The following is the first installment in a series of profile sketches pertaining to the Core of D-Hall. This will be ongoing throughout the investigation of The Core.
Name: Allison Wheeler
Age: 27
Location: Arlington, Virginia
Occupation: Director of Science and Technology, Justitech Industries
Connection to The Core: Chief director of operations for project entitled "CRAP - Core Revitilization Advances Project" - an initiative to utilize the Core's energy to replace current power sources.
"We believe the Core holds power beyond our capacity of undertanding. We have top notch scientists working on figuring out why this mass of energy exists in the center of a university dinging hall"
- Allison Wheeler
Monday, July 26, 2004
Sunday, July 25, 2004
Schumin and radioactive pulses from the core
The First Council on the Core of D-Hall met May 1, 2001 to discuss the growing concern that the core is expanding and presents an immediate threat to all of Rockingham County, Virginia. Present at that meeting was a man known as Schumin. The following link connects to his website and particularly a front entrance shot of D-Hall. Notice the clock above the entrance to D-Hall says 10:20 AM - this is the only time of day when radiation from the core is low enough to capture a photograph of D-Hall. Attempts to obtain pictures at any other time of day result in overexposure, or transmitter malfunction in the case of a digital camera. Schumin knew this.
The Schumin Web - Photography
The Schumin Web - Photography
Saturday, July 24, 2004
D-Hall's Black Hole
From a newspaper article from January 8, 2003:
Suspicions had abounded that a black hole lay at the core of D-Hall, but visual sightings from a handful of people were thwarted by clouds of memory-erasing dust and gas that hang within the outer rim of D-Hall, also known as the "kitchen". Scientists at Justitech have discovered that the core, weighing in at 3 million times the mass of the sun, is a starved black hole because when it flares, the intensity of the X-ray emission from its vicinity is relatively weak.
Black holes are among the most powerful but enigmatic forces in the universe. They are believed to be caused by the death of massive stars that run out of fuel and collapse inwardly, creating a body of extremely intense gravity from which nothing, not even light, can escape.
However, some scientists believe some black holes may be created by non-stellar means, by large volumes of gas that arise from uneaten mashed potatoes and collect at the center of circular buildings and then collapse, becoming things of enormous mass but relatively tiny volumes. "We hope to use the findings of the study to explain how the core increases in intensity and interacts with its environment," stated Justin McDonough in a related press conference, "In the meantime, we've sold the story to Paramount pictures who plan to release 'The Core' in theaters very soon".
http://www.thecoremovie.com
Suspicions had abounded that a black hole lay at the core of D-Hall, but visual sightings from a handful of people were thwarted by clouds of memory-erasing dust and gas that hang within the outer rim of D-Hall, also known as the "kitchen". Scientists at Justitech have discovered that the core, weighing in at 3 million times the mass of the sun, is a starved black hole because when it flares, the intensity of the X-ray emission from its vicinity is relatively weak.
Black holes are among the most powerful but enigmatic forces in the universe. They are believed to be caused by the death of massive stars that run out of fuel and collapse inwardly, creating a body of extremely intense gravity from which nothing, not even light, can escape.
However, some scientists believe some black holes may be created by non-stellar means, by large volumes of gas that arise from uneaten mashed potatoes and collect at the center of circular buildings and then collapse, becoming things of enormous mass but relatively tiny volumes. "We hope to use the findings of the study to explain how the core increases in intensity and interacts with its environment," stated Justin McDonough in a related press conference, "In the meantime, we've sold the story to Paramount pictures who plan to release 'The Core' in theaters very soon".
http://www.thecoremovie.com
Friday, July 23, 2004
Death's Final Undoing
The following is a recorded transcript from a handheld tape recorder thought to be dictated by a man known only on the JMU campus as "Death". The recorder was found lying on a picnic bench in Harrisonburg, Virginia's Purcell Park in October of 1998.
"....The clanging in my head is unbearable and I can barely hold the pen to write down these thoughts. What I have experienced the last few months is something I do not wish on any mortal soul; however, I have carried the burden of this knowledge for too long and it is time I told the appropriate people the events that are unfolding this very moment. I have encountered a life force so expansive, that I...I..."
The rest of the tape contained static and garbled audio that is currently being encoded. No one has seen or heard from Death since the fall of 1998.
"....The clanging in my head is unbearable and I can barely hold the pen to write down these thoughts. What I have experienced the last few months is something I do not wish on any mortal soul; however, I have carried the burden of this knowledge for too long and it is time I told the appropriate people the events that are unfolding this very moment. I have encountered a life force so expansive, that I...I...
The rest of the tape contained static and garbled audio that is currently being encoded. No one has seen or heard from Death since the fall of 1998.
Thursday, July 22, 2004
A disruption of the status quo
On the snowy morning of February 5, 1996, bleary eyed students at Harrisonburg, Virginia's James Madison University trudged into their main dining facility, Gibbons Hall - a cylindrical shaped edifice lacking the sharp corners of the surrounding buildings and thus giving off an otherwise innocuous presence. Tables and chairs lined the outermost circumference of the structure, and as you worked your way towards the center you reached the serving areas, followed by the kitchen. Like all mornings, breakfast was served cafeteria style in the form of heaping quantities of yellow eggs, grits, Lucky Charms, and gallons of thick chocolate milk dispensed from rubbery plastic tubing.
However, this particular morning, something was different. Actually, 3 things were different.
1. Jeannie Drummond, a part-time chef on duty that day since 6am, was not wearing her apron. Under normal circumstances this was not something anyone would have noticed. Except on this morning, Charlie Earnest was the on-site manager. Charlie had been reprimanded twice in the past week by his superior, Mr. Lyons, for not tucking in his shirt. In response to Mr. Lyons' bullying, Charlie took his anger out on his employees. When Jeannie appeared with a tray of cream-of-wheat and no apron, he immediately went off on Jeannie asking her where she left her apron. She would not say. She could not say. She was in shock. Jeannie Drummond swayed backwards, dropped the tray of scalding cream-of-wheat, and fainted on the spot. When she was revived she could not remember anything that happened that morning, only that she drove into work, put her apron on, and went into the restroom to wash her hands.
2. At approximately 7:52am, the lights in Gibbons Hall flickered several times, causing freshman Joe Steiner to accidentally spill waffle mix on his shirt. Upon entering the restroom to clean it off, the power went off completely and he was left standing for a good 30 seconds in the dark. As he became adjusted to the dark, he noticed a greenish glow coming from the air vent in the ceiling. Before he could go any closer, the lights came back on and Joe left the restroom - not quite sure of what he saw.
3. The unofficial JMU chapter of SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence), which consisted at the time of geology major Alan Fairlawn and his roommate George Craig, woke up in their 4th floor room in Wampler Hall and noticed that the seismograph they constructed from used car parts had registered a small earthquake sometime during the night. Because of the amateur crudeness of their machine, it wasn't uncommon for the machine to register a 6.0 on the Richter scale whenever the Marching Royal Dukes passed by outside, but the night had been particularly quiet.
A little too quiet....
However, this particular morning, something was different. Actually, 3 things were different.
1. Jeannie Drummond, a part-time chef on duty that day since 6am, was not wearing her apron. Under normal circumstances this was not something anyone would have noticed. Except on this morning, Charlie Earnest was the on-site manager. Charlie had been reprimanded twice in the past week by his superior, Mr. Lyons, for not tucking in his shirt. In response to Mr. Lyons' bullying, Charlie took his anger out on his employees. When Jeannie appeared with a tray of cream-of-wheat and no apron, he immediately went off on Jeannie asking her where she left her apron. She would not say. She could not say. She was in shock. Jeannie Drummond swayed backwards, dropped the tray of scalding cream-of-wheat, and fainted on the spot. When she was revived she could not remember anything that happened that morning, only that she drove into work, put her apron on, and went into the restroom to wash her hands.
2. At approximately 7:52am, the lights in Gibbons Hall flickered several times, causing freshman Joe Steiner to accidentally spill waffle mix on his shirt. Upon entering the restroom to clean it off, the power went off completely and he was left standing for a good 30 seconds in the dark. As he became adjusted to the dark, he noticed a greenish glow coming from the air vent in the ceiling. Before he could go any closer, the lights came back on and Joe left the restroom - not quite sure of what he saw.
3. The unofficial JMU chapter of SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence), which consisted at the time of geology major Alan Fairlawn and his roommate George Craig, woke up in their 4th floor room in Wampler Hall and noticed that the seismograph they constructed from used car parts had registered a small earthquake sometime during the night. Because of the amateur crudeness of their machine, it wasn't uncommon for the machine to register a 6.0 on the Richter scale whenever the Marching Royal Dukes passed by outside, but the night had been particularly quiet.
A little too quiet....
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