I know, I did say in my previous post that I would leave the rest for you, butt I changed my mind... at least with this one. Note this excerpt from my previous post:
...note the following excerpt from the "Bocks Car" wiki page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bocks_Car:
Note these two other excerpts that stood out from "Bocks Car" wiki page:
- Bockscar was flown on 9 August 1945, by the crew of another B-29, The Great Artiste, and piloted by Major Charles W. Sweeney
- Delivered to the United States Army Air Forces on 19 March 1945, Bockscar was assigned to Captain Frederick C. Bock and crew C-13, and flown to Wendover Army Air Field, Utah in April.[1] The name chosen for the aircraft, and painted on it after the mission, was a pun on the name of the aircraft commander.[3]
- It was originally given the Victor (unit-assigned identification) number 7 but on 1 August was given the triangle N tail markings of the 444th Bombardment Group as a security measure, and had its Victor changed to 77 to avoid misidentification with an actual 444th aircraft.[4]
Note the second excerpt re the twin and triple numbers that fall into the "Identical Numbers Sequence" pattern-cluster. There is definitely something more that the inner twin world wants me to "gaze" at. So I decided to check out the person responsible behind the name of the bomber plane, Frederick C. Bock:
Frederick C. Bock (1918 – August 25, 2000)[1] was a World War II pilot who took part in the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in 1945, flying the B-29 bomber The Great Artiste, which was used for scientific measurements of the effects caused by the nuclear weapon.August 25th... the day that Bock died, is my grand daughter's birthday... a date that has cropped up a number of times recently. Perhaps the "boxcar" serves as hidden cryptic reference-- the inner twin world "boxing" us in?! It's audd too, the switcheroo re Bock flying the "Great Artiste" instead of his own plane the "Bocks Car" during the Atomic Bombing... so what's that all about?!
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