Notes on Virgo (Garth Allen)
Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 5:00 pm
Up On Things
(from "Your Powwow Corner" by Garth Allen, American Astrology 8/59)
Something mighty interesting, even fabulous, has already emerged from the early high-altitude studies of the sky by rocket-borne instruments. In November 1955 the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory sent a far-ultraviolet radiation recorder some 90 miles aloft, and brought down the news that there were celestial sources of this type radiation other than the Sun. Refinement of apparatus and improvement of ascent plans resulted in the send-off of an Aerobee-Hi rocket from the White Sands Proving Ground on the night of March 28, 1957. Purpose: To map the ultraviolet distribution in the night sky. Result: Success with surprises.
Biggest surprise of all was the discovery of what is called the Spica ultra-violet nebula, though it was established that the star itself is not the source of the excitation necessary to account for the amount of radiation being emitted. The Aerobee rotating mapper recorded patches of ultraviolet nebulae here and there about the sky, though most were concentrated in or near the plane of our galaxy. There was one out-standing exception, and that was a region of radiation having a sharp peak of intensity just one degree east of the star Spica.
And you know what? This is the very point which siderealists claim to be the zero point of the true zodiac! In the earliest years of Fagan's restoration of the original astrology he used the star Spica as the fiducial point of the sidereal zodiac. In 1949-50 Fagan made his momentous discovery of the origin of the exaltation degrees of the planet, which finding made him shift the fiducial point just one degree east of Spica. Not even the most painstaking statistical work has been able to improve on this determination by more than one-tenth of a degree. The narrowed-down point, as most readers know, is now referred to as the Synetic Vernal Point to distinguish it from other ayanamsas, all of which should have identifying names. Comes along a team of Navy scientists, now, with their report (published in detail in the November 1958 issue of the Astrophysical Journal) that this same point in the sky is the generating point of an invisible radiation so intense that all known theories are at a loss to explain its source. The core of the radiation is at 0° sidereal Libra, the pivotal point of the zodiac. It is well to remember that siderealists use this point, its opposition point and squares thereto, as the basic marking lines of the divisions of the zodiac, and our solar and lunar ingresses are actually transit phenomena in relation to this point. It could be a coincidence, this wholly unanticipated finding by our government wizards, but an astrologer can hardly suppress a chuckle at the statement made by one of the scientists: "The origin of this surprisingly intense radiation poses a difficult problem." For astrologers, the only riddle is whether the ancient founders of our science and its zodiac had abnormal eyesight that was sensitive to ultraviolet light, leading them to select this glow as the pivotal point in the sky. Or perhaps they had devices, unknown to modern technicians, which pointed to this radiating core in the heavens – and drew the correct conclusion.
(from "Your Powwow Corner" by Garth Allen, American Astrology 8/59)
Something mighty interesting, even fabulous, has already emerged from the early high-altitude studies of the sky by rocket-borne instruments. In November 1955 the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory sent a far-ultraviolet radiation recorder some 90 miles aloft, and brought down the news that there were celestial sources of this type radiation other than the Sun. Refinement of apparatus and improvement of ascent plans resulted in the send-off of an Aerobee-Hi rocket from the White Sands Proving Ground on the night of March 28, 1957. Purpose: To map the ultraviolet distribution in the night sky. Result: Success with surprises.
Biggest surprise of all was the discovery of what is called the Spica ultra-violet nebula, though it was established that the star itself is not the source of the excitation necessary to account for the amount of radiation being emitted. The Aerobee rotating mapper recorded patches of ultraviolet nebulae here and there about the sky, though most were concentrated in or near the plane of our galaxy. There was one out-standing exception, and that was a region of radiation having a sharp peak of intensity just one degree east of the star Spica.
And you know what? This is the very point which siderealists claim to be the zero point of the true zodiac! In the earliest years of Fagan's restoration of the original astrology he used the star Spica as the fiducial point of the sidereal zodiac. In 1949-50 Fagan made his momentous discovery of the origin of the exaltation degrees of the planet, which finding made him shift the fiducial point just one degree east of Spica. Not even the most painstaking statistical work has been able to improve on this determination by more than one-tenth of a degree. The narrowed-down point, as most readers know, is now referred to as the Synetic Vernal Point to distinguish it from other ayanamsas, all of which should have identifying names. Comes along a team of Navy scientists, now, with their report (published in detail in the November 1958 issue of the Astrophysical Journal) that this same point in the sky is the generating point of an invisible radiation so intense that all known theories are at a loss to explain its source. The core of the radiation is at 0° sidereal Libra, the pivotal point of the zodiac. It is well to remember that siderealists use this point, its opposition point and squares thereto, as the basic marking lines of the divisions of the zodiac, and our solar and lunar ingresses are actually transit phenomena in relation to this point. It could be a coincidence, this wholly unanticipated finding by our government wizards, but an astrologer can hardly suppress a chuckle at the statement made by one of the scientists: "The origin of this surprisingly intense radiation poses a difficult problem." For astrologers, the only riddle is whether the ancient founders of our science and its zodiac had abnormal eyesight that was sensitive to ultraviolet light, leading them to select this glow as the pivotal point in the sky. Or perhaps they had devices, unknown to modern technicians, which pointed to this radiating core in the heavens – and drew the correct conclusion.