Listed on Wikipedia's Death in 2013 site under December 1st is:
As it turns out he was born on November 14th which doesn't mean anything to me.
So at this point I moved on to this next person who stood out, listed under December 2nd:
So note the surname "Teller"... very similar to "stater"!! So off to Edward Tellers wiki page, note this excerpt:
Stirling Colgate, 88, American physicistWhat stood out was his twin age at death re 88, and the fact that he was an American physicist. Twin numbers are a particular trademark signature of the inner twin world and so I generally investigate notable persons who died while at a twin age, such as Stirling. That he was a physicist is meaningful given the "war" content of my previous posts and given the fact that physicists generally build bombs. On investigating Stirling's wiki page nothing immediately stood out so I dropped my investigation. If his death had in fact timely, in other words: influenced by his inner twin and/or the inner twin world, then something usually shows up in his date of birth to encourage me onward.
As it turns out he was born on November 14th which doesn't mean anything to me.
So at this point I moved on to this next person who stood out, listed under December 2nd:
As you can see, he too died at a twin age , note the following from his wiki page:
- Salim Kallas, 77, Syrian actor and politician.[14]
Salim Kallas (Arabic: العربية; 13 November 1936 − 2 December 2013)So Salim died one day after stirling and was born one day before him.
It then dawned on me that the name stirling is related to the word "star" re: http://www.behindthename.com/name/sterling, which is meaningful given that the number 8 shares the same key on my computer key board as the * asterisk. I also realize that this word is an addition to the recent "Money/Cash/Rich" pattern-cluster, so I decided to investigate the word "sterling", note the etymology:
sterling (n.)
c.1300, "silver penny," probably from Middle English sterre (see star (n.)), according to OED "presumably" from the stars that appeared in the design of certain Norman coins, + diminutive suffix -ling. But starred coins were not especially common among Anglo- Saxon currency, and the stars on them tended to be small. The other theory [Kluge] is that it derives from Old French estedre "stater" (see stater). Sense broadened by 1560s to "money having the quality of the sterling," and c.1600 to "English money in general." As an adjective from early 15c. From 1640s in general sense of "capable of standing a test" (as a sound coin would). A pound sterling was originally "a pound weight of sterlings," equal to about 240 of them.The section in the above re "stater" is interesting because what immediately comes to my mind is : someone who makes a "statement"... a cryptic way of saying "speaker". So then with that in mind, note this next excerpt from Sterling's wiki page:
The laboratory had been recently created by Edward Teller with encouragement from the United States Air Force in order to compete with Los Alamos weapons research. For the purposes of developing a hydrogen bomb, Teller assigned Colgate to the ...
So note the surname "Teller"... very similar to "stater"!! So off to Edward Tellers wiki page, note this excerpt:
Edward Teller (Hungarian: Teller Ede; January 15, 1908 – September 9, 2003January 15th is both my son's and my partners birthday hence this is an addition to the "Targeting Family Birthdays" pattern-cluster.
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