Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Ted Serios was a bellhop at the Conrad Hilton Hotel on Michigan Avenue, though probably not the kind of employee they expected.
THE TWISTY courses of an aspiring art, photography, and a suspicious science, psychic research, describe a rough parallel. Each is a creation of the first decades of the 19th century, each has been ...
“Parthenon” (1965), an image in the Jule Eisenbud Collection on Ted Serios and Thoughtographic Photography (courtesy the Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, copyright ...
In the early 17th century, the metaphysician Robert Fludd pictured the interior of the brain as containing an eye in the same position as the imaginative soul. He labeled this organ the “oculus ...
It is pathetic that The Chronicle Review elected to publish the nonscientific editorial by Mikita Brottman, “Ted Serios and Psychic Projections” (February 25). Anyone who knows anything about this ...
The black-and-white Polaroid photo shows a building tilting precipitously to the right. Above what appears to be a picture window, a curving line of type clearly spells out “The Old Gold Store.” But ...
Digital technology has revolutionised photography but, 40 years ago, a hard-drinking Chicago hotel porter, Ted Serios, demonstrated abilities that make today's techniques seem primitive. For Serios ...
Ted Serios, 88, of Quincy died Saturday (Dec. 30, 2006) in Quincy. He was born Nov. 27, 1918, in Chicago, a son of Gus and Esther Serios. Ted was in the Merchant Marines during World War II. His most ...
Between 1964 and 1967, American psychiatrist Dr. Jule Eisenbud conducted experiments with Ted Serios, a man from Chicago with the purported ability to psychically transfer his thoughts onto Polaroid ...
Ted Serios was a bellhop at the Conrad Hilton Hotel on Michigan Avenue, though probably not the kind of employee they expected. When he worked as a valet, he had a habit of joy riding in the guests’ ...
CHICAGO -- Ted Serios was a bellhop at the Conrad Hilton Hotel on Michigan Avenue, though probably not the kind of employee they expected. When he worked as a valet, he had a habit of joy riding in ...