Release 2001/04/02 Cit. """1500110019-5 CENTER LANE-3 NO FOREIGN DISSEMINATION 4 October 1983 Proposal for Research SRI International No. ESU 83-145 FC@ SPECIAL ORIENTATION TECHNIQUES (SI-SIII) (U) Part One--Technical Proposal Prepared for: Prepared by: Client Private Harold E. Puthoff Senior Research Engineer Approved by: Robert S. Leonard, Director Radio Physics Laboratory David D. Elliott, Vice President Research and Analysis Division WARNING NOTICE CENTER LANE SPECIAL ACCESS PROGRAM. RESTRICT DISSEMINATION TO THOSE WITH VERIFIED ACCESS. CATEGORY 3 Copy No . .............. CLASSIFIED BY: CENTER LANE Security Classification Guide dated This document consists of 6 pages. 1 March 1983 Declassify on: OADR 941/CL-0007 er_enrv wymmqING NOTICE @ @ @ @w 0% 00 1 CENTER LANE-3 Intelligence Sources and Methods Involved NO FOREIGN DISSEMINATION 333 Ravenswood Ave. Menlo Park, CA 94025 !1n t ter n Pa@'( oved For #161IOAVIYOD 1Y04AYV7CFA4R1DPft4W'ff8 ROO 1500110019-5 a Approved For Release 200..-,,,,,, -0 00788ROO1500110019-5 SECRET/CENTER LANE-3/NOFORN I INTRODUCTION (U) (S/CL-3/NOFORN) In response to correspondence from Army INSCOM dated 2 May 1983, and to discussions with INSCOM personnel on 7 and 8 September 1983, SRI International submits this proposal to initiate activity with regard to Special Orientation Technique (SI-SIII) remote viewing (RV) training. (S/CL-1/NOFORN) To accomplish the proposed program, SRI will provide the facilities, materials, SRI staffing, and consultants to perform the tasking outlined in the INSCOM Statement of Work dated 2 May 1983. Details of the effort are specified in the following section. 1 1%161 Approved For Release,3ffiQj/)HWg Q,*fY?f6%RQ0788 ROO 1500110019-5 Approved For Release 2001/ ^16@01500110019-5 SECRET/CENTER LANE-3/NOFORN II STATEMENT OF WORK (U) 1. (U) GENERAL 1.1 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) The objective of this effort is to investigate a particular aspect of the psychoenergetic phenomena known as remote viewing that has a potential military intelligence application. Coordinate Remote Viewing (CRV) is a staged technique that utilizes coordinates to facilitate acquisition of a remote viewing target. 1.2 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) The major goal is to determine whether CRV technology can be successfully transferred to INSCOM personnel with a corresp d' i ease in the reliability of a remote viewer. RC11-3g 1. @ SpTr WILL IPR, 0 1/ 10 Je CRU L) 0, C%zu1VAL*Vr Tft"i&C AS &0,04jC,,4$&e 2. (U) SPECIFIC TASKS 2.1 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) Train three army personnel concurrently in CRV Stages I through III, as outlined in SRI memoranda on this subject, dated 16 December 1982 and 25 May 1983. 2.1.1 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) Initiate training at the highest skill level (CRV stage) of the trainee. 2.1.2 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) Training for each CRV stage will normally be divided into working sessions in accordance with the following schedule: - StageI, Phase 1 2 to weeks 3 - StageI, Phase 2 2 to weeks 4 - Stage11 2 to weeks 6 - Stage111 12 to weeks 16 Total - weeks 24 The session dates will be mutually agreed to by SRI and INSCOM. 2.1.3 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) After successful completion of each CRV stage, the trainee will be scheduled to begin the next CRV stage. 2.2 (U) Determine the potential of the trainee for further training. (U) Broken up into 2-week sessions each, with 2 to 4 week breaks between sessions. 2 e r Am r% i" qp - %W51% fts v Approved For Release 2MAigAin;T~plAl8E97R*N788ROO1500110019-5 'OM r, 7CE - Approved For Release 2001/019*0 M96-00788 ROO 1500110019-5 SECRET/CENTER LANE-3/NOFORN 3. (U) SECURITY (U) Military security requirements in the performance of this con- tract shall be maintained in accordance with the "CENTER LANE SECURITY PROCEDURES GUIDE," dated 1 March 1983 (S/CL-1/NOFORN/ORCON). The highest classification involved in the performance of this contract is SECRET/ CL-4/NO FOREIGN DISSEMINATION/ORIGINATOR CONTROLLED. 4. (U) DELIVERABLES (U) SRI International will provide the following: 4.1 (S/CL-3/NOFORN) St66- of-the-art CRV training. 4.2 (U) A progress report (2 copies)--written evaluation of the trainee's progress (within 10 days after the completion of each training block). 4.3 (U) A final report. 4.3.1 (U) A final report (three copies) will be furnished within 30 days after completion of each training stage. _@_4.3.2 (U) The report will include a summary of the training presente , an evaluation of the trainee's ability to understand the training, and a summary of the trainee's accomplishments during the training period. (S/CL-3/NOFORN) The report should also include an evaluation of the trainee's future remote viewing capabilities, and a recommendation concerning further training. I/, y 5. (U) POST TRAINING ACCESS (S/CL-3/NOFORN) After the completion of each CRV training stage, personnel involved in the training program will have reasonable access to INSCOM personnel trained to assist in further evaluations of CRV. 6. (U) SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS (U) Requirements concerning the use of human subjects as outlined in the INSCOM Statement of Work dated 2 May 1983 will be adhered to. 3 Approved For Release 2601V044024C EA4REWWW88 ROO 1500110019-5 Approved For Release 2UNCiASi&WdWoO788ROO1500110019-5 ROBERT S. LEONARD Director Radio Physics Laboratory Research and Analysis Division SPECIALIZED PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE Radio-wave propagation: in normal environments; in naturally dis- turbed environments (aurora); in manmade disturbances (nuclear explosions) REPRESENTATIVE RESEARCH ASSIGNMENTS AT SRI (since 1961) Project director of a program to remotely sense nuclear detonations during the U.S. high altitude nuclear test program Led a research effort to improve the U.S. capability to detect foreign nuclear tests by their effect on radio propagation Technical director of a large multicontractor research program to study the effects on radio propagation of an artificially produced ionospheric plasma Technical director on a program to develop special communications techniques OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Instructor, researcher, and graduate student, Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska: HF and low VHF radio-wave propagation studies of auroral effects; designed, developed, and tested a prototype of the 41-MHz auroral radar used in the U.S. IGY program; installed and operated the six Alaskan IGY-auroral radars, and analyzed the data collected during the IGY Teaching assistant, Physics Department, University of Nevada ACADEMIC BACKGROUND B.S. (1952) and M.S. (1953) in physics, University of Nevada; Ph.D. in geophysics (1961), University of Alaska PUBLICATIONS "Observations of Ionospheric Disturbances Following the Alaska Earth- quake," Journal of Geophysical Research (March 1965); "Selection of a Model of the Earth's Magnetic Field," Journal of Geophysical Research (December 1962); "Evidence of Low-Frequency Amplitude Fluctuations in Radar Auroral Echoes," Journal of Geophysical Research (April 1962); "Distribution of Radar Auroras over Alaska," Journal of Geophysical Research (March 1962); "A Low Power UHF Radar for Auroral Research " PIRE (F@Tbruary 1959); plus numerous scientific and technical reports PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS American Geophysical Union Union Radio Scientifique Internationale 4 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1500110019-5 F Approved For Release *JWL:A&3#qE600788R001 500110019-5 HAROLD E. PUTHOFF Senior Research Engineer Radio Physics Laboratory Research and Analysis Division SPECIALIZED PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE Research in "remote viewing" and other psi phenomena (1972-present) Research in lasers, quantum electronics, nonlinear optics Research and development of tunable solid-state lasers, electron beam lasers, microwave tubes OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Research associate, Hansen Laboratories of Physics, and lecturer, Depart- ment of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University; teaching, textbook author, research supervisor of Ph.D. candidates in the area of lasers and nonlinear optics Lieutenant, USNR: in-house research and contract monitoring on DoD (NSA) contracts concerned with the development of ultra high-speed (GHz) computers, assessment of potential of fiber optics and lasers for use in optical computers Research engineer, Sperry Electronic Tube Division, and Sperry fellow, University of Florida: design and testing of electron-beam focusing systems for use in microwave tubes ACADEMIC BACKGROUND B.E.E. (1958) and M.S.E. (196 0), Universi-ty of Florida; Ph.D. in electri- cal engineering, Stanford University (1967) PUBLICATIONS AND PATENTS Author or coauthor of more than twenty-five papers in professional journals on electron beam and laser research, and, more recently, first major publi- cations of research on psi phenomena in Nature ("Information Transfer Un- der Conditions of Sensory Shielding," Oct. 1974), in the Proceedings of the IEEE ("A Perceptual Channel for Information Transfer over Kilometer Distances," March 1976) and in The Role of Consciousness in the Physical World: AAAS Selected Symposium 57, Ed. R. Jahn, ("Experimental Psi Research: Implications for Physics", Westview Press, 1981 Coauthor of textbook, Fundamentals of Quantum Electronics (Wiley, New York, 1969) published in E_@glish, French, Russian; Coauthor of Mind Reach: Scientists Look at Psychic Ability (Delacorte, New York, 1977); Coeditor of Mind at Large: IEEE Symposia on the Nature of Extrasensory Perception (Praeger, New York, 1979); Patent on high-power tunable infrared laser source (50-250 microns) PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS AND HONORS American Association for the Advancement of Science, American Physical Society, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Sigma Xi, Department of Defense Certificate of Commendation for Outstanding Perfor- mance, IEEE Franklyn V. Taylor Memorial Award for paper "A Scientific Look at ESP," listed in American Men and Women of Science and in Who's Who in the West 5 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP96-00788ROO1500110019-5