Snow, Chet B. 1945-

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SNOW, Chet B. 1945-


PERSONAL: Born July 6, 1945, in Paterson, NJ; son of Walter A. (a mechanical engineer) and Ann (a language teacher; maiden name, Bonine) Snow; married Kallista Abele (an administrative assistant), December 12, 1992. Education: Johns Hopkins University, B.A. (international relations), 1967; Columbia University, Ph.M. (history), 1977; International Institute for Advanced Studies, Ph.D. (history), 1984. Hobbies and other interests: Travel, photography.


ADDRESSES: Offıce—P.O. Box 1738, Sedona, AZ 86339. E-mail—[email protected].


CAREER: Therapist and author. Regression therapist in private practice in Paris, France, 1985-89, Lake Arrowhead, CA, 1985-89; Scottsdale, AZ, 1990-94, and Sedona, AZ, 1994-98; Dr. Chet Snow Productions, Sedona, owner, beginning 1998. Association for Past-Life Research & Therapies, Inc., president, 1993-96, member, board of directors, 1986-96.


MEMBER: International Association for Regression Research and Therapies.


AWARDS, HONORS: Book of the Year award, Magazin 2000 (Germany), 1991, for translation of Mass Dreams of the Future.

WRITINGS:


(With Helen Wambach) Mass Dreams of the Future, McGraw Hill (New York, NY), 1989.

Creator of videos, including Earth Shift, 1995, and Star Visions 1996, both Dr. Chet Snow Productions (Sedona, AZ). Contributor to Regression Therapy: A Handbook for Professionals, Deep Forest Press, 1993; contributor to Four Corners Magazine (Sedona).


WORK IN PROGRESS: Research on the crop-circle enigma in England, Germany, and the United States.


SIDELIGHTS: Chet B. Snow commented to CA: "I am a student of the human race: our common past and our potential future. My writings, video productions, and conferences have been motivated by a desire to share my personal life experiences and research into today's psychic and spiritual developments so that others might better understand themselves and create a better, freer, and more harmonious society as we reach out for the stars together. A personal relationship with two psychological pioneers, Dr. Helen Wambach and Dr. Winafred Lucas, as well as the writings of Carl Jung, Stanislav Grof, Zecharia Sitchin, Edgar Cayce, and David Bohm, have strongly influenced my work to date. Today, I remain especially intrigued by the ongoing crop circle mystery, especially in England. Are these huge, precise, and complex 'agri-glyphs' more than just a new form of 'pop art,' as the mainstream media implies? If so, where do they come from, how are they made, and what is their message?"