Flying Saucer and UFO Encounters.

Flying Saucer and UFO Encounters
By Joy Healey

The UFO story originated not long after June 24, 1947, when many newspapers in the USA published the first sighting of the “flying saucer”.

The story told how nine very bright, disk-shaped objects were seen by Kenneth Arnold, a Boise, Idaho, businessman, while he was flying his private plane near Mount Rainier, in the state of Washington. Now supported by a journalistic license, reporters took Arnold’s original description of the individual motion of each object, “like a saucer skipping across water,” and rephrased it to: “flying saucer,” referring to the objects themselves.

Many years have passed since Arnold’s memorable sighting, and the phrase has become so common that an entry was made in Webster’s Dictionary, and it is recognized today in most languages throughout the world.

For a while after the Arnold sighting, the term “flying saucer” was used to describe all disk-shaped objects that were seen flashing through the sky at fantastic speeds. Before long, reports were made of objects other than disks, and these were also called flying saucers. Today the words are popularly applied to anything seen in the sky that cannot be identified as a common, everyday object.

In other words, a flying saucer can be a formation of bright lights, a single light, a sphere, or some other shape; and it can be any color. Performance wise, flying saucers can hover, go fast or slow, go high or low, turn 90-degree corners, or even, apparently, disappear almost instantaneously.

Clearly the term “flying saucer” is open to interpretation when objects of every imaginable shape and performance are labeled as such. This is why the military preference is the more general, although less colorful, name: unidentified flying objects. UFO (pronounced Yoo-foe) for short.

Officially the military uses the term “flying saucer” on only two occasions. First in an explanatory sense, as when briefing people who are unacquainted with the term “UFO”: “UFO, you know, flying saucers.” And second in a derogatory sense, for purposes of ridicule, as when it is observed, “He says he saw a flying saucer.”

This second form of usage is the exclusive property of those persons who positively know that all UFOs are nonsense. Fortunately, if only as a matter of courtesy, those in this category are reducing in number. One by one these people drop out, starting with the instant they see their first UFO!

Some weeks after the first UFO was seen on June 24, 1947, the Air Force established a project to investigate and analyze all UFO reports. When the project first began, opinions ranged from near panic, to total derision for anyone who dared to even mentioned the words “flying saucer.”

This contemptuous attitude toward “flying saucer nuts” prevailed from mid-1949 to mid-1950. During that interval many of the people who were, or had been, associated with the project believed that the public was suffering from “war nerves.”

Early in 1950 the project, for all practical purposes, was closed out; at least it rated only minimum effort. Those in power now reasoned that if you didn’t mention the words “flying saucers” the people would forget them and the saucers would go away. But this reasoning was false, for instead of vanishing, the quality of the UFO reports improved.

From airline pilots, to military pilots, generals, scientists, and dozens of other people, reports continued of UFO sightings, now in more detail than previously. Radars, which were being built for air defense, began to pick up some very unusual targets, thus lending technical corroboration to the unsubstantiated claims of human observers.

As a result of the continuing accumulation of more impressive UFO reports, official interest stirred. Early in 1951 verbal orders came down from Major General Charles P. Cabell, then Director of Intelligence for Headquarters, U.S. Air Force, to make a study reviewing the UFO situation for Air Force Headquarters.

The study was headed up by “EJR”, who possessed impeccable credentials, and supervised until late in 1953. EJR served as a B-29 bombardier and radar operator, during the Second World War. He restarted college after the war, and before long, gained his aeronautical engineering degree. To keep his reserve status while in school, he flew as a navigator in an Air Force Reserve Troop Carrier Wing.

While compiling the report, EJR and members of his staff traveled close to half a million miles. They investigated in depth dozens of UFO reports, and read and analyzed several thousand more. These included every report the Air Force had ever received.

There were ten regular staff on the investigation plus many paid consultants representing every field of science. All had Top Secret security clearances so that security was no block in our investigations. This organization was made up of a reporting network consisting of every Air Force base intelligence officer and every Air Force radar station in the world, together with the Ground Observer Corps of the Air Defense Command. Reports were collected on every conceivable type of UFO, by every conceivable type of person. What did these people actually see when they reported a UFO? Putting aside truly unidentifiable flying objects, for the present, this question has several answers.

Often it has been positively proved that people have reported balloons, airplanes, stars, and many other common objects as UFOs. The people who make such reports don’t recognize these common objects because something in their surroundings temporarily assumes an unfamiliar appearance.

Unusual lighting conditions are a common cause of such illusions. A balloon will glow like a “ball of fire” just at sunset. Or an airplane that is not visible to the naked eye suddenly starts to reflect the sun’s rays and appears to be a “silver ball”. Pilots in F-94 jet interceptors chase Venus in the daytime and fight with balloons at night, and people in Los Angeles see weird lights.

So did the investigation prove that UFOs exist? The hassle over the word “proof” boils down to one question: What constitutes proof? Is a UFO required to land at the River Entrance to the Pentagon, in front of the offices of the Joint Chiefs of Staff? Or is it proof when a ground radar station detects a UFO, sends a jet to intercept it, the jet pilot sees it, and locks on with his radar, only to have the UFO streak away at a phenomenal speed? Is it proof when a jet pilot fires at a UFO and sticks to his story even under the threat of court-martial? Does this constitute proof?

You must decide for yourself.

How real are UFOs? What actually is a UFO? How credible is the evidence? “Project Blue Book” a fascinating and authoritative e-book about unidentified flying objects. (UFOs). Not merely an e-book; it is a report, and is the first time ever that anyone, either military or civilian, has assembled into one document the complete facts about this fascinating subject. Learn more at http://www.ufosecretreport.com/

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RINGING IN THE NEW YEAR

By: Rod Washington

First off, Happy New Year to all…


Hey, as the creator of the CUPIC series, I rarely have the opportunity to report anything unusual as it happens or recently happens. My last sighting of the unknown was well back in 2006, and that was a brief sighting of some silver cylinder high up in the sky as described in the CUPICtv video, “CLOSE ENCOUNTERS.” Well tonight I think that I just had two.
Right now, I am in Las Vegas, actually Henderson, Nevada, for my job. Waiting for the New Year to ring in, I just happened to be looking out the window. I have a great view of Vegas from the window and was not crazy enough to join the crowds and let’s face it, as of recent, I am a total woos when it comes to cold weather and 36 degrees may not seem cold to some of you back east, here when you are use to 80s and above, you tend to take notice.
At midnight the fireworks started, I could see the Stratosphere clearly in the distance. I shot video and took a few stills with my tiny digital camera. After fifteen minutes, the display was done, or so I thought. I went over to my laptop and hooked up the camera to see what I captured, after watching a bit, I stopped the camera. I then noticed a few more bursts of fireworks through the curtain. I went over to the window to see, and there were a few random bursts from different sides of the city. I noticed a bright point of light, high up in the north-northwest sky. At first I thought that it was a star or planet, then a second light appeared under it, that light quickly dimmed and darted left. My first thought was, “Well in the hell is my camera, “I moved swiftly to the table and unplugged it. By the time I got back to the window the second light was gone. But the first light was still there. By the time I hit the power button, that light dimmed and darted to the right, and blinked into nothingness as it moved away.
To me this incident counters the argument about the fact that video/ still capture technology have come a long way; i.e. digital camera, phones, etc. “Why aren’t there more sightings captured on digital?” My answer is simple; it is because of situations that I ran into tonight. How simple would it have been for me to bring the camera to the window with me? That’s one of many plausible factors. I will detail this sighting and subject in a future. For now, have a happy and safe New Year….

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Everything About Haunting – 3 Basic Varieties of Haunting By Abhishek Agarwal The Hollywood ghost is a product of human imagination, especially of those in the film industry, and is far from accurate. However, many people have this version of ghost in mind when they discuss the subject of ghosts. Ghosts hardly haunt the way they do [...]
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Famous Phantom Trains – 3 Fascinating Paranormal Activities By Abhishek Agarwal Of all the paranormal activities that have been observed over the decades, ghost trains are the weirdest. Most of them put in an appearance in the United Kingdom, which is known for its affinity to the paranormal, and also in America, which has experienced some historically [...]

Leading UFO Researchers Confirm Christian View
By William Nugent

A general consensus has emerged among serious, science oriented UFO researchers that a certain small percentage of UFOs are real and are not figments of anyone’s imagination. Furthermore, it is well known that many individuals claim to receive messages from alleged extra-terrestrials aboard UFOs.

The messages received from UFOs are generally occultic and steer people away from belief in Christian doctrine. Extra-terrestrials tend to undermine or attack the Christian faith.

Christian scholars and researchers have responded to this attack. In this article I will show that leading UFO researchers, many of whom are agnostic, have come around to generally support the Christian position on UFO phenomena.

After all the UFO sightings have been carefully analyzed and most explained away as natural phenomena the remaining UFOs, called residual UFOs (RUFOs) are regarded as real. They are real yet the leading researchers say they are not metallic spacecraft from distant stars or planets.

Astronomers who have devoted their careers to studying UFOs point to the fact that UFO flight patterns defy the laws of physics such as turning and accelerating so fast that any metal spaceship would disintegrate even if the metal spaceship was a solid iron ball. Furthermore, UFOs are seen in the atmosphere and not observed coming in from outer space.

UFO sightings have been reported throughout history. Ancient literature describes ‘aerial people’ and ‘cloud ships’ in terms that correspond to modern UFO sightings. In 1691 a Scottish minister wrote a book describing how Scottish farmers were harassed by paranormal entities similar to the UFOs of our time.

All of us are aware of the many UFO cults that have sprung up. There have even been television specials devoted to UFO phenomena.

Francis Crick, Nobel prize winning co-discoverer of DNA, calculated the probability of proteins forming by random collisions of atoms in the primordial ooze. Crick found it so remotely improbable that proteins and other building blocks of life could form by chance on earth that he decided that aliens from outer space must have brought life to earth.

Crick’s theory that claims that aliens brought life to earth is called the “Guided Panspermia Theory” of life origins. This new theory of life origins gave momentum to UFO research.

Close encounters of the fourth kind are when people (almost invariably occultists and New Agers) are actually abducted and communicate with the aliens. The aliens generally give messages with deep religious impact that steer people away from Christianity.

Let’s consider the following quote: “For example, ‘The Urantia Book,’ a tome supposedly communicated to humans by spirit dictation from ’superuniverse rulers,’ spends the first two-thirds of its 2,097 pages describing a ‘universe of universes’ that is not subject to space and time”

The quote continues: “The last third of this UFO bible denies the full deity of Jesus Christ and humanity’s need for salvation from its sinful condition.” (Quoted from Lights in the Sky and Little Green Men: A Rational Christian Look at UFOs and Extraterrestials by Ross, Samples and Clark p. 122.)

It seems plain from the above quote and from abundant other evidence that the aliens oppose Christian doctrine. This leads me to believe that the aliens are actually demons.

It is also very interesting and revealing to note that many of the best UFO researchers seem to be coming around to a view that undergirds and supports the Christian view that demons are involved.

Astronomer J. Alan Hynek and the late French physicist Jacques Vallee are perhaps the most respected UFO researchers in the world. Both are agnostics. No one can consider them Christians with a theological ax to grind.

Both men have made what I consider to be very bold statements that clearly undergird the Christian position that spiritual entities are behind UFO phenomena. For example, Hynek said that UFOs cause physical effects “in the same way that a poltergeist can produce very real physical effects.”

Vallee said “The UFO phenomenon represents evidence for other dimensions beyond spacetime . . . It is a spiritual system that acts on humans and uses humans.”

There are many other quotes I could cite. Vallee was the leading proponent of the Interdimensional Hypothesis which is the view that UFOs come from another dimension (Christians like me would say the other dimension is the dimension of spirit) and not from interstellar travel.

Many prominent born-again Christian scholars such as David Allen Lewis have done research on UFO phenomena. It seems clear to them that demons are using UFOs to deceive millions and prepare them to embrace an occultic, ‘New Age’ type of faith.

Some say that UFOs and the teachings that proceed from them are preparing the world to receive the coming antichrist.

I will close this article by mentioning the fact that there have been documented cases of close encounters of the fourth kind, which are abductions of people by UFOs, that have actually been stopped when the people involved called out the name of Jesus. In other words the people appealed to the atoning work of Christ who died for our sins.

When they cried out to Jesus the demons attempting the abduction ceased their activity. The demons fear the power of Christ and must submit to the power of Christ because Christ is the Son of God. See the April 2001 issue of Charisma magazine for documentation of UFO abductions that were stopped in this way.

A major source for this article was Lights in the Sky and Little Green Men: A Rational Christian Look at UFOs and Extraterrestials by Ross, Samples and Clark.

Bill Nugent has written many articles on Christianity, philosophy and science. He has also written books that give Bible based teaching on sanctification and that caution against the error of legalism. His books are available at his website www.gracelawandsonship.com.

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Film School Opportunities — Find Your Favorite Job in the Film Industry
By Alex D Baker

The film industry offers an almost infinite list of job opportunities — this is regardless if you are looking for reputable Minneapolis film schools or are wishing to learn more about the movie industry. Do you love to write? Talented scriptwriters are always required in filmmaking. Would you also want to be part of a film crew? Worry no more as you’ll always find a place that will suit you — cooking, operating a camera equipment, monitoring sound boards or studying lighting effects. If you’re more of the business-minded individual, you will always have jobs that will suit your interest — advertisers, marketers, accountants. There are still more jobs in filming, acting, and direction…the list never ends.

Despite this wide selection of opportunities, people may still struggle, unsure of how to enter the film production industry. Indeed, it’s almost always difficult to break into a new area where you have little experience on. It’s a good thing that a number of programs that will help aspiring filmmakers find their niche are available. One is filmmaking.net, which is specifically made to provide resources just for such interested people, providing helpful internet links, articles on current filmmaking opportunities, a directory of other organizations and schools oriented around film, and gear and software needed for amateur forays in the filmmaking industry. Another wonderful option is the Entertainment Career Connection whose subset, Film Connection, links aspiring filmmakers and industry professionals through effective mentoring programs. This way, the mentor can pass along valuable information while giving a broader look at how the real world of film and filmmaking proceeds.

Educational Options in Minneapolis

There are several Minneapolis film schools, based within the area and offering training in many of the technical areas of film production, for those who prefer a classical approach. One of the most famous is MCAD, or the Minneapolis College of Art and Design. Aside from offering media, art and graphic design courses, MCAD also provides classes on filmmaking and technologies used in various types of film elements. There’s also a less conventional school called Brainco (an affiliate of MCAD), where a more film-oriented program schedule on directing, shooting and film writing classes are carried out.

If you’re looking for a mentor-based type of training, see what you can find out about ScreenLabs, a non-profit Minneapolis program that links those interested in having film careers with writers, directors and producers at a series of workshops designed to give tips and how-to knowledge. Be sure to check in with local colleges and film studios, since they’ll often have hands-on knowledge of film in Minneapolis, and be able to point the way for more information about other Minneapolis film schools options and what you can do to land in your dream job in film production.

Minneapolis Film Schools offer one-on-one mentoring from Hollywood film professionals. The Film Connection ‘s mentor apprentice approach to filmmaking pairs you up with a working professional on actual film and video jobs — no teachers, no crowded classrooms, to massive tuition debts.

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Black Holes – An All Consuming Mystery
By Sara Buttar

A black hole is an extremely dense matter in space, typically a collapsed star, whose gravity pull is so powerful that its escape velocity surpasses the speed of light. Given that nothing is believed to exceed the speed of light, it is impossible for anything to break out of a black hole, often referred to as a supernova. A straightforward way to understand this concept is to think of a vacuum cleaner; black holes simply clean up debris left in outer-space. However unlike a vacuum cleaner, suction power is not the magical force that forces objects into holes. Suction power would not be strong enough. Instead, a black hole uses the potent power of gravity to pull things towards it. The three main types of black holes are miniature, stellar-mass, and super massive. The force and strength of all three types is astonishing to learn about.

It is believed that black holes apply the same amount of force on a distant object as any other item of the same mass would. For example, if our sun was mysteriously crushed until it became only a mile in size, it would become a black hole. Still, the Earth and the rest of the Milky Way’s planets would remain in the same orbit. This can be easily understood, though the following question still seems mystifying to many. How can holes shrink but still manage to retain the same amount of mass? When a star becomes “squished” to the size of an atom, its gravity becomes much stronger. Gravity can become so great that anything- including light- can be pulled in. The middle of a supernova is called a singularity, meaning “squashed up star.” When something gets too close to the singularity, it will begin to fall into its grasp. After falling into a supernova, the first horizon that you will pass is called the Outer Event Horizon. It is possible to escape at this point, but as soon as you pass the Inner Event Horizon, it will be too late. While this may seem rather complicated and difficult to comprehend, the formation of holes is quite simple in comparison.

Miniature holes are created when a large star exhausts all its fuel, and is no longer able to support its heavy weight. The stressful pressures from the star’s immense layers of hydrogen begin to press down, compelling the star to weaken, eventually getting smaller and smaller. After some time, gravity will cause the star to collapse to an almost infinitely small pinpoint. The star will ultimately shrink down to a size smaller than an atom. On the other hand, stellar-mass holes form when huge stars can no longer generate energy in their cores. Combined with the radiation from nuclear responses to keep the star “puffed up”, gravity causes the core to disintegrate. The star’s outmost layers are subject to blast away into space. They could also fall into the hole to increase its power. Astronomers are not sure how super massives form. Some hypothesize that they form from the dissolution of large clouds of gas, or from the mergers of several smaller holes. Still, nothing has been factually proven yet. The ability to see black holes has also not prevailed thus far.

Although supernovas are impossible to view from Earth, it is possible for astronomers to detect their presence by measuring the effects on objects near black holes. These effects include, but are not limited to the following: mass estimations from objects scoping a black hole or spiraling into the core, gravitational lens results, and released radiation. Many holes have objects surrounding them. By investigating the behavior of those objects, you can detect the presence of a black hole. You can then use measurements of the objects’ movement to calculate its mass. Additionally, Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity forecasted that gravity was able to bend space.

Many years later, this was confirmed during a solar eclipse in which a star’s position was noticeably shifted when its light was bent by the sun’s gravity. Therefore, an object with colossal gravity between Earth and another object has the potential to bend the light from the distant object into a focal point, similar to what a camera lens does (gravitational lens results). Lastly, when substances fall into a hole from a companion star, it gets heated to millions of degrees. The superheated materials proceed to emit X-rays, which can be detected by X-ray telescopes (released radiation). With this information, black holes continue to be one of the most mesmerizing parts of our universe.

Black holes are perhaps the most fascinating matters in space. Although humans cannot see supernovas, there is indisputable, indirect evidence that they exist. Since there has not yet been stable proof of the outcome of an object after it is consumed by a black hole, many people have their own beliefs of what happens. In fact in many situations, holes have been associated with time travel and worm holes… a la Planet of the Apes. It is vital to remember that holes are not cosmic vacuum cleaners; they will not consume everything. It is also important to know that gravity is the strange force behind the consumption of black holes… not suction! Black holes are captivating and mysterious extraterrestrial forces that may not ever be fully understood. Still, they are continually being inspected by certified scientists. The desire to learn more about the intensity of black holes has never been higher. In every way, they are an all consuming mystery.

Sara Buttar

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Astronomy – An Introduction


Astronomy – An Introduction
By Owen Jones

Although astronomy is the oldest science, it continues to be at the forefront of not only scientific thought, but that of the public at large too. Who has not looked up at the galaxy while walking home late at night and wondered? Having said that though, the ancient people of certainly the northern hemisphere, but probably both, knew the movements of the stars and planets better than most of us do nowadays.

They understood then, thousands of years ago, that the majority of stars appear to rise in the Eastern skies at night and travel on circular paths. They also noticed that some ’stars’ were ‘wanderers’ (we call them planets) and that sometimes they went ‘against the flow’.

They also named groups of stars that we now call constellations or even galaxies and knew that those visible in the winter were different from those visible in the summer.and that others were visible all year round. The average common man of 5,000 – 10,000 years ago almost certainly knew more about the movement of the celestial bodies than the average common man of today does. (I mean men and women here, of course).

They learned how to calculate or at least locate the extremities of the sunrise and went to extraordinary lengths to mark those positions with huge stone structures, such as Stonehenge in the United Kingdom, probably to facilitate the location of certain positions of the sun or other planets or stars, which may have been important to their religious beliefs or crop cycles.

In 1609, Galileo invented the first artificial device for studying the stars and planets. It was the first astronomical telescope and through it he was able to observe things millions of miles away that no one had ever seen before. Because of the deductions he drew from his observations, he clashed with the Roman Catholic Church and was often in serious danger for his life, so radical were his discoveries.

But mankind was not intimidated, and since then we have gone on to build ever bigger and ever better telescopes with which we can even detect radio waves, microwaves, X-rays, infrared waves and gamma waves from outer space. Forty years ago, we even travelled to our Moon. and we have sent probes to eight of the nine planets in our Solar System, as well as to several comets and asteroids.

Where are we going next? That decision was always up to the government of the United States and the old Soviet Union, but now there are other players in the field. What will China or India want to explore with their possibly slightly different outlook on life? Or will it be just a question of financial benefit?

The world may be in a state of flux and power may be shifting from its traditional seats, but it has not diminished interest in questions that scientists think can only be answered in space. These are exciting times in the science of astronomy, but then man has always found astronomy exciting.

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The Basics of Buying a Telescope
By Benjamin Pendergrass
telescope

There is always a time when aspiring astronomers would want to buy their own first telescope. It is fun to think about setting up your own viewing station on the deck of your home or having a mobile telescope that you can set up anywhere and anytime to get a shot of those amazing stars and planets. The last thing that we would want to do is to take away the excitement of your hobby of astronomy. Unlike other hobbies, star gazing or astronomy is a discipline in science which is more of a passion or learning and discovery of the unknown in the universe. Even a hobbyist with limited telescopic set can still see some amazing things in the heaven by just looking at them. It is important to invest in a piece of equipment so that you can continue to enjoy and increase your knowledge in astronomy. However, the question now is how do we increase our knowledge? Let us meet our some of these people first.

Meet the Geeks

We will use the term “telescope geeks” to describe people who love astronomy and use the telescope all the time. These people have the capability to evaluate your needs when it comes to choosing telescopes as well as where you want to go as far as your hobby is concerned. If you haven’t associated yourself with these people yet, better start now.

Build rapport with these people

You can learn a great deal from them and their information are more reliable than what a sales brochure or any salesman might have to say since these people have started out just like you and they are more than willing to help people like you to avoid the same mistakes that they have underwent before.

Size Matters

The sales people usually try to confuse us with all the latest models of telescopes. Of course, sales people are after their sales quota so they are trying to sell you things that you would normally uncalled for. For one, they usually would offer amplification for the telescope lens. If, however, you do need to amplify your lens, then it is worth to note this old adage “size matters”. Your telescope lens works effectively when it takes in the most light it can from an object that you are viewing. This means that the wider the diameter of the lens, the more light it can perceive and the better view you will be getting. So do not fall for the amplification only but also you need to evaluate the lens size that you have to fit what you want to do.

It Has to Stand on Its Own Feet

If you are planning to buy a permanent telescope, then you can bolt the unit down to give it more support. However, many of us would like to take our telescope into the country for star gazing. IF this is the case, then the stand or tripod needs to be strong and flexible so that you can set up the telescope on an uneven plane and won’t have to worry of getting the equipment fall while observing the sky. Another thing that you need to consider while choosing a stand is the ease of its use. You have to consider the ease of setting up and breaking down the equipment in the dark or by lantern or flashlight is you are taking advantage of the star displays in the night sky.

These are just the basics of what to look for when you are on the verge of buying for a new telescope. You need to make sure that the telescope can be enhanced or expanded to save money of getting a new one. You also want the telescope to grow just like you knowledge and skills when it comes to star gazing. If your telescope meets these requirements then you are on the right path to choosing the right telescope so you can enjoy your hobby as an amateur astronomer.

The author shares many different writing passions. Want to find out more about French Door Blinds, then visit the author’s site on how to choose the best French Door Shades for your French doors.

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