Admiral Byrd's Radioman

List Members,

Here is something that I found in Eric Norman's book, This Hollow
Earth, page 36:

Admiral Byrd's Polar Flights: "...I live in Amherst, Wisconsin. It
is three miles from Nelsonville. Nelsonville was the home of Lloyd K.
Grenlie. He more recently lived in Greenbay, where he served in the
Federal Avaiation Agency for years before he died on June 7, 1970.
His family was my neighbors. This is important only because Lloyd K.
Grenlie was the radioman on Admiral Byrd's expedition to the South
Pole in 1928 and to both poles in 1929. In 1929 a newsreel could be
seen in America's theaters which described both flights, and also
showed newsreel photos of the 'land beyond the pole (north) with its
mountains, trees, rivers, and a large animal identified as a
mammoth.'"

"Today, this newsreel does not exist, although hundreds of my readers
remember, as I do, seeing this movie clip. Thus, I have it on my own
personal viewing ... and from the radioman who went with Byrd tio
that land beyond the pole and saw things recorded on film, that this
unknown, uncharted and presently denied land exists!"

List Members-

Here is testimony from yesteryear, from people that have passed away.
This testimony isn't really recorded anywhere, just in some paperback
book which is about 35 years old and out of circulation, and of which
few copies remain. Nothing ever came about because of the book, not
much, at least- no associations or groups were inspired by it enough
to ensure that the message would be carried on. Here we have a list
of hollow earth advocates, and there aren't even four hundred. There
are other lists, but nobody is really on them that isn't on this one.
And of the four hundred, probably only half of that number is really
active, and is going to even see what I am passing along; or less
than that.

What are we going to do in order to make sure that we don't lose the
little bit of evidence that we have?

Dean

Well, Admiral Byrd and Olaf Jansen, they seem to have a bit in common.

Cheers