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  1. He was a pupil at the Lycée Saint Louis, then he studied mathematics, applied and general chemistry at the Sorbonne and finally he went to the École Nationale Supérieure de Chimie, where he graduated as chemical engineer.

  2. Jacques Bergier (born Yakov Mikhailovich Berger) was a chemical engineer, member of the French-resistance, spy, journalist and writer. He was a gifted child: at two he read his first newspaper and at four he could easily read Russian, French and Hebrew.

    • (2.1K)
    • November 23, 1978
    • August 8, 1912
  3. Dec 22, 2014 · Known as the Dorchester Pot, the small bell-shaped jar was supposedly found buried in an ancient deposit near Dorchester, Massachusetts. This particular piece has been used as evidence for ancient astronauts, Biblical creationism, Hindu creationism, Fortean high strangeness, and numerous other flavors of fringe history.

  4. Bergier, born in 1912 in Doessa in a Jewish family, emigrated to France in 1920. In 1931, he and fellow student Alfred Eskenazi established a laboratory in Paris to study chemical and nuclear reactions, propagating the release of nuclear energy from lighter elements.

  5. The Morning of the Magicians: Introduction to Fantastic Realism ( French: Le Matin des magiciens) is a 1960 book by the journalists Louis Pauwels and Jacques Bergier.

  6. Nov 25, 1978 · PARIS, Nov. 24 — Jacques Bergier, who headed one of France's most efficient secret resistance networks during World War II, died here last night of cerebral hemorrhage. He was 66 years old.

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  8. Jacques Bergier (French: [bɛʁʒje]; born Yakov Mikhailovich Berger; Russian: Яков Михайлович Бéргер; Odessa, August 8, 1912 – November 23, 1978, Paris), was a chemical engineer, member of the French-resistance, spy, journalist and writer.

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