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Nelson, John<br />

B.A., M.A., and Ph. D. degrees. He served in <strong>the</strong> U.S. Army (interrupting his undergraduate<br />

years) from 1946 to 1950, mostly in <strong>the</strong> Signal Corps and in <strong>the</strong> Army of Occupation<br />

in Germany and Austria. In 1954 he received a Fulbright grant for one year of study in<br />

Germany, where he attended Tuebingen University and did research for his Ph. D. dissertation.<br />

He <strong>the</strong>n served in <strong>the</strong> German departments of Northwestern, Harvard, Princeton,<br />

and Rutgers. From time to time at Rutgers, he served temporarily as department chairman<br />

and graduate director of German, but he was mainly a teacher and researcher in German<br />

literature of <strong>the</strong> seventeenth through <strong>the</strong> nineteenth centuries. His main publications are<br />

E. T. A. Hoffmann’s O<strong>the</strong>r World (1965) and Grimmelshausen (1972); as well as numerous<br />

articles and <strong>book</strong> reviews on German literature. He retired from Rutgers in 1986 as full<br />

professor. Since <strong>the</strong> beginning of his career as a teacher of literature, he has been translating<br />

German poetry into English, and writing his own in both languages. He has self-published<br />

several small volumes of poetry, much of which is astrological.<br />

During <strong>the</strong> sixties, Negus became interested in <strong>astrology</strong>, as a result of his<br />

research on Grimmelshausen, a seventeenth-century German novelist who was also<br />

an astrologer and incorporated much astrological symbolism into his writings. Eventually<br />

this sideline of <strong>astrology</strong> became a major interest in itself. In 1972 he helped to<br />

found <strong>the</strong> Astrological Society of Princeton, NJ, Inc., which at times has grown to a<br />

membership of over 100. It is one of <strong>the</strong> most active astrological organizations in <strong>the</strong><br />

area, with regular meetings, a faculty that teaches on all levels, a referral service for<br />

consulting astrologers, a lending library for members, and a journal. Meanwhile Negus<br />

has been practicing <strong>astrology</strong> extensively, writing about it, delivering lectures on it,<br />

and filling various offices in several o<strong>the</strong>r astrological organizations. Since his retirement<br />

from his university career, <strong>astrology</strong> has become his main activity.<br />

His publications include writings on <strong>astrology</strong> and literature, harmonics, Chiron,<br />

<strong>astrology</strong> at <strong>the</strong> university, <strong>the</strong> validation of <strong>astrology</strong>, Johannes Kepler, <strong>the</strong> Cyclic<br />

Index, five volumes of his own astrological and esoteric poetry, and numerous translations<br />

of poetry and astrological texts. He maintains a regular practice as an astrologer,<br />

specializing in rectification; and as a teacher in <strong>the</strong> faculty of <strong>the</strong> Astrological Society<br />

of Princeton, NJ. He and his wife, Joan, were married in 1952, and remained so until<br />

her death in 1997. They have three children and seven grandchildren.<br />

NELSON, JOHN<br />

John Nelson was an American radio engineer who specialized in <strong>the</strong> analysis of shortwave<br />

radio propagation. In <strong>the</strong> 1950s and 1960s, he was an employee of RCA Communications<br />

and worked on <strong>the</strong> problem of how to predict fluctuations in <strong>the</strong> Earth’s magnetic<br />

field that disrupted radio communication. It was well known that <strong>the</strong>se fluctuations<br />

were affected by, among o<strong>the</strong>r things, sunspot activity. Using this clue as a starting<br />

point, Nelson began investigating correlations between <strong>the</strong> heliocentric configurations<br />

of <strong>the</strong> planets and radio wave disturbances. His findings were so remarkable that he was<br />

eventually able to predict such disturbances with a better than 93 percent accuracy.<br />

His discoveries verified certain elements of traditional <strong>astrology</strong> to a remarkable<br />

extent. For instance, he found that when two or more planets ei<strong>the</strong>r lined up with <strong>the</strong><br />

[486] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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