The S.I. will destroy the Space Shuttle & NASA if the UFO Base is not soon provided. * Owens
* Somebody must understand that the S.I. are not bluffing. Owens
2 Space Shuttle PK - Oregon Journal, May 6, 1981 (2)
Fall kills space site technician
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) - Kennedy Space Center officials are trying to find out why a construction worker fell more than 100 feet to his death while making preparations for the space shuttle's next launch.
Anthony E. Hill, 22, of Rockledge, Fla., struck the concrete apron of Launch Pad 39B and was pronounced dead Tuesday at Jess Parrish Hospital in Titusville. He had been working on the metal framework of the service structure for September's launch of the shuttle Columbia.
Hill was the third technician to be killed at the center while working on the space shuttle program, and the 12th victim directly associated with space activities at Cape Canaveral.
"We have no idea how it happened," said Clifton Reeves, project manager for Wilhoit, a structural steel construction firm based in nearby Titusville.
Hill worked for Wilhoit, which had raised the planned 241-foot service structure to a height of 212 feet when the accident occurred.
On March 19, two technicians for Rockwell International - the space shuttle builder - were fatally exposed to nitrogen released into the shuttle's aft engine compartment after a test.
=== **Page: 6 of 7**
jack anderson
Pakistan aid perilous
WASHINGTON — Several weeks ago, I warned that the United States was inviting another Iran-style disaster in the Middle East by cozying up to Pakistan's hated dictator, Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq.
Since then, according to the latest intelligence reports, the situation has deteriorated inside Pakistan. Yet the Reagan administration, instead of backing away from this potential nightmare, is planning to commit the United States even more deeply to Zia's unpopular, repressive regime.
Secret foreign intelligence cables reviewed by my associate Jack Mitchell reveal that the "Shah Syndrome" is already beginning to materialize in Pakistan: American citizens have been assaulted in broad daylight on the streets of the country's largest cities — for the sole reason that they are identified with the United States, which is supporting their detested dictator.
Surrounded by shameless yes-men, Zia has delayed three times the free elections he promised, has instituted unprecedented martial law and has arrested and tortured thousands. He is caught in a vicious circle of his own making: The more he cracks down on his countrymen, the more unpopular he is and the more vocal his opponents become. This then causes him to tighten the screws still more.
But though Zia sits precariously on a powder keg, White House policymakers seem determined to provide him with the latest military technology. The reasons are the same as those advanced to justify support of the shah: The United States needs a "dependable ally" in the region to confront the Soviet Union, and Saudi Arabia must be protected to assure a continued flow of oil.
But diplomatic sources warn that time may be running out on Zia, just as it did for the shah. Pakistan's highest judges have refused to go along with the general's kangaroo courts in which defendants are convicted without benefit of witnesses, lawyers or appeals. Lawyers have also shown their distaste for the dictatorship by openly supporting prominent colleagues who have been arrested on trumped-up charges and tortured.
The recent burning of a DC-10 at the Karachi airport was officially termed an accident, but government insiders say it was sabotage.
Still the repression continues. Newspapers carry photographs of cruel floggings, and the possibility has been discussed of punishing adultery by publicly stoning the transgressors to death.
Education is deteriorating; Zia and his generals have closed down schools as a means of curbing opposition. The government has also increased censorship of the media.
Yet it is this hated dictatorship that the White House seems determined to identify with, trying to prop up Zia's shaky regime with hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid. If there are dissenting views in the administration, they have been effectively silenced by Secretary of State Alexander Haig.
The really sad part of this is that the administration's policy may actually help to achieve exactly the opposite of its intended goal: By helping Zia, we could drive the opposition — which includes virtually all political parties — and the people of Pakistan into Soviet arms. That would make Zia's downfall doubly disastrous for the United States.
orig 5/6/81
Note: The U.S. govt.
provides hundreds of
millions of dollars
to Pakistan... which
"goes down the drain"...
yet will not provide
PK man/UFOs with
5 million dollars for
a UFO Base operation...
which Base, once provided,
could do more to aid the
U.S. than all other
foreign countries
Combined!
Owens
=== **Page: 7 of 7**
Scientists: I will appear on TV's "Faces & Places" May 14, throwing knives (of all things). For those of you who might be interested in my agility, coordination, digital dexterity etc. at age 61... you perhaps could have an associate in this Portland-Vancouver area view the show and report to you.
- Owens
Thursday Evening Programs
See listings for details.
| | 8:00 | 8:30 | 9:00 | 9:30 | 10:00 | 10:30 |
| :---- | :----------- | :------------ | :------------- | :------------- | :------------ | :---- |
| 2 | Mork & Mindy | Bosom Buddies | Barney Miller (CC) | Taxi | 20/20 | |
| 3 10 | Wilderness | Good Neighbors | Sneak Previews | To the Manor Born | Cousteau Odyssey | |
| 6 | Waltons | Magnum, P.I. | Bob Newhart | | | |
| 8 | Real Kids | Movie: Dracula | | | | |
| 12 | Movie: The Taking of Pelham One Two Three | News | | | | |
EVENING
6 PM 2 ABC NEWS-Frank Reynolds
3 10 INSIDE STORY-Magazine
Hodding Carter anchors a scheduled report on the media's use of confidential sources. Also: Bob and Ray.
[Pre-empts regular programming.]
6 CBS NEWS-Rather/Drinkwater
8 NBC NEWS-John Chancellor
12 KUNG FU-Drama
Chief Dan George as a dying warrior in search of his preordained burial site. (60 min.)
6:30 2 NEWS
3 10 EARTH, SEA AND SKY
6 M*A*S*H
Hawkeye (Alan Alda) is enraged by a colonel (Charles Aidman) who seems to love his job-predicting casualties.
8 TIC TAC DOUGH-Game
12 FACES AND PLACES-Magazine
Segments on a knife-throwing school; women's rugby.
7:00 3 10 STATEHOUSE '81
5 MERV GRIFFIN
From Hollywood: Publisher Kal Rud-man ("Friday Morning Quarterback"), the Marshall Tucker Band. (60 min.)
8 FAMILY FEUD-Game
12 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN-Comedy
Richie (Ron Howard) makes his debut into journalism-loading papers onto trucks. Henry Winkler. Frank: Jed Cooper. Otis: Ted Gehring. Potsie: Anson Williams.
Inside Story
Covering the press
that covers the news.
What are the rights and
responsibilities of the press,
especially to you, the news
consumer? Hodding Carter
anchors "Inside Story," a weekly
half-hour magazine devoted
to the examination of news-
gathering, its problems and
its performance.
Thursday 6 pm
3 10
This ad made possible by a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
MAY 14, 1981
TV GUIDE A-79
Faces
AND
Places
E FOR AND ABOUT THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
Featuring:
MARY STARRETT
KEV REILLY
RON CARLSON
ELAINE MURPHY
PATTY LOEW
Get a free Faces and Places T-shirt for any story idea
used on the air. Watch Faces and Places for details.
WEEKNIGHTS 7:00PM KATU abc 2
April 27, 1980
Mr. Steve Kelley,
Oregonian Sports Columnist.
I enjoyed the composition of your article re my parapsychological work (psi)
"The Force Be Agin' You."
And your piece of work was most accurate.
The only mild rebuttal that I might make would be with regard to "He calls it
documentation." Your readers might have been interested to learn that all of
those pounds of books and magazines wrote about me and my work only after the
authors had researched carefully the proper documentation in the various matters.
I.e., I would certainly consider Stan Hochman's newspaper article "documentation."
After all...as with the rest of those pounds of "documentation"...I earned it by
performing for Hochman, as you know.
It also would have been nice if your readers had been told that I have proper
affidavits from prominent scientists to the effect that I have produced
startling parapsychological phenomena...such as controlling a huge radar
installation with my mind; producing UFOs to be seen by the police or to be
photographed by scientists; and so on.
Now, I have given the matter of the Trailblazers some thought.
Since I am "treading water", so to speak...until I somehow get that Mountain
Base that I told you about...I have made a definite decision with regard to
the Trailblazers next year.
I am notifying my scientist-contacts today...that I will use all of my psi-force
powers to influence the Trailblazers next season (Fall and Winter of 1980/1981)
culminating in their falling apart at the seams a la Eagles, Squires, Rams...and
being eliminated at the Championship Playoffs, if they in fact get that far.
I will track them, game by game, via TV and radio...and the scientists can watch
the results of the psi-force attack, which should be devastating.
The early part of next season for the Trailblazers should be easy for me to
handle, due to the "lag effect" from my earlier work on them (that is what
devastated them early in the season this year...the lag effect from the attack
last season.) "Lag effect", by the way, is not my term...it is a scientific term,
applicable to certain parapsychological phenomena. Dr. Mishlove and D. Scott
Rogo discuss "lag effect" in the book which they have written about my work,
"Earth's Ambassador".
My UFO connection also approves of my stopping the Trailblazers cold next season
because it will give me "combat practice" for the time ahead when my powers must
be used against formidable foes (re the Otto Binder article in Saga).
Cordially,
Ted Owens (RK Man)
200 NE 76th St.
Vancouver, Washington 98665
=== **Page: 2 of 7**
The Oregonian
SATURDAY, APRIL 25, 19
Morning after
Steve Kelley
The Force be agin' you
Ted Owens had retired from sports. After using his supernatural power to put whammies on the Philadelphia Eagles, the Baltimore Colts and the Virginia Squires in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Owens was content to leave the world of sports and spend his time ending droughts and helping mankind.
But Owens was forced out of retirement this season. Like Muhammad Ali, Owens came back to fight again. This time the opponent was the Portland Trail Blazers.
The popular belief after the Blazers lost their playoff mini-series to Kansas City was that inexperience, impatience and troublesome shooting were responsible for Portland's early vacation. Owens says he knows better.
The truth, according to Owens, is the games were out of the Trail Blazers' hands. They were the victims of PSI (psycho-kinetic) force. The force was against them.
"They had no chance once the PSI force was applied to them as only I know how," said Owens, a Vancouver, Wash., resident, who says he carries out the earthly game plans of other-world intelligences.
Owens predicted the Blazers' doom early in the season in a letter to The Oregonian and reaffirmed his belief in March that they were heading for a quick playoff exit.
Blazers got away
"I had a hell of a time beating them," admits Owens, a member of the high IQ club Mensa. "I had them zeroed-in early in the year (when they were 7-19), but then they managed to get away from me.
"Against Kansas City I let them have everything I had. When Kansas City would have the ball, I would sit (in front of the television) as quiet as a mouse. I didn't want to draw attention to the court. But as soon as a Trail Blazer touched the ball, that's when I went to work.
"I put the PSI force on the floor and an intelligence attaches itself to the Trail Blazers and makes them drop balls, make mistakes and miss the basket. It's beautiful. As the power builds up on the floor, the team falls apart. It follows along like a bird dog and waits until it spots a weakness. Then it jumps in and takes advantage."
But why the Trail Blazers? What did they do to have this close encounter of the worst kind? Why did they have to meet Dr. No?
"They didn't do anything," Owens said. "But I was supposed to be a guest on the TV show AM Northwest. I got to the show and they told me they were overbooked. I couldn't go on.
"I was in shock. I decided I was going to have to play rough and teach them some respect. Since the Blazers are the symbol of Portland, I decided I was going to have to use the PSI force against them."
For those who doubt Owens' mumbo jumbo about other-world intelligences, whammies and the like, he produces pounds of newspapers, magazines and books. He calls it documentation.
Blazers powerless
Philadelphia sports columnists write about the damage Owens did to the Eagles. Norfolk, Va., writers discuss the ruin he wrought on the Squires and Colts. Owens provides a book that lists him among the world's top 40 psychics.
"I think that left alone, without the PSI force, the Blazers would have been successful in the playoffs," he said. "But once the force was built up, they were powerless to do anything about it. Poor (Jack) Ramsay would jump up and down in frustration when his players would fumble the ball, but it was out of his control."
Now, Owens says his point has been made and the force is off the Blazers. "Sports is a superficial thing, but it's an excellent way to demonstrate PSI's power over a small group of men."
In an effort to leave nothing to chance in their quest for a championship, maybe the Blazers should draft Owens and use his PSI power. If there's room for a team dentist, surely there is room for a team psychic.
"Work for (owner) Larry Weinberg? You mean the Beverly Hills flash?" Owens asked. "Never. I think he has treated them very badly. To run a team properly you have to be near the team.
"I think he (Weinberg) should be aware of something. I used the force on the Eagles and (owner Jerry) Wolman went broke. I used it against the Squires and (owner Earl) Foreman went bankrupt. . . .
"I'm just saying that he should be aware that his fortunes could take a turn for the worse. It's very problematical."
Kelley named sports columnist
Steve Kelley, a sportswriter for The Oregonian since 1976, has been named the paper's daily sports columnist, Sports Editor Larry Shaw announced Friday.
Kelley, who has covered the Portland Trail Blazers the past three seasons, will write a daily column appearing Thursday through Monday, Shaw said.
The 32-year-old Kelley was named Oregon sportswriter of the year in 1979 and before covering the Blazers covered the Portland Timbers soccer team.
He began his newspaper career with the York Dispatch in Pennsylvania and worked in the sports departments of The Daily Chronicle in Centralia, Wash., and The Daily Olympian in Olympia, Wash., before joining The Oregonian's sports staff.
Kelley spent one year at the University of South Carolina and graduated from the University of Delaware in 1971.
"Kelley will give The Oregonian an added dimension to its overall sports coverage," Shaw said.
Steve Duin (pronounced dean) will assume Kelley's responsibilities of covering the Trail Blazers, Shaw said.
Oreg. 4/18/81
=== **Page: 3 of 7**
Bird, defense
spark Celtics
past 76ers 91-90
By ALEX SACHARE
BOSTON (AP)
The Boston Celtics, led by Larry Bird's 23 points and brilliant team defense down the stretch, completed their remarkable playoff comeback Sunday by wiping out an 11-point second-half deficit and beating the Philadelphia 76ers 91-90.
The victory moved the Celtics into the National Basketball Association's championship series against the Houston Rockets.
"If you were writing a Hollywood script for the last game between Boston and Philadelphia, you couldn't write a better one," Celtics Coach Bill Fitch said. "I said it before the game and I'll say it again now: It's a shame somebody had to lose this series."
Boston, which has had to rally in each of the last five games of this brilliant series, erased a seven-point deficit by holding Philadelphia without a field goal in the final 5:23.
"That defense is no surprise," said M.L. Carr, Boston's rugged reserve guard. "We've been playing that kind of defense all year."
And when it ended, the victory touched off a wild celebration that saw more than a thousand fans spill onto the court, surround the Celtics and usher them off the floor.
"This is the greatest feeling that have ever had as a professional athlete," Carr said. "When it ended, I felt like Sugar Ray Leonard when he won the gold medal at Montreal and blew kisses to the crowd."
"I did the same thing," Naturally, the mood was entirely different in the Philadelphia locker room.
"We had some opportunities," 76ers forward Bobby Jones said. "We had our chance but couldn't do it. It's an awful feeling. I can't say we choked because we were there at the end with a chance to win. But we lost and they won -- that's the bottom line."
The 76ers led 67-56 during the third quarter and clung to an 89-82 advantage with 5:23 left in the toughly fought seventh game of the Eastern Conference finals. But Boston scored nine straight points, the last four by Bird, while holding Philadelphia scoreless for 4:54.
Cedric Maxwell sank one free throw and Nate Archibald sank two, center Robert Parish made a turnaround jumper and Bird converted two free throws to tie the score 89-89 with 2:51 to go. Bird, the 1980 rookie of the year, then came back with a 15-foot bank shot from the left side for a 91-89 lead with 1:03 to play.
Following a pair of turnovers, Philadelphia had a 3-on-1 fastbreak, and Maurice Cheeks was fouled by Gerald Henderson with 21 seconds on the clock. He made just one of two free throws to leave Philadelphia trailing by one.
Carr missed a 20-footer for Boston, and Philadelphia's Bobby Jones gathered in the rebound and called timeout with one second left. Jones' inbounds pass bounced off Maxwell and hit the top of the backboard, and the Celtics had the emotion-charged victory.
As the final buzzer sounded, more than 1,000 spectators from the capacity crowd of 18,276 at Boston Garden poured onto the famous parquet floor in a jubilant celebration.
By winning, the Celtics became the fourth team in NBA history to capture a best-of-seven playoff series after falling behind 3-1. The others were the 1968 Boston Celtics, 1970 Los Angeles Lakers and 1979 Washington Bullets -- all of whom also did it in the semifinal round.
Of the three previous comeback clubs, only the 1968 Celtics -- who also beat Philadelphia in the semis -- went on to take the title. The current Celtics are hoping to match that and win the 14th championship in the history of the tradition-steeped franchise when they take on the Rockets in the final, which opens here Tuesday night.
The Celtics began their comeback by beating Philadelphia 111-109 Wednesday night, hitting the last eight points of the game and holding the 76ers scoreless for the final 1:51. Friday night, the Celtics ended an 11-game losing streak in Philadelphia by rallying from a 15-point second-half deficit to win 100-98.
And Sunday, they applied the finishing touch.
May 5/81
PHILADELPHIA 90 -- Erving 11-22 2-3 24, C. Jones 6-12 0-0 12, Dawkins 7-13 2-3 16, Hollins 1-10 0-2 2, Cheeks 3-7 1-2 7, Henderson 1-5 0-0 2, B. Jones 5-5 3-3 13, Toney 4-10 0-0 8, Mix 7-7 0-0 14. Totals 39-89 12-15 108.
BOSTON 91 -- Maxwell 9-15 1-5 19, Bird 8-17 7-7 23, Parish 7-12 2-2 16, Archibald 3-7 1-1 7, Ford 3-12 2-7 8, Robey 1-2 4-4 6, Carr 1-1 0-0 2, McHale 0-1 1-2 1, Henderson 2-2 2-2 6, Fernsten Totals 34-72 22-35 91.
Philadelphia 31 22 22 15 -- 90
Boston 26 22 23 20 -- 91
Three-point goals -- Bird. Fouled out -- None. Total fouls -- Philadelphia 27, Boston 18. Technical -- Bird. A -- 18,320.
May 5, 1981
KNOWING
SCIENTISTS AND CONTACTS
After attending Duke University and Dr. J. B. Rhine in parapsychology, and learning that time and space are irrelevant in ESP...I went on through the years doing my own unique research in that field and discovered that not only time and space are irrelevant...but so is MASS.
Now I have stumbled upon another amazing fact during my own research in psi-force. I have discovered "Displaced Lag Effect." "Lag Effect", as you know, is the continuation of psi phenomena after the psi-force project has been terminated for a period of time.
In 1968 I notified sports writers and others in authority that I would personally beat the Philadelphia 76'rs team by using my mind, over television and radio. At the time I notified them the Celtics were down 3 to 1 in the championship playoffs. That meant that I had to use my powers to make Philadelphia lose three straight games. And I did just that. My deed was documented and is on record.
Now, just recently I stepped once again into the sports arena to use psi-force to stop the Portland Trailblazers in the championship playoffs. That, too, is documented.
Following that, the Celtics once again lined up against the 76'rs...and once again the games became 3-1 in favor of the 76'rs. At that point I told my son, "You know, thirteen years ago this same thing happened and at that time I was in the picture with psi-force. Wouldn't it be something of my recent work with psi-force against the Trailblazers re-activated that 13-year-old psi-force form, or mechanism, that I used then, now at this time in the Celtics/76'rs series?" And so it happened. The games became 3 and 2; 3 and 3...and last night, one more time, the Celtics came from 3-1 behind to win over Philadelphia. (See newsclip.)
Since such a happening is a rarity (only the 4th time in history) I am convinced that the 13-year-old psi-force mechanism was re-activated. Thus, psi-force in this case worked like the displacement effect in the Zener card experiment. I.e., once a psi-force mechanism is constructed it can once again come alive under the proper situation or conditions, if the original creator of the mechanism is tied into it.
Ted Owens (PK Man)
T Owens
=== **Page: 4 of 7**
May 4, 1981
Scientists and Contacts
Note: my UFO's communicated with me... to write this, below, at 12:15 P.M. today.
- Gwens
You must remember... that I am able, with my half-alien mind... to apply Psi-force to an idea, to make that idea come to pass.
(Recall that it was published in a book some years ago that I would cause all whites to be driven out of Africa. Since then all hell has broken loose in Africa and whites have left that Country in tremendous numbers.)
Now, my UFO's want their Base.
Do you realize that I am entirely capable of transferring terrorism from Ireland, Africa, etc etc here to the United States?!!
The U.S. govt. got their Space Shuttle back safely. Now my UFO's want their Base.
- Gwens
=== **Page: 5 of 7**
May 6, 1981 10:30 PM.
Called P. Scott Rogo - he didn't pay attention - said he had company.
Called Dr. Mishlove - told him the same thing:
1. A terrible political/military blow will be struck against the U.S. in 30 days.
2. The S.I. will destroy the Space Shuttle & NASA if the UFO Base is not soon provided. * Owens
* Somebody must understand that the S.I. are not bluffing. Owens
2 Space Shuttle PK - Oregon Journal, May 6, 1981 (2)
Fall kills space site technician
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) - Kennedy Space Center officials are trying to find out why a construction worker fell more than 100 feet to his death while making preparations for the space shuttle's next launch.
Anthony E. Hill, 22, of Rockledge, Fla., struck the concrete apron of Launch Pad 39B and was pronounced dead Tuesday at Jess Parrish Hospital in Titusville. He had been working on the metal framework of the service structure for September's launch of the shuttle Columbia.
Hill was the third technician to be killed at the center while working on the space shuttle program, and the 12th victim directly associated with space activities at Cape Canaveral.
"We have no idea how it happened," said Clifton Reeves, project manager for Wilhoit, a structural steel construction firm based in nearby Titusville.
Hill worked for Wilhoit, which had raised the planned 241-foot service structure to a height of 212 feet when the accident occurred.
On March 19, two technicians for Rockwell International - the space shuttle builder - were fatally exposed to nitrogen released into the shuttle's aft engine compartment after a test.
=== **Page: 6 of 7**
jack anderson
Pakistan aid perilous
WASHINGTON — Several weeks ago, I warned that the United States was inviting another Iran-style disaster in the Middle East by cozying up to Pakistan's hated dictator, Gen. Muhammad Zia ul-Haq.
Since then, according to the latest intelligence reports, the situation has deteriorated inside Pakistan. Yet the Reagan administration, instead of backing away from this potential nightmare, is planning to commit the United States even more deeply to Zia's unpopular, repressive regime.
Secret foreign intelligence cables reviewed by my associate Jack Mitchell reveal that the "Shah Syndrome" is already beginning to materialize in Pakistan: American citizens have been assaulted in broad daylight on the streets of the country's largest cities — for the sole reason that they are identified with the United States, which is supporting their detested dictator.
Surrounded by shameless yes-men, Zia has delayed three times the free elections he promised, has instituted unprecedented martial law and has arrested and tortured thousands. He is caught in a vicious circle of his own making: The more he cracks down on his countrymen, the more unpopular he is and the more vocal his opponents become. This then causes him to tighten the screws still more.
But though Zia sits precariously on a powder keg, White House policymakers seem determined to provide him with the latest military technology. The reasons are the same as those advanced to justify support of the shah: The United States needs a "dependable ally" in the region to confront the Soviet Union, and Saudi Arabia must be protected to assure a continued flow of oil.
But diplomatic sources warn that time may be running out on Zia, just as it did for the shah. Pakistan's highest judges have refused to go along with the general's kangaroo courts in which defendants are convicted without benefit of witnesses, lawyers or appeals. Lawyers have also shown their distaste for the dictatorship by openly supporting prominent colleagues who have been arrested on trumped-up charges and tortured.
The recent burning of a DC-10 at the Karachi airport was officially termed an accident, but government insiders say it was sabotage.
Still the repression continues. Newspapers carry photographs of cruel floggings, and the possibility has been discussed of punishing adultery by publicly stoning the transgressors to death.
Education is deteriorating; Zia and his generals have closed down schools as a means of curbing opposition. The government has also increased censorship of the media.
Yet it is this hated dictatorship that the White House seems determined to identify with, trying to prop up Zia's shaky regime with hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid. If there are dissenting views in the administration, they have been effectively silenced by Secretary of State Alexander Haig.
The really sad part of this is that the administration's policy may actually help to achieve exactly the opposite of its intended goal: By helping Zia, we could drive the opposition — which includes virtually all political parties — and the people of Pakistan into Soviet arms. That would make Zia's downfall doubly disastrous for the United States.
orig 5/6/81
Note: The U.S. govt.
provides hundreds of
millions of dollars
to Pakistan... which
"goes down the drain"...
yet will not provide
PK man/UFOs with
5 million dollars for
a UFO Base operation...
which Base, once provided,
could do more to aid the
U.S. than all other
foreign countries
Combined!
Owens
=== **Page: 7 of 7**
Scientists: I will appear on TV's "Faces & Places" May 14, throwing knives (of all things). For those of you who might be interested in my agility, coordination, digital dexterity etc. at age 61... you perhaps could have an associate in this Portland-Vancouver area view the show and report to you.
- Owens
Thursday Evening Programs
See listings for details.
| | 8:00 | 8:30 | 9:00 | 9:30 | 10:00 | 10:30 |
| :---- | :----------- | :------------ | :------------- | :------------- | :------------ | :---- |
| 2 | Mork & Mindy | Bosom Buddies | Barney Miller (CC) | Taxi | 20/20 | |
| 3 10 | Wilderness | Good Neighbors | Sneak Previews | To the Manor Born | Cousteau Odyssey | |
| 6 | Waltons | Magnum, P.I. | Bob Newhart | | | |
| 8 | Real Kids | Movie: Dracula | | | | |
| 12 | Movie: The Taking of Pelham One Two Three | News | | | | |
EVENING
6 PM 2 ABC NEWS-Frank Reynolds
3 10 INSIDE STORY-Magazine
Hodding Carter anchors a scheduled report on the media's use of confidential sources. Also: Bob and Ray.
[Pre-empts regular programming.]
6 CBS NEWS-Rather/Drinkwater
8 NBC NEWS-John Chancellor
12 KUNG FU-Drama
Chief Dan George as a dying warrior in search of his preordained burial site. (60 min.)
6:30 2 NEWS
3 10 EARTH, SEA AND SKY
6 M*A*S*H
Hawkeye (Alan Alda) is enraged by a colonel (Charles Aidman) who seems to love his job-predicting casualties.
8 TIC TAC DOUGH-Game
12 FACES AND PLACES-Magazine
Segments on a knife-throwing school; women's rugby.
7:00 3 10 STATEHOUSE '81
5 MERV GRIFFIN
From Hollywood: Publisher Kal Rud-man ("Friday Morning Quarterback"), the Marshall Tucker Band. (60 min.)
8 FAMILY FEUD-Game
12 HAPPY DAYS AGAIN-Comedy
Richie (Ron Howard) makes his debut into journalism-loading papers onto trucks. Henry Winkler. Frank: Jed Cooper. Otis: Ted Gehring. Potsie: Anson Williams.
Inside Story
Covering the press
that covers the news.
What are the rights and
responsibilities of the press,
especially to you, the news
consumer? Hodding Carter
anchors "Inside Story," a weekly
half-hour magazine devoted
to the examination of news-
gathering, its problems and
its performance.
Thursday 6 pm
3 10
This ad made possible by a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
MAY 14, 1981
TV GUIDE A-79
Faces
AND
Places
E FOR AND ABOUT THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST
Featuring:
MARY STARRETT
KEV REILLY
RON CARLSON
ELAINE MURPHY
PATTY LOEW
Get a free Faces and Places T-shirt for any story idea
used on the air. Watch Faces and Places for details.
WEEKNIGHTS 7:00PM KATU abc 2
Collection
Citation
“8105,” Archive Home, accessed June 28, 2026, https://www.pkman.org/archive/items/show/405.