Awww, it was called "Dark Stuff" and his name was Frank, or maybe George. Rupert?
redhand. so good to see you posting agin. Rupert? The only Ru[ert I know is a movie star by tht name! ha-ha
So the discoverer of Dark Stuff was a movie star!!? It figgers.
My goodness. You mean to tell me you all gave up? I thought I would come back and find the right answer? What's the matter boys? Can't find the right answer yet? lol
P.A. here read this because you have tried.
http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21575729-hunt-mis...
Dark Matter: Franctional Distilation
Your turn now dear friend
Sorry. I guess it was too long of a time in between. here I found it.
http://ww3.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21575729-hunt-...
Was it General "Mad" Anthony Wayne? He was exonerated from the Paoli massacre, though he was informed of a potential British attack and not doing anything about it? Major General "Mad Anthony" Wayne, Revolutionary War hero and Commander-in-Chief of the American Army, lies buried in two places nearly 400 miles apart. And maybe in between ...
I thought the leader of the Indians was the Shawnee war chief Blue Jacket and Delaware (Lenape) leader Buckongahelas.
n 1877, decades after Blue Jacket's death, a story was published which claimed that Blue Jacket had actually been a white man named Marmaduke Van Swearingen, who had been captured and adopted by Shawnees in the 1770s, around the time of the American Revolutionary War.
This story was popularized in historical novels written by Allan W. Eckert in the late 1960s. An outdoor drama based on the Van Swearingen story, Blue Jacket, White Shawnee War Chief, was performed in Xenia, Ohio, beginning in 1981. Performances of the play ended in 2007.
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