As I was writing my previous post the Deaths in 2014 site added another to its list under July 4:
Other things stand out from the papers wiki page, not the following:
I won't go into detail with everything that stands out, butt there's no doubt in my mind that his death was "timely"-- influenced by his inner twin and/or the inner twin world. As I've stated over the past couple of weeks and longer, the inner twin world are now targeting notable journalists/media persons. which Scaife falls into. Note this excerpt from his wiki page:
- Richard Mellon Scaife, 82, American billionaire philanthropist, newspaper publisher (Pittsburgh Tribune-Review) and political activist, cancer.
His birthday was yesterday... hence his date of death falls into the "Off By One" pattern-cluster... which has factored in many recent posts. Note the following from the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review wiki page:
- Richard Mellon Scaife (July 3, 1932 – July 4, 2014[1])
Note the twin 22 and 11 in the date, both additions to the "Identical Number Sequence" pattern-cluster.
- Founded on August 22, 1811 as the Greensburg Gazette and in 1889 consolidated with several papers into the Greensburg Tribune-Review
Other things stand out from the papers wiki page, not the following:
- Carl Prine, an investigative reporter for the newspaper, conducted a probe with the CBS news magazine 60 Minutes that highlighted the lack of security at the nation's most dangerous chemical plants following the September 11, 2001 attacks.[25) The reporters, and a CBS camera operator, were charged with trespassing at a Neville Island plant during their investigation.[26] They were later acquitted when the judge accepted that the story had been in the public interest.[27]
I had written about the Kent State University shooting and the photo is included in my post:
- Local journalism student John Filo worked for the publication while attending nearby Kent State University and served as the Valley Daily News' correspondent of the Kent State shootings. His photography that day has ascended to iconic status and won the paper its only Pulitzer Prize.
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