X-Within-Url: http://www.nas.nasa.gov/~schmitz/Page/Ufo/et.html
From Melbourne Herald-Sun, January 16, 1995
RULES FOR ET HUNT
by Eleanor Sprawson
Scientists who have set up a base to search the night skies for
signs of intelligent life have revealed they have strict
instructions on what to do if they are successful - phone home.
An elaborate protocol document developed during early NASA exercises
in the United States for dealing with aliens has been handed to the
CSIRO scientists and their American counterparts based at Parkes in
central New South Wales.
It says the first person to be told that we are not alone should be
the leader of the nation in which the discovery is made - in this
case, Prime Minister Paul Keating.
The scientists must then telephone the US president before telling
the United Nations.
As soon as these tasks have been completed, the scientists are
allowed to tell the media.
"There would certainly be no secrecy if we did find something," said
Dr Seth Shostak, one of the American scientists from the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute.
American billionaires are funding the search, which gets fully under
way early next month in the first leg of a $9 million worldwide
exercise dubbed "Operation Phoenix".
Over five months, the Australian team will train the country's
largest telescope based in Parkes, on systems around 200 stars
thought to be similar enough to our sun to sustain life.
This will gather microwave signals which will be sorted out by a
radiowave receiver tuned to 56 million frequencies.
All signals gathered will be tested and double-checked to ensure
they don't come from terrestrial sources, such as mobile phones or
army radar systems.
It is the largest such search in history, with equipment so powerful
it is expected to gather as much information from three minutes
raking the skies as all the projects in the past 30 years.
"The general public seems fond of thinking that there is something
of strategic importance in a situation like this which would mean it
was kept secret, but that's not the case," Dr Shostak said
yesterday.
"And if it caused panic, well, that's just the way it is." The
scientist said sociologists had undertaken studies to test how the
general public would react to the news of intelligent life forms
existing in outer space.
"It turns out that panic would be unlikely," said Dr Shostak. "They
looked at life-changing precedents in the past, and it turns out
that when Copernicus said the earth travelled around the sun instead
of it being the other way around, people didn't panic, and ditto
when Darwin said we developed from simians."
However, Dr Shostak conceded that there would undoubtedly be
spirited debate over whether to aim a radiowave reply to the aliens.
#
There is more information from the CSIRO HERE
From: legion@werple.mira.net.au (John Stepkowski)