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Revision as of 13:07, 12 November 2007 editAnthon01 (talk | contribs)4,204 edits Created page with 'The criticism section shows western bias. Looks like it needs modification. Western medicine is largely based on anecdotal evidence, but it decries anything 'other'...'  Revision as of 01:50, 7 April 2008 edit undoMaynardClark (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users31,594 edits ~~~~ Questioned date of Wigmore's death; talk about HHI moveNext edit →
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The criticism section shows western bias. Looks like it needs modification. Western medicine is largely based on anecdotal evidence, but it decries anything 'other' that is anecdotal. ] 13:07, 12 November 2007 (UTC) The criticism section shows western bias. Looks like it needs modification. Western medicine is largely based on anecdotal evidence, but it decries anything 'other' that is anecdotal. ] 13:07, 12 November 2007 (UTC)



When was the fire? When did she die. 1993 or 1994?

“Ann Wigmore (1909-1994) …”
“Ann Wigmore died in a fire in 1993, but …”

I recall the event as follows:
Ann Wigmore (is that a Lithuanian name?) awoke several hours after midnight and tried to amke herself a pot of tea with a carelessly wired electric hot water heater. (Is heated tea, is any tea other than "sun tea" permitted on a "living foods diet"?) She and her pet poodle "Precious" died in that fire. A young Asian woman, hand-picked by "Dr. Ann", became the head of the Ann Wigmore Foundation, which had (been) split off from the HHI after a logistical dispute within the decisionmaking powers of HHI, which includes Brian Clement. Talk was that "Dr. Ann" was an old lady who should be retired because she could no longer manage the affairs of the HHI, which she and Viktoras Kulvinskas had co-founded. Much was at issue financially, and the AWF was formed and HQd in the Back Bay brownstone next door to 25 Exeter Street, at 196 Beacon Street (entrance around the corner, on Commonwealth Avenue rather than or Exeter Street or "in the alley"). Brian Clement moved HHI to a property in West Palm Beach, where it remains today. Several "raw foods" gurus were running their own fasting resorts in that area, including ___...

Revision as of 01:50, 7 April 2008

The criticism section shows western bias. Looks like it needs modification. Western medicine is largely based on anecdotal evidence, but it decries anything 'other' that is anecdotal. Anthon01 13:07, 12 November 2007 (UTC)


When was the fire? When did she die. 1993 or 1994?

“Ann Wigmore (1909-1994) …” “Ann Wigmore died in a fire in 1993, but …”

I recall the event as follows: Ann Wigmore (is that a Lithuanian name?) awoke several hours after midnight and tried to amke herself a pot of tea with a carelessly wired electric hot water heater. (Is heated tea, is any tea other than "sun tea" permitted on a "living foods diet"?) She and her pet poodle "Precious" died in that fire. A young Asian woman, hand-picked by "Dr. Ann", became the head of the Ann Wigmore Foundation, which had (been) split off from the HHI after a logistical dispute within the decisionmaking powers of HHI, which includes Brian Clement. Talk was that "Dr. Ann" was an old lady who should be retired because she could no longer manage the affairs of the HHI, which she and Viktoras Kulvinskas had co-founded. Much was at issue financially, and the AWF was formed and HQd in the Back Bay brownstone next door to 25 Exeter Street, at 196 Beacon Street (entrance around the corner, on Commonwealth Avenue rather than or Exeter Street or "in the alley"). Brian Clement moved HHI to a property in West Palm Beach, where it remains today. Several "raw foods" gurus were running their own fasting resorts in that area, including ___...