10 results for stemmed:ticket

TES6 Session 275 July 25, 1966 parking ticket noninterval intervals Treman

(Second Question: Can you say something more about G or J or A? “The initials or the letters seem to be connected with a square item, or package.” As stated, there were two Anns at the gathering Saturday, and a Jane and a Joe, etc. See page 284. This would connect such initials with the fact that the envelope object is a square item, [although not a package]. However, remember that the object came from our visit of Tuesday July 12, whereas the gathering was held on Saturday July 16. The link here being that a parking ticket was also obtained, and saved by me, during Saturday’s visit; this ticket was the same except for the serial number as the ticket used as object.

(See the tracing of the object and the notes on page 284. As stated we obtained the parking ticket used as object on July 12,1966 at Robert Treman State Park, Ithaca, NY, and I kept track of this date by attaching a note to the ticket. Other visits to the same park later in the week enter into the data, and these will be discussed as the need arises. Seth also helps out after break. In the meantime Jane and I began making our own connections with the object.

(“A center, as the center of spokes. As the spokes of a wheel, for example.” In a free manner Seth uses associations of Jane’s to get at the idea of a car, or travel. The parking ticket was obtained at the state park as a result of a 60-mile round trip by automobile, as were the two subsequent parking tickets for the same state park. But again no mention of either a car or the park in specific terms.

(The envelope object for the 64th envelope experiment was a parking ticket obtained at Robert Treman State Park, near Ithaca, NY, on July 12,1966, on our recent vacation. It is printed in black on card stock, with the serial number in a light blue ink. I enclosed it between two pieces of Bristol, then inserted this into the usual double envelopes. Ithaca is 30-some miles northest of Elmira.

TES6 Session 242 March 16, 1966 script ticket Leonard square neat

[...] The object was an unused ticket to a VFW ball and entertainment. [...] The man, who was also planning to attend the VFW affair later that evening, gave Jane and me a free ticket.

(We preferred not to go, but took the ticket to avoid explanations, without making promises. [...] I forgot about the incident until a couple of days ago, when I found the ticket in a coat pocket. [...]

[...] The ticket is printed in bold black type on yellow card stock. [...]

(“A connection with a turnabout”, refers we believe to our accepting the ticket from Leonard’s friend—see page 21—then not going to the affair.

TES8 Session 403 March 16, 1968 Pat Reed Dick male godlike

[...] You shall indeed, get traffic tickets and of a different kind, only you yourself give yourself tickets. [...] You can manipulate events and you can manipulate them for your own egotistical purposes; but when you do so, you give yourself a traffic ticket. [...]

[...] You have given yourself several traffic tickets. [...] And that is why you have given yourself a traffic ticket now and then, What you are learning is a technique for self-development. [...]

TPS4 Deleted Session October 24, 1977 faith Framework crash intimacy sustained

[...] A ticket is lost. [...]

[...] He lost his ticket—a stupid error, it seemed. [...]

ECS1 ESP Class Session, October 8, 1968 bell task Lafinda ring brandy

[...] That is perfectly all right, you go where you go and you travel where you travel, and if you want to tear your tickets up in the morning and forget where you have been, that is your own privilege. [...]

NoME Part Two: Chapter 3: Session 823, February 27, 1978 myth fruit Introductory Framework chance

[...] Perhaps your late arrival was caused by “a chance meeting” with a friend at the last moment, or by a misplaced ticket, or by a traffic jam that seemingly had nothing to do with you at all.

TES5 Session 201 October 25, 1965 story Freeze airplane chilly motel

[...] (Jane shook her head.) There is something, a gate or a runway with the number 3, 5; 35, possibly the number on their luggage ticket. [...]

TES6 Session 274 July 20, 1966 chemical excess projections propelling asparagus

(Front and back tracings of the parking ticket used as the object in the 64th envelope experiment, in the 275th session for July 25,1966.)

TES6 Session 241 March 14, 1966 grave holly Ezra Gottesman leaf

(Tracing of the ticket used as the object in the 41st envelope experiment, in the 242nd session for March 16,1966.)

TES5 Session 218 December 15, 1965 Priestley Peggy Dunne San seminar

[...] Possibly the number on their luggage ticket. [...]

(“Our luggage ticket number was either 453 or 455.”)