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Évariste (chanteur) Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.

Évariste (chanteur)

Pour les articles homonymes, voir Évariste. En 1966, les frais de la guerre du Viêt Nam amènent des suppressions de postes dans les universités américaines. Un Français, Joël Sternheimer, docteur en physique théorique de 23 ans, voit son poste d’assistant à Princeton (chez le professeur Wigner) dans la liste de ces suppressions[1]. Cette escapade se voulait au départ sans lendemain. L’année suivante éclata cependant en France Mai 68, qui poussa le chanteur à reprendre la guitare pour enregistrer, en autogestion cette fois — avec l'aval du patron de Disc'AZ, Lucien Morisse — un disque aux accents plus clairement politiques :

Cleve Backster. Biography[edit] He was born in Lafayette, New Jersey in February 27, 1924.[1] Backster began his career as an Interrogation Specialist with the CIA, and went on to become Chairman of the Research and Instrument Committee of the Academy for Scientific Interrogation.

Cleve Backster

He is the former director of the Backster School of Lie Detection in San Diego, California and was a polygraph instructor before his experiments on plants.[2][3] He got a D.Sc. in Complementary Medicine from Medicina Alternativa in 1996 and was on the faculty of the California Institute for Human Science Graduate School and Research Center founded by Hiroshi Motoyama which is unaccredited.[2] He wrote the book Primary Perception — Biocommunication with Plants, Foods, and Human Cells which describes 36 years of his work and was published in 2003.[4][5] He died on June 24, 2013 after a prolonged illness.[6] Role in polygraphy[edit] Backster founded the CIA's polygraph unit shortly after World War II. Primary perception[edit]