Eleanor White rating: OK November 24, 2008 File name of saved copy: http://www.raven1.net/reviews/cr000006.htm ARTICLE: "Microwaves and Behavior" by Dr. Don Justesen published in the journal "American Psychologist" in the March 1975 issue WEB SITE: http://www.raven1.net/v2success1.gif http://www.raven1.net/v2success2.gif http://www.raven1.net/v2success3.gif http://www.raven1.net/v2success4.gif EW: In the electronic harassment arena, VOICE TO SKULL is the BIG ONE. It's the harassment experience that attracts journalists, for one thing, and it's the harassment experience that so often brings forth strong hints that electronic assault targets may be mentally ill. What this article does is show that pulsed microwave voice to skull has been do-able, and not even a military secret, since it was announced at the University of Utah in August, 1974. That's more than three decades. A recent Freedom of Information request shows that the U.S. military has an interest in developing voice to skull further: http://www.raven1.net/friedmanv2s.pdf Since the operating principle is simple, basically synthesizing voice from a stream of clicks, and a radar set can be modified to transmit the original voice to skull signal type, and since this technique has been available for over three decades, it is reasonable to not summarily assume targets of organized stalking and electronic harassment must be mentally ill. Hopefully journalists will, in the future, clearly mention Dr. Joseph Sharp's success of the 1970s to give the public a balanced picture. Eleanor White