In the Brittish paper Daily Mail there was an article named High Speed Saucery by David Norris. Here's a summary of the article.
This could be the way of the future - flying-sonic-saucers!
Scientists belive that within a deacde we can "shwoosshe" from London tto New York in about 15 minutes. Or to Sydney on 48 minutes, traveling at 24,000 km/hr.
This breakthrough involves they way the new craft can protect itself of the high acceleration that brings shockwaves. A microbeam is being send out from the crafts onion-shaped nose which creates an opening, or pushes away the shockwaves that otherwise would stop the extrem speed. Electrodes placed around the disc will be pick up their force from satellietes orbiting earth. The shockwaves is supposed to "slip behind" the craft and gather at the tail where they will form a catapult that pushes the craft up to the speed of Mach 25 (25 times faster than sound). The craft will use these shockwaves and therefor wonä't need the big amount of fuel that was pre-needed to leave our atmosphere and gravitationfield.
Engineer Leik Myrabo, who is developing the crafts power-system, says:
-The whole craft will be it's own engine!
ISCNIFlash newsletter, USA, February 16th.
Glenn Campbell -- known on the Internet as Psychospy -- is a balding 36 year old former software developer who makes his home in Las Vegas, ninety miles due south of the top-secret military test facility known to the locals as Dreamland, Area 51, or Groom Lake.
In 1992, Campbell sold his shares in the Boston-based software firm he worked for and headed out west to investigate the strange rumors buzzing around the mysterious area. Campbell has been a civilian fly in the official ointment ever since. The result has been that both he and Area 51 have received coverage in everything from tabloid TV to the New York Times.
Stories from the Nevada desert are legion of craft performing impossible aeronautical maneuvers, and technology that's literally "out of this world." Campbell's heard it all. A sardonic observer of human folly, he has long taken the UFO folklore that has accreted around Area 51 with a grain of salt. So I found it surprising to find him entertaining "extreme possibilities" when I met with him.
Sitting cross-legged on his hotel bed, Campbell soberly told me, and a few others, a tale that would test the credulity of any reporter.
Campbell has published the testimony of a man who he will only identify as "Jarod 2" -- a retired 70-year old mechanical engineer who claims to have worked at an unidentified facility from the 1950's into the 1980's. According to Campbell, Jarod claims to have spent at least a decade working on a top secret project involving flight simulators, which he later learned were based on recovered alien technology. He came forth with his story, says Campbell, only after checking with his old supervisor, who gave Jarod the go ahead to relate some, but not all, aspects of his work.
Not only was alien technology recovered decades ago in New Mexico -- in 1953, according to this particular tale -- but alien bodies as well. Some of which, according to Jarod, were alive.
"Do you believe his story?" I asked Campbell.
"I don't know whether to believe it or not," he replied. "All I know is that it's a story from an old guy I'd trust with my life." Campbell adds that he is satisfied by interviewing Jarod's family members that he is genuine.
Not a story that particularly satisfies all the protocols of who, what, when, where. Campbell won't identify Jarod as yet -- citing the unwanted attentions of the fringe element. Only one person has gone on record with a tale similar to Jarod's: the legendary Bob Lazar, who really began the whole Area 51 craze.
On the face of it, the Jarod story sounds ridiculous. Campbell would be the first to agree, and simply shrugs and says his role is simply that of a "collector of stories," a sort of postmodern folklorist. He remains resolutely agnostic about the tales of crashed saucers. "If this civilization is so advanced," he writes in his online newsletter, the Groom Lake Desert Rat, "why can't they keep their craft in the air? It would be just our luck that the aliens visiting earth are the drunk drivers of the universe, sent here to complete a 12-step program but taking the wheel again while still in denial."
Another collector of stories is George Knapp, a burly, bearded investigative journalist and Las Vegas television reporter. Knapp has said he has found greater fear in current and retired military personnel with UFO information than any Nevada residents with information on organized crime. I asked Knapp if anyone with a military background has told him anything similar to the Jarod tale. "About twelve people," said Knapp, adding that none of them are willing to go on record.
If you want to read more about this, check out PSYCHOSPYÆs Internet-page.
(from AUFORA News, March 9th, 1996)
On Wednesday, scientists released information that they had found the oldest Martian meteorite to date. The meteorite, named Allan Hills 84001, is around 4 billion years old. It was found in Antartica by a team of scientists from Manchester University and the American Museum of Natural History. The meteorite is unique not only because it came from Mars (only about a dozen other meteorites have been found which originated on Mars), but also because it was by far the oldest Martian meteorite found. The others were all around 1.3 billion years old. The age of the meteorite coincides with the Lunar Cataclysm, a period between 3.9 and 4.1 billion years ago in which the moon underwent massive meteoric bombardment. Allan Hill 84001 is thought to have been ejected from Mars through similar bombardment. Some people feel that it is very possible that life (microbial) origninated on other planets, and was then transferred to Earth. The discovery of Allan Hill 84001 and other Martian meteorites shows that a transport system does indeed exist. Jack Farmer and David Des Marais from NASA's Ames Space Science Division said in a recent report that "of the other planets in our solar system, Mars holds the greatest potential for having developed extraterrestrial life". Ironically, life on Earth was thought to have originated on Earth between 3.5 and 4.1 billion years ago.
AUFORA News Update 03.21.96
On March 19, 1996, workers at Waltham Dry Kilns lumber yard in western Quebec witnessed a mysterious, diamond-shaped UFO hovering above them. Employee Hector Brochu said that he saw the UFO hovering above the yard shortly before it took off upon his approach. Eight other workers who witnessed the object say that it hovered for approximately 15 minutes before leaving.
Local Environment Canada officials have no explanation for the UFO. Military officials at Canadian Forces Base Petawawa (located across the Ottawa River in eastern Ontario, only a few kilometers away from the lumber yard) say that they are not responsible for the incident and offer no explanation.
Recently, Paul Bauer stated that the UFO was probably his helium balloon that he and his wife had released from their balcony on the morning of March 17, 1996. According to Bauer, the balloon, which had "Happy St. Patrick's Day" on one side, matches the description given by the lumber yard workers. Brochu still insists that what he saw was from outer space. He describes the UFO as a "four-pointed star".
(from AUFORA News, March 9th, 1996)
It seems when Apollo 11 mission astronaut Neil Armstrong first walked on the Moon, he not only gave his famous "One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind" statement, but followed it with several remarks - the usual communication traffic between him, the other astronauts and Mission Control. But before he re-entered the lander he made the enigmatic remark, "Good luck Mr Gorsky".
Many people at NASA thought it was a casual remark concerning some rival Soviet cosmonaut. However, upon checking, there was no Gorsky in either the American or Russian space programs.
Over the years, many people have questioned him as to what the "good luck Mr Gorsky" statement meant. A few months ago in Tampa, Florida, Armstrong was answering questions following a speech when a reporter brought up the 26-year old question. Armstrong finally responded. It seems that Mr Gorsky had finally died and so he felt he could answer the question.
When Neil was a kid, he was playing baseball with his brother in the backyard. His brother hit a fly ball which landed in front of their neighbours bedroom window. His neighbours were Mr & Mrs Gorsky. As he leaned down to pick up the ball, he heard Mrs Gorsky shouting at Mr Gorsky, "Oral sex ! Oral sex you want !? You'll get oral sex when the kid next door walks on the Moon !".
Still laughing ? Would loved to have video taped Mr Gorsky's face when kid Neil jumped off the Eagle and hit the Moonrocks !!!!!!!! He he he.
Check this out folks! If this release proves to be real, the truth will be known to all, at least in Japan. On July 4, the Municipal Government of Hakui City, Japan will open a multi-million-dollar UFO Museum, created with federal government funds. Command Sergeant-Major Robert Dean, USA/NATO (ret.) is being flown in to address the opening ceremonies crowd.
In Convincing Mr. Dean to come, the Japanese officials told him that the Museum will contain _physical_ artifacts from UFO crash retrievals and proof of extraterrestrial corpses found, among other evidence. As of the Fourth of July, the Japanese are no longer waiting for the Western countries before ending the UFO Cover-Up with their own population.
[Side note:] In a desperate attempt to maintain the UFO Cover-Up "story" in America, the intelligence spin-doctors have manipulated the release on the same day [July 4] of a movie about an evil invading alien army attacking America. It is called "Independence Day". This agit-prop film maintains the Cover-Up organization's Lie #2: (If we can't get you to believe that UFOs don't exist, at least we want to convince you that ETs are evil mean invaders.)
(from ISCNIFlash Newsletter, February 16th)
Advocates Hail New Discovery; Skeptics Unimpressed
ABC-TV's "Good Morning America" program on Wednesday, Feb 7 announced a possible breakthrough in clean energy technology. The story was expanded on ABC's "Nightline" Wednesday evening. If true, the new technology employs a so-far mysterious but apparently non-nuclear process to produce an estimated one hundred times more energy than it consumes.
Skeptics were quick to reply that such claims are by definition improbable at best. They pointed to the "cold fusion" claims of Pons and Fleischmann which took the world by storm a few years ago but turned out to be much less promising than first thought. [Pons and Fleischmann continue their work in France and have recently been granted a patent by the European patent office. It remains unclear how well their "cold fusion" technology really works.] Among the several skeptical scientists interviewed by ABC, it appeared that none had yet tried to test the new device.
However, a number of independent, highly reputable scientists and research labs have run tests on the new device and say it appears to work exactly as claimed, although they can't understand how.
The device was invented by James A. Patterson, a chemical engineer who says he's made millions perfecting numerous industrial applications of "little beads." A cannister of tiny metal beads, each one coated with layers of copper, nickel and palladium, is the mystery ingredient in Patterson's device. He calls the cannister a Patterson Power Cell.
When ordinary water is run through the cannister and a small electric charge is added, the cannister produces amazing amounts of heat, which is transferred to the water. According to Patterson, the energy produced is at least 100 times greater than the energy spent.
If Patterson's claim is true, it could have huge implications for the future of power production and consumption. Interest in his device is snowballing rapidly. It is rumored that Motorola Corporation has already offered to by him out for an undisclosed sum. However, Patterson's own company, Clean Energy Technologies Inc. (CETI), has announced plans to develop the technology and has acquired several patents.
CETI is in the process of conducting further research to corroborate its findings with several external research partners, including professor George Miley, editor of Fusion Technology and director of the Fusion Studies Lab at the University of Illinois, and Dr. Quinton Bowles, professor and associate dean of the Coordinated Engineering Programs at the University of Missouri in Kansas City.
Preliminary testing indicates that this power generation device is environmentally safe, producing no harmful by-products. The company intends to license its technology for commercial use, and believes that commercial applications could be on the market within five to seven years.
Clean Energy Technologies Inc. maintains a site on the World Wide Web at: http://www.onramp.net/~ceti.