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The importance of saving

Friday, February 27, 2009 at 23:55 - General

The days I work tonight so it is seldom I come up before 09. Try in all cases set the clock at 09 and then I see how it goes. Then I have received nearly seven hours sleep is okay. Today I was awakened by a German friend Tom who called me from Munich and told that he had sent some collected ufotidningar to me. I thanked and fuss me out of bed and put me on the sofa to organize a paper bag of correspondence from an old UFOLOGIST.

Just old letters from and to ufointresserade says a lot. Here you will find reflections on cases that can not be read when they write their books or producing an article for a magazine. Often thrown just when the person dies. Well-meaning relatives skyr everything seem personal and dump it quickly in a container or fire it up. In this way, lost an important dimension in the person's life, and we who come after may be more difficult to understand how he or she thought.

Not infrequently, I have called or written to the survivors to get them to understand how important it is to save the letters and notes. But just as often on the tip, and instead we get maybe a bag of videotapes, which we already have, and books, we also often have.

Read in New Scientist, which is a faithful husorgan, that the space rock that went under the name of 2008 TC3 and discovered a collision course with Earth October 6 last year, and then crashed down over the Sudan, has been this way. This makes 2008 TC3 to the first rock from space that has been able to follow in his career before the wooden earth to be able to pick up once the beating. Not bad.

The night at work was moderately quiet. Wrote about Obama's speech to the Marine Corps soldiers and his decision to withdraw troops from iraq, a robbery in Smålandsstenar, continuing fires in Australia and some other things. Not so much to speak of.

When I arrived at half two in the night, it was actually the star ready for the first time in a week. Finally, there was a chance to see comet Lulin before it becomes too dim, so I went straight in, talked a little with Niklas, and turned to me with field binoculars out to see if I could detect it. And it went well. That was good was the comet close to Regulus in Leo, and there seemed a little blurry dammtuss slightly below the right. At 5 o'clock, you could say.

No major astronomical experience perhaps, but in any case, nice to have seen it.