Tom Slick

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Thomas Baker "Tom" Slick, Jr. (1916October 6, 1962) was a San Antonio, Texas based inventor, businessman, adventurer, and heir to a oil business. Slick's father had made a fortune during the Texas the oil boom of the 1920s.

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[edit] Early life

Tom Slick graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy in 1934 and Yale University in 1938. At Yale he was a pre-medicine biology major and earned Phi Beta Kappa honors. During his Yale years, Slick and some of his classmates traveled to Scotland to look for the Loch Ness Monster. The group found nothing, but Tom's search for unknown animals had begun. After he graduated from Yale, Slick became a consultant to the War Production Board during World War II and served in the Navy. He later pursued graduate studies at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

[edit] Career

During the 1950s, Slick was an adventurer. He turned his attention to expeditions to investigate the Loch Ness Monster, the Yeti, Bigfoot and the Trinity Alps giant salamander. Slick's interest in cryptozoology was little known until the 1989 publication of the biography Tom Slick and the Search for Yeti, by Loren Coleman. Coleman continued his study of Tom Slick in 2002 with Tom Slick: True Life Encounters in Cryptozoology. That book mentions many of Tom Slick's adventures, in politics, art, science, and cryptozoology, including his involvement with the CIA and Howard Hughes.

Tom Slick was a friend of many celebrities, including Hughes and fellow flier Jimmy Stewart. Stewart, for example, assisted a Slick-backed expedition in carrying a piece of the Pangboche Yeti hand back to England for scientific analysis, Loren Coleman was to discover from Slick's files and confirmation from Stewart before his death.

Slick founded several research organizations, beginning with the forerunner of the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research (SwFBR) in 1941. His most well-known legacy is the non-profit Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), which he founded in 1947 to seek revolutionary advancements in technology. SwRI continues to advance pure and applied science in a variety of fields from lubricant and motor fuel formulation to solar physics and planetary science. He also founded the Mind Science Foundation in San Antonio in 1958 to do consciousness research.

He was an advocate of world peace. In 1958 he published the book, Permanent Peace: A Check and Balance Plan. He funded the Tom Slick World Peace lectures at the LBJ Library, and the Tom Slick Professorship of World Peace at the University of Texas.

Slick died in 1962 in an airplane crash near Dell, Montana at the age of 46, the same age his father died.

Nicolas Cage was to have portrayed Slick in a movie, Tom Slick: Monster Hunter, but the project stalled.[1]

[edit] Biographies

  • Loren Coleman, Tom Slick and the Search for Yeti, Faber & Faber, 1989, ISBN 0-571-12900-5
  • Loren Coleman, Tom Slick: True Life Encounters in Cryptozoology, Fresno, California: Linden Press, 2002, ISBN 0-941936-74-0
  • Catherine Nixon Cooke, Tom Slick, Mystery Hunter, Paraview, Inc., 2005, ISBN 0-9764986-2-6 (author is Slick's niece and former director of the Mind Science Foundation)

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[edit] External links

[edit] Patents