Download - Paper Hand Outs on George Adamski
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Telepathy.- -.-
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Pyramid/pyramid power and its connectionto U.F.O.'s.
Bible and U.F.O. slides from differentchurches in Europe showing U.F.O.'sexisted in Biblical times.
Teacher and Lecturer:
1. D.F.O.'s (Unidentified Flying Objects)throughout the ages, combined witheighty (80) slides.
Born in Iran, educated in Iran, Belgium andthe United States, Miss Mahin Shahriverwill be lecturing on the following:
2. Telepathy, the natural heritage of man,and its connection to D.F.O.'s.
3.
4.
5. Moon and its activity. Possibility oflife on moon, moon base, forest, water,etc. Thirty five NASA slides revealdetails.
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•••.• _~.:....~DA.".SKI - Ca1iforni~_-. 1951
'lCfB b 2 :s~Contact by Phone (714) ~ 2900
Write: Miss M;biX.Shahrivar.21110' Ovcrhrlte DI=-"
I:mJcc Fu::: 8St:--, Ct'. 92 fi3.O
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SCIENTIST PHOTOGRAPHS
FLYING SAUCERS!
and Los AliEos Intermediate School at El Taro
Tus. Sept. JJ. 7-10pm. room B-1.
7?6-JF50
[-os !-.1' s as
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY": 1976
..-":"~.':':.
From Page A.J
SAUCERS . .-.School District adult educationcourse on the "Psychology of,
Current Events."A new session of lhe course.
which also delves inlo otherparapsychological phenomena.begins at 7 o'clock lonight al LosAliso!' Intermediate School in
, Mission Viejo.Mrs. Shahrivar's collection of
UFO material includes not onlypictures taken by U.S. astronautsbut a couple of personal ex-
periences as well."I've seen a few objects myself
that I couldn't explain." she not-ed, "Once I saw a flashing lightunder a cloud aboul30 feel abovethe Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine,There were six people who saw it
-along wilh me.", Another lime she and anairplane pilot observed two large
. objects \raveling next to each; .other at great speed over the
Hollywood Hills before disap-
:' : pearing, '','." And, she maintains, some of, -ber sludents claim to have seen: -'small, three.inch' "observational
,discs" which supposedly are'laboratory tools sent down by'space ships to analyze the
i-character of people living inareas being. investigated by
them. 'Mrs, 'Shahrivar, a native Ira-
• nian, also is a lecturer in severalother subjects, She teaches a <
.class, in' Iranian culture and~ imguage at Cal State Full
and courses in nutrition,, -ology:and isometric exer :.se
. ,tlguna ~ll~ Leisur~ Wod
Daily Pilot Staff Photo
'SAUCERS ARE REAL'Monique Shahrivar
Eyes on SkiesValley Woman Studies UFOsBy Rum NIEDZIELSKI
Of tho Da i Iy Pi lot Slalf
Some people get their kicks outof collecting stamps, others flogaway at tennis balls. But when itcomes to hobbies MoniqueShahrivar may have the most un-ique one in the SaddlebackValley.
Her specialty is UFOs.Ever since she read a book on
flying saucers nine years ago:Mrs, Shahri ,'ar became hookedon the subject. She has amasseda vast collection of pictures and
publications, all. of ",;hich point to. one thing: The saucers are real.
"After I read the book, whichdescribed 20 years of investiga.tion by the Air Force into thesephenomena, I was invited to ameeting with a man who wassupposedly contacted by spacepeople," Mrs. Shahrivar, a Lake
, Forest resident, explained.The man turned out to be the
late George Adamski, author of• three UFO books, and for many
years'the nation's leadingauthority on unidentified flyingobjects.
"Adamski's first contact with, the space people was by bothering them. We're interfer.
telepathy. They taught him how ing with the peace of space and en.jt works," said Mrs. Shahri var, . .dangering the planet by polluting24404 Overlake Lane, noting that the air and the water," she point.
Adamski's writings indicale the .. ~out.space people are visiling earth to •. rs. Shahrivar recently has
, ave the planet from destruction. :begun sharin2. her ..knowle~, " understanding from, the ,-a t UFOs with st ~
teriall read is that the atomieod Ie back' a 11ey itlebswe',re.throwingar e J 1< SAUCE S.,P j. '
1"". '::f:' "..... ..." .•
" "
'by J~ '.K'RI11 -of the DAILY PIU'T staff
-,i 1
I
I,,'tl:.•
,,'
l-iomque Shahrivar of Lake Foeest has been a very pretty French girl, a Dutch man, C:L
primi.ti ve humanthat lived underground, and one of Beethoven's lovers. But that's all
behind her now.Those were her past lives, which she identified in a three-year intensive study of
reincarnation and cosmic phil 0SOTJhy•Andbefore she passes from this life, she feels certain she will visit Easter ~'.:::s~
Island, Australia, and the pyramids.She said she has experienced the phenomenonof teleportation to the bedside of a
friend, has somehowmade bread ap?ear from the s1<;'.and believes that careful andscientifically learned cosmic consciousness could produce a race of supe:rllUmcms.
For the past eight years, f/~rs. 5..'1ahrivarhas pursued her interest in all thesephenomenadiligentljr, by reading as manybooks as she can find and seeking out peopl,e
with parapsychological experiences.Last year she offered to teach an adult education course in telepathy, UF0s, and
cosmic awareness for the Saddleback Valley Unified School District, and her course
was a hit.The second year of her classes began last week-with both an advanced and beginners ,
class of students fascinated by telepathy and other mind-over-matter disciplines.H,er students include a teacher of parapsychology from ChapmanCollege and also a
psychobiology professor from UCIrvine.She says she has taught her students to improve their telepathic abilities and to
become one with nature."Her classes have a real follo •.1ing,II said Keith .::lllll5, coordinator of adult educa-
tion for the '::'addleback Valley district. "There's a ,'nole group mo have been coming
back for the advanced courses. II
l11"s.::'hahrivar, a native of Iran who speaks fluent French and was educated in Iran,
Belgium and the United states, comes across as an a......-ticulate,thoughtful voice for
parapsycholo"-Y.ParapS".fchology,•.mch technically means libeyondpsychologyll or "similar to psycho-
logy ,II is a new name for the study of mental phenomenalike clairvoyance, mental tele-
pathy, astrotravelling. and the study of humanreincarnation.Every natural form has the ability to communicateits feelings to every other'
life-foI'm, }irs. Shahrivar explains. That is telepathy. IIAndif ~TOU becomeinvolvedtelepathically, you can communicatewith plants, animals, all forms of life, II she said.
"These teachings are non-political and non-reliltious,1I Lrs. Shahrivar said. IIThis
is just sci ence we're stud,ying. It's all based on scientific logic and commonsense. II"It's very beautiful to study, II she said in an interview rlednesday in her home.
IIIf
more people studied it we'd have a race of superhumans-and not very long from now.1I
"Somepeop.!.eare liKe a ship "rl.thout a rudder.1I ~he added.. IIBachperson is hp.re
for a purpose. And if you learn to understand life, you understand thi s. II
rne of the authors iirs. Jhahri var asks her students to read is ueorge Adamski, a
California "mo claimed to have had visits by people from Venus.:le wrote severll books, one of them in collaboration "rl.th .d.nston. Churchill's
nephew, DesmondLeslie. They include Ii~~IDETIlE ;)PilCL .::illP~, and FLYIi~G ShUCERSHAVE
LliliDED.Adamskiclaimed to have made contact with menfrom Venus in 1952 in Desert Center,
California, and several more ti!nes through 19.54. (cont. next page)
_Firom-tIieDATI.Y-PILM'-,--COsta.r~'sa,.'t-aii iom1a;-reprlnteCi'-witil permission
..--------------- ---===---..-:;:::;....----'-'-.~~_--=::..~--:..:......::.-______ • 0_
- A PHANTC'liPC'RTRAIT--Unexplainedl -
In the historic city of t-xford in England there was a dean of Christ Church Cathedral,the Very Reverend John Liddell, tozhodied in 1898.
Accordinf to columnist Allen Spra;gett, it rffiS in 191) that many witnesses stated
that they had seen a "startling likeness" of the late Dean mich had begun to materi-
alize, near a stone tablet dedicated to the memoryof Dean Liddell and his family.
A noted NewYork spychoanalyst and ghost hunter, the late l~andor Fodor, and a friendof hr. ~praggett, told him that of all the curious thinfs he had investigated, themost curieus was t...'1isphanto.rnportrait of Dean iiddell l-mich appeared on a plaster'Hall in Christ Church Cathedral.
It seems the reproduccion wasn't only a vague outline or splotch, but a ve~ good
likeness of the dean•• ~.henit ''laS photof:,raphed and studied alon[ \-Q th pictures of thedeparted man, there Has a marked degree of accuracy. The two images were ve~ similar.
In the ,september 11,1926 issue of Cassell's \{eek1y, a British magazine. the mysterious
image on the cathedral vall was described: lilt is a faithful and Ul1Ii1istakablelike-
ness of the late Dean. Yet it is not etched. neither is it sketched, painted, norsculptured. But it is there, plain for all eyes to see. 11 hr. Spraggett reports.
The image on the ,.,all greH continually clearer over a period of time, till finally it
shOlvedthe Dean smiling benignly, as though it were a painted portrait, lir. Spraggett
says. The idea that someonehad perpetrated some sort of hoax Has entirely discoli.'P"Jted.It was casually sUGgested that perhaps there had been a change in the plaster. hany
researchers investi~ated the rare phenomenon.but apparently no scientific explanationwas ever found.
It seems that by 19)1 a new altar had been built in front of the v.rall. hiding theinexplicable phantom po:rtrai t! Did it disappear? 01' might it still be there?
~ihocan tell! __.~~ <l--:7I!_~i-/Y'./~IILost of m;"y"students are skeptical about UFCs\-menthey first bet:,i.nthe class, II I 1./'
hI'S. Sha..'1rivar said. "Sut as He progress, they becomemore interestec .•"
Since she is a finn believer in life in outer space, lilce Jldamski, she believessome of the visits fro:.1 other life fonns have been to trj" and Ham us that our naturalexistence is in perilous balance a'1d that nuclear blasts could tip us over the edgeint0 enviro~~ental annihilation.
('ne of the central points to i'"rs. Shahri var' s beliefs is what she sees as ourgrol'ling necessity for II genetic screening. 11
"The time will come ,:hen a corrnnittee will screen the E,enehi story of couples whowant to f-et married. If their genes aren't good, they should enjoy other people'schildren I II she said.
,ihen asked what made that theory different from the one used by the I-Jazis in
~ennany, she added, "'lhis has nothing at all in COIil!i1onl.;ith that. l,ood genes don'tdepend on whether you are Jel.;ish or black or any other race. You can find good genesand bad Benes in a..'1yrace."
"If our children start "Q th good cenes, and then are taught philosophy and cosmicawareness and telepat;w, that's h0"1He will develop a super race ," she added. Beforelong, diseases would be wiped out, she predicted.
hichael Parker is the ChapmanCollege ad.'l1inistrator \-1110 attends 1-:rs. ~hahrivar'sclasses and teaches a class in psychic phenomenaon the inter-term for Chapman.
liFoI'most highly educated people ,it's more difficult to get in touch ,.n. th psychicphenomena," Parker said. lIrur education is very slanted to one part of our mind.
i:onique is very Imovrledreable in these thinr;s and is doing a good thing by teachingthis class. !ie need teaching on all levels to open people's minds."
Biographicbl Sketch of Geor~e Adamski
Born in Poland April 17. 1891, George Adamski was not yet twoyears old when hi~ p~rents settled in Dunkirk, N.Y. Possessing anextremely brilliant ~ind and a sensitive na~ura, he ~oon found himselfwondering at the ~et;lming inh3r'monies in Life about him. Wi.th all ofNature ope~ating in p~rfect c~ordination under the guidance of aninvisible lCtw. whv \~irl m,",n h~vl'- ~•... "'\'r,J.. .:--;:-,..:1-..).--: finding peace?
Five years in the Army only 5~~en€tnened Mr. Adamski's longing togrow ~n understanding and ~isdom that he might b~ of service to hisfellow man. The University of the wc'rld as his, and for many years hetravelled around the nation~ earning his living at any job that wasoffered.
N~ari ng forty ~ he m~")'(ed to Lagu.'i~ ~€:ach I Cal iiornia. and there he
devot~d full time ~u teaching Universal L~~. Student~ flocked to him.He was in great demand for lectures and his talks we~e radiobroadca~t, Here, too, he was presented a six-inch telescope.
Later on he and e g~oup of students moved half way up Palomarmountain, Mr. Adamski was not connected with th~ obs~rvatory but hehad many friends among the scientists, and the~ respected his ability.Thus th~ studies continued. Hany visitors came and with all he gladlyshared his findings.
In 1946l M~. Adamski and his friends began observing strangeobjects moving across the heavens. Soon others ,came to check theirpersonal observations. Gonvincsd of their e~tra-terrestial nature, heset about getting evidence finally succeeding in getting photos and inlater years he also took movies of them. It was to this man inNovember 1952 that the Venu5ian pilot of a "flying saucer" came oneday in the desert. His latar exp~riences with the people from spaceare recounted in three of hi~ books. He has also writtenphilosophical material.
With the coming of the space people Mr. Adamski's field of5Brvice widened. Far advanced from us all in many ways t~e spacepeople confirmed Hr. Adamski1s unders~anding o£ Universal Law~ andduring the many illuminating hours he spent in their com~anYldi~cus5ed much of Cosmic Wisdom that he could share with mankind hereon Earth. He has been on many lecture tours allover this country andabroad. He wa~ in much demand wherever he went. In Europe he was~elcomed by Queen Juliana and her advisors. In Rome he was given amedal of honor by the Late Pope John. Lives were made richer forknowing George Adamski, for he shared his under5tanding of CosmicIntelligence with all who would listen. His name is a symbol of hopeand understanding in the midst of confusion, a promise of happinessand Life Eternal when Nature's Cosmic Laws are obeyed.
On April 2S~ 1965 at Silver Spring, Maryland, during another touracross the country. George Adamski now 74 years old) was strjc~en wi~ha heart attack and passed away very suddenly, leaving a rich heritage.and followers allover the world. His mortal remains were interred atArlington National Cemetery, in Arlington, Virginia.
And 50, to carryon the work ~o which he $0 nobly gave his lifet
the GEORGE ADAMSKI FOUNDATION was established with Mrs. Wells actingas coordinator. There will be no break in the ~ork and material willbe available. We will continue to try to bring to mankind theunder~tanding and the beauty granted to each individual. and so 5implytaught by George Adamski.
We invite any who sincerely seek th~ Truth to share with us.
Hi.
stn
an
yfr
iends
an
dfa
ns
wil
lm
iss
him
very
much
---
and
all
.,•.:iU
agrc
eth
at
his
"vis
it"
here
on
Eart
hw
asun£()
rgett
able
.F
rom
our
hC
2_1.t
swe
say
to
him
,"F
al'e'.vell
and
thank
you,
Mr.
Adam
ski,
£01'
your
gre
at
co
ntr
ibu
tio
nto
this
wonderf
ul
fi(!
ld,
Vlc
111
do
01;1
1'best
tocar
ryan
th.e
work
whic
hw
inm
ean
50
much
toaU
luankin
d.H
HIS
HV
ISIT
"H
ER
E',1
11\5
UN
FO
RG
ET
T.A
~B
LE
:
Last
Apri
l2.3
,1965,
QE
OR
CE
AD
Alv
1S
Kl,
74,
(born
A.p
ril
17,
11
39
1),
one
of
the
lore
nlO
sl
pio
neers
In
F!y
ing
Sam
::.e
l're
sen.r
ch,
ie.1
tth
iseart
hly
life
.M
r.
Adam
ski
waB
'Nell
know
nto
most
students
and
invest
i-
gato
rsof
the
Fly
ing
Sa
UC
er
subje
ct.
Hc!
had
made
it
narn
efo
rh
imse
lfaro
und
th.e
'.vorl
das
ale
ctu
n3T
an
d
teach
er
il.b
out
space
Cn
"l.
it,
pee.p
Iefr
orn
oth
er
pla
.nets
,
and
Gosr
nic
Phil
osophy
~
1'0
.1'
5cvcra
lyea.r
spri
or
tohis
his
tori
cu1eeti
ng
wit
h?
space
inth
eC
ali
forn
iadesert
,M
r.A
darn
-
ski
had
obser
.••.ed
and
photo
.gra
phed
space
ship
st.
.'lt
ro.u
gh
his
tole
scope
---
fro.m
his
hom
ea~
ML
Palo
mar,
in
Cali
forn
ia.
He
firs
ttn
adc
new
s,how
ever,
ait
er
his
ex
pel"
-
len
ctl
On
No
v.
ZO
,J9
52
,n
e,u
"D
(~l:
H~
rtC
en
ter,
Cali
f.
At
that
tim
ehe
met
ilV
enus
ia.n
Scout
Ship
and
its
pil
ot.
Fro
rnth
at
tim
eo
n,
his
life
was
corn
ple
tely
,;;h
anged.
1,V
ith
tHlh
seq
uen
tco
nta
cts
an
dw
ith
incre
asin
gn
O'N
kri
o',v
led
ge
"h
efo
ltth
at
hi~
rcspousib
ilit
y\v
as
to.re
ach
t.tH
~publi
c\,•
.ith
as
rnuch
il''L
Co
rmati
on
as
he
could
ghre
tllc
nl
ab
ou
tth
eP
eo
ple
an
.dth
eir
mis
sio
nto
Eart
h.
:Hc.b
ecarn
e'"
,,'o
rld-l
am
ous
a:5
the
auth
or
of
80
',,'o
ral
of
the
tl1
0st-
read
bo
ok
siI
1th
,e.F
lyin
gS
au
cer
field
.p
lus
rnany
art
icle
s,
it•.
•.'as
whil
eM
r,A
darn
.ski
.•vas
lectu
ring
inth
e
east
that
he
contr
aded
pneum
onia
.H
edie
din
a
'Via
shin
gto
n,
D.
C.
hospit
al.
Inaccord
ance
w,l
thhis
wis
he$
,th
ere
v,'as
n.;
:)fu
nez:a
LA
sa.v
ete
ran
oi
Wo
rld
Vta
rI,
his
ash
es
were
inte
rred
at
Arl
ing
ton
Nati
on
al
Ccrn
cta
ry,
inV
irgin
ia.
Alt
hough
he
was
am
an
of
sim
ple
an
ehum
ble
odgin
,G
eorg
eA
dam
ski
becam
eg
l'erl,t
inquie
t,dig
ni-
fied
serv
ice
tohis
fell
ow
.man
.H
eta
ught
\Vl1
athe
'
loved
and
kne'N
bes
t,giv
ing
gener(
)Usl
yof
hif
:iti
me
;mo
energ
ies
toaU
"..h
o\'lo
ulc
JH
ste
n.
Fo
rhe
had
lea-:
'ned
that
the
Univ
ers
ea
ne
aL
l>
L~
atit
en
CQ
mp
ass
es
isan
infi
nit
ely
\llO
:n.d
erfu
lpla
ce,
un
dth
at
'Ne
are
no
tal
one
i.n
'.. 1•••
He
lme"'....th
at
the
worl
d',vas
u:r
:tdcr
goin
ggre
at
chang(!
,and
that
the
Inin
ds
of
men
l"n
ust
expand
to
I.m
pre
ced
en
ted
new
hori
zons
inord
er
toco
pe
\vit
hw
orl
d
pro
ble
ITIs
and
tobe
recepti
ve
toth
eir
l:lo
luti
ons~
--
in
orc
ler
toaccept
and
toundcl'sta
nd
sonl€
:of
the
"nly
ster-
ies"
of
life
and
of
the
Univ
ers
e.
and
our
pla
ce
init
.
GE
OR
GE
ADAM
SKI
FIRST Il\IIPRESSION OF SPACE.
L 1954."'•.... George Adamski
" •••• to ••.• II" t1 as 1 looked out I was amazed to see that the background of space istotally dark. Yet there were manifes tations taking place all arowld us J as tllOughbillions upon b,illions oi.fireflies were nickering everywhere~ moving in alldirections I as fireflies do. However, the~e were of many colors, a giganticcelestial fireworks display that was beautiful to the point or being awesome.
2 .. 1962 ••••.•.•. John Glenn
n When I glanced back out, my initial reaction was that I was looking out into acomplete star field, that the capsule had probably gone up while I wastnt lookingout the Window, and that I was looking into nothing but a new star field..'. .
" But lhis wasn't the caSe~ because a lot of the little things that I thoughtinitially were stars Were actually a bright yellowish - gTeen, about the sizeand intensity as looking at a firefly on a real dark night. n
7t These little particles that were outside the capsule were, I would estimale,some six to ten feet apart, and there were literally thousands of them. ,. :
" As far as I could look off to each side I could see them, I could see them backalong the path .. Later on I turned around so that 1 was facing the direction fromTshich they appeared to be coming
Jand although in that direction
1toward the ,
hright sunlight of the dawn, most of them disappeared. You still co~ld see a.few of them coming towards the capsule.'u
IT I was coming very slowly through this field. I estimaled that my velocitythrough this field was Borne three to five miles per hour .• They did not appear tobe emanating from the capsule. They appeared to have even distribution acrosseach side ~I the capsule. II .
" There are numerous things tha.t some of the people are thinking about and loo-king into, but I have no theory myself
1except we observed them" \Ve saw it on
aU. three orbits about the same lenght of ti~eto H
INSIDE THE SPACE SHIPS ..•••• by ~orge Adamski. page 76. Published by,A. Schuman. Jnc~ 3rd printing,. 1955
Transcript of Glennts newsconference relating his experenc~s on orbital flight asrecorded in t~e New York Times;! February' 24~ 1962 page 14.
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l1is
illw
ione
nan
ddi
sapp
oint
ed.
Cou
lll
one
~'t
hew
usl
ight
lysc
hi-
zophre
nic
?I
don't
know
.I'
mnot1
psyc
hiat
ri$t
But
one
oft
enhad
the
impr~
ion
ther
ew
ere
twO
~ople
intb
atnne
leonin
ebody.
the
litt
le
Ad.
:unJ
ki.
the
burb
ler
whi
cll.
alW
l/o.
yI.h
aved
itt
way
toth
efo
regt
'oW
ld
when
the
crow
d:!
gat
her
ed.
a1li
ng
non*S
top
and
leav
ing
your
hea
d
spin
ning
ina
clou
dof
half
-for
med
,b.
ully
expr
csse
djd
e.u.
The
nth
ere
w3
Jth
eB
igA
dam
slci
,m
em
anw
eca
me
toknow
and
love.
who
Olp
peue
don
lyto
his
inri
m.a
.tes,
and
once
havi
ng:l
.ppe
ared
,le
ftth
emin
no
doubt
they
had
know
na
gre
atso
ul.
The
Big
A<
hmsk
isp
oke
soft
ly
wit
ha
dee
pbea
uti
ful
voic
e,in
cred
ibly
old
,w
ise
and
pat
ient.
Lookin
g
into
those
huge
burt
ling
bla
ckey
esone
real
ised
that
this
Ad.
a.nu
ki
knew
2.J
1d
.ha
dex
per
iencc
afa
rm
ore
than
heW
2S
a.bl
eor
wil
ling
to
rela
te.
.
One
of
his
inti
nute
9la
ter
told
me,
'If
GS
;Q[~
had.
bee
nal
lQw
edto
ten
ttlt
he
knew
.his
life
wou
ld.
hav
ebee
nm
uch
cast
erfo
rhim
.H
e'd
hav
ebee
n:a
.ble
topro
ve
liis
C01
Se:
How
ever
,th
ere
wer
ece
rtai
n
~x~r
;ord
in:lr
yt!
ling
she
did
d~sC
ribe
tom
ein
1954
-.:a
.t:a.
tim
ebe
f 9re :
the
Van
All
enR
a.dia
tion
Bel
t$had
.~
endis
cover
ed;
:a.n
da
Ion
time
bef
ore
the
firs
t:l
Srr
onau
tshd
circ
led
the
0e
jff
i:m
ull
t~
ace
c~C
mg
0W
te
seen
:md
bee
ntQ
ldu
-hi~
tnin
auO
.as
c:u
mc:
InU
ldte
rbo
ok:
'Insi
deth
eSp
aces
hips
',he
dC$C
rib~
d.:
Bu
t.b
erO
tew
e"t
art
IIta
lkw
ith
"sp
ace
people
,w
ould
n't
l)e
much
bett
er
that
peop-
leof
this
tragic
Jo:a
rth,
dest
royed
by
WB
r.I,
halr
edand
into
lera
nce
,could
nnda
mutu
al.
mo
reh
um
ane
lan
gu
age
on
this
pla
net
,a
lan
gu
age
tor
mu
tual
un
der
stan
din
g,
just
ice,
peace,
frie
ndsh
ipand
bro
therh
ood
toall
peo
ple
oC
go
od
wil
l!
Fro
mth
em
81/u
ine
HO
MO
kaj
KO
SM
O,
10
1h
'I/O
L.
:!n
dh
alt-
yea
r1
97
1,
"0.:
2,
WAT
CHTH
ISSP
ACE
Man
'sfi
rst
dte
mp
tto
co
mm
un
icate
with
anot
her
civ
iliU
ltio
nde
epIn
spac
ebe
.gan
last
week
(rom
the
worl
d's
mO
/)t
pow
.
erfu
lra
dio
-~le
sco
pe
inA
reci
bo
,P
uer
toR
ico
.T
he
coded
sig
nal
too
konly
thre
e
min
ute
sto
tran
smit
,but
itw
ill
~ke
24,O
OG
years
tore
ach
its
des
tin
atio
n.
a&
tar
dust
er
caJl
edM
essi
er13
on
the
edge
DC
the
MS
lky
Way
."N
on
~o
ru
sh
ere
wil
lev
erk
no
wif
itw
ork
ed,"
said
Dr.
Fra
nk
Dra
ke,
dir
ecto
rof
the
ast
ronom
ycentr
eat
Are
cib
o.
Th
ed
ou
bl&
-fre
qu
ency
sIgn
alg
ives
scie
n.
tifi
cin
form
atio
nab
out
lire
on
Ear
than
ddeta
ils
of
man's
advan
cem
ent,
alth
ough
the
latt
erw
ill
be
ou
to
fd
aLe
byth
eti
me
the
signal
arri
vC$.
B~
ause
Mess
ler
13
isso
far
away
,th
ete
lesc
op
e's
bea
mw
ill
"!l
jt"
all
the
3ClO
,OO
Ost
ars
mak
ing
upth
ecl
uste
r,"A
tth
at
dis
tan
ee,
its
size
mal.
ches
the
size
oCth
eb
eam
,"sa
idD
r.D
rak
e.B
utw
ill
any
-
ont
hea
rth
esi
gnal
?"'
Ther
eis
aboul
aon
ein
two
chan
ces
of
ther
eb
ein
ga
civ
iliz
atio
n
inM
essi
er13:'
says
Dr.
Car
lS
agan
,of
Cor-
nel
lU
niv
ersi
ty.
Su
nd
ay
Tim
••L
~n
do
n.
New
.1
1,1
97
4
REME
MBER
ADAM
SI{1
7T
hll
Ed
itD
\'".
N.l
ion
Rnie
w,
Melb
ourn
e.
DE
AR
SIR
,
As
your
pap
erIs
Dot
edfo
rit
sco
ntr
ov
er.
sial
pu
bli
cati
on
sI
cll
ose
NaU
on
Rev
iew
to
com
mem
ora
teti
lete
nth
anniv
ers
ary
of
Geo
rge
Ad
amsk
i's
paS
5in
~O
nA
pri
l2
4.
lJ6
Geo
rge
Ad
amsk
.i,
wh
ose
bo
ok
sB
nd
lec.
ture
sin
the
'50
san
dea
rly
'60
sh
ave
cau
sed
worl
dw
ide
inte
rest
,has
been
call
ed
many
thin
gs
inth
ose
yea
rsan
dsi
nce
-ra
ng
ing
from
pio
neer,
pro
phet
and
scie
nce
ficti
on
wri
~r
toham
burg
er
sell
er,
charl
ata
nand
lunati
c.
To
this
day,
one
only
nee
ds
tom
enti
on
his
nam
ein
pu
bll
cto
un
leas
ha
vic
ious
atta
ckon
his
per
son
and
litt
erat
ure
.O
De
can
no
tb
ul
ask
wh
ylh
issh
ou
ldla
so,
wh
yis
ther
eco
nti
nued
del
iber
ate
mts
.-re
p~
nta
tion
orA
dam
ski's
clai
ms
and
sta-
tem
ents
and
ou
trig
ht
lle:
sab
out
him
and
his
lJfe
'! Tfu
!o
bv
iou
san
swer
isth
atw
ltat
he
dis
.cl
ose
dab
out
man,
this
worl
d,
the
sola
rsy
-st
eman
dth
eu
niv
ers.
ere
prC
$t'!n
ted
ad
irec
t
or
indir
ect
thre
atto
ever
yas
pec
tof
esta
b-
lish
edo
rder
and
ever
yfa
tel
of
\'es
ted
inte
r-
est
on
cur
pla
nel
This
was
qu
ick
lyre
aliz
ed
byth
est
ringpull
en
and
gu.a
rd~
ns
of
thE!
sy-
stem
and
anag
gre
ssiv
eo
pp
osi
tio
nb
egan
to
opera
teag
ainst
tMlo
ne
pio
neer
wit
hth
ert
Sult
,th
ata
most
urg
ent
mes
sag
eto
the
in.
hab
itan
tsof
the
Ear
thw
aslo
stonce
agai
n.
Needle
ssto
say,
that,
a.p
art
rrom
the
ego-
infl
ate
dst
atu
sconsc
ious
acad
emic
s,th
eag
ents
or
the
op
po
siti
on
wer
eg
reat
lyas
sist
.-ed
by
tbe
leth
argic
nas
ses
who
rCS
ent
noth
.in
gm
ore
than
bei
ng
upro
ote
dan
dto
mout
ofa
dr~
mli
ke
exis
tence
wher
eIm
ages
reig
nsu
pre
me
and
the
finer
work
ings
of
cO$m
kre
ali
tyare
rele
gat
edto
the
realm
of
the
un.
kn
ow
able
un
kn
ow
n,
bey
on
dth
eIh
resh
old
of
life
.
What
was
the
conte
nt
orth
em
essa
ge
wh
ich
Ad
amsk
ib
rou
gh
tfr
om
the
mO
Tead
-
van
ced
peo
ple
from
oth
erw
orl
ds
(this
inH
self
anoutr
ageo
us
clai
m,
say
bis
.det
rac-
ton)
and
wh
ich
soupse
tan
ddis
turb
ed
the
eart
hly
psy
cholo
giu
lm
oro
ns
(hig
hlQ
or
not}
_.as
ifan
ythi
ngco
uld
cons
titut
ea
gre
ater
thre
atto
thei
row
nsu
rviv
alth
anth
em
isuse
orth
eli
tesu
stai
nin
gsu
bst
ance
jt-se
lf'? Bas
ical
ly,
itw
asan
appea
lto
the
hig
her
con
scio
usn
ess
inm
anto
wak
eu
pan
dta
k.e
stock
of
the
pte
vai
lin
gcondit
ioIl
5b
efo
re
they
det
erio
rate
any
furt
her
and
lead
toth
e
ult
imat
eh
olo
cau
sLIn
crea
sed
un
der
stA
n.
din
go
fm
an',
mak
e.u
psp
ark
sta
ten
tp
ate
n.
tialH
ies
wh
ich
inlU
tll
lift
the
ind
ivid
ual
and
thro
ug
hh
imh
isen
vir
on
men
tan
dev
en.
tual
lyth
ew
ho
lep
lan
etup
toa
hig
her
exis
t-
ence
lev
elan
db
;J.c
kin
toth
e(o
ldof
thf
pla
neta
ryfa
mil
yof
the
sola
rsy
stem
from
wh
ence
he
has
ori
gin
ally
rall
en.
orcours
e,
here
we
cla
shhead
on
wit
hth
ew
hole
weig
ht
of
off
icia
lpro
nounce-
men
\.an
dro
cien
tifi
cfi
nd
ing
sw
nie
har
eal
l
too
expli
cit
inth
eir
insi
sbnce
that
condi-
tio
ns
on
the
nei
gh
bo
uri
ng
p18ne~
are
any
.
thin
gb
ut
cap
able
of
sust
ain
ing
Hfe
Inan
y
shap
eor
rorm
.C
uri
ousl
y,
ho
wev
er,
the
US
finds
itnecess
axy
tobep
stri
ctse
cre
cy
over
all
data
concern
ing
space
rese
arc
h,
space
flig
hts
and
UF
Os
toth
eex
ten
tth
at
they
clas
sifi
edev
ery
thin
g,
incl
ud
ing
clas
sj.
fica
lio
ng
uid
es.
Ever
since
John
Gle
nn's
and
Sco
ttC
ar-
pen
Lct
'sco
mm
en
to
nth
efi
ren
yerf
ed
of
par
ticl
esin
ou
ter
spac
ew
hif
;hV
t!ri
fled
com
-
ple
tely
Ad
3.m
ski's
earl
ier
stat
emen
tso
nth
ls
phen
om
enon,
astr
onau
tshav
ebee
ncl
ose
lyg
uar
de-
do
nth
eir
retu
rn('
rom
spac
e.an
d
the
push
butt
on
eon
tro
lin
Ho
ust
on
has
ef-
fect
ivel
yp
rev
ente
dan
yte
ll-t
ale
pic
wre
,
sou
nd
orc
oll
ver
sati
on
toap
pea
ro
rb
eh
eard
on
the
TV
scre
ens'
orth
ew
orl
d-
Nev
erth
elll
SS
,so
me
secr
ets
are
inad
ver
-
ten
tly
rev
eale
dan
d,o
ccasi
on
al
"leak
s"fr
om
scie
nti
nc
sou
rces
connec
ted
wit
hth
e
space
pro
gra
mL
ell
avery
dif
fere
nt
story
fro
mth
e"f
ind
ing
s"re
leas
edro
rp
ub
lic
con
.
~unlp
tion,
Infa
ct,
tb~
yco
nli
nn
the
Adam
-
ski
c1ai
m5.
Ind
Wid
ual
sn
ot
easi
lym
isle
dw
ill
see
Geo
~e
Ad
amsk
ifo
rw
hat
he
real
lyw
as:.
i1m
anof
rare
coura
ge
and
love
for
man
kin
dw
ho
"stu
cko
ut
bis
nec
k'
•..
not.
un
lik
eth
e
tRil
bla
ur&
ber
o~
him
-an
d,
pre
dic
tably
,h
esh
ared
thei
rlo
t..
On
eday
,w
hen
this
mad
,m
adw
orl
dw
ill
hav
eco
me
toit
'sse
n-
ses,
itw
Hl
reco
gn
ize
the
!rue
Sp
ace
Ag
e
Pio
nee
r.
till
iC
iuH
nsk
i.!G
AP
lXIo
WO
rf(\
!t'.
ST
H.
BL
AC
KB
UR
N.
Vic
.
----
----
~~--
----
--N
eed
less
tosa
y.
thil
tlh
i!N
atio
nR
evie
w
cut
ou
tq
uh
eCI
bit
of
this
m~
age
wh
en
thev
publis
hed
itin
their
Vol.
5no
29,
Ma
y2
-8,
19
75
.u
nd
er
the
title
"Pio
oe
er
or
Ch
llrl
ilta
n?
••H
e.
LETT
ERTO
AFR
IEND
Sam
\,l~
1T
ay
lor
Co
leri
dg
e.
Ihe
En
gli
sl1
p0
-
et,
cri
tic
~"d
phil
OS
Opher,
.•••
•as
bor-
"O
c.
tob
e.
21.
1772.
at'Q
uery
5,.
Mary
in
Dev
on
shir
e.
the
ren
lh.:
Jnd
youn'J
llS
lch
ild
01
IIcle
rgy
man
and
schoolm
ast
ef.
HII
was
pre
cocio
us
b!l
't'o
nd
com
pare
,to
~ay
the
fe<
l:;~
.At
ll1
eag
eo
ftl
'lrt
!!!
h~
cO
\,jl
dre
ad
i1
ch
ap
ter
inth
eB
ibl!
!,an
dh
isin
«!l
"l!S
1in
rea
din
gne
ver
~u
bsid
rd.M
uch
of
hi!;c
hao
rllC
ter
ise'lp
lain
ed
in/1
)(.C
E'1
'Pts
fro
ma
Jeu
lIr
toA
frie
nd
.
On
Octo
oo
rH
I.1
79
7,
Co
l!lr
idg
l'l
••.•
•.•
ote
~
."M
yra
ther
(wh
olu
ldso
litt
leor
par
en-
tal
ambi
tion
inh
im,
that
he
had
des
tin
ed
hiS
chil
dre
nto
be
bla
cksm
ith
s,et
c••
and
had
act:
om
pli
shed
his
inte
nti
on
but
for
my
moth
er's
pri
de
and
spir
itor
aggra
ndiz
ing
her
fam
ily
)-
my
fath
erh
ad.
ho
wev
el,
reo
solv
ed
that
[sh
ould
be
apars
on.
Ire
ad
ever
ybook
that
cam
~in
my
way
wit
hou~
dis
tincti
on.
and
my
(ath
er
wa~
fond
of
me,
.an
dw
ed
tota
ke
me
on
his
kn
ee
an
dh
old
long
conver
saU
ons
wit
hm
e.J
rem
ember
that
atei
gh
ty
ears
old
Iw
alk
edw
ith
him
one
win
ter
even
lng
from
ara
rmer
'sho
use,
am
ile
from
Ott
ery,
and
he
told
me
the
nam
es
of
the
stars
and
how
Jupit
er
was
ath
ousa
nd
tim
esla
rger
than
our
worl
d,
and
that
tht
oth
er
twln
k.l
ingst
alS
were
sum
;th
at
had
worl
ds
roU
ing
arnund
them
;an
dw
hen
Ica
me
ho
me
he
sho
wed
me
ho
wll
ley
roll
ed
round.
Ihea
rdhim
wit
lta
pro
found
del
ight
and
adm
irat
ion,
but
wit
hout
the
leas
tm
ix-
ture
of
wonder
or
incr
eduli
ty.
for
from
my
earl
yre
adin
~or
fair
yta
les
and
gen
ii,
etc
.,m
ym
ind
had
bee
nh
abit
uat
edto
the
vas
t,
and
Ine
Ver
reg
ard
edm
y~
nse
sjn
any
way
asth
~cr
iter
iaor
my
bel
ief.
Ire
gula
ted
aII
my
cre
ed
sby
my
co
ne~
pti
om
i,not
by
my
sight,
even
atth
at.
age"
.•.
Rea
dby
Cb
rts'
lop
•••.
Clo
uo
n,
Joh
••fl
'ln
lcly
••••W
illi
llm
Sty
les.
.
Av
eil
isIV
ing
ov
ero
ur
eye'
S.
ifw
elilt
ours
elv
es
be
pu
rsu
aded
that
scie
nti
sts
are
som
eth
ing
spec
ial
wh
en
the
tatk
is
.tb
oll
tb
rain
s.A
nth
ony
Sta
PdenfH
C
1<f
81
82
l'~
IIII
the
Ear
th,
wh
ow
en:
CIlH
l1il:
nlnt
~or
~Q
III
,Iw
ak!
'(0
gi\'\
.:,th
('1
)1;In
l'll
'mal
!\ll
l"•.
••
tion
(of
~oul}
lly
lmlr
t}'T
du
m,
lhro
ug
hw
hic
hhI'
IlH
llil
'dtb
emco
lh:c
lil'e1
y1
.\L
uIh
e
W<
Jrld
orhi
gil~
rIc
\'cf
ill
the
uni
llt'r
seto
wbid
lhe
hcl
ongs.
That
isto
!'.;lY
,th
epla
net
Ear
thlh
at
was
once
on
the
vC1l
'geot
exl1
ncl
ion
att~
ra
ca.
t."l.S
trop
hchad
bee
nfo
rsakll
nso
me
two
thousa
.nd
yea
rsag
osi
nce
itw
asex
tended
ahe
lpin
gha
nd1
0re
build
itsel
rth
roug
hw
is.
dom
of
the
univ
erse
,bei
ng
I!x
pcc
ted
todes
troy
itse
lfby
war
and
mas
sacr
e••
•C
hri
stsa
id,
"00
YO
llS
Uppose
lca
me
toes
tab
lish
plr.
lce
on
Ear
th?
No
,in
dee
d,
I
hav
ecO
me
tobtl
ng
div
isio
n"
(Lu
ke
12
:51
)
Arb
itra
ryth
eolo
gia
ns
took
his
\Vor
c!s
ingood
par
t.to
dec
eiv
l!publi
cfe
elin
g,
sayin
g
that
this
mea
nt
his
teac
hln
!!,
Then
,w
hat
On
eart
bdO
llS
his
test
imony
mea
nw
hic
his
more
concr
etel
ydes
crib
edin
the
gosp
elof
Tho
mas
thnt
hald
tnlc
llS
apri
mar
yC
ltri
~t-
TRAV
ELLI
NGIN
SPAC
EW
cdo
know
that
man
isal
way
sse
ekin
g
n~
wau
tll!
'ts,
n~w
auven
ture
,et
c.•
and
lad
llY
he'
sev
ense
ltin
gh
imse
lfbey
ond
lhe
sauce
r
By
G~
alg
oA
dar
mlo
:.i.
We
do
know
that
man
isal
way
ssc
el~
ing
new
out1
~ts,
new
l'ldv
~nt
\lro
,cL
e.,
llnd
too
ayh(
"s(,
\I~
nse
ltin
ghi
mse
lfb
l.'y
on
dth
e-sa
ucer
qUI.'
~U()
nso
Lllil
the
Lhln
k!'.
hew
ill
!le
~rl
Lvc
l.
line
lip;t
t'e
~n
dv
isit
inc
oth
l1r
pli
lnet
s,T
odo
that
we
have
tofin
da
met
hod
ogoper
atio
n.
We
do
kn
ow
Lh
alo
ur
oil
isg
oin
gL
oru
n
out.
W{,
:"ll
bavc
tori:
Vl1
rtto
~mQ
Ulin
g,T
her
e's
one
thin
gw
ehnve
to1!
':lT
nbe-
rol't
:w
el.'
:Inm
ake
asU
<:t
es~
rlll
lfIl
ghL
Loan
ypla
net
even
oll
t~id
cour
ow
nsy
stem
,an
elth
atis
we
hay!
!to
give
upae
rudy
na,
mic
liof
lhe
prc
stnl
day
and
golo
aM
Wli
neal
log!!
thl!
r.In
aero
dy
nll
mit
'll
we
work
on
strc
s6e~
,!.
hat
son
of
thin
g,an
dw
eha
veL
ob
uIl
do
ur
5h
i~ac
cord
ing
ly.
Yrl
lnN
lItu
re,
asfa
ras
Ear
this
eonc
errH
!d,
ther
eis
no
such
thin
~.
Tht'
p~
opll
!w
ho
oper
ate
thes
l.sp
ace
ship
~(a
nd
wll<
'tllC
'Tp
eop
leb
elie
v<
:il
.Ir
lIot
,
ian
dlX
'1Im
ellt
"nd
Wll
Sl:lt~
'rf{
'~('tE
'dto
put
Illto
UU
.'CII
IIIH
1?:
"Yo
ud
on
ot
kno
w111••1
Ih
;]v~
(;om
ll19
s~t
d;v
i5.;O
11,
lirt
.!an
dw
arto
Ill(,
'l!
<Jr
th".
(Tt.
QIT
I;'~
1fi
l
Yo
ufi
nd
hcr
en
e)im
aga
orw
C'lIk
-lo
tlk
illg
Chri
st,
a1.
11m
bor
God,
who
tau
gh
t[a
ve,
thc
kin
gd
om
or
Go
d,
and
its
riC
hlc
uu
sncs
s.
.H
l'tC
on
Ea
rth
you
find
na
thi
rtgb
ut
clio
vis
ion
,w
ar,
des
lru
ctio
nm
idad
dlU
on
aUy
publi
cn
uis
llZ
lce,
ernr
ironn
wnL
.,1p
oll
llti
Oll
,
un
usu
alm
eLeo
rolo
gic
alch
lln
ge
and
lack
of
reso
urc
esan
dro
od..•
l-lo
wlo
ng
,in
dee
d,
wil
lth
isp
lan
etE
arth
~u
rviv
e?A
rew
ed
esl
.in
edto
exte
rmin
ate
ou
r.;e
lves
arte
ral
l'?
What
.on
~ar
thdoes
itm
ean
that
spac
e-sh
ips
or
the
"div
ine
vC
hic
les"
hav
epre
-sen
.U
JdL
hem
sclv
esag
ain,
thro
win
g3
glor
ious
lig
ht
IIpon
lhis
mis
prn
blc
Ear
thth
a.t
seem
s
tobe
bea
din
gro
ra
coll
apse
?.•
,
YU
SU
KE
:J.
MA
TS
UM
UIl
A(C
oll
tl1
d)
BV
GeO
lgB
Ada
rmki
.
they
AR
Epeo
ple
lik.e
ours
elves
,an
dso
me
of
thes
ed
ay~
we
are
all
goil
lgto
see
them
)-
hav
eas
ked
them
selv
esat
<m
eti
me,
aq
ues
tio
nth
;aL
we
sho
uld
!15
ko
urs
elv
es.
Yo
u
see,
the
Ear
this
revo
lvin
g,st
eadil
y,
at]
8.5
mil
es[l
er
.sec
on
d.
Yet
Wi!
do
n't
even
real
ize
we
are
mov
ing.
Not
only
i$it
mO
l/in
gin
thi$
orb
it,
iLis
Dl~
om
ovin
gon
412
4I:O
tIT1J
a.•.•i.'
Iup
to36
5d
aY5
,II
nuin
the
ml!
allt
lmc
ther
eis
aw
obble
phns
e.It
'soper
atin
gth
enin
thre
est
ag1!
s.Y
etw
ekn
owno
thin
gub
out
it,
and
we'
reli
vln
gri
ght
on
it.
III
oth
er
wo
rds,
we
arc
real
lyri
din
ga
sJl:
lce
ship
_...
at
18.
5m
Ucs
per
sccc
nd.
-am
)don't
even
thin
ka
l>o
ut
IL"W
HA
TM
AK
ES
Till
:;R
A1l
1'U
MO
VE
!"
The
yha
ve,n
.~ke
dU~c
m'
Sll
lvll
sth
uLqu
esti
on!
No
jt't
engi
ne,
nsw
eca
llit,
No
wiL
l~au
il..
Wha
tm
akes
itm
ove'
?T
h~
yst
arte
din
vC
$U
ga~
ing.
Moybe
W~
clln
build
som
dbin
g.-
whp
tw
em
ighL
ellH
as:
lt.e
llit
e-
Lhat
wH
l0
P!!
nll
ein
Ule
'sam
ew
ay,
only
man
mnde.
,\n
dth
eyhal
'esu
c-
ceed
edIn
lhal
.,S
oth
ere'
sre
ally
nO
myst
ery
invo
lved
.A
bouL
thos
etu
rns
they
m:\k
c.th
(l
£Urt
hm
akes
cert
ain
turn
slO
I>.
We
don'L
know
ath
lilg
abuut
It.
Wil
y?It
the
I::n
rUt
WC
l!i
to!i
lop
tUrt
l;ll
~tlL
is",
cry
n'tO
tlh
'nL
.!
(jou!
)ljf
any
om:
Clf
us
wQ
uld
know
wh
D.l
llil
pp
cned
.b
ecau
seU
le.a
Ir,
wh
:lL
we
call
the
atm
osp
her
e,w
ould
be
gone.
JU3t
that
fast
...
and
''re'
dd.e
ftom
l•.•e
kof
air.
And
ifIt
conli
nut'd
tosl
ayst
andin
gst
ill,
thcm
its
ener
gy
wit
hin
the!
Ear
thit
self
,w
ou
ldex
ert
ilse
ltan
dst
art
bre
akin
gth
eF.
:lrth
up.
Itis
just
lik
ea
pil
ot,
he
gOes
up
SOhi
gt.
wit
hout
npre
ssuri
zed
ship
,an
din
lighte
rai
rhe
ha:
>n't
lhe
support
for
his
body
from
the
ou
tsid
ean
ym
ore
,li
nd
he
beg
ins
toex
pan
d.
ltis
t!le
sam
eid
u.
So
what
they
hav
ere
ally
turn
edis
this
.T
lu:~
yU
lmze
th~
!Icm
~net
icfo
rces
,-
we
tall
itm
agnet
icro
rce.
Inea
r-li
erday
sW
eca
lled
itst
atic
elec
tric
ity,
Itpro
duce
sour
lightn
ing.
We
mU
stad
mit
tl~lII
twh
enth
erc'
sli
gh
t-
nin
gfl
ashin
gfo
rtw
oor
thre
ehours
stea
di.
ly,
like
itdoes
til
C3li
forn
iaso
ml'!
times
,'v
cry
rem
ad:a
bly
,aU
of
our
pow
erpla
nts
ho
ok
ed1
.og
eLh
erco
uld
on
lyp
rud
uce
on
e
n~h
nk
eth
at.,
lln
dlh
atw
ould
be
Ol(
!en
dof
thei
rpow
er,
'Yet
itgoes
on
inth
esk
yfo
r
hours
.1
'ner
e's
ple
nty
of
itth
ere,
They
tea.
Jize
that
.T
hey
hav
ehooked
onto
Lhal
pow
.
er.
So
they
hav
epow
erwh
ereC
!'Vl.'r
they
wan
tto
gao
The
yha
veex
ces.
spo
wer
atlh
ispoin
t.T
hey
only
use
abou
tte
nper
cent
tor
pro
.pu
lsio
n.N
inet
yper
cenL
tl:c
ym
ust
dis
si.
pal
e.W
hat
do
they
do?
The
ydis
sipat
eil
r~.)
mti
'esk
inof
the
ship
,th
e.s
urf
ace.
All
par
licl
e~In
!Ipae
ear
eneg
ativ
eto
spac
e.S
pil
(~eb
posi
live.
SO
:lll
par
!id
esth
<lt
wou
ldh
itth
eb
ed
yo
fth
atsl
'ipa
rere
pel
led
byth
ene
g;).L
ivera
dil
lli(
tnfro
mth
esk
in
0f
the
ship
.T
hef
l"!'
;a
nl'g
oati
vere
puls
ion
goin
go
n
U:e
re,
soth
esr
.ip
nev
erto
u<
:hes
anyth
ing,
even
am
cteQ
riL
e.W
hitt
Lhey
hav
eac
tual
lypro
duce
dth
roug
hth
isdis
sipat
ion
of
the
cxc~
spow
er,
isan
~tm
osp
her
ear
ound
them
selv
es,
thei
row
ngra
vit
atio
nal
Ci~
ld-
ina
wav
elen
gth
syst
em.
Iryou
dro
p{l
peb
ble
Ina
stil
lpool
of
wat
er,
you
SeC
!wal
let
afto
rw
ave
goin
gou
1.If
YOIJ
c~n
mca
surt
!it
L'O
rrect
ly,
you
wil
lli
nd
th.~
ship
i~pr
essu
rize
dac
CO
rdin
gto
our
law
,at
1.1
.7in
.<;ld
l!,:m
dth
atfi
rst
Wl!
lIe
.r:
ldia
ling
from
the
!ikin
of
the
ship
isill
so14.7
.W
hen
we
1iL'
t!tr
ails
of
thes
el;
hip
.~.a
nd
som
\!tim
f'~"[
>:Irk
sn
yin
~b
ehil
ld,
it.i!i
lIuL
\
com
ing
from
the
ship
.M
aybe
~h;]
lrad
iati
on
ill
cxl.
end
inJ:
SO
milL
'S,
10
0,
ex200,
milL
'S3W
:l.Y
(rom
Ull
!tl
ody
orth
elI
11II
I,:l
Ild
it's
'out
ther
e,w
tH!n
tth
ofr
inl:
eof
iti~
Uw
tIt
CO
mes
inco
ntn
ctw
ithLh
efr
illg
eor
spac
e'
1ts4
!1fl
that
W~
see
~he
reac
tio
tl.
So
till.'
ship
i.'lri
din
gco
ol.
RIg
hton
thro
ugh.
They
don't
even
:noti~
when
they
mak
ell.
&.u
rn.I
use
this
illu
stra
tion
asan
ex.
pl:
linat
lDI1
on
thal
.Y
ou
take
aneg
g.
Ever
y.
body
know
sab
out
aneg
g.
The
yolk
of
.an
egg
Isth
eso
lid
'P&
rLtr
yo
uk
no
wlh
ew
hit
eof
aneg
g,it
isju
stli
ke
air
would
be
around
the
~rt
h.
The
shel
lof
the
~gg,
the
frin
ge
oC
ll..p
roduce
sa
crus
t.It
we
wer
eto
put
am
anon
the
yolk
,he
issu
bm
erged
on
the
yolk
of
aneg
g,
he
issu
bm
erged
inth
ew
hit
eof
lhe
egg,
ishe
not?
The
fric
tion
and
ever
yth
ing
wouid
be
enth
~ex
trem
epar
tof
tile
l!gg,
whic
his
the
ahel
!'In
side
of
the
egg,
lhc
man
then
,w
ould
n't
know
a.t
hin
gab
ou
tit.
Th
at's
real
lyW
hll
Lth
eyha
vedone,
-w
hic
hth
eE
arth
isdoin
gev
ery
day
. (Th
esh
ap
eo
fth
esa
uce
rs).
You
st'e
,th
eydon't
r,al
lyhav
eto
mak
ea
hnn.
TIl
elr
bal
l-ty
pe
la[H
lin
gg
ears
,as
they
h:l
Ve
l>~
!!n
call
ed,
arc
only
use
das
lall
dinc
:ge
ars
inan
emer
gen
cy.
Th~
'ar
eac
l..u
atly
con
den
.
sers
,fo
rco
nden
sing
stat
kel
ectr
icit
.y.
And.
W~
alre
ady
know
,in
anolh
erw
ay,
that
on
ceyo
ula
.lda
bal
l,a
pD
w~
rh
all,
wit
h
~la
lic
ck'C
lric
:ity
,it
isgoill
gto
open
up.
So
they
U~
con
den
si!t
s.T
hey
can
cut
the
pow
eroff
one
or
the
oth
er.
Whic
hev
erth
ey.c
ut
ocr,
thai
'sth
ew
ayU
lesh
ipis
goin
gto
go.
The
ydo
n't
have
tom
nke
a1u
mlI
Sw
edo,
wit
hour
auto
mobil
eor
our
shil
lS,
but
they
j~l
swin
gth
isw
ayor
that
way
,Im
d
JO,'
')'0
usit
looK
sas
ifth
eym
ake
11
righ
Lf1
ngle
turn
,bu
tth
eydo
n'f..
c..p
tain
Man
tell
got
caught.
lie
would
neve
rba
v&go
~hu
rtha
dil
lssh
ipbe
ana
fusi
lage
type,
aton
ew
itbou
t~
ny
win
gs.
Itw
orl
;$li
ke
two
1l6
r5of
met
alw
ith
/lm
agnet
ther
e.B
ecau
seth
eh
vom
agnet
ichar
sar
ebolh
alik
e,th
~y
ntt
rnc~
)lIst
Iik
t'th
at.
'rJl
l~t's
wha
t.w
ould
have
hap
pen
C'd
.R
uLU
ll!
win
gjo
tci
lught
lind
pu
lled
inby
thi5
pow
erLh
eyW
f!n
~l"
dd
i"li
nlt
.H
'pl'lI
in~
furt
hIn
pro
.
-------------------------
---------_
._
--------
-.'_
.•.".
_--
----
-_.
ll!~
'~L
lu'ir
,:Il
l;!,
.O
nce
the
will
!~[l
ilt
em
lt:h
l
IlwW
llO
lcU
lill
l-l
s!ar
ll'd
hT
t'u
kjl
l~n
p.
BuL
if;1
1.'
h:J
dh<
lll
arm
;il.I~
~,Ii
\({'
i\d
J.:i
\r!;
1l;
lIH
~
~b
ip,
1>
olh
ship
sw
llu
ldh
;).Y
I'1'lJll
ieIO
~i'th
er,
just
tiki'
thr:
two
bar
sdo,
ami
not.
hill
:!w
ould
hav
ehap
pcn
C{l
.rl
'll(~
Yca
n,d
oL
hat
\'~
ryea
llil
y.
The
ydi
dn'L
mei
lnLu
harm
a~yb
ody.
He
Just
did
n'L
kll
OW
and
hI'
gal
into
ocl
ose
.
ILi~
ju~
ta
.~w
hen
w~
u~
cdt.
ohi
tU
ICsu
per
.so
nic
wal
lll
efu
rew
ek
new
hu
wto
pen
e.
trat
etl
lem
.W
ed
idn
'tk
no
wan
yb
ctl.
cr.
We
did
n't,
see
it.
'That
's....-h
ilthap
pcn
oo
t:e~
,
You
see
mag
nr.
:Ls
radia
tefr
om
the
~nd,
tow
ard
Che
cente
r,~
com
eal
lth
ew
ay
aro
un
d.
Iq
ue
stio
nth
is,
when
they
say
that
ou
tE
~rl
hhas
nort
hp
oll
.!an
dso
uth
polc
.I
wonner
ifth
cre'
ssu
cha
thin
g'r
One
wo
uld
~e
neg
aliv
ear
idth
eo
ther
wo
uld
be
po
siti
ve,
wo
uld
n't
if?
Th
atw
ou
ldb
e.t
rue
:Il;
~ar
din
gto
our
mag
net
icla
w.
Yet
we
say
tile
ccntl
'rof
lll(
'E
arth
isposi
tive
-so
bo
Ul
ends
mu:;
~b~
neg
ati"
e,in
stea
dof
one
posj
.li
ve
and
on
l'n(
'g,ll
i••
.e,b
llcm
lsl'
the
fotc
C$
work
Uti
sv
lilY
.A
nd
suppose
it.w
ou
ldhe
pO
.~~
Lb
le.th
ell
on
ew
ou
ldb
ere
pl'li
edb
y~
he
po:;
iliv
cso
oner
,yet
bo
thar
~p
ull
edin
.T
hnl's
only
theo
ry,
of
cou
rse.
,.A
cco
rdin
g1
0th
em
agneU
cla
w,
posi
Uvc
repel
sposi
live
and
nQ
~a~
tve
rell
el~
neg
ailv
e,I1
lld
her
e's
a
posi
tive
com
ing
tow
ard
the
cenw
ran
dth
ece
ntl
:ris
po
siti
ve.
Ito
ou
ldn
'tbe.
Itw
ou
ld
lIe
rep
elle
dth
ere,
bu
tin
sLea
dif
isbe
ing
at.-
trac
ted.
So
['m
wondvri
ng
flO
W,
ifbolh
lllo
~('
ends
are
ncg
aliv
e?T
haL
'sw
her
eour
:'au
llis
,-
Ule
tro
ub
lew
ith
alo
tor
thin
gs,
:,nai
'he.
Ibel
ieve
OU
Tgover
nm
ent
dese
rves
aUU
IC
true
into
l'm
alio
nof
adea
l-cu
lnat
ure
lhat
itill
poss
ible
to~
ive,
bec
aus(
'th
l,!u
ett
er
we
JIe
inro
rmll
rl,
the
i3et
tcr
wi!
are
prep
ared
for
anyt
hing
that
mig
htco
m~.
So
there
rore
ap<
1t1;
onha.
"got
tobe
very
care
ful.
ItC
Alls
rQr
alh
oro
ug
hin
vest
igat
ion.
rrom
all
ClI1
[f':I:
!:i..
1rit
C,1n
gtl
ldo
wn
toth
eb
••~ic
cote
,"I
OU
l\U
~••t
hav
eS
QU
lt'
lugi
cal
ricl
din
whi
ch',h
eth
ing
wll
lex
pla
init
.~cl
t.If
you
can'l
do
hat
,th
enth
e(h
ing
isn
ogo
otJ
.._
Fo
ur
orth
eto
pm
enin
'C
alif
orn
iaon
:L:i
dl'd
mis
sill
'sin
terv
iew
edm
~an
dlI
sl<
eet
tiC
Lh
isq
ll~
sli(
}n
:"I
~(J
wc.
m~
p::
tesl
jjp
~C
o
til
rOll
l.:h
a('
km
rlri
~h
taf
ter
imaL
om
kex
,
plos
itll
l,lU
eIno
t1>
c:lrr
l.'('l
ed.t
,.ll>
aid,
"(lo
wU
n!
I\0
Iin
nw
'!"
"WeB
,'\4
0'1
'k
no
w}'O
IJd
o
kll
uw
.P
I",
(,h,
'on
ly\\
'a~
<lll
I:Jn
wuu
ldkn
oww
ou
ldb
eif
hI:
WII
Sin
(1111.'
or
tho
sesh
ip:"
to
kn
ow
ju!'
.tw
hat
tak
espl
<lc
e.D
oyou
IlIC
:UI
tl1;
lL[
hav
e!.
I\-e
nin
ash
ipm
ill
Ish
ou
ld
kn
ow
'{"
"We
kn
ow
thnt
yo
ukn
ow,"
'l'h
al's
.al
llh
cyl'I
llC
{,W
ell,
then
Ilo
ldth
('m
ju~
tw
haL
the
answ
eris
,.[
llld
lhcy
,;ai
dIt
was
go
od
,
Then
they
asked
me
ifI
would
n't.
be-
com
ea
consu
ltan
tro
rth
eguid
edm
issi
lepro
je-c
t,l
said
,"I
'mno
meth
anic
.I
cou
ldn
'L
const
ruct
anyth
ing."
Wel
l,th
eysa
id,
"Y
flU
don't
nee
dtG
be
am
echan
ic.
We'
ve
go
t
mcn
tha.
tca
ndo
anyth
ing
that
.you
tell
Utc
m.
All
they
wan
ti!>
yo
ur
idea
s,"
Isa
id,
''That
call
sfo
rw
ages,
doesn
'tii
?"
"Yes.
""I
do
n'l
wan
tto
be<
:Off
i{!a
wag
eea
rner
for"
the
gover
nm
ent
bec
ause
ifJ
did
,th
ent
rou
h1
n'L
tal
k<
ISI'
JTl
tnl
kin
gn
ow
.I
kn
ow
that
.I
don't
wan
tto
g~t
tangle
dup
like
thO
ll,
but
I'll
give
any
infu
rnw
Liun
tlm
lL
hegover
nm
~nt
wan
tsfr
e~-
wit
hout
char
ge,
do
it.th
at
w:l
y."
(Lile
onot
her
pla
n~
ts).
No
w,
l('t'
sre
aso
nlli
ong
the>
lin
eor
spec
-tr
um
anal
ysi
s.S
pec
tru
mis
aw
onde
rful
lhin
g,
wonder
ful
and
dan
ger
ous.
You
can
USe
itto
acL
ual
lyk
no
wth
ew
eaknes
:oor
iro
n,
or
of
any
thin
gyo
um
igh
t.w
ant
toau
a.
Iy~
e.'r
haL
'sv
el)'
go
o<
!.ll
ut.
also
,as
tro
no
.
mer
s:l
dm
itth
atsp
ace
isfu
llof
so-c
alle
dde
bri:
;,-
met
eeri
tes,
par
tic
1e'I
0rd
u:i
l,lI
lld
gas
pock
ets
of
aUso
ns.
Then
,w
eca
nsa
yth
er~
ls60
mil
lio
nm
iles
bet
w~
e11
us
and
the
pla
net
Ven
us,
W~
are
goin
gto
regis
ter
all
of
that
deb
ris
befo
rew
~hit
the
targ
l!t.
Sin
e!!
we
don't
know
wh
llt
perc
l?nl
-age
sof
intc
rrer
en~
eL
her
eis
bet
wee
nus
and
Ven
u~
,o
ran
yoth
erbo
dyo
ut
~h
erc,
ho
w:i
rew
egoin
g~
ogeL
aco
rrec
tan
~w
er'l
80
YO
IlsC
't:,
wh
a~th
e)'
find
coul
dh
ov
e
regis
lere
dan
yw
her
ebutW
l!l'll
her
o:m
dV
e.n
us.
No
mat
ter
ho
wm
any
tim
e!>
wetr
yit
we
ha\
'cth
esa
m~
pro
ble
m.
We
wil
ln
ot
know
tile
LruL
hun
tilW
I!ha
ve,
--an
i'I
~h
ink
we
nfl'
wo
rkin
gu
lon
gth
atii
ne,
-'-
wha
trc
all
all
~'le
ctT
Oni
c&
til'k
,L
hat
C".
mgg 8
3
out
rop~
by
fooi
i~to
oute
rS
J)l1
COI
~re
g~
.st
eTe:
lCh
foo
l~
epar
nte
l~.
Wh
~n
~e
hav
eL
h~
~lt
acl
IlC
.rce
I116
1R~
,th
cnW
I.!
t.'II
rrd"
Dflu
cLji
llth
eil
lt~
rrl!
rcncc
llla
tW
~hit
pri
or
loth
e
tara
tl.'l
and
Lh
cnw
eca
n~
no
ww
h~
tis
Ole
--
Lual
lyon
the
pla
net
.O
ur
!nst
rum
enl.
1li
regood
sofa
rl1
Sth
eygo,
but
we
know
tlul
teven
lhe
100
inch
t.clC
SI.'O
pedo
wn
h~
rc(P
1\lo
rnar
)on
lygo
asou
ton
~b
illi
on
li{:
hLyeO
lrs.
and
inII
unil
/~I'
)eth
nth
as
nO
begi
n-nin
got
endin
g,
Oll
ebil
lion
Iigh.
tyea
rsIs
reall
yIlo
thfl.
'lg,
.Le
t',get
dow
nto
aco
mm
on
sens
ebas
is.
Ahu
man
bein
gis
ast
rang
&:!a
nlnU
lt,
He
is.
mad
eup
ofev
ery
ctem
ent
know
non
Ear
th,
nsw
ell
usin
spie
l.'
fOf
hebr
t.>
alhc
sit
.H
ew
ou
ldlh
Cl'1
!!ro
rc,
Bu
lorn
atic
ally
be
apote
n-
tial
for
r(le
lin
~,
orv
ibra
lio
ns,
orC
ruqu
en.
de!
>th
atal
ert
him
tosl
mp
1t!
condit
ioll
s
from
the
low
est
stag
eoC
men
tal
acti
on
toth
ebi~
ltest
stage
or
inte
llig
ence
.T
hat
would
then
call
for
aquIt
est
udy
of
one.
self
,to
be
able
tote
lldeli
niw
ly,
(rom
whal
sourc
ehe
isget
ting
his
info
rmat
ion.
'l'h
eunfo
rtunat
epar
tof
astr
onom
yto
-day
15
that
we
som
etim
esig
nore
peo
ple
wh
oh
al/
en
'th
adm
uch
edu
cati
on
-fx
cltJ
-
drn
gth
emto
tall
yfr
om
any
import
ant
job.
As
anex
ample
,I
once
ques
tione<
lth
ea.
iLro
nom
ers.
"Gen
tlem
en,"
Isa
id,
"th
(l48
inch
tcle
s.co
pe
her
eon
Mt.
Pal
om
aris
end-
eavori
ng
Lo
mak
ean
atla
sor
the
skie
sC
or\.
he
Geo
gru
phic
So
ciet
y,
som
ethin
gtb
athas
nev
ert)
cen
done,
Ithas
bt'en
inoper
a.ti
on
for
quit
eso
me
lim
enow
and
itis
not
get
ting
ver
yfa
ran
dyet
this
isL
lle
fines
tin
stro
men
tev
erm
ade,
Sup
pose
am
anca
me
toyo
uan
dla
idout
am
op,
anal
ias
of
the
sky.
Wel
l,w
ha.t
would
you
say?"
"We'
dsa
yhe
was
agen
ius,
""B
ut.
stH
lyo
u'd
ask
him
wher
ehe
got
his
e<lu
cati
on,
1l0
W
would
n't
you'?
""Y
es,
we
wo
uld
do
that
.""S
upposi
ng
he
told
you
he
could
n't
wri
tehis
ow
nnam
~,
what
wou
ldyou
$ay
then
?""W
ell,
.we
would
be
was
ting
oU
rti
me.
We
",,'o
uld
thro
wth
em
llp
Inth
ow
aste
bas
ket
.".
"'I'
hll
rsW
hil
l1
tho
ug
ht
you
wo
uld
say,
Now
IcL
me
S<Ly
som
ethi
ngw
itho
utin
tend.
Ing
'any
har
nl.
Acc
ord
ing
to't
his
.sta
tem
ent,
you
hav
ead
mit
t.cd
righ
Lh
ere
that
usa
sdcn
ce,
you
at<
:founded
today
on
whal
istr:
rnu
.•dC
"olo
sm\
I~nura
lll'e.
n"W
haL
.10
you
84
..nl
can
by
U1~
L?"
onct
o.f
thM
l1ip
ok~
up.
"IU
l'Lutr
onom
yfo
u.nl
ko.l
un'~
.Ie
l".4
wlli
tc,
..U
lC:a
lu:l
t:'n
l.u
xlj
~!"
"V
cs,
.it'is
.""W
ill)
can
st-m
eto
dL
he
IUlC
Lfn
1.'-'
tooil
\C,
~~
CQ
rdiIl
.lito
hI5
l~ry
?-It
.w
a~!.
he
$h
ccp
hen
leI!
il,
livin
gby
ulg.
htw
ateh
illg
th~
sllC
C'p
,ha
ving
noll
).in
g10
do
.-
Lile
yh
ad
nOedut:
3li
on,
-'th
esc
hu
uli
nc
S)'
st~
mas
we
kn
ow
itt.
o.d
ay,
was
unkn
own
inth
at.
tim
e.'tet
they
obse
l'\"c
dlh
esS
tysa
wel
lLh
nt.L
hey.
mar
ked
uut
til(!
oonst
elln
Lio
~an
dsO
en.
-an
dto
this
day
they
hAve
not
been
prov
enw
rong
,A
sLro
no.
my
isC
oo
.nd
edu
po
nth
at.
Yet
tod
ayw
eg
o1
0ta
rah
ead
of
the
nat
ura
lla
ws
tht.t
we
cond
emn
Bm
onueclL
u!i
i!he
has
m;l
Cor
null
educa
tion
and
say
thll
tit
would
~e
impos.
-si
ble
{or
him
tog
eLso
mel
hin
gIi
kc
this
."A
nd
tlla
t's
about
what
the
sitU
:l.t
ion
isto
-
day
,F
rom
Ini•.•1o
rmal
talk
giv
enby
Geo
rgi
Arb
.m~
k.i
in1
95
5-
edil
lild
~n
dad
llp
ted
1ra
m.
tllp
tlrG
cO
r'
din
;.D
ed
ir;
Th
flR
ou
nrJ
Ieu
er.
'prin
g7
97
4.
Trav
ellin
gCo
mpa
ni~n
s
Aft
erth
eIn
tem
lpti
on
of
the
trav
elli
ng
'
pla
n-
du
rin
gh
isst
ayin
I-:u
ropc
19
63
-
Ad
amsk
iw
ent
dir
ectl
yto
Bdg
ium
fro
m
Den
mar
kan
ddid
not
go
toF
inla
nd
and
Gel
m:m
yOS
had
bee
np
lan
ned
-11~
stay
edin
Antw
erp
toget
her
wil
ha
co-w
ork
er,
on
th~
d.ay
0r
lhe
OIfn
val
thl'y
dine
dout.
acco
mpan
ied
by
nS
wis
sL'
O-w
orke
rw
ho
had
arri
ved
tolo
inth
emto
Ro
me
via
Bas
el.
Du
rin
gd
inn
erA
dam
ski
sud
den
lysa
id:
''Ther
eis
asp
a«m
anat
the
table
o\'!!r
ther
e,I
hav
em
eth
imbe£
ore
.II
His
com
.
pan
ions
got
shock
ed,
itm
ight
be
$O
m~
kin
do
fA
mer
ican
hum
our,
but
wh
atco
uld
they
~o
but
bclh
we
his
word
~'o
rnot.
When
two
day
slu
erth
eyhad
com
eto
na.
'lcl
.th
~h
adlu
nch
ou
LS
udd~
nly
A.
dam
ski
said
aca1
n:
"Look,
ther
eis
the
lip
acem
an."
And
real
ly,
Lht'!
mll.
nfr
om
An
twer
pw
assi
Lti
ng
:l.t
aln
ble
rig
ht
thll
r~In
Ras
el.
Itco
uld
bar
dly
bt
aec
.ini:
id(,
IlC
ll
-A
d:u
mk
im
usl
hav
eb
een
rig
ht
int\
lll.
wer
pan
dsO
inu~•.
••d1
00
,
_._
.__
..•.•
••
_•••...
_.4
."-'
~
•
My discovery will proveAdamski's claim
by Basil va!! den l}erg. .. .1ft Itl s.,.....•. r-Occo •••. t•••.•• __ ••• TI NO SA UCIIl REView printed
M ac.c.u••tof "r •.'iliA •••.•••• , ~ ••••• d•• claim to h•••• cI.d •••.,..cI theAdam.1d h•••.•• Iyphla.•••••• •••••c... ••••• •••MtI..••••lty •• Ice••••.•• •.•••••••••••• TIM author DeW •••• lib Dwn .tary ••••••••• ,.... aft
Interview _MIl 'IIM .., ••••• CeNT•••••••••• Hr. ",lIIlp J. "-man. Oil
AMple L .
THROUGH thf' medium of ¥",nHG titJeD.
av~ Itake this opportunity of5gto a~ man readers as possible t
the world the ~(:l5 of my ~!IP thro the)HUt ten yean, beginning in lOO3. when one oftne most controveut;l t boob e'W!r' 00 the subiectof UFOs was publisb«t. I reW: to FlyingSaucer" Have lAnded, by Oem-oM Leslie andGeorge ~damskj, 01. Ammca ..
Many boob have' been written regardingUFOs or • .Hying .aaucers: but I can, Ihrough myown &ndi~ m utrnmt sblCerity. say that Ihem05t important 01 an books to be writtm Methose by Mr. Georg~ Adamski" I say this ~awehe has. in all ~ncen1y and ~.' and withgreat cOuragt.', tried to convey to tM world the:'Iiimple straightforwotrd truth about thew phe-nomena,
I U5t! the w(~rds ~ln<;:-erity and honesty guitt"openly a~ regards Mr. AdamskJ~ slnoP I now hav("tndi5~table proof for the scientist and laymanalike- thnt ('.N)rge Adarnski'~ claims are B.uthentilbeyond reproach.
CllftlaJ ~
I am not ;II fk"Tson who helieves in everytllluiolthl£t I read without first wl'i~hhlg the prl.l~all~Scons very carefuUy, and t"'en then I resen'(' m .•.llld~ment. Ih;,4v~ Je:lrncJ through ('Xo[\('rtf'n('(' t II.dit h unwis~ tu judA'elI'lY fdlnw lx'in~s without rlwI1e"(."t:s~~"ry f'vidt'tK"t" to )lIstlfy ttml j'.l.llgmt'I"T"f:refort~, 1 dill not iud~e Mr. Adarnski off .hah.l•.~s so m.lUY h.ul .1olu. wlu'fl 1 tirst n',HJ flis hll'~rllJiU~ S11I40!n Han' umrlrd. _".nee 1 h;ld Ud1hl'rf"\..itJem ..""C' nOT pronf lhal 11<"WilS a fal(', or thnt 111'
''''.l...; ~('lll~ilLt',
Prior to my readJ d$ 1m book, my interest inlyiDg sauoers wal nil; since I had ne-vef heard.•.•. ftlUd. oJ them before. I wn.s thetefo~ in nopo:tlt'on to t~e sides either for or aglii~. Whatdid aMuse my int~ was the aDluinK !!:imilaritybetween Mr. Adarnski'll photograph "f a scout •.!hlp pn bHshed 'in his boOl:: and " strQJ1gl! objectth"t had trailed my bomber fur three hoUrs dLlringlhe last war. This incident we re~ to JntflU.gence on orriva r at base. arid :'Iubsequent)ylct.U'ned that 5:ightings of these stran~ pbeno-rnffia had been reported before. but no explana-tion of what they were could he given.
On coming to the (.'Oncl usjon that there mOlY besome eonnttCtian betwef"n A.damski's story and mywar-time sightin~ I took • keen Interest in thephotograph of the symbol iC' rtW'!i:l>age drnpped toGeorge Adamski by Venushms frum just such a
craft.My np;uiun wa..,. that if then' was any truth ill
his book and tlle~ \'Va.' n connection with my OW"T'4sighting, lhf'1l the symbols wourd gh'p the anSWeT.one way Of' t}t{' IlthM'. •
From tht'n nU I workt'(1 fur many months on
th(' symlK~ls. tryiu~ hy t'n"ry pmijhJe means to{,OIUll"d tilt "In in ~ume' w"'Y Wtth ;l tol.n~ihl•• solu-Hun. I Mall", su<.'t.'t"t"(lt"d in (lix,,(lvering Illt' riRht., dmnnt'l" f"rnu~h whip'. ltn' wmhl~ls (1)uld bei'lh'lpr~'h"d. I[('r," J wa~ 011 ""- t;naru as to",twlluor tl.i"i \",I~ .1 d(>\"("r hCNlX l~"flX.>tr.Jted byMr, .'\<.1am,ki. or rt'"lI" :'iyrnh(tl~ ~,n~nttl him byhl'ill~s £n)lll ;umlll("r pl,tllf't.
This ~il\ I' nw mUTe n'.L"lIll I" djsC'CI".'r dIe' tTuth .••iltl.t' I rC'.~1i\t,d Ilmt , .•tll1't th~ "ymhuls Muld
iw 1JIt' b.L••i•.•fUT snnw uf thr ~rl,".tl"st adVi.HlcP.
'flt"llh Il~~ !1'H(."l. in lht' wllr~rIJr it (,'t1I1M IlL,'.~n
;~w~,••tf.' Hf tim(". I th(~n.wroh' to ~tr. A41anl"i~i,••ud,bked fm ,,:Ie~ir prillts of tJi(: symhol'\;, :"l.nl'~' t~w
n.prwllldlon in tin: book h;u.1 lll'lt most tJ dwdH.ri~'~U1d d(.ta,jl. On r«'dpl or these prfnt..; (S('ttlc:tJ uU\'Vn to thl" ardlll)lt!lo taslc: or J.:lellnLn~ thi.'inrtJnnation from diem to tlu~ best af my ahi)jty-llrtlf' rcaUsjng tne tremendous task that la)'allt.'ad. A'S the yeilTS passed hy, more and marl"infonn.~tion was rcvcaJed-in£ormalion that nntx'in~ on earth (.'(luld eVei' ha\'e dreamed up touse .lS l' hoax, f{')t they reveal the f;tllt;.~tic truthof these (.'Tait in df'tail. They reveal tlu! methnd ofpropulsion, a'S well as lwo powerful magneticmoton .• md d~taj[ed plans uf the interior and C:-i~
tcri()r o( these craft, giving botfl the large mother-ship am~ tl~ smaller scout-craft C'ommunlyknown as II}.jj~gsaucers.
SincE' t~ rnotou atone have nut vet bc-£'u in.vcn~ed,ono this earth. att<1 since tht>y have hem$(l]o.'pd through the symhQUc mC!lN~J:((", the bigqllcst~(lH is: •• Where does the mes.s.nge C(Jme
f" 111l?" 01.1\'1\ 'Il~k lIut hom at,\."p1l(' IHI t lli •..400lf th--~lIilr ;[ ('hit~ll';LrI' ~l"l'-.-sn 11/1 Illal h.r Ilow ltll[ .••..{•.••
'ii\€.' fill' Si,'i.'lLti.,h may try hi h,', tt.('y l',lllHnt d"f1Ytlli~. ntaL im' IIHSIt..':!dih~ It.l(' lHlhlit:. \
SiUl1' th{.s(' r,lIdin~s h~l\'l' hU1'ue pr.u:tica' ~)Toofof Mr. Ad~.un~ki\~t"nllill{'H('~S illl(l of ,o,;puce t:mftfrom pb:.t'h ntll('r than nUf'i., it is my iuteutinll,
i.\'()n~ with \tr, AtL.~mski. to ~i\"e to the p~nple of
the world that \,,'hid~ is ri~htL)' th~irs:. '
It, j .•••l~n'~••h. tun h,tt' for <lilY inkrfcrt'nf.'e fn,many SOIIr<.'(' ••.\.l ••lt(•••.t"1'. wlJ(,tht~r jt he at Guvern-ment h.•t.••!aT rtnt. Thi..; jntt~rr(>t~UC~ Wll~ fote~}'cars tl1-tn a71d l 'flU5~ l1U:'lIt1}' pbns II~\""(' iTI the PD.sthft-n snit iuto ol'('r,.tifHl nnd {,~lITit>d O'it in utmo:o;t.1it"'Crt.cy thruuJ.thout the wnrld to ~ulmttr dU\'mo •••~ ~t"l'~in~ tu pre\"~nt tht:!"t' wurls n+aehill~Inank.hHl
Wlll"U die wodd ha~ this rmof. which i$ Jlnt faroff n~>w, Mr. Ad:ttn~ki wi1 UUl't' and ft)r all he\"i nd.(.,:.J ted.
Oh the ml ,min~ of April 29, 1962, anotherJ lIl'~~.[i (.:untnct with :Ji bei •.•.g from :mothfT planethit the flfOiul1int"S in a Jead(n~ Afrikaans Sunq,aynew.;paper-Stef1l, In lhj~ instance the. C'OntacteeW~"ii a Mr, BasH van den Kerg. of Johannl"SbuT~,I ha ..•..e alwllY~ heen inclined to beU~v~ CeorgeAdamski, :md tlS ~hLS lategt contact W.1S °majnlf.ba~ed on the controvers.i ••l Ad~ms~j " symho15, '] wns mnst ~ren In ml;-'f't Mr. "'an den Be~ per.sonaUy. W.,. starWd (:orrespondL.tg and I W.uimpr('s~('lJ hy hi!li humility, sinc:~rity and f<lrth-rj~httlt':\.s, ,1\t lJ'ngth a mutually cm~vt'niMlt fim<-und dllt~ for our first Ineet;n1-t wa!! agrc('{) UPDU,
It jc; clHfkLllt to (h'~crihe m... ft'('liuJ;t!t :.lndth(H'l-tht.. as l walked down ElolJ Str(,E"t.J Df1anll("S-
hurj.!. tnward., 01 IT tt'wlf"z .•..nus. on th~'mornin~ ofThur>iday, AIl~lI'1it 2, 1962, As I •.•ppr<lad~'d il (:cr-t;li., <':oTlwr I ullti.cc"{i a taU man. erect, wHh killdly~'Y('!-, sun.t'yir~~ the lla~sjng pllTude of stmpp4.'rs,If \\Wi Ra..'iil \..m drH At'rlot. I ~hoo'k hantl.~ withtlu~ liMn wh •••.t. l'ontact dnry had c,tlls('rJ SH('l1 II
'WIH.ltion in ~outh ,.•..fric'" unu who d<Jim'l: to holdthe rn••,~ic:.'fnrmu\a that would ultimah'ly pavenur w~\' tIl the' :lit;~r:s.
'Ve :;"nlln lound a cOl1venif'ut tea room ~nd iatdown jn;t 'luil" ~(ll)t.In my bri('r-ca~f' was a (.'opyof thr J;ulH,u~'.F(,lm][lry .''LYlNG ,;"'Ltu:n RRVIl!:W~
whi(,h cll'seriht"~ Prctff'So,;(Jf M,1rc.:l,1 nmn(>fs,un,IJI,ltl~ d i"em'~ry in northern Stalil oi l'H)uhlt"TS,dtl. f'1 1,!,H;1 \ r,d ~Y1n.Jnt ..•whlc.-h l)("ar il ~ttn ..i1l~ re-~('mh~:UJ(:('to IIII1Sf'of Ad;unski. I nlltk~,d 1hat my
I r[t'wl hilc1 ~Irnlldlt:lhllJgin~ fu\dl'T and ~l stnln$'tC'~;tdJ;d whic 11!H: h:llld('d til inC' for in"pt>ctjePlI. ItW,I' IMrt ni "Itl.}tor ~l{. kul iIlH'oh.'tl ~rnm th~ dt-
eodt'd Adams~i symbols. amI of which a pllntoIilppt'a.red in the SCptt"ml)('T.Octobcr n~vn:w, It5~~d to he made of stl"'et and I rt'mar~NIo1buut jb wright and the fQct that .it 5~t>lnt.'d h> he"ali\'f"," HE" !irnikod as he said 'Tm R;larl you f1otic.,'("that it j~ ulive. Look, hme Me tht' ma~rt~li!"
TlHo'U hc.o ° described its importanc..-e in ~r~at l]t>-
tail ;]nd u[')("fWd hi~ flIes whid~ tcostifu:d to tll('pnonnous Omn\lllt ()f wmk olwiHllslv irnoll!o.-I .•d in
jt~ <:rmsrructiOI\. T!I('re w4'::le iitt'raHy hll11dr'rds ()llrianl(lIlar-like (ITawing:.; th:lt SI'('m{"c1 tn ~t iuh,
•• rni\~tt'1' I~ln{'lr:int. I 1\odo
d('(l m~' l,(';Lcl wiS('lr ~.ul~)ftell, as If takml( It ~dlUl. hilt ,It ,h~''lUll(' tlllll'
~)iticd him, as tll{' st:it'ntific. jaq:,\ III ''''a'Sbl ~ill~ fin
llU{'Ompn'J.ending rars., ., n~lsil." I th('lI~tll. ..~'L1lj
werr 1H'\'{'r "'.Iit"r m \,l~urHf{•. ]t drl('~n•.t m('~lll ~lthill:.!, to Ill('!'. .
Jle mwit ha\'c c:ulJ.!ht Oil :IS hr ~UtMi'-'lItv aS~I'd :" 'Suw wi L;lf lliL'~ t' ~tm gnt III t b,tt II 1al-ta'f, ilH' \ I II r~~id \IC>U w<'n' Sl) k('~.11h) ,till\\' 1Ill'?'
l \\:mu I.'n.d wilat 1~;.• 1'I':Lt:liHn w"ulc~ ~)(' ,l' IturtiNI til l)rllf('~sor tlnmct\. mn~!rati~1I1 .,f till"Bnt:l.iUiUI hil'rul!l~'Plti{''i. 1[•. \("t'nlnJ ~tUlIIU'd F,,¥ .t
mnnlcltt .U\J tllt'l1 t.'~~'I~irni'll: ., T1d~IS i\lll:L/IH'C?; ~
It is uhs.olnf('lr falltt~til' ~ TIl(' dl'~\lVill!'l j,lio ul'~i'dcdown. hut imt lnok .ll ,II()S~. ,;}'mb()l~! . He tllt'n °
rrmJul't'd two I'>rints: nf :\d;un!iki's s'"mhok ilndl\otlCi.d what a "'ast imllfOn'mf"ut tl Lt'y Wt'ft' un
the nnc nV[Jf':lrin~ in #r'l!,itl~ Sauo'r,'t: Han.:Lam/ffd. I k dlC.'1I l'omp,lu'd Ad~undr ••with Pro.feS"i(lr ~Imnt.fs ,ul~l 1':lCitt'tt1\' dr('w lm: ,lUl'lltiouto llunwl'nUS pnints uf Ilppiu"('nt :simil.~rlf~',
Ollr h":l Wi'S t.'f~l,' h, lin\\', hut th:~l dIdn'tU1;,th-r, .. r.h,;\.'U,' ~i\(' !nt' tl.i" 111.!;.tU/,illo' lor rm(lwr
. uatioll~tl Hl;.WSP;1Pl'I' 1M.};.01,;1.]; llL Int"f~,:"rtil H\'iJ~~yUt:'('TS III g('lwl'al, ~uHl ft "dSi; S"ll('E~lu \ n.;w m
partkulm ;~!'idid the. ~'('m Jww!ival~ruH:tllIum llil))Jlr tH rt'port tII.lt thrnu~I~,ut .the 11I~~r~
Vil"W \(r v:U\ tJl'U HerJ.{ lM~kl.xl my \ I("'\YS •••~Jr,hs.er\."tinll, ..•.Ltrltl l W;':Il iml)r~~ bY the olwh:.Wi("'~t~m In whidl th~s sn(~.sP'Okenand lmassummg.. p:n-~t'!ttf'r" W,\S ht'IIJ hy the Stem l)("fsonnei.
UUlLr!o: lat('r I ""w Mr, \'.lfI t.!t.•.•t BeT~ to his bus,m,it lIut ulltil 1M: huu tl,ld mt; mort" Iloout his(.'-cmtilf.:ts, To put tht! rf'""dc.'r iu the pktul't' also. IelLU do Wl Jwttt'r th"J~ to (llIott~ frt,)ffl one of hislettl'n:
" '\ lmiHt I woulrt h~t. to cleuT at this -~!n.ge~1'tlu: mi~intt'rJl"i.t.ltinn by the ooitor uf .Stemn'lJ;;ucllnt( my 1:'C'l'h ••", with our Brother. Ontll~' firsr o<.:(:aStUll he m~'rt.l)" pitt mt" back on totl~t, ti~flt track of int~rpr("tjnJ( tm' ~ymhob,"hl.t'e I had wavered 3ud Il1td become (,"On(used.ufer five vear,~, uurin~ which time d'e motorhad already been completed. 111e ~e(;ilmd,t..'On•.tnct was: briM. and merely confinned thefirst. He bmup;ht no sh,tdll"S of ,his uwn as r~.)lOTtt'd. and ~••"e. me no help whah.\.er ~Il
$orvin~ tht> symhols. I tE'()('at: Jil' ":L('['("~Ypointt'd 4,mt the cHrt("d path to fo.l1llw smec' .1hild deviated and h.ld Jo<;t telepadue l'.lmmum~cu.tinn with ttle ~1.t.",t('r thruuw- m~'. OWIl
emot\u.l~ IIlnd that was the _mJt' pUrL)I,IS4'of tlwvisit. Siner. then 1 hUH' 50h"t"tl mm ..II mort'. and
OOVf' gleaned It tremelldr.lu~ amollnt elf ~nHw"l<>dgf" throulih my oWn dfurbi, ThP Rrothcr ]':\.'IIt~lu~ht mt. the foil", 'If f;"fUlllitmal h~'t~~rcu,<:r.•.•.mJ J lun'C' ~iU('t. glUl,nh ..'tl a~ ••insf it. thu", let'lt'p-
ill'? our tt'le[l4lthic cil.lnnf'] ufIE'n and clear., My .Oiim is tn l~rm (' to all and sUJldry ~1r"
All tunskf~ genuinem .•••~ M'U] t'!at t Itl. (\'mhols an'UM at thi~ warM. I ( .•will so (>.;" •.• i1y <.t.im thcsrlIl,,'entiollii as my own cI(,iH I.!, wit llHlI t ~f' 11
In("ntimlin,et th~ ~.lnlk'~h.•ulll UI)t H :Il;i~l!-tleg)ulon I hi<!: pl.uwt would ('\'t.r h,' tl14.' WI!\M', Not('\" •••11 Adalus~i!-
I l)l'li~-q. lt~,il~,II. dt'u R('r!!, I -t .~•• I b.L\t.of f'\ I'r~ .dw.~~.•.l'l,Jr." (,d C"IIf~I. \,I.Jn, ••ll
,tmly IlIult'f In).' ma~lli.ryht~ ~Iw.•s," lit' plt'aded.., \Vith pJcasun'," I fpplkd .•. but IOllk tit r}w
funt' ~ \\'1.' mustn't keep tIl<.' Sll'lU people w ••itlll~_"They ~rWW of my ~•.i~if tn ]nhanm~hur~ HIlJ
wi~h('d to interview us togetfler.A~ we nllrrit!d along to the Stem oUice'i, Mr.
van dt'n Berg was explaining the thn'(",diml'1\.~Lnn3l asped of thp. Adamskj photOb'l'uphanu huw he WIUI discovering new symhol~ everytj ml' he studied them undf'r n mngnifying W EI~S.
" It S('(lms there j~ no eud to an the deb Us giVlm.
\\1fmt hrilliant scienti~tS these Vroumi.HlJ must betn he ahle to suprrimpase their symbols overAd~mskj'_" photogruph, •••' You kllow/ he went on.:' I worked night and day to break down the rodf'.Often J wa, tempted to call it qUits, but yet Iplodded on untiJ I found ~mcres5 crownin~ m~'hard work. Soon I was con~trucUng the mQrors.AJI the detitils Were Uten. I shan n~ver fOTJl:~t theday when the lint motor wus ready. It func-tioned PM"feetly. Jt.was"on my hh1hday ..•. ThenI mt't tl.," . M<:tst('r .•.
1 (.1(J not pres~ for dl~tans a..~we had reachedthe .~tcm uffices, T'I~lhum of printing pres5(':"O(-ould lle h~:tTd cominF; from the ha~ment. Itho\J~hf Hf thr ~im('. th.rty ye:ns aMo, when I
wnrKl'rl ill a prmtin~ o(flc("' myself. In rtlose daystil,. rJfff'lIdin~ RyiuK ~atlC'M"S wert" virtually un-LJluwn"
In llur. (.'tl"~ we Wf.'J'e ushered iuto iii. spaciou~nffic;(', Arter the usual introductions 1 took my seatwitl. a ~r~ut deal of appr~heusiorl, but ff'hhmu"lrcd all the ,~lIm~ to take my ~tand in dc-f.!uc(' I>f thr. 'f saucers" and the bPtn~~ who pilorthl'lIl, B••1 I n('~'{1not have worr(ecl. I wus 'Q th~'('nmp~UIY nf "iillCt"l"e friends. Thl'Y were ••be"11P\'C' r s." t I.H~.
It W:'" ;Ui it1IC'l't...~tin~ e)\pt~it!n(.'t° anu th<' inter.\ ie'\\" Jtl:"h.d Iwady lli!"(',"' 11Imr'S, ORI;t' "gll"l Pro.tl''\''Or lInmd w ••~ Hnder dis(.'ussioPl and f1l\
pn'C'illlh H, \ I:\G SAol'r:rJl, Elt.\"IEW (..h.lu~("(1 J-. ••uld .•IIJlI,;1' mur l' ;l~ it W;~!Ii: m'('d f'd to jill' ~tr•.•h~a n"rm Ill.:!l 'illh"{'qlJ("nt~y :Jppt'aretl. thf' roJl()WillC
~ll1lo1.l\.
f I, ',~. t 1\'I"hl'd lhal {'\.t;n" t'clitor
UFO UPDATf
He cornpl&lne<1 l••tA" thAt thel;O"Crn.meDt lb.••..••..••••d hl,•• f"'t til ••demon "traUo", but dJd nol ulr. howhe bnd dOD" It. Th"J' dJd .I<.I .••••ant
t.o "no....,•. llowever. t~e qU@'elion
ui.$a •.••.•.",,'t Lh".e 10"," 0' hungry~",olJte in the world? The,,. "ould"IJ he fnd •••.lth U,UfI Innrl Amf Hut ••
l>IIM~. "houJd tb",. ••ppl": tid ••f •••••." ••r'" method" ••• bkb he re.
(";3)r••.-.~l fTOOl the c:ct",,~f"J:"e'JtriA1.s.
On", c..... I>nl;r .•• "nd"T wby ••~rJvcrnn::u!nt would not 'WA.Dt pro"...
gr""''' and lr"twl ••.•""llt (or tt..s:I"<"Opl •..••
' ••.•itb !.he ever.mcrt,,,,,inl( vd.ume ot d~enf.pd lIighling'!l over
tb" p ••.••\ :15 Y"'ttJ'''. thare La Uttled"n)'ing that ••.., hAv•• b'HIfI. 8bd••.•.••Ix>ing. ",ieited bl p"""pl •• fromother pt.a.f'~r.~tA,.The old 1Ul8Jt:" ofafficleJ denin.!, can no loo&e.
••••ti8fy tbe ""lLjorily of the f'<!<>pl••IJO a I:u:'w apprOAch U b Qrdfil:t.. \\f~know Ulllt tlHl mfllUies C,IUJ b~ t~'tlllt
r..onlr-oHt-"d t.b..t(jll$gh ft:!ll-E fl.IJL1 'terrorof t.he \Hllc::no~'n ~ thin u. th(,.
KTt"u,~'!Jt- ''Weap ••.•" 'Hir man 1;.nn-t•..ld aver anol.h ••r. (""",.,ld th" .",,,1.of aightin.s" itlvolV'it,,, ••hducd"" ••IUld l"fU'. b" cothLn" bUI .U) ••ct of,..,If.defcntlc hy the f••••.••. ho boldpow iH o'-'or the ro an,.. Lbe r.tw who
r•.IL thr ••"~b •.,l b.lr th •• ecm.l.tl$ o(
(.he tip ••"" vim!t•••r" ••.uo their "ro"",I.ng ••~-"••pt.anc:e? 0
In tbt' Brith.b bf)O'k •.AUlltrnatiLo'C.
ot:J:J. the antho,,,, reveAl [rom
NASA eor't.nc:lA. Lhat lh" U.S.A,"""d U.S.S.ft, hAve bad l1u"" e'"our t;l)(){,)n !liD<:~ tht:l late 19'60'8~The •••ery well Infonn",d Authon of" fhitl"h BflG Bro"dc:."""lng cre"."t.at.>;, th••l toan;:r rtx:c:>t iddrm p-pinga of Bcient.i..trU, tbnir r'rIJsUv~"'f••nd aft .••" •• 1:,.,1" bu.. I_do or
J"OU:~::l~t P~(~I,lt1 aru th" .el'lt of ,Qur111"0 peopl" t.r;ri..,g to "'~ppiy tbelttop ~ccro\ bllJ:llo$ with cheap
leMfn •.•• Could thi./l ho po-lJ-lJiblo?
TOOI''' l.Oll.,. •.••• ".Dotb"" eIt,tlWft-tinn. Soma yc...,. JlgO, I b"nrd or 28
f""'Opl", ",h", d[""pp<,,,.,<>d fTnm ••cb••.•.'WI..d boat ott LI,t! Florida
co<ut. Th",." 28 pe<:tple all hAd oueth3ng in common, tho,. were ofRX'ttAt,cr;r"~~'lLd_),o-dgln~ Ar.cordLog
to W,T information. aJWt tr"v"tiop'from diHerentpl.ace!l ,aruund the
wodd, tb"y "'11'I" ••d in MLlUni to"wnil. t.h,,1r pic.k.up ••t s ••.••.
'\\'hcn tho mfJthcr craft. cu.me for
tb<lm thny mllat tuw"" b"""o m ••h\:II"IY. (or th",T loft in the middleof tb,,1r n." .•.l". f>U'lt.o! pf ••1Tcnttthn,'" VIU> .•• b",d lik.. thAt too.f+Omutimcs with the ain:ra.ft and:JOM<Rt.1tn<OJI the jew were-te(u.tnedto Il,,,I, honul ••irpona nDd lnnded
"ale\r, .)'at no on.. wu in thnpiJO'l'" "o ••C To tJJltke lbA lIU>17'fUfrfQ int<~ •.c~t.ing-.thu pla.nu. """''''r-e:f-"ijtUt"n~, Itomoomntl l!cvenU
bou."" ••!U>t tbny "hould ha.',;, lunout 01 fue!. EI""oim,uoD .hew"dthAt the fueL !.H.,k" Were iod ••••d
eUIPty •••.• th"y ••hould hav" b"en.I ••brmld fc"l that wuny of
k>d",.'" UFO =1",,100" to ••••/"l.ncarr,. t.bf! MJl\O melulage lUItbc)~.,.
e;,f Bibtic..J d ••y •• - oxcept ••I 1h"t
1:-lm•• WI' did Dol " ••ve the •••••llcr,;u'nb",d oppo.IUon toward tho.m
""" ""4 hAv" t<>d••y.We It,,,. O<oK:ome incr ••••"ltrgly
eom,pLicllted b.oth tKooorniettJ}y
iwd politlc:rilly ••• od th ••m ",ili'-llgreet JUIl_DIe anUH'tg6( t.bo~c b:1power. All l(><;hnJc ••.J. I'CQuomJeAl.ltl)d apmrual progn,n Ur und ••rtt••, II' puh Illv", coutU)!.
Sevnra] officw.l. of .• Gavern*'ment one-1ft t..oid IlH'!-. IIOu,r sovcm."meot know8 the ,,&:t"tli~t:f'1,'(@t...rlals
ar., hore. D.Dd th"L th,,]' ••.•• goodfor' un, but we don "t wn..nt '\heOO~~.
When X .,,"ad .••.hy. 1 wa.. told
"b<>o:;Au ••e of p<> litiCA1. ocooOtuJcand raligioull r-l!I!lSOU,8,##
According to ifr~@nt arU,c,lc
publbb"d by the Blad~ Trib,,,,~ io
o..:"lI1m.id••• e.••llforn;... a MeLlcaofarm"r .•••.." given. tbe "",e'''1 by DIIpn.c.n:rl)~ of how c.o grow ginnt
'l'el':ew.bl"l!l. e"bbAIl''' .0 1b••.• on.it:>D" 13 It",. "I.e:, Th" KOv""'Dm,,ntCJt .••• " wi Lh 20." xp<>rL. to ch"""k Qtlt
the story, E"'I"",rim.,.."","1 "eulrn.!
iII/:.''''''8'' .••.•u u••-.d by the ••• ""-pen.... Th"y u"ed f"r'.iliz.er "."0pn:xJucffd ,30t.on.s of pt'oouce J:-toer
hit"')r"'. Tbefurni""-r8 who au'\.d bo-~nCfJ-ltl..Jo:l;e-~~dand given thJlJ lIt."'Cr't~t of
hip: h produc:ti Do.. produce<I t 06to:J~. -withoutLhe: UGC" of rcr1.i1.i.z.-•••r ••
BY FRED STECKLlHG
UFOABDUCTIONS
ANDTHEIR
IDITY..•••.8*' Lh~ original a,gpIHt!fOr ~ Fct'
eX'UD$Jte. it might h.yr. bc-ea that
tbe,T mt<>rvfl" ••d In o,d", U> atnpA,gR'f08~dun of OOf;' group of peoople
a8flln~t anuther, t\-.Dd it il" JJ(J"!llble
t"ot they may indeed bny" u."dfON'"A. Such .ctJlt, """'09 tAn)1 h('I""~,U@.
did hnppen thrQughQut hl"~<J""',from tl",,, tl> lim", fo, '''>1 All
P"'Opl" c<)uili,ll' fTotn "pAce are 01 anoble uatur,,_
Yet c:von in thetlO' lICCD\H\tA, TJC
w-eotJon of Aoductian;q nod ')''f'tto.ioat..ions nnd/or tor'tl~r!O:~ h~.•.~
be"u re<:ord"d. l.ru!ane", d.ting
tho'Hewd ••of Y"OJ" "how th"l "'J(H)
occ.a"ion, rlBitatioo", ttOlll epacewef"l1 ACCOf1lpa,nl~"'CJ by over-.'hclrn .•.ht,g ili.!!pla;r. o( loreo And pqWf'r. IItb." "arth h"" been ,•.;."j~ b .•.botl;noble ILnd Ih" cot.- ••c-nob) ••••.i",/"'),,,(or lit hUU!lt ••••••.oral l.1ou"",nd'f;:uu"., H. wuuld itH...~m thal anfl it isa lit'lJ •.••).Ilt<> (or them t.o ••";'t t.o
•••"".m1.tl4 And i!lt'\1dy Uti bO .•••••"""dtwu~ Vii.'ilb ~ueh I1We'eHJt:!16 pow~r' #.8
1J;Je,," aDem to h.ln(-Dfk,,)A:'l~~.;~j
tblco'U:ghout hi:t1ory~wb,lIit UI!I~w{l<),!dkidnApping Oil,! (>T t.••••o e•.••n•• bu.ndr ••d •.•••.•t.h.m ••., b ••••,,7
E ••.•.ly in ] 005 I .••.••.••informed byraliAblo fJourcCIJ •. that :!Icv-ora] no-
tim", 0" th" "Artb 1u>d "'Annog"d u>dopU",,,"w "l1yinK •..••uce •..••.•••Inri!"•.to c.h" on"" ••.h.ich have beeDvi..•ltjo8' thlll Ill",rt.b for Lhou"and" of
yga",,". Straogoly. oO""'J.gh" -IJV'"
.,;""" 1005 til.. bMtil" o.d;ione,aWucUuo". fo •.•......1 m..-dic.e1 e" 11m-
inationa ••.••d Il'Uch, hAv" ~nwidely report.e<l. Since that ti.o ••h",lpl ••"" 'vlcu.rn", ha"a r"portMbdlng 10••1.:1. eaptiv.. by .t""n,geIQ<1oId"" <::t •••• tu •.•,,'. blL •..•• ly lUllntln.
like. fon:<>d to und"r-go krrilyi.ng"1tAm.inatio",,, and exporimootJIin
di.m1y Ilt "P""" .hip" ••hlch "u'.!\-te-d a., nvU IJUlpbvr limen. CO'u.ldth" ••••'coot4~' ••.kb til ••w,dt)'u,g.."tnotAlrr""triaL .• be in fad con-l«cLa ,..;th "pace <:T"n" built on mill
earth by v"rlous ll'O""'Ct>:WEotlU,
pll<>«ood by I:H.'O ot .earth In et.r-a:ng<rc•.••lUlD ••~?nul wh,., .••.hAt could b"
u... ~ve? Pe.hnp" U> -"C"'''''.«lulu..., and cro"t... lnAT In \.hepublic "ub-<C.On .•••.•.iou.... A r•...,.fuJ
poopl •• atO ••••••I••' to eontl'>!.
lAl$ go bAck "B"l •• t.o ••,.,d ••••t
hl"wr1ca1 r"",o •.•.!" of vi ••tt.Hloa •••Such conlncu, w@r", ••lma"L al"'IIY.
wilh 'anll"Ls'. "",d th" .•••o,d "",g,,1not only n'h,.a.nl .$omtl:one veryIllK>d and tlt,bl" hut b",,,,,liFuI ••••
•••eLl. )'01 today, All th" <ontad •••••.e delouttO!'d ctt!tHur.u with mAOY
r.oye.5.• llJ'WlI, 1610:5. and ringcrt •• ~om: cAn Imo.gi"... II rill th"
rc<:ord"d ",,,!tetlon:o •..•'" La ~
hnllt:~ynd. th-e!le ~Aa...'ReLt•• 'w'Outd
I", ••." had lIttl" u"" ill It.Idm.pp!.ngu"" a.nd reLoroinlt to tho •• pu.tU~t.
""'., of earth. fOT th" ttlo ••t 1'!U't,h.••••." n••va' b<ltu'J abl •• tc Live infl'C!AC~ ••••i•.h (JDI@ another, .od 1iJ1DC4
oue rotteD apple c.tUJ ap"Al the•• hot" b" :ok •• l, w I>n1could ••e 0 He.
" • oej"1)' thAl bAll I"arned to livewiLhout aggr-ee.!Jloo and WAr?
To I" .•••"'UI( ••"' tb,,,-,,uKhJ,, "'\1of th.. ~h1,. fJubUd.%-<>d U}'O
.hductio"," and Iddn ••ppings. on"fl>url •••arch roco.d"d hilltnry.
On •. t~ "ftC. ••:n.• lyT.A ,dJ .-.'H:.)or,Ifiln)la
UFO ~~vll::y _ !.rOUl Lhou3A.J1d-" ofr........ to tho p",,,,,nt, tbat bAA
<>ccunoQ m Chi.,.. lnclia. ....dA(n.:... *" ,...,U ••• North. ContralfJHJ So'Ut.h A.t:n •.n.ica~
It la g<>o•••.••.Uy a""",pl(w;j th ••e.
!I:rtnl14"",~b h... "LoIUod thJ ••
~~. Th'!••v •.•.• .-..e",n.L. WJoci;mt Cblna thaI indjc:nl<> bcin8"Do•• UA hav •• vilrit.<>d China lo"Ying
,.,hl..o. eome tyP"' 01 r-.:>nJlnKJ.LociI. Tho_ poopl.. wo'" <:A11edhe DRAPAS. Thor c.....u.. Lah:urQ<Uc(and to ~l~h.... 1ll.O,Q Dot t.o••Wuct or lcidJ:mp.
Andent my-.ha from ""orykno W;l .civiliz:atJul1 fllTO in Ilgt"t.••.e--
mentthnt b.3ingftl or ~ftk-r •.uowJ ..
ndg •• "lid "';..0(,..." h.llve d"oc,wdc-dfrom the "lrl"... '1'1>..... bdnK"." ••....u<ed tho od"u.nct! of •• ~tter'Way of lit".. SotllofJumel:l it W'ftJl
llec.<UH'U\.ry' to ~ •• gArt.hm~n wjththen> Wh".D they 1,,(t ••nd retllrothem, ••ome u.m" law •.• wJth Knu.t!<no •• lc-dga of m.Il"Y t.l:.i.D¥ •• Ago.in.not;)~ or t...~QIk"l ~to.luif desai.tJ..e anyBOrt o( 1•• ,,,tUJ ty.
In ttl" •••.••••fully ......,miO(j hi"k,'7nf TJ.,j,u~", In the AtHi,,".8t.QD"bengo In }~"gland, n....n...•kin Lob....,,,", N"to<:'" In POTU, E~.,'pt-ian .nd M"J'I!LD tuJtur..... "ndC••"un '"bond. w.. f..J.l t<> findevidoncc o!abdllct:ioo.!' ag-.Just. Al~rc~f».~:8 w,W~ Yet, .u ind.ic~,t.tt
lJ}'O Activity. JtAtber. the ••hove.
<uUDed place •• "'01"" aite. or wpr-
Amp ••nd In ••tinuJ,, l.owazd til"iI!ll:tn~rrel!:t.riA1!f who hiitd. _\lown~b.rnoD bow to COD.5tTUct.t "1 ttin"
I.1lin aDd gTQW Lnto •• hJgb"r "Intoof developmnnt~
Man]' Lh..<.loKk.••l autbentic......, DOW convinct>d th" t BlhliCAlw.Jlcbinglt ••••••• Irtroogly mnu-
<'luD8d. If not db_dy In.plr<><J byexu-l!it.o.rr"",trirsl "'."iI.""" .• t'b •• BlbJ ••lJl. filll'd -..Jth TnportA of ""8"lo. who
look "xact.!." llk<! flU'" of _rlh.d£l:::nCcnding Irom •*be-a \'of'n" Or'
-8j)f\en.
111 Hf\hr~''''ft 3:2 it Itt.atue: '*IJ.onot forgntful to crot,crlAia J!lu'.n,g-en. (bert-by' fi-(j.rl\1(' hAve enter'.
t.al.ced &llj;<!Lo unto •••• r ••. '. Th ••••••
..••n8elo. .. """IDad Ie '- ftl"nd1;r.
u'1:1,,,,1 DnAlyllla nn ••"'" that Iftbe!Je' ef'i!I{\Cl",mOD look: like u. andr.an IJ,,'•• b ••r •• ,mdetacU><l •.••. hy••.ould they ••b<I••~.t ••••Ami ltUb}ocl
U~ to l•••,.gt.h,. m",H •..••1 .".;ft",I".tlonand U"Q like, .lnee 'We ••.• no
diff"T" ,,1 in "Pp"'lI.l'lIU1Ctl lh.a.u tb 11,.7
A.o.d ." •..••ly. U •••• ha",.. t.-"entert.aJ..nln,g wtTAD.gora UDJIwlU'iIl
;lor over two tJ.ou ••.•nd y.a.rw 0-1~-rqOO hiaJ(.-or)"" t.bn.,e.A .t:r'aog'OnI
..,..rt.alnly bave had c.h•• OllIM)rtunit.,.Ie l_m about Lbo ••••.•t.hm.••n ••
body long ••go ••• hou.ld thO', I' ••.•.••
had th ••n_d or d•••k••.
In G'''l''''lJo 6:2 ....,d .•, It ,,'LAte •••
"Son.a of GOO look E••rth ",,'j>.e ••
and bad d,Ud,••" ...-lth UJeXT> ".
.••.hJ.ch pn;rv.... L1>.t th ••ir ph,.lIic:...land gO><UDot.ri.<:A1 ••t.nlctu...... IILre••.••ry .imlliu:. U 110'\ Od.",uc:&!. La
OUt •• Eukl ••l 1: 1:1 too U\ ""K'lrU of•• friendly U)'O IIl.nding and p"r-.."....,j contact ••,0. rour Iivtn.ge•.••••tun>. lo<:King ••Jt.a.(:t)y ll1< ••
IINLl1.h:mtll1.n...... toe, cam" toIrurt:ruetand t<> •••.• d ••, nCPI. to
abduC'l..If on.. !W'nlI........ to --.r-ehea.refully. an" .••.ill fwd t.luot -.c:h
tiro'!t m"n On earth Il"'t out ororder, in O'na W"IIY or anothe%'.t.b.EL80 mC.Ac:ngara or lI'p..a.r:;emeDbA.••••CCUlt! do..." te £-rlh In their
rM"":r doud.l.lko I'pa<:" ••hip". th,,! •.•• b ••••Yo within wbooho .-..::.. andLan••xl La th" l••.••d...... •••. to e<><n"/nIJIrue:tlOD 1.0 ~ tho trltua-....,... In 110m" __ tJ...,. .••.•...••p•.••Po,. firm, IJ tba -n.b mandlrln't ol:Mo,. th" •••••U'1Jdi.".. 0...,.tcol< other •..-li.t>na. Y ••••.•mI.,T -y'I.l:Mod ••finlt:ion of • '",1>.... act.lO'D"
oooula w. "",ODd a b-ullt,T. ~-JOVor .t ..ould d" ••.••nd "PJ'O .••.ho
UFO CasuAH,t ••
To ~~te, ~Or. than 200 UFO ~r••h.$ hav. b••n repgrt.d gv.rt~. span af ~o y •• r,. But only ~ fraetion or ~bout 21.at tho••~ra.he. h.v. been a~tual .~tr.t.r~e.tri.l.pa~.~r&ft.
Nin.ty~.i~~tper cent 0' the cr••h.~ o~curred ~ith our ••rt~~uilt, duplicate ma~netic 1Jying ~i.c.f bu11t ~y sgm. of tn.worlds top 90v.rn~.nt••
Our .~iwntL.t ~er. tntrlQu.d by the e~tra twrr~.trJ.It.chnoloO~ ~nd .ft.r 2 snip. crashed near Whit. Sand.. NewM.Nico, duplication af construction and propulsion wa. atte~pt.dand bV ~966 .~hi.ved.
~~h n.eded to b. Ivarned about ~.Q~etie propulsion,ccnstru~t10n of part. and pcsLtive fli9ht eontrol of d.vic.~operatlnQ on a complete new concept 01 flight. I~ its infancyn.tu~.lly, cr••h.s and casualtie. often occur, •• with ne~d••iQn. in eoovention_l .i~cr.ft.
It i. foolish ~o beli.v. that tho.. vi.Itor. 1ro~ oth~rworldS, in CU~ sy.t~ end beyond, waul~ ~Qme to visit ••~th toc~tt ~u1eld. by not beini l.~knot09ic&1IV pr.p.~.d for our~~Qr~~.ion, ~au.iM9 ccuntl.ss sp~c.craft to ~r~5h.
It Ju.t do••n't ••~••• n••• A eivil1zation "hic~ ~••~a.tRr~d ~49netl~ 1li~ht .inee b.for. Biblic.l tim••, h.d ~c haveth.ir ~raft first thorOUQhly t.sted in lh.l~ atmospnere b.tor.t~.y .t~.mpt.d and 1Ln.lly m~sterRd lnterplan.tary 1liQnt.
Thus, w'tne~.e. ob~e~vLng ••• cret l.ndino or a cr.sh ot an~.rth built UFO Mould h.~. no idea of the origin of t~. c~.ft.After reporting the 1ncid8nt an~ b.Lnq interr09&t.d, thewitnes... Dften &re so cDnfu.~d t~.t th.y ar. no lonQRr sur. ofdet.LIs .~d t~'r r.port. Are ~k.t~hv ~nd ~n~l.ar.
With this in ~ind it ~u.t be ackngwl.dq.~ that ~.ver.l true••traterr••tri41 .p&c.~raft crash.s have occurred ov.r the pa~tv.ar •.
fwo b.11 Shaped UFO'. cam. tod cia •• to the radiatJon cloud01 an ato~1c bomb .x~lc~ion at White Sands, New W.Kico durinq thelate 1940's. Radiation ente~ed the ~limate ~Qntrol .yst.m throughLt. rotatin9 ~OW.~ eoll. and burned the creM. Th••• 2 cr.1t andthe bo~i•• inside were reportedly ~.mov.d by the Air Force toWriQht Paterson Ai~ Forc. Ba •• , in O.vtO" O~io.
Ano~~.r I~cid.nt h~ppened dur1n~ the .arly L9&0-. ~nen &Mothe~.hill had .r.l •.••• d .I:t. sc.cutc:r.ft to Db•• rv. Joint Nav~l~anRuvers gver t~ Pa~i1i~. One scoutera1t hovered ov.r ad.~trcye~ and .•~issil. "as shot through it. botte. .~d topob ••rvation len •• whic~ r••ulted in a ~ra.h 01 ~hl. ~r.ft Intothe Pacific. •. After this occurrence the l.r~e carrier craft9ath.red up the rem.ining .cout~ra't and y.n~s~.d.You will not.,their was NO RETALIATION upon the pa~t of th. occupants of th.spacec:~.tt! !
S.y.ral Qt~.~report. 1ro~ Europe .~d South Africe, LndieateL~$.r TechnoloQY .Ld.d in crlpplinq .o~ of the extrAterr.strials~acec~.tt ~hich result.~ in 10•• 01 control and ultImate cr.s~.
It i. &lsQ impo't.•~t to net_. t~ 4 to ! foot eccup~nt. ofth••• ~any er••~d ~r.ft. ~~J~h hav~ be.n reported.. havin9 nOf~c.. gray - blue skin tan., 00 halr, oversized h.ad'j et~•• r.NOT Hum.n o~~upant. bu~ rather android•• ~Qbct .lj~. cr.ation.d••1Qn.d ta fu"ction for .bout ,1- month. on- •• ingle ch.rv-.Th.se a~. .ent fortn to ••plo~e the ~ore d."Qe~ou. territcri ••N~ere hu•• n life m!iht bw .nd.niw~.d.
The th~•• 1ino.red h~nd•• ~. really claw 11k. nail. de.J;nedto held on to obJe~t •• nd can be u••d £n •• If d.fense it tn-Yare '0 prCQr~~m.d. T~•••• ndr01ds .re able to gp.r.t. in sp.c.~.t~•• n the ~all. 01 the .pacecraft where hi;h r.di&t1onprgp~l.ion units ne.d to b. ~.rvi~.d. They are a1.0 hi~hly s~1t.dfor .xplorln~ ~lan.ts Nlth un1avorabl. at~ospherle environment.wLt~Qut the need fgr .~.~e s~its or air .upport system••
It i. b.l1e~.d,~. too, are d~plic~tLn9 to••• typ. ofandroLds and on. ~an only Ncndwr a. to wh.t N. A.V be prograftminQthelll fat'.
Today, i~ ha. b.ccm. .Ntre~ely d~fflc~lt to d1sti"9U1sh t~di11.r.n~. bet"••n their ~raft .nd ones of our awn ~aki09 b•••dsolely upon _ siQhttnQ. a.oro. Adamski tDld ~e ~.ny y~.r •• 00'the o~9aniz.d opposLtion h.d.. d.finLt. plan to confu.. t~
publie about the entl~e sp~ce ~.tt.r bV makin; u•• of people whohave little or no e.p.rl.n~. of t~ir awn. Whan people .p••k ofother. e.p."ienco. th.V c.n •••ily bo ~on1u~.d.Since Ada••kil.ft thi. pl.n.~ in ~~b~t we ~.v. had ~~oV s~ch individual. ~nd;ovqrnm.nts ~hc h~ve .ucceqd.d in ~~Mp1ni t~. r.al truth trgm thepublic. lcda~ can1usian prevails ~nd p~opJa Ar. b.n.1!tinq littl.
fr~m t~e t~ach~nq. of t~•• ~.c. vi.itQr~.
Article
that
appeared
in
the
Santa
Ana
REGISTER
on
October
16,
1971
employs
guarded
lan-
guage
in
describing
the
clouds
over
the
moon.
See
pages
168-169
of
Adamski's
book
INSIDE
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GENERAL INFORMATION ON EXTRATERRESTRIAL
SPACECRAFT - - A~D THE PEOPLE WHO PILOT THEM.
Several millions of people in the UtiS. A. alone have accepted the fact that the
U.F.O. '8 or Flying Saucers. which are sighted in OUr skies; todayt are of extra-
terrestrial origin. The reason for this 1st nO nation on Ea1'th is able to build
and fly these strange ship;!'] and make them perform maneuvers as they have dem~n-
Btrated and still do demonstrate almost every day, in every nation n£ this world.
Millions of people have sighted these spacecraft; Some were Eortunate to take
photographs, or , were even p1'ivileged to take movie film of these incl"edibly;maneuverable machines.
Although most of the world governments still deny the existence of these extra-
terrestrial visitor.!Jt this does not make them any less real. The millioos of eye-
witnesses, scientists. Air Force and airline pilots~ engineeJ;."l!!F; and' even the
common man walking out' etreeh cannot all be wrong. •••• The fact is. that we.
are being visited by Human Beings from planets of ouX' solar system and beyond.
Economic and reli gious rea sona Seem to be the o~ly anSwer as to why ourgovernments remain silent coni::e-rning this matter .•Neve rtheless, this does not
stop the Visitor s from traveling millions of mile B to do what they must do: to help
Earth man evolve to a higher State of ExiBten~e. both physically and spiritually.
Their mati ve is to help thos e who are will i:cg to accept this help.
Dr. Herman Oberth. head of the CALT ECH Laboratorie 8 until 1955. made this
Btatement: "We cannot take all the credit fot' our record advancements in certain
scientific fieldl!!Jalone. we have been helped" When asked who helped U8. heanswered: liThe people of other Worlds".
Although ast ronomi cal circle s are still arguing whether life as W 8 know it could
exis.t elsewhere in our solar system;!' all of tbei.t>a611umptions a.re but theories,
and until we have traveled and landed on the other planetB physically. we could
not tell. And even thenj this truth of the findings may be kept from the publi c
for ma.ny rea90nS. We mu,t remember that the a.gencies that are responsible
for our outer space exploration, are the very same ones that have debunked the
U. F. O. 's for the past 30 y'earB~l~ It may be that OU1" Mariner and Viking. Space
Probes have questioned life on !loIne of the otheJ;."planets. but we must reme.mber
that, accordlllg to certain space p~obe9 Gent out 13everal thousands of miles from
Earth. life as we know it could not exist on Our Earth~ ~ For the tempel"ature
measured f1'om the upper ionospheX'e was 1800 degree's Farenheit on Earth. with
no 1'ecording of oxygen and water vapour. Since all men, every;vhel'e, a.re in a
CODstant state of learning. we ca.nnot afford not to keep an open mind in all fieldsof Science.
Mr. Geo:J:"geAdamski, lecturer. amateur astronomer, and philosopher, was one
of the most priviledged men of OUr tim.ea when he succeeded in making pe1"sonal
contact with Visitors from the planet Venus on November ZOth, 1952. Six witnesses
were present when the bell-shaped scout craft landed nea:r Desert Center~ Calif.
Mr .. Adamski conversed with the scout Pilot for over an hour. Three months later
he was privileged to board one of these out -oI-this -world cra{t~ and wa6 actually
trans po:rfed into one of the Space People' B gigantic carrie r -ships. Much information
was given by these highly evolved Space men. which Mr. Adamski shared tl'uthfully,
in his books. with mankind on Earth. Mr. Ada.mski has written three books:
FlyinLSauce! $ ••~ve Landed
Inside ~e Fl~ S..a?cers .•(Paperback)
Behind The Flying Saucer MYfltery(Papexback Ed. )
George Adamski waB not the only one who experienced an event .• such as this. Mr.
Cedric Allingham. of Scotland photographed a Martian 6cout ...cra.£t in Scotland, and
later conversed with its Pilot for some time.
As Mr. Adamski once stated: liThe Space people have beent and at'e~ in contact with
nearly all government leaders and higher Cburch officials •. But also ,. ordinary
people were, and are. conta.cted if there is any need for it. But very few dared to
mention the l;e contact 6 for fear of losing their jobs ~ P0!l itions J and social
commitments.
Mr •. Adamski was one of the ve'J:Y few men who stood up to the l1Truthliand had stea.dy
contact with the Spac.e People until he pas sed away in April of 1965 at the age of 74.
Dul:'ing bis later years of lecturing and world-traveb be was received by Royalty
and government leaders with great re spect. While others ridiculed this man of
great COUl"age, b.e never grew too tired to bring ~e Truth to thoBe who were willing
to listen. When he delivered a sealed message from the Space People to the Vatican
in May~ 1963, he was awarded the gold Medal of Honor by the late. Pope John
XXlll. for his outstanding. selnes s service to his fellow -man.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * *QUESTIONS and ANSW ERS-.•....._..•..•.....-.-. --------------
Question; By Wha.t planets in our solar system are we being visited 1
Answer: Weare vigited by Space Cr:-aft {rom all Planets of our sola r system, and
even beyond - f'rom aystel!la clos e to out' 8.. However most Space craft (about 90%)
come from the planet Ven\1B. The rest come {rom Saturn, Mars. and very few
from the other planets.
Question: Do the Space People come with hostile intentions?
Answer: If they would be hostile. they could have taken-over this planet ages ago~
';"hen we were even leas developed technically. The people from Venus and Saturn
come to help their Earthly brothers in the many fields of science, etc. and in
social understandingJ while others perhaps, come to study our behavior. etc.
Question: What is the phye.ical appearance of these extra.terre&trial People?
Answer: The are represented by all "kin colors known to earthman. and range
from a Ii ttle over 3 feet in hei.ght~ for the smallest ~ to about 7 feet. From the
medical poi.nt of view) their physical make- up is identical to ours. A large numb6r
of them live on Earth at thi s pres ent time. undetected~ for they look exactly like us.
Question: What do they eat?
Answer: Whatever h nec.esaary to keep body and soul together. On the othel"
planets they ea.t just about the :aame foods as Earthmen ax e a ccustomed to.
Question: Are our governments aware of thes e people living among us?
Answer: Yes. MQat of them are known and equipped with what they need in
t;ec';"ssary papers, etC. Even though ,",Ie do not accept them openly. we do, at
lea.5t to some extent, secretly.
Question: What language do they Speak? Wha.t form of government do they have?
Answer: On their planets a common language is spoken. But before they come
to Earth, they, of COlU"se, learn the necessary languages to get a.long her@'without'
difficulties, and to commtmic:ate with us. They are also able to HreadH thoughts by
using Telepathy. In this phase theya.re educated from birth. This helps them in
undeJ:'standing others. and in staying out of trouble, if necessary. On Venus t!tey
have a government system of a perfect Democracy. with extremely high ethical
Standard5. There are no borders and no monetary syst€!ttls. P~oduction is for use
only. not for profit.
Question: What a.J:'e their religious Yiew-points? Do they believe in God?
Answer: The do not l"ecognize religions, as we know them to be, for here
religions deal with diviaions and they know God cannot be divided. They. live
according to God fS or NatU1"c IS LawJ not man made standards. The~ lortg ago,
recognized tha.t the C];'eator made everything with. a purpo$~: from. the tiny atoms
to the greatest planets and suns. They respect all manifestations of God .•
eapecially man - for man is the one creation that carries the full potentials of his
Creator. Man Can school bim6eU to become God-like. by listening to, and
executing the instructions or his Consciousness. Man ia able to express the
Creator's Intelligence if he lend8 him~elf to Cosmic or Na.tural Laws. God meanS
Consciousness~ or better said, C015rnic Intelligence. The Space People'B studie9
are based on the law 9 of Cause a.nd Effect.
QUi!stion,: Do they Die?
Answer: The body is but the hous e~ or Temple. The Real US- is the Individual
Consciousness with the form, or Life Itself. And Life cannot die .• only a body.
Death for them. is therefore nothing but a change from an old worn-out fo];'m into
a newborn one. This takes pla ce within a few seconds. Reincarna.tion is scientific
fact on those worlds, not a religion or belief. Reincarnation and ResuJ;"ection mean
the same thing~ different words for diffeJ:'ent parts of the WO rId. Both mean to return
or to com@ ba ck again..
Question: How old does the average person get to be on Venus?
Answer: From about 300 to 1000 years accol"ding to our time. This may sound
incredible, but VIe must remember that. in the early biblical days, eal'thman, too,
reached the age of over 900 years in one body. The Venu&ians live a natural life,
Cree of worries. hate. jealousieB, and discriminations .. They are always in a
balanced state of mind. and therefore. suffer hardly any bodily wea.r~out as we are
experiencing on Earth. Then. too, their medical knowledge 15 far advanced. and
sicknesses of mind or body are unknown on Venus. However~ if they 5tay here for
a number of years. they~ t(lO~ can catch a cold. etc.
Question: How long do they stay here?
Answer: They may stay Z years 01" so a.nd on rare occasions. may stay longer
than that if there is a. reason. Their se rvi ce on Earth is entir ely voluntary and
comparable to the Peace Corps movement.
Question! Are lIFlying SaucerslT mentioned in the Bible?
Answer: Yes, many times. They were ca.lled :rl!lying chariot,,", lrwbeeZsllJ
lIWhirlwindstlt I'pillars of firel
\ ,tgolden Lampstand s") .1flying scrolls"~ etc.
For further infoX'mauon pertaining to this read Behind the Flying Sa~~: MYBtery
by George Adamski.
Questio.!!,: Are Space people to be found in the armed services?
Answer: If they a re needed for a certain rea Bon, yes. But not with a gun in
their har"i:d, Cor they do 'Dot kill their fellow man. even in what we call self-defense.
QueBtion~ How can they stand the tremendous tlG" lor ceBwhen maneuvering their
5pa~ecra!t, such as full stops, from a speed of thousands of mileB per hour?
Anewer: Their Spacecraft are equipped with instruments which nullity a planet's
atmosphere and gravitational force in the immediate vicinity. They are able to
crea te their own gravity VI i thin the spaceship which allow s them to maneuver at
almost any speed without discomfort to the cr~.
Question~ Can they make their space ships invisib~e.?
An::lwer: Yes. This is done by bending light rays around the craft. But the craft
ilthough a.ppearing invi8ible~ could still be touched. HoweV't'r, they do not
materialize or dematerialize) or com.e from Bome"higher dimensions ". All life
on aU planets is 3-demensional. just as we ha ve it on Earth.
Question: Do the Spacemen help all nations?
~5wer: Yes. they do; for they do not discriminate. They help whomever they
feel will utilize there help and information~ and moat important. put it to USe in
the construc.thre fields.
Thank You"
Fred Steckling.
S41ItF.Tll TN; TO Til J M<' AUo{Tr •
Old ynu knnw that th •• w~ll ..knftwn Hut~nr, J(tnathan Swift. (Gullh ••r 15 T,[av~l '!i .)
gav~ an exact deseriptinn ~f th~ lwft m~~ns ftt lh~ p18n~t .~r5 ~V~T ~n~ ~unrlr~rlyears bef~r~ they Wer~ rliscnver~rt by th~ American Astrnnnm~rt Asaph Hall. in 1877?
An-rl tJ1at Swi it rtescrib •..d in P-xaC1. l1p.tai 1s th~ shf'-s. :sp~~r1~, aDd r1istanc~sef t~e, by n~w. well~knftwn twn M~nn5 nf ~~rs • Phnhns an~ ~imn~? flnw eftul~ h~have non~ set unless h~ was r~ally t8~pn up tb~r~ by th~ ~~rtian:s in a spacp. craft,whi ell Sw&iit called in 112b" a "city t n th~ s1cy?-
nld y~u know that the Nati&nal A~r~nautic aorl Spac~ Arlministratinn. th~ Aca-rl~n~ ftf Sci~nce, botb Snvi~t Rnrl American, anrl a trP.mp.ndnus numbp.t nt we~l~.- r~.nowned Qstrft-?hysieist~ and a5tr~n~~rs ar~ cnnvjntt.r1 that LIFE ~xists ~n Mars,V~nus. Q~rl ~Vp.n the largpr plan~ts, J~pit~r and Sat~rn. inclu~ing tbeir satellit~s?Here is pl"tltlf' •••••••••••••
Tn 1959 ~l••Shkl"v~ky. a tnp Sftyi~t plan,tary physieist, an~unc~rl. attpr ~iscar~ful stu~j~s of th~ twn IDft~nS nt Mars. that tbp.y b~tb ar~. in r~alitYt spacev~hicl~s~ artificial satpllit~s cnnSlruct~~ ftl al~11num an~ ~agnp,si~l. an~ are hftl~
l~~ insirlp. ~. Snkl~vsky's finrlings ar~ hHS~rl ~n th~s~ facts •••••••••Ph~bn5 ~rbits 3 ti~ps as last a! Mars rnt~t~! n" itl 8wn axis. whic~ is unna-
ttl,ral, an'" hnth ml'll'lns rprtpct Hght as it w ••uli! ~mn•• fl'nGl an all1llinunt surface ace~r-dina ta sp~etr~scnpi(.prism analY5is. Alu~in~ is a mrtal which d~~s net ~~ilt. Ina natural $t~t~ a~ywh~r~. 1~9hly advancprl. m~tallurg}eal sci~nc~ is v~ry ~ueh n~e~-5 sary t I' prfll41uc~ a1111~inUlli.
Bnth ~n~ns ar~ tn~ s~~ll an~ tnn ~l~s~ tn t~~ sur!ae~ ~f Mar~ tn b~ ~t naturalnrigin" b~tw~p.n fiv~ anrl t~n th~u$anrl wil~5.
Pi Ii ytlU "kn~w. t hat n~ AmjlOr 1u" astr flnt'PH"'[ nr. U,M. S1ntnn ()f Y••l"k~$ l'bs~rva-t~ry in Wjscnnsi n. ttllrl thp, Nilt I n"a 1 AC':afl~fl;Y"t Sci fIlnc~: "[)hnbt\s anl't n~imf\~ r.U1Y wfI!ll
be- large &rbi t.! ntJ c1 Up!:. (i llf""~ wi th Ir:~h. wnrnp-n il nrl chi It1r"n?'"And 8nethPI' such spacp staU "fI W".HI l1isenv ••.r,.if hy T)r. Ill; l1htm fl •. I'fc'kjlllring .,t
Harward. It wa8 mysttori nus rli:5 C(lVfI!ry f'lC tb~ I'lut~r -rot'll t ,!<"nMCIn tlnnns nf p la n~t Sa-
turn. and it was g~'ng, ~r ~rbiting, in th~ "wr~n9~ r1tr~ctinn, as no nat.ural sa-tel1it~ rt~~:s. It is fact that all natural satplltlfll$ ~rblt in a c~unt~r-r.lnckwised1r~cti lin", Latp.r the mysteri (tu!!: spac •• nat ien Ai SC1pp ••ar ••rt (tit abfl\.lt sixty -t hrfl!eyear., an~ nftW in 1906 was rp.~is~nv~rp~ i~ ah fIlntirflllyrl~tf~rp.nt pns;tinn a~~ ~is~tance fr~m ~lan~t Saturn. frn~ ,mat Or. r;~k~ring r~p~rt~rl in 1904.
The samp applies i~r thp ~~carlps nf inn~prahtp rp.p~rts.by Iparling prnfeslln-nal anrl amat~ur astronnmprs. "t unnatur~l mnvina lights, brl~g~s whicb sudrl~"ly ap-pear anci art~r a !4!W wf"E"ks vanish, anri ~l~.,.inlJ. pulsating nhj~<:ts. mnving at higbspp.e~s witbin the crBtprs an~ vall~ys nt ~ur M"~~. Oft~n tray~lin~ 8 th~US8n~ mile$BCr05~ th~ Lunar surfacp wit~jn 0 fe~ mlnutps, t~~n lanrling nr h~v~rtng in cp.rtBincrat~rs Ii9.:l"' "I'latn. liau ~nrli. Gr i mil lIB ••~{'l •. and aga in m;.v\ ng at terri fi c: spfl'f!:dss~mpwh~rp. p.lsp "n thp. lunar surtacp.
The latp llri tis h R.,y~ 1 Anrent.lr,,.r P~Tci va 1 WI 1ki ns. U Ie •• many nt ht'rs. ha s nub-li~hp.1i 8 full r"'pnrt ('In t h""5~ "happ"n; ng~" f'ln a nrl il hflY~ th~ Lunar S Ul' fa C~ (n hi s
wt'lrll1 fafl\t'lIJ!t !)('lnk "Our "'~l'It'lntf.•
And hf'lf lin nul G~v ••rnr.l~nts. r,.a ct t" t hfll r9 ct t Ita t t ~p J:':art h 11> b~j ~g Yis:; t Nl byhig~ly ~dvancftrl, nobl~ human b~ings rra~ ~h~ n~ny inhabit~~ planpts ~r ~Ur 5~lar $ys-
t<MI and lHlyoftd? Wh/illl,. is .th~ r~.IIct j on fI! nur bi! rlp-t"s t"~arl'fi ng thf!J f'! fll~U?
8e~. 'fe I~.exeerpts fr~ ~ nt our prp5p.nt laWS1 w~i~'~y be tb~ und~r-b'1iIg;eaq~ fO'f; :much of tM rloubleta Ilc. wh iell 3H'Ol! t., cmp. !r~ nur 6p"ermlpnts
Ire:. U. lft tille.
A.f .It.. - 200 - 2 iss ued on August 26, 1953 by thp. then Sf!crrt8:ty n! tbf'!
AIr Force, I~rol~ F.. Talbntt. Unrlpr .paragraph 9. callp.~. MRp.lease of Facts~~~t ~s provin~d that only hoaxes. pr8cticlp, jokp.s an~ erron~U5 ~ •.~.O.fp.-pnrts can b~ given to t~e puhlic or press. tAll g~nuinp. UFO rp.pnrts rp'-~ ~iyprl ily Th~ Air Force Must l~ ¥ept Frnm Tbp. Public. f
Un"" .•• A.•F .•.It •. .200 - 2 a 11 con (i rmP.'" Fly in9 Sa Ilct"r rp.ports mus t bp, rushrfi to
]nt~l II g~t'lep by '1.~lp.tJPf' nr ra rHo. Whp.n pas Ii blp. all tanqi bIt" ewhl~1\cf!
~ust .~ fl~n tnmerl1at~ly to ATTC ( Air Farc~ tp.c~niCBl rnt~11ig~~c~ CPn-t~r at Wrigh~ ratt~rl~~ A1rr~rc~ na5~ in Daytnn, Ohin.)
1. J.laf~s nt flyi ng Seucef'S, af,t us 1 ~r susp~ctf!ti.
2. p~o\Q$ of rarlar S~~pes.showing sauc¥,r~~neUVer$ anrl spP,Prls.3~ ()eIlLd.M pi ct,ur~s ftC :flyi Qg 5eueers.
A.f.R. - 200 ~ 2 eonflnp.! aetnal UFO Jnv~~t;g~ti~n ta thrp~ SUpp.r~B~er~tgr-rlUpl.Thfl ni tr.etnratfl! .of t lip. AI r Fnrc~ T ntf"l1 ifjf"ntp. at .t hf! PP.ntagon; t h~~602 d Air Jnt~lligeftep.S~rv5c~ SquB~r~~, WhlCb has appcial iDvpstf~at~rsat all Air ~f~n8f" basPsl T~p ATTC Bt nayt~n* Ohio •.£yp.n top ran~ing Air Fnrce offieprs are \~rnp~ n~t to probe b'lnn~ thefitst stagp. - that nf securing UFO rpports trnm thpsp thr~~ ~r~up$.
••• ••• • • • • • •JANAP. 146 ( B ) issu~d SpptPmbpr 1951 an~ rlpc1asstliprl pPt n A M~ssag~dat~d neC("fl\~ 12. 1<;153. ~ jANMI ~"5 Jnf nt Army • Navy - Ai r - Publi ca •.
.t i-on.) t)Jrl~r 5PCU ot'I.. In aft1. (1J l(lt 'Whn rpVp3 1$ a l"I •• en d a 1U•.F .•o. f~pf'trt
can be imprisnn~~ tnr nft~rb tpn y~ars an~ r;n~~ up tn $10.000.00 CTltlp 16.U.S .• Ctldp.. ~ 3),A spcond nrdel carrj~s ~n~tl~rtial p~naltips.Un"er a s ubh~a.1 "GTRY ]S'" 4 ~~NAP 146 or rI~rs gi lots. tn r~pnrt by ralii I'l~.F.O.•rp.port~ Irnm any s~p~ in thp worlrl. ~ tnp 5p.~urity cI8usp.. hn~pveranyftn~ w~CJmaotrl a emv IS 't~rort - (lr l~a rns wba t nne c~nta i nS - is C<,rui r!-rl~n evpn to rr~~al jts ~xfltpnCPt This nrrl~r~ b8Clcp~ by Cinps anrl imprisnn-w~nti ~prljp$ ~o military, havul Rnrl ~trlin~ pilots ~aking CJ~VTS r~pnrtsl"n lJ••.• O.s.
•• •• • • • ••• • •
PHNC. 3ol120. 1 C~4'1" 03 iss uprt J\.] y 23. 19!J4 hy t hI"' P~t tllllac 11i \If'f l'\C1v1l1 Lo-
tl;anci" 5i lJ oprl hy Admi ra 1 T. H. Ili 11, t his "i tfJct iVf" nrrlprp~ intl.",rli ~ tp r~p('tr-
til\{! nf 11l1irtf'ntifiprl !lying nhjPcts. Tt U!;Pn' thil' CC'uip worrt "FLrOl.ll\pru
in
pllon} no (It t~ Ip.typi ng r"'pnrts. Thf"Y wprr- tn bp 5f>nff tnt hp in 11 owt ng;
l~ nir~etor of A.F,l.2. A.T.I.C.3, C.O~ - A.F.C.
- 3-
4. C. O. EASTERN A. D" C.5. Director of Naval Intelligence
6. C.O. EASTERN Sea Frontier7. Commandant, Potomac River Naval Command
To insure secrecy on the reports, it also cited JANAP 146, N. F. R,200 •. 2 and two previous Navy orders, OPNAV 3820 and Directive3820. 2 by the Commander of the Eastern Sea Frontier.On February 5, 1958 new instructions to hlsure secrecy on. UFO de-velopments were Issued to all AJr-Force Commands.The orders are contained in a revised seven page edition of A. F. Re-gulation 200 - 2 J the orncial n Bible U on U.•F. 0' s.
It says page 4t paragraph 9:Information regarding a sighting may be released to the press or gene-l'al public by the Commander of the Air Base concerned ONLY IF rrHAS BEEN POSrrIVELY IDENTIFIED AS A FAMiLIAR O~ KNOWN
OBJECT.The Air Force has another U. F, O. Ctlnsorship memoran-
dom, No. 200 - 9. It is classified and details are not yet known asto its contents.
Ask and write your Congressmen if they kno. of these orders. Since these ordersin no way seem to involve the security of our nation, why were they made in thefirst place? And why are they allowed to remain in force? Ask tllem to make athDrough investigation into this matter, and than to act b1 behalf of you) the people,whom they represent throughout Our nation, and who as taxpayers are entitledto know what is going on.
( Air Force Regulations are a reprinto[ t Question and Answerf booklet No, 4
by George Adamski 1959 t under titleI' WHY n)
Thank you Frad Steckling
During tho recent Skylab IIspace mission, Crew membersLousma, Belin and GalTiott
sighted and photographed'A mysterious red obiec(fhm radar 'couldn't detect.
UFO:s Watch Every Move NASA Makes, Say'Ast~onaut's:'.Who~Were Tailed on Space Shot
A "'UMBt-:!t III' A$trur!l>ulfO ••••.hll "'". UwS8
obj<:(:1S •• t.il., in 'I"'~ ba,'r puWld)' "'juIIII,,1thaI lhc)' ll<!11e,'. •••••ny UH.lc. i"~ Ihe
prlitdUl:l.lI ot 'n1clbl: 'nl ooing!.,"I Lelie,a Ul'fl. hel,)n~ W ••. JJ1••~,,,.. dSlr and
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=============-==::;,,"N, 14. l'oI(j9- Apello \2 - A'.trc~I;"ilill'.k
Cunr&<!. Atan n•."" lit'" Dick Gttt1k<n ••• 1<1Itun) lK'fiImpanl<t<1 I.l",rn to ,,',Ihln 131.000
mllt.s (4 I"" HHk'n. pn-cooL"1l tt~," 'II thitW8)',
Special UFO Section/s Yours for 50~
COl..cl.lc. indUlllr'll a cyUlfttrl<.)al ob:''C1 \I'ilb
a.rtnIJ ItictJJ111 00,1 lU\l,1 ,n ~lIIl-tihJlJl'i lYO••W, $(>100•••••.•, of anau5
o.~,4, I~ - (;~lfl'.I\lVIII - Fr3n~ Il<""nlOtn and Jim Lonfl phtl\l'~,r"Phe<lI,,'L •• 111',1.lIItap.od UH" with glu"lnu L",jel'b"~',.
Jul, lA, I~ - GrmJnl X - John \"'."'1/ lind
Mike C"ltlns aal< Il t..r¥t' c}'U"driral ooJe' "1t,';'''''J JllIniod by I"" sman"" brighl ubJ'" L',
whid.1 "tiling I,I"*l\irapt ••,j, NAS ~ laUe'" ty
pidI Ux'm up 001 ••.•r•.•.,"".&opt. 11. liO>oIl - (kmini XI - I\lcl\Jord
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~/ld r:ll ••••11l Id•.in 11II11 I"ur lIF(» Ilnk,'ll ill ••
row. 1l<,U1JlP'lrl -",,'n said too) ••..~rc nJI 'I.;:' •.
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m, •. 'It.
1"" WC'Err s.\m ull •••r ,lghU"l;t. " •••'Oftll!
to his tJ!'l'oro.. In<:luo.k:;
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what "'di<d Uk » gJ)tl(j ..r101 of a ~ u'r,~W) 30. 1962 ~ XIS pll"" ,I•• , Wallon
plwll" ••r.pl\td fl, ,lL'>('.b"~ 00}«'1lI.
July 17. 1962 - 1m 111M IWb whJ~
ptwli'liupI:iOO ~b}c(:", abaut30 Cec'I'''''QY 11'."
his C'raft llJld .1.0101 fIa mU"" "p.
'Ort.S, lilfIi - M.'TCllf) VIlI - WnltM'
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, C"''P'"r Tt'P'l<1.-<J • I(rwni!h IWO With Il •.•• I
t<.ll dllfing hl1 lrrth (>]'1111.H. ~au tepatl(~
olher "Iyot •.•to". alllt,llngs {w,'r S""lh
Aml'rklo 11M '\u"lr811& '1~Ilb)td he £Ighl""
""er ?<'r'lh, Australia, WIiS wughl on ><--re.m,.It) IIruutkl lracklng 'U,Uvrol;,
(){1. 1:1, lli1lo4 - Voskh,:.1 I - Thc"" /t" •••I••n
r ••••murum'- lOlX>rt •••.1 II",>, "l'fN SUrr<l'Jfil""J
,by Q 1","l'wtion of tiwjftly m",'lng dIS(. o.l"'po.~looj.'Cts
Mlltt'h e, Iilf\~ - V,,<khr ••1 : _ UII"""'","{l6!onn.,uLs cCJlV'Io~J Ilidenufi.,.j "bj•••..1 ju,~
it. Il~, .:nll.•.ll'd It,e r..rth' •• lwt}!!pI"' •••••
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f(.'j,....,.I(~d 11! ph~}t.I ••t:Jl")t.l.f ~"'\'Il:"t~tl >{(r-t.rIH~
By ROBERT Ii. Nl90RINO
. Of 'N T••. ,. ~fl"
lJaJdt.ntifu<;l J1Yi"8 Yb~'l.a txriin..., \(I'
baunt l4ld Pltuk Am,'Mea', IIp.~lllo<!n. The
Natl~"!11 Aerun.uU". IIlld Space Ad.
Init,}, traUOIl ~dmj~ II-.llt. In .ddllioo k> 2ll
othtt tJ ~~ """a."moo, the .'1r{\Mull ""Sky.Lntl!I [J ,1Jd III were the ltlllllll « ,~Jl ~pa<:'e •
U1W.j(lfl' \Q ,f.KIlt UFO..
()w",n Garriott Illld "lull n ••••n, w~tct••.'d Illld
I~l"l.ut:rephed I ID)'mri.cus red ,,1,""'1 fur 1. ,mlnull<!! bel,1I"e Lt t\l.Il&ppellN'd.
I./Iter. I::•.lt•• rd Gibaorl ut st)'wb In'rqIOrW CAlMI~k>ll Cootrolalilooustoo thaI I••
lu1<lI\UlI'or1t.plonlDn!!, Gf-f'tdd em and WlIIlAIII
I' q.~. "Nt' hemg du •..oo by "lIttk ""JlI"hl •..•
"Hie rrl<:n ct Sky1:,bs 11 and III lkh"ilcly,lid ..c;, tWo., '11",1 la, w~ dOIl.t know •• hul il
b 1J1o".~ <11<•• ' Jl.tlcl pOOtOl(I'lIf.be<I." •••. Id !>eMI••
W,Uu""" •• " I",blle I"lwUOrla lIIplJll"HnUlII 'V( ,MhlYM ('''IIIc<ol, in 1/ l'ATIl.Jo:H IIller\ie"'.
A" dlll~ til at 1e•••1 uoe ''''",,,i,••.,,,t liFO
~\r-'rr1 (;t~lIIl;V! D. F.~'c,.'dt of Mt Mr)'.!\ ( • ,t •..•c I.IMI I•••." ~"." btillM 10 ~I
1"',>1 .!II II~! ncullh ••r "I tWO. "",... "rI""wLJ '''.ilJlt14~11 11) AJm'rU."~n *(WI HlI~n.
laltl't'fI1dl
n".,... "'.ll)<k th~ ~xperl"ftI"" ol ••••lt'l)lll' •••1s4t~ ~< ,,~,u.,11 mi •••&Qn:
[lUrln,~ ~t. lniJl:iilln, to'.-ll Amw~\,
f.dwLn Aldrin. ~ CoUbw ~lit
tcq~-~"by~ ~ •..,~ -' - •••..••.••••ro ••••• / ~ ••• ~T ~
.J\LJQI .•••. ~. UilIfU ,V,P..Ii.AJ ~ ",<:lc At": l
_l1DIilat,.~ ••k ••••.•. .! .A.u!J.aolcIl. U. '~b Ul NCr utl'.'
~0e4. tile ~ ••• ~ 1tlII&<f~ tlloCIIl, WlllJ';lJl,t 10-*1 TAmEH tiloal •
110 tur It;"r ""talL, ••1_1 the r.:t..I:bU1'i IIill be
"aJlaWt: lor lilt PI"""'''I tul~,TI",,,, lin:, ho'v.~V4.••., ~Ilblr tilun'
d>:14U" 3vll.1.1b!e librot tb" . hling b)' Sl<y14\)
II '" U•• 1lJ",.ill(l r~ WJ-oct lOilllJ\..t lt~ I>l••••,curtain ~ "P"",. ll<>IlIf' Vll miles lit."",. Lbt• "rtlL
Ii,,!) Gordoo. "nulholr !O(lllllCoo Control
"""" •.••,"'''. told TAT'rt.Jo:n I~t the noOft '" SI(YLAB II c'ew hll'i no ,(~•• mal uFOl ••••••, obM,,,,,d Jl1 ""f\I "ft off
Skybb II did ~ _ ~ Ut'O ~nd LMI lIJ<')' , 1
~l-"'I pll<Jt<'OltapbN It. lLa'ill beo.-n an)' 1lI1C"I UllOUS8ndlo \If objOC1J 1111A('o,wdlnll 10 Gurriott:. : ., •• lhwe. No 00l' W~5 l':;.p«lally eitdt.d pboul
"Jud ILoo.ttM) lim nlllk•.~ l.lIb. l'1IlbeT""(I," ••• &;lid, ' .' .
li<rg~ !....-lot/ll. wI 1Jl1he •.• ,.dt'wt:n wmoo". :C. Dr. J. All.i.:'1 lIYlMlk <J. "..,.J.wc:;t(,mllpon. cl_ t'~'nt,...tl(l<i, It ""u mlJdl Univocolty, a . l>!Ul.nt 10 lhr Ali FIJf'«I OIl
br4:htor th.~. JupLUr til' .11)' 01 Oil!ather It$ fJl) •• ~h .•''''1lJ'''O re.••.•rd, etffll"t, P'roj»d
p!llru.lA. Bl~ aook. .nd U IWl'lll'Clt a utltortt}. ()/l
~It 114d.reddJ:ah w. to II, ewn \l)( h it U~"Os,\t.ld TATl'lER:
••.u ••eU.ho\'~lheIwlrlUlCl W"Ilbatn-edlltor "1lJt !Ilr.i..b U ~'aht'lA~ •••• _,.~ .• lit 'alMa 10I1\lnuta N:i« to 1Un1l4rt. 11'ltAll _11 ~ ., -- -"10 (e,..... 'I qIlIl It'.»
rol.i>UIlll bft::aUlOl! II had' • wrlnt\l:ol, i.ll' u a llf"O.I.t~ nq one I.¥ a~ 10 ~In II~,lt ••••••• Ith •. lkt>l'OOd'peIlod. : !o8tWae'Wrlty. ;,.
''Wt ~I -~ 4Iri.r ••••• bccI nVll!l«'OI'Idi~.' "If II •••.a. "I1Cl1'e JUIlAor the bo<>Irter rllO:k~t
10"". Frr.;n ttl!' D to to """.>IId <.kill)' ID It.. • tor Sl<y1dl, 1. {ra ~tr,lttg~ Ihal NOIl.AD diillJ't
diulpp'lIf'll.OOe, ~ IIlJl'1n~ that II ••••• "oil IJ.••,.., ,t on trllocklnll_ 'flier trudl ~Vl'f)'
111<0' than 10 :I/) MuUc: .••1 mJlt.'j Irvm oor rtamnlld Ihlrol; - tv"" ,I thaI !lei.ghL
lor"llOn." Mid Gurrlott. "t unde"t...nd thaI NII.!IA ha • Iv! to do aoo"Fr(llfl Its orLlClnal pos.ItJOIlln U•••I"ardro<1.n, '(:arr'l d"",'k out ""cry thlroi UJ)U•••• 1 U•••t iii
"'IIIdow. It d1,1 no! in&n mort Ullin It Of 2!l rt<porWd. bUI It could 00 that "'nl"IlJl~ like
Jko~ o..OIIht lW1tl10 mlllUIcI we w.!clvd llii. object mlghl b<! Ihl! ~y lA llUI' k.arnlillt
It. JlJl.jlI'blt "liner)' cloMl4 O\l&'own. J•.•.t whal Il~nuln" UFOs 1U'1!," he Mid.
"We """~r •••• It on JLtI)'f"rU<.~ or 011iny Act'Ordl "K lo, ,al'lcell, ""morlclUl.1MK'<.......tlllg IlftJlI.II:' bli co"dudc<1. ll,s!l'OOJIuLi .nd ltulI.Il!.kn oosnl'lfJ.llulli have
.. . t"",,, &<,dr.g IJFC.lli ~Vt•••slN.'t mlJ~ l'I••rtocI hl.
(PORDON !Am"o 'elf"l1 wAs rtl.Il<li!JJ . cffnrt, to ttl,!, Int •• SI'••'.•••"'(I'" Ih<ln 10 Y~lltlioo1<;l'R,lne •• hal Ih" Sl<ylb!J 11 III IrOffilOU bad Ilill'
oct ", ~'"n UWllol'h lbe NC('\b nt<'rtC'lln IIJr Tt", firsl nl U)j!~. ,Utle 11"1'1, tv ~'cb.:xl, lwt.D.,{._ e"mrn ••nd (MIHAn; did no( havt' "'~•••n Jut", nknr~ pllodll<! lih M"""llry
I"" r,"'J,'rl ,., Ihrit 0.;'(',,". t'ilp~uJe. saw Ih",~ .,bj""tI> k41,),,'f,,~ h1m and
'It \It.~~ J,I",t l'lIIl)fJ)f4,tihlH up lhH't. h rl'uld then t.l'\.'(>rt .••k.\",hlttl at vary"ln, !'iil.'I"t1S.
S,ientiitsRevelll-:"" ..Alien UFOs WalchedOurFirst Astronauts on M'oon
The first men on the moon wer:cn't there alone!Two alien SI),lCeships landed near ApollQ 11 and wat(:h(."Ci as our astronauts
stepped onto the dusty surCace, reveal U.S. and Soviet scientists in a stunning dis-
closure, . l~turcs at Moscow Unl ••'er-. The astronauts saw the UFOs and even phf}- slly.
tograpned theIn, The ENQUIRER has learned - but "Two spaceships probabl)'the stupefying close encounter hilS been kept complelt~- were dispatched. so thereIy under wraps by NASA unlil now. would 00 backup In an ~mer-
A former lop eonsultant to NASA has admitted lhe mlnd- l'ellS:Y, Undoubtedly theIr ob"boggling event look place during the historic mission _ find Jl'Ctive was to learn what theywas covered up, t~t1ld L100ut the extent. of
"When the (Apollo 11) module landed at the bottom of a. earlh's Intest technological~rllter. two uliCll lIpa!:ecrart kn.~w:h?w. . .appeared al the cratcr rim," . HavlIlg verIfied the, land.revealed sdentist Maurice 109, ,Ihey depa~!..ed wilhQutChatelain formerly under rnakmg contnctcontract t~ NASA, AUen sp~~ecrart apparent.
"The cncounter WIIS com. Iy Were ~llllmg Apollo 11 longmon knowledge in NASA. Out before l.t, set .dow~ on ,thenobody has talked about it un- m?on. Chatcl~tll revealed.til now H On thc thIrd dUl; of Ihe
IncrCdibly, NASA's cover. ... mission, ,I strang~ object was FIRST ~At"l to wolk on ITIOOn, Neil Armstrong, point"up WIIS.so massh'c Ihat the Aldrin C.llin. S~tled .In the dist.mce., But lls to landing spot of TOyeors ago. From moon, he toldIl(lWIj has taken 10 years to Bot~ s0v.: strange object dJJ;n~OlilOn~ ~r e,,'(:r!lts sh~lpe NASA two objects hod landed near U,S. croft.
re3eh the Amcrlean public - dunng flight to moon. Io/IXe pracllcally rmposSlble • '_AA 'h 'n .try'llo 11 Mutual Unid"ntifl'Ad Flying" , to determine To Armstrong (){~I,U•• ~. IN C ••••'" '" ~
and had to be fIrst dlSCloscd convinced thnt the two allen 't 1 k~..l I'k 'i t,. 'I' neared the mOOI1. ;ldded Object Network (MUFON).by L'-vI'et .~jentl'sts wh". I' t 1. .. I 00 ,;'" lell erconne<: mg C'h tIl h '.. I id t . (' I
"'" "", " ." Solips were sen 0 spy on rings, Collins said it wus a tl e Ii n, \If a now L~rc",re<, sa. a governmen st'len IS
found out a{){lut It two years Ar!~str0.ng. ~ldrln, Ilnd MI- hollow t')I'linder and Aldrin "The utronaUl$ suddenly ~old him ubo~t the Apollo 11ag.~, , c~l:lel Colll~s dunng theIr thollght it looked like a huge heard strange noises on the mcidentlast summer.
[ am absolutel?' ec~rta!3 IJlstory-makmg 1969 mission. halropcn book. ' 1',H1io _ noises similar to a ,An.d J~hn Sehw5sler, depu-.~this episode took plac" ll.III ••It's my opinion that other •••.rhe. mysterynbject finally lnin whistle tireellgillesir.en ty dlf't-ctor Qf MUFON. told j
Dr. -Vllldlmlr Azhazha, a. . . d . <.. '" h •d' e<I . 'the ENQUlrtER: "I workphYlliclst llnd professor of clvllumtloJls learned of the dlsapp<:.!an.>d ao the nstro- or power saw,e LSclos; • 'lIh I ts t NASA dmathematics at M(l$cOWUnt- P!"0lJ:Ose<l moon. landing by nauts flev~r knew what they "ThlJ:Stl slltmds were tho~ght ~, , ahs.rendau
l1II .,t • an ,
- plckmg up radio slgn!lls from had sccn. ' to be 80me form of (.-ooe. " a\e ••ear lC"",~~y.....;:olll._VeTSlty. . I" 'd U' B'" '_L. I A h •. t in ld t" . them,, "A(.'(.'(lrdingto our ilnforms. v<~rtt. Sail', 0:"'111.,., w 10 nOI er 8 range c en _.Bulcthe real shocker came UFO researcher ami author~n, the encount.et 'was re- --------- when Arr!lstrofl~ atldAldrin Tim I3e<:kle)'_ who says he'sported immediately nfter the landed, Chalelllln said. Two seen oHid.ll NASA photos ofhlllding of the module. , UFOs alS{) .hmdea -. and rone.shaped UFOs on the
,"Nell Armstrong relayed Aldrin photogrllplK'<! them. moun _ feels the governmentthe ,message 10 Mission Con- Apollo 11's .r~dio trans- Is supprcsslng the trulh totrol Ihat two large, mys- missions to MISSion Control sa\'(~ faee.terious obJcds were watching , were ,Interrupted on several "The government is nolthem after having landed o~caslons "';'lthoUl .explana- going to admit we're deftmlre_ ~ ••ncar the moon mooule, But tWit, ac(."Urdlllg to Chatelain. less against beings from"nu:-hismest;;~ge was never heard lIe's ecrtain this was done to other planeI," he explained.by . tlw public - because hide the news of the tWO cn- Joseph Gooda\'age, another'NASA censored it" counter from the public. notOOlluthorand UFO expert,":'"
Buzz Aldrin even look mc)\'. . Chatelain added: S<l)'S he's l(~arned .straight'lng pictures in color of the ""he pictures MVC never from llecret NASA files that ""UFOs from.inside the module ~n published ... NASA did alien spacecrnfl were .regu-'- and contlnut.'d shooting ;af- not release them. There Were Inrly spoiled by the Apolloler he tln~ Ar!Ustroug wcnt certainly alien beings there _ aslronLlul8., "There's no llU~!-outskle, <I(,.'C(ln!lng to another but the oWclnl record is silent Uno that somethIng is gomg
, .&lvlel space scientist, Pro!. about it." 011UJl there," he declared.
Aleksandr Kazanlsev. NASA spokesman John Mc- The astronauts havc keptDr. Azha:z.ha says that the l..eulsh denIed that the agency silent about their Ul.'O en.
UFOs (lew nway Just minutes ,Ctml)jJred any ~'oice tr<'l1l8- counlctli because they areafter the astronauts came out missiolls from Apollo 11'5 trained 10 believe It's a mat-on the moon's sllrla~'e. Aldrin astronauts, or any film shot by IeI' o! nalional sec~ril?" saidlater ,cIJ,!ie<i his Htcrediblethem, He admitted, however, Dr, 1'red Bell, 11SCIentist ilodmovie ~aek to earth - where that a slight delay in trans- former consultant to NASA,NASA Immediately pul it nn. mIssIon took place _ but said ''I've secn photographs ofdel' wrilps, the professor I it WIiSdue simpl;' to process- UFOs taken by astronauts _charg(~. , ing through electronic equip" but when questioned. the
Dr. Azhnzha - aware that ment astrolllluts refused to talkhis le:lephQne interview with The Apollo U flighl wasn't :il:lOut them," said Dr. BdtThe ENQUIRER was being the only oun thnl cncoulHered "The Ild has really beenmonitored by Soviet securtty UFOs, aCL"Ording to Dr. Alh- c1arnlk"d ~0w.n O~l this:'agents - refused to identify alha, He said Apullos 12, 13 Added Strmgfield: .the source of his information. and 16 also slx)Ued space. "If the government rc-But he and other Russian craCt leased one litlle bit 01 whatspace experts say the en- A~erican lJFO expernsay happened on the moon, itCQunter has been ("ommon they have heard about. the would be the story of the cen.kn~~iedge among Soviet sci. shocking Apollo encounlers, lury,"enllfle circles ror the past two too _ Irom people in a pasl- - UIC 'AUCHIR, ElUH
years, tion to know. GOODSTEIN -J HENRY GkJSA lhlrd Russian space sci- Leonard Slringfh:ld. authQr •••••T10NAL p 25
I entist, Dr. Sel'gei Dozhich, is Blld board member of the lNQUIRlR age
~!POt~UT FHOTOGRAPHS ~
COLONEL GLENN SIGHTS UNIPENT IF lED FLYING OBJECTS WHILK IN ORB!'!:On hie history-making trip through 8p~ce last February 20th. Col. John Glennsaw a gre~t number of awall glowing cbjects which have b~en d~!cribsd looselyas .fir~~lies•• Here is the story in Glonn'8 own words:
~At the first light of sunriso - the first !unri!e I came to, IW85 5till ~acing back toward the dirc~tion which I had come from ~lth normalorbit altitude~ and jUB~ ag the first rays cf the eun came up onto the cop-sule, I glanced back doYn inside to eheek something. QDd when I glaneed backoutf my initi&l reaction wa6 th~t I was locking into ~ s~&r field •••These lit-tle things that r thought (at first) to be St~~8 were actually ~ bright blui5hgr~en, about the size and 1nt~neity of ~ ~irerly on a reslly dark n1ght~ fhc5elittle part:clea w~re about 6 to 10 feet apart~ and there were literally thou-sand! of th~:. A9 far ~s I could look off to eacb side I could see th~~ and Icould also see them hack along: the path. Lat.eT Qn I turned a.round so that I'NaB facing the direetion from "hi ch they 8.ppe~red to be coming~ e..nc!£1.1though,
in t.ha.t di rection~ 'toward the bright 8Un! ight of 'the ttillm moat of' them d1.aa.p-pe~Ted, you still could see a few ot them coming tow~rd the capsule. I waemoving very slowly through t.h1 s ricH,.. I estima. ted thfL:t. rII'f velocity throughthe field w~a sOme 3 to 5 miles per hour.. The part.icles did not seem to ~emineting from the cap!ule. They appear~d to have an ~Y~n distribution on eanhside of the c~p~ul~ •••.•.I 88V ~hem ~or a ~eriod of " to 4 m1nutes ••••They v~r-ied in &ize fro~ abou~ pinhead a1~~ to about three-&igh~8 or an inch in di~et~r••••.I observed ~h~~ on 811 ~~e~ orbits, for about tne 8~e length of time~t each ~riBe ••~••
What did Glenn ~etu~lly see! Soveral ~heor1e5 h&v~ be~n con8ider-ed. but none have be~n proTen. The -fireflios. could not 11k~ly be the contro-ver~1al copper needlea s~nt into space by the United States aome time ~go.1hcBC are now known to be in a ditferent crbit. ~nd ~re bunched up in fi~e or.,i x uee 1eS IS el utIlp9 J i., e •., the expe.r1ment was a fe..i lure. It. baa be.n sugge Bt.ed
that Col. GlenD say -spate be:tOrtl his eyes,. cl!lulled by coming into the bright.
dawn suddenly out 01' "the darkness.. This 111 M I!bs'Ilrd rJOt1on. in our opinion;Cer t~inly , in hi 8 three years of 1nteD!l ivo pBYCho10gi eal t phf a1 cal •.nd ment.altraining, Glenn ~aa taught to 4iatinguish between phy5ie~1 objects &nd Tieualillusions •. The moat likely theory IIldv&nced to date 1s tha.t the al!ltronaut salt
fro~en droplets ejected into th~ fr~gid1~yo~ spa~e rro~ III cooling device cnhie 9p~ce~r~ft.Yet, even t.h18 eXpl&Dbtion does ~ot .ufflce. During & vi.it tothe Pentagon laa"t March. we were told that the objects. some of whi~h were aularge as an inch in aize, atill have not been ident1fie4.
Another very interesting phenomenon from the Glenn flight iB shownitt the photo at the t.op of' the next Pl!.ge. Th18 picture. taken trom tho Loa An-
gelee Tl:=1ol!l .o~ Februe.ry 22.nd. bears the: f'ollcrlng eaptioIlI -MYlItery; !~[,~k'iUnoxplained. streaks, ~ppar.ntly of ligh.t. 8.ppo •.r on pictul"e taken by JohnGlenn ~ith hand-held c~era. as he whirled ~hrcugh space •••••
Quite amazingly, Col. Glenn's experience tends to con-firm the claims of the late George Adamski, made in his book.INSIDE THE SPACE S~IPS. published in 1955. In that book, hedescribed saucer f11ghts he made with the space people. Inone passa.ge he used the word ,rflrefl1es.' to describe a phen-omenon he alleges to have seen. Adamsk1's followers slsoclaim that statements he made about the moon have been provenby reoer;.t I\ASA ..E..h.Q.togreJlt1~_ -- JWl':.
81
George Adamski~~--.--.~.••.•....-.:_~Dy Desmond Lcltlie
~--.~--."""~.•...""" .•...•...
;>,'inted w;lh lllfmllisioR from tile
COSMIC BULLETINGEORGE: ADAMSKI FOUNDATION,
Of ,,11 the people In th.: tl)'ing saucer world, George Adamski stands l\lorl~ as Itsml'st tontrOY!.'l'$11l1 character. l'rhrw t>lhers htlv,! daimed {Con'.acts and b<l~n tr(!ill~d withlallTl'mce, belief or 11m used cr;mtt:rnpl, out Georg:e hlld only to op'1n his mouth to bring
down a ~torm.of abuse. praise ~nd wondcrml:nt:PClh;;t>~ 1 (':IIlW t{) know him as well a$ nnybod)'. 1 tta)'cd with him sevel'al times
ilnd discovenitt rill~&h ill hIs character selrlom revealed In public. Underneath the talk:l-1(\'1:, Nlorful exterior lurlt,'.d a Y{~ry !:,"!l,t lnm,an beluFl, Some quirk in his "'lll1re C,ftltll tookp~ll1S to i'V"C(>l'>I this lmd pre sent h'sh!ad, fl. hi;;; public face, a tllr more shallow person
ih~ll he really ,"as. Will} "".';,1S he! C(,]'tllinly no ordinary penon.
Phy!\iclllly he was Polish with. I thlnk 3 touch of Romeny. Immensel)' stronli. Roodlooking and wHIt burning hillek ('Yl~$,. Spif'itu:llly he was mote lhan one pe!l>Oll_ There
•••..as the George of IHlblic lcc- tUft'S - the One I llkcd leMt tor he tried to say tou mucll~Il lit once. Then thel'(~ WllS the nlRlt":'d, m.ugl1ly Gt;'Qrge '••.•Iih a keen C)'C far II rtrlilly
lllee, llnd " pludd:!h dellcht in shocking Ihe profuced Rno;! prudes.
l'n\:tl there Wll5 lll\othc,r George,. beautifully spoken, wise,-kind, Ilnd doot11y UWllre of the Imporlallce of hi;;: task.-'fhro'fIJ!\h this Genrge, 1 severa.l tJme!t gHmp:>r.:d the pr('$l')nC~of a M,I~lt)r; und I WIi!; .,I1WllVS ~orry when the curtain caml!
down Il(l!lm llm.l the worldly' mask l)b~vllr~d him.I often wond(orcd why he should b;I1.'1: 1Jt'<:n singled. •.lUt
:>5 Ill!' prim~ prophet of saucery. H~ belit',,'e:l that he hadrc:nc;lr""led frum another planet thrO\lgh karmic reasons tf)
r.ivl' his ll':ldling!\, and I find that idlia quite acct'ptabfe, Hebl'li!: ••'ed lhrll otJ\N'lf, gn:illi;,'r in thl') worM's (-stt'NH, nlld tlhobeen I't'rrl:.ctt)<l imd glVt'n thi;,' SalUt: miJ;tion. bul thal forvarloll.s pel"sonal rell$<Jn$ hila rdu~r~dor failed. He s.aw him-t~lf ;l~ th~ 'bOle the imlt and the l>hml' wbowel.: c"II,~1 toth,! King's fea~t after lhe ChOH'!n l\\.l~3~S had mfHlc elU)\I$t'$n""l in ,r"::ht. !Ia felt he Wll~ :l hroken rCl1d, but alas the olllyIced willi rr~ to II'Y lInd piny tlllfir lUr;(1. SrI with aIt hismiGht. wllh his I,,,,bilrly 10 wriie :md &Pt~k go<)d English,~nd the inall} diHil'VUi(1$ of heing the d'QI'Qd'~r tll;,l he Wfl$',
he $(.t out urdaunled by criticism or al:ms'2 to glve tile tul.!'~'
!'Qr.e 1l~ b'!~lhe ~aw it.This to me ~{'•.ms tn()r.l probable, eVen :l '.vhl;! move on
th~ part of th~ BrothelS. Tn ('\'v,05e a g\'m'l 1l1\dre~P'Cctedper:lOfl would be tl)O •.~"s)' ftJr u:; t'.J :'l.,ecl,t, ')1' 100 dif(icultfOr ,hili p-cfROtl who might be demQted and decl;lrt~d mad"Il<lifl, in G!."i.Wgc Adanukl W'lHt all the virlu<,sam.! f~m\,~"Q( \hi~ "IMII:t, $Jightly ov~r-li(e5jzo':d. So that one t:,)\lldrcc<;.gnll"! All t\sped or Ilfle~tM in him "n(! ;udge from a mQr'!l'o:r)i'tln'IJ bllSis,
Tn lrS~C85 the \'flHdj1~' of hi$ claims is still diJHerllt r ampi'nol'l<llly completd)' $utisfietl that hi!: ('hotos mod early (101l-lucls <lre wmpl<~tds authl10tk and wlU lJ1 tin\~~ 00 prowm byIM~r e','ents. Some af his cJa;m$ take a I<~tor :>WIIl!o)" •••.ing.B\.>\ ji::~\whtn you hlld d(~cidf;'d to -"nitE' him off as ;I babbler,SOffit-thing (\lms up to subslnntil,le them, F()r im,tM'ce, ••..!lEttI first vlsiteli him in IS:>4 till spoke of the Van All ell Ddts,and tilq "FirdHes in 6pi!lCl!:' .as IM('t teen by the cOsmonauts,~eithe.r 0( thes" were known il~ the dme. 'The 11l5t time 1SIiW' him he t:lJlmly armGullc.ed 'I ~nw Pop'" John Yt'~lt:n:! ••)..'\Vell. as it hllpperwd [ WlJS oble t.) !'(t,t indcpt'ndcnt con/irnn,-Ho~ tll ••t this WlJS true, John g"Ve him il he1mtil uI g(ildmN;;'lHlo:;'n em,,)' of himsel( which M far as .1 ktlOW hns Ilf'Yel"
yet bCl.:'n rdcat!'d lllHI is nllly given to the most special peoplJl",George dllimed 10 have Ui"ell John It $.(';lI~'>lprlckage fromthi! Broth('n; with ad~'ice for the (:Qnrlud of the CQundl.Crrt"inly th", ",,'r'y the Church hi'':; behaved since then is verymilch in lille with Ih€ Brother'
That Wil:!, Ihe mnddeninl! G('orge, Just as;YOl1 tht\ughl ;'(.".,l had llit lll.~1 Cll a whoppcr, some-thing WQuld lurn up to subsllll 1aim.
I rcmrmb",r two e,,;c~s$l(lns (Ill SUt't:i!$slve ni.ghts. al Palo.mar when I saw a tillY golden remote control disk It.avErapidly. 01\ the wt'ond occassion we w~re t<1lkil'lg on his llntloj\l,t <liter dark wht:t1 I fHlt a tr(!'m~mlous ft'Cling of bt!inilwatched. I Wrned around jU$1 in time to seq Ii tirr~' ~oldendisk nat n1<XE t.hlln OCt). reel (lway, liS it shot upward in almil or light. George laullhed, and I 5uid: "Th.wl< God ourronversation 11lts bern dean Ihe lar.t IwenfY nllnUlltS."
He reCused to ask me OIl,' 'contact' wIth him lind lit thehmr? it pee •...ed me lo(nwtly , But I n'alized Illter that [ was inno fit Fplritl13,1 state for such <1.0 t'j(fJerl(~nce und had I bl!C'l1
tllk(>n l\btlllrd II .s:.urer I doubt if I'd ha\'e bf't'n aver', SI1C-ct"ssful prt}phl'l. a!l('rwnn1s tnr my ego is highlv susceptfhle taspiritual aggrantlisement, Many ..•,fw htH'c hB"d gen\lit,e l'(ln,
t:uls !tllve gone vl1ry odd. Cormi..,r new mlif',icms llnd in [;""tdoing everything the Brothel'S desire ((~11S1. 1 doubt I wouldhave bC{'n any (tXCepUt,ln.
One thing [ liked about Gm,rnc Wil$ his ulter down. to-eallhines$. I. c(Oo't tJlink he t;:v('r "UH.'H~d ffQtn spirit.ualruid •.• - from almk. froln $((0111). rr""" lnany !,th',r thin!:5y~, but despite the Wl\l'l'mg hllmon fflctlOns wlllrh grltw upIH!Wng his 10UQwen, therlf WIl.$ atwllYs 1\ f,tcot rl1(x1e:sty llnd
5(.no5(; 'of !ISs own Unirnp{lrtIJ!lre in II sch.!Ul'! of $ueh V('$tfl.:SS
and splumltJr.
I don't s\Jppc.sc he will mind me telllng this, now tha,the hilS .,:Ist olf the Hne old body, bLlt ht: once shOWN! methe Hlo"t t;xtfj,oNilnary birthmark, His nil~'el was not likea human navel nt all. It W,iS a huge !>olar dil;k With deeplycut U}':5 ext~ndln!l out llbout SIX inch..::;; all ;)l"o\Hui It, (r'omwaist to I!roln. Whal this ~;iglllfies I have no Idea - unles$It is (ru1)' l!lesJgn ot a 'Chil<l of tM' Sun.'
, ':'HUTH ABOlJ'l' 1',}lE TRU1'}-l
, .'• ,J,.or-
Political faction~ are clamoring a~ain~t each other for the:Fight of opinion; ptlilosophers and sc ient1sts arc arguin/?, a.bout thetruth of their '~arious theories I allover the world conflictingth~ught centers are ~pringine up, each professing itself the onlydispenser of the absolute truth and man £inds himself wonderinejust what is truth.
As long as man has been in existence I suppose he has soughtfor truth without recognizing it when he:had it firmly in his grasp.
Many generations a€!:owhen the. Rqman Empire was at the heightof her glory and the weir:ht of her dominance was felt by a h03tafpeople there arose in her~midst a master mind who said to those'oppressed "You shall know the truth and the truth shall make youfree:. And the people eager for deliverance. cried out, '~~he truth!Give us the truth tha.t we rr.ay be free!.' 'T;hey were told the meanineof truth but they could not comprehend and so.we hear the echo ofthose words. and of the billions like them quivering down the ageswith an insistent appeal - ~~he Truthl what is truth?h
And for eyery such questioning voic,e there is another calling.hpollow me, I alone can give you the Rcal Truthl~ And blindlythe people follow, little knowing or understanding the purpose of life.
So to you of this present day - you who have acquired rr.uchknowledge of m~ything6 t I ask, r"Nhat is truth?I'
Those who are idealistically incliried will answer,"It isreality! ". And thoze wh'o are founded upon -a,-cold scienti;fic basiswill answer "Fact" Others will say tha~ truth is that which isopposed to untruth or is that which is good. To those who gave thefirst two answers I shall say you ar~ correct so far as you havegone but I shall proceed to catch you in a net of your own weavin(.The latter answer that truth is that which is good is utterlymisconceived and evasive. .
. Let UG, therefore~ get down to real analysis. Just what isthe truth 'about truth? You have said that it is Reality and if Iwere to ask you to define ~eality you would be compelled to admitthat it is that which has ~actual existencep and y~t you speak of thereal and unreal. You have a s~t standard for Reality. Goesnot everything that is known have appar.~nt existence? How else shouldit have become known?
What of those that 5~Y truth.is f~ct- explain~ng furtherthat it is that which carl be proven. Let me ask you this-provento whom and by what and for how long? .Again you must have a setstandard of d iscr imina ti qn. ~.:ust i t b~ proven by man. s laws Or'theo~ies th~t.hav~ alreaQY b~en given.recognition? Then you areputt~ng a l~ml tatlon on trutn. ~'lust 1.t be prov.en to al.l peopleor only to one who is able to see. beyon~ the perception of hiSfellow-men? Proof can op,ly G-0 so far. as a man will accept and truthto ea~h man is only tha~Ywhich he has experienced either by mentalrealiz2tion or physical expressiOh, and yet truth is universal. Itis the sum total of act:i;;On I Every slll~llest quivering frequency irjthe whole cosmos is tru1;h-true becau$"e it perpetuates ac tion. Ishall bring all of my statements down to a perfectly, logical,matter-of-fact foundatlQn', " . ,:', .
. .~
Most
ofthe
world's
intolerance
isdue
tothe
misconception
of,truth
.•~en
fight
todeath
for
their
inrt
ivid
ual
concept
ofit
wh€n
alittle
wisdom
would
.show
them
that
they
are
only
astep
apart
inthe
same
hall
oflearning.
but
due
tothe
fact
that
every
individual
intelligence
has
aslightly
different
degree
ofunderstanding
truth
toeach
isslightly
different.
Intolerance
is
amark
ofignorance.
for
adeveloped
intelligence
is.ableto
view
sequences
ofac
tion
that
show
sea
chseparate
action
tobe
rela
tive
lytr
ue..
And
because
all
sides
ofa
question
are
understood
heis
bound
by
none.
This
type
ofintelligence
does
not.conpemn
those
who
see
only
one
phase
ofthe
truth.
Instead
he
will
point
out
the
pitfalls
oclimitation
that
follow
the
course
ofthought
that
th~
individual
isindulring
in.
T~uth
isaction-the
whole
action
ofwhich
every
part
istrue.
Small
truths
lead
into
grea
ter
truths
and
one
small
truth
cast
out
asfalse
can
block
the
progress
ofa
civilation~
ashas
been
show
nby
the
history
of.the
paet.
Ee~ause
men
donot
understand
the
meaning
oftruth
and
are
therefore
intolerant,
there
has
been
aspan
ofover
athousand
years
ofsc
ient
ific
darkness
that
might
have
.bee
nused
tobring
th~
slowly
evolving
civilization
toa
higher
standard
ofhuman
expression.
~Y
ou
shall
know
th~
truth
and
the
truth.
shall
make
you
free
h•
And
the
truth
isthat
all
things
are
true-true
ina
relative
sense.
Igrant
you-relative
toal
lother
part
s,bu
tun~il~en
reco
gniz
ean~
give
oue
consideration
to
tr.e
Cause
ofall
actions
they
will
never
be
free.
Only
in
unitine
our
efforts~
acknowledg~~g'a
common
purp05~
can
we
bring
civilization,
to
aun
ifie
dstate
of
understanding
and
progress.
.Truth
isli
kea
grea
tpicture
puzzle-a
mosaiC
tas
itwere.
and
each
man
r ::;
ind:i
,vid
ual
ex
pre
ssio
tlis
apart
of
th~
t.ota
lcom
posit
ion
•.Th~
mature
individual
realizes
life
asa
auccession
ofduties
tobe
.perfor~ed,
Because
there
are
d~versified
concepts
oflife
does
not
mean
that
only
one
can
becorrect.
NOt
all
are
true
..whatever
isconceived
inth~
mind
ofma
n16
true
tohim
for
the
mo~e
ntjU6t
asevery
act
ofnature
istrue
whether
it
beof
creation
or.disintegratio
~an'5
ideas
may
boused
unwisely
because
hehas
not
enough
knowledge
touse
constructively
inrelation
toother
truths,
but
that
does
not
mean
that
the
results
establish
afact.
Our
purp
ose'
inli
fe.
':th
en
•.is
no
tto
pers
on
all
yju
dg
eb
etw
een
the
true
and
the
untrue
but
toSO
coordinate
our
own
being
with
nature
that
.w€
may
unite
the
knowledge
ofCause
and
Effect.
New
sof
inte
res
t:
Ov
erth
ela
st
sev
eral
mo
nth
s"a
gre
atde
alo
fre
new
edat
OO
nt.i
on
and
exp
os
ure
has
been
dir
ecte
dto
war
dsth
e1
94
7U
FO
inci
dent
inR
osw
ell t
New
Mex
ico.
For
thos
etm
fam
iJia
rw
ith
this
even
t,b
rief
ly,
this
inci
den
tin
vo
lved
the
reco
ver
ytex
amin
atio
nan
dsu
bs~
uen
tm
ili(
ary
cov
eru
pof
sev
eral
cras
hed
e~tr
atet
Tes
tria
lsp
ace
craf
tan
dth
eb
od
ies
of
lhei
roc
cupa
nts4
Inp
art,
sele
cted
circ
umst
ance
sco
nce
rnin
gR
osw
ell
wer
eac
cura
tely
reco
un
ted
~h
ow
ever
,in
tbe
anem
ptto
sens
atio
nali
zean
alre
ady
mom
ento
usev
ent t
ast
and
ard
asso
rtm
ent
of
mis
info
rmat
ion
was
also
inco
rpor
ated
.T
rue
seve
ral
UF
O's
did
mal
fun
clio
n~
one
dis
inte
gra
tin
g
-co
ver
ing
the
land
scap
ew
ith
deb
ris
..d
ue
toin
tem
aJpr
essu
riza
tion
prob
lem
san
dan
othe
r
4..L
aShi
ngpr
imar
ily
inta
ctne
arby
.Y
est
the
mil
itar
yd
idre
cove
rth
ew
reck
age
and
~m
oved
the
bo
die
s,pl
acin
gth
emin
cold
sto
rag
eat
afa
mou
sm
ilit
ary
ho
spit
alY
es~
the
peop
lere
mo
ved
wer
ebe
twee
n3
and
4.5
feet
tall
.H
ere
ho
wev
er,
the
stor
yh
eco
mes
man
ipu
late
din
ord
erto
mai
nta
inth
ecu
rren
tst
rate
gy
of
mis
info
rmat
ion
.T
he
bo
die
sre
cov
ered
wer
eN
OT
som
ela
rge
hea
ded
~g
ian
tey
edg
ray
skin
ned
crea
ture
bu
tas
orig
inaD
yan
dac
cura
tely
reco
rded
,th
eyw
ere
com
plel
ely
HU
MA
NO
ID1
rese
mb
lin
gea
rth
man
bo
thin
tern
ally
and
exte
rnal
ly.
Als
o tw
ithi
n
ash
ort
~th
ego
vern
men
td
eten
nin
edth
ese
vis
ito
rsd
idn
ot
po
sean
yth
reat
too
ur
wo
rld
.
did
nO
lre
qu
ire'
anyt
hing
fro
mus
and
thai
they
wer
evi
siti
ngou
rw
orld
fro
mne
ighb
orin
g
pJan
ets
wit
hin
our
sola
rsy
stem
.S
ince
that
tim
e~bo
thp
arti
esha
vem
ain
tain
edfr
ien
dly
inte
rac
Lion
lOth
eb
enef
it
ofo
ur
soci
ety
~
Wh
enev
eran
dw
here
ver
we
con
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•••
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••••
*
SEORSE ADAMSKIthe first ambassadorto outer space?.._-------------------------------------------------
G EO RGE ADAMSK I sO!!)/$ he ph oto-gr<!lphed this cigar-shaped "moth@rship" at 7:58 a,m. on May 1,1952_Adamski says the motller ship W<l$
almost rdentJCi!JI to the one that heand eight witnesses supposedly$<lW near Dasert Centar, Cellif,. on11.0'20,152.
..• ~ii~~~H~,';::.;;/dIJ:,'H~~:::~
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. ... . . .: •••••• I ••••. ... " ...
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..... .
i: THE GIGANTIC CIGAR SHAPED ship glided silently over~ the blistering noon desed. The hum from its huge generatoI5=:I electrified the air, sending small desert animals scurrying fori their holes in lightning terror .... '~ Directly beneath the large UFO, George Adamski hurriedly
set up hi8 six-incb reflecting telescope, attaching a Camera. Thehair on the back of his neck stood straight up as he begansnapping pic1ures in the charged a1mosph ere.
A quarter of B. mile away Adamski's four companionsstood aghast, their eyes glued to powerful binoculars, watchingas the orange-1opped object glided silently over a nearbymountain ridge. The lack of wings and tail assembly, and thestrange undecipherable insignia on the side made them thinkof an extra-terrestrial space5hip.CONTINUED NEXT PAGE
"-i: .. '.fS? ....
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GEORGE ADAMSKI $Ulnd!> beside a palntins of ~h& Venusian "l'lyinS ssucer" pilot he claims to ha.vecontMtoo near [)e~rt center, Calif .• on No\Iernber 20, 195.2.
: :.':11. :
," "
This is supposedly the third of roUP'" photOgr"~P"'3 of a ~p~ce ship GeorgeAdam£ki :inapped in rapid liUCC8ssiofl on 315/51. Photograph pur-portedly shO'NS a large "mother ship" discharging 2'l group of "fly-ing :!.lIUC8r$."
4.Suddenly I saw this sauoer
come in," Adamski later told me
"In the meantime, Ail' Fot<:e jets
had spotted the cigar-$haped craltand began closing."
Adamski, remaining cool through-
out the entire. display of aerial
bedlam, finished his roll of film.
He had just begun packing up
his photo gear when he heard Q
man hail him frt)m a short distance
away. Adamski's first thought was
that the man was mer~ly a rock
hound, but tWs judgement ptoved
moom:et. Adamski signaleil for
his companions to take care of his
telescope, and began walking
toward the .stranger.
.4The closer I got to him, theoclder r felt,'~ recalled Adamski.
"I was cautioll8, but not frighten-ed."
Upon close inspection Adamskifound the stran ger'R dothing to be
not unlike his own. Long, blond
tresses hung down to his shoulders.He W!l$ about 5'6" tall, weighed
135 pounds, and by Adamski's
judgement, looked approximately
28-years-old.The Rtranger'R hi gh forehead and
finely chiselled nose gave him astatuesque appearance a~t the
noontime desert sun. His grey-
.t;reen eyes. set in a face that was"nearly as hairless as that of a
baby", presented a striking pic-
tunt The stranger W01'e no watch,ring, nor other ornamentation.
When the two were at ann'slength, the stranger Btuck forthhi~ hand in a friendly gesture, but
instead of shaking hands in the
normal marmer, he just rubbed his.
palm agaim~t Adamski's.Realizing that time was ex;pitio g,
Adamski asked his new acquaint-
an(e from whence he hailed. Butthe visitor only shook his head
and flashed an apologetic ex:pre.a.-sion, indicating that he di d not
understand.
So they comm\lned by tele-pathy!
Adamski explains how he piCA
tured a plllnet in his mind and
pointed to the SI:m. Immediately
he received the message that the
8tra~r was from Venus.
ThroURh telepathy, gestures,
and ijign language, Adamski slow-
ly amassed the information that
Orthon'!:l ohjectives were friendly,
a1thou~ he was concerned with~':rndiations froOl our nudesrtests'>.
The Venuaian then pointed to a
nearby hill where his "saucer" wasparked, and eX}Jlained that he
used this scout ship to hop back
and forth between earth and thegigantic blunt-end mo ther shipAdam6ki had phlrt.ographed earlier.
The \-'iaitoI revealed that he
came from Venus and that themother ship was propelled through
space by magnetic energy; tha tmany landings had pt'eceded this
one and many would follow. Ven-
u$ians follow the laws of the Cre-
ator instead of the Jaws of ma-Wl'"ialiBm aa earth-men do, Adamski
later claimed, and was pointedly
informed tha,t several space visitors
had been kiHed as the re!ilult ofthoughtlesS! actions by men ofearth.
"For thie reason", Adamski WM
told, "extra-terrestial visitore. do
not land in populated arEas be-
cauoo they would be 'torn topieces'."
SUDDENLY AnAM!1Kl lIBM~MBgR.E1l
a box Brownie CaJIlI;ra he had
brought with him. But the space
man objected. It seems that heoccasionally does "undetc(lver
workt' on earth, and he feared he
might be recognized.
To other q1,le~tions, tbe strangerrevealed that all jnhabitanU3 of
other planets are humanoid in ap"pearance; that they have '.kid-
napped" many willing earthlings;
tha t all of the planets within oursolar system are inhabited.
After about one hour of di3"cussion, Adamski was telel?athical.
ly impressed, that the Venusian
must leave. Pointing ro his feet,
the vi~itor suddenly exploded in
an alien toUe"1le - one that re-sembled. Chine;se and "one of the
ancient language.!! 5Poken here onearth." .
AdarmJei 5UrmiBed that the vjsi t-
or's feet held S()ffie special ~gr
31
f'hotogr'aph George Adi!lt'l'lski sayshE! made aool".lt 9: 10 a.m. on 12113)'52 at P~loma.; Gardens, Calif.He ~Y$ sp~ce ship WeI$ .\!Ibau1::35feet In dlllmet1!Jr' 2Ind was com-posed of '" trZlnslucent mElta!. Thedome su pposedly contained a."power coil,'J
ni£icance. Then the :;jP~cemanstepped a~idel and - behold; -there were two deep impression$
containing a quantity of Jines..
circles and symb()l~. Adamskiclaimed that the symbols con-
tained astronomical and historicalinformat.ion.
Then the two men walked tothe hovering scout ship. Adaml'ki
de~ribed it as resembling a glassbeU rather than a "saucer." Hesays it wa~ translucent, of "ex-quisite color," dome-shaped withthree huge ball.-Maped objects onthe underside, and abau t :15 feetin di.3meter. The dome supposedlyhoused a. hea ••."')'coil, which glowed
when power surged through it.With Qrthon aboard, the craft
$uddeoly glowed !l blind.in~ whjte
and nashed away over a nearby
mountain, where Adam~ki han oh-
served the mother ship hovering.
Thu!;, on November 20, 1952.George Adamski beeR-me our first
alleged ambassador to outer space.During his lon~ and colorful
career, George Adamski, who has
never had one day of public 9chool-
ing in his life, wore the hats of
philosopher, student, t.eacher, and
sauce.r researcher.Adamski's first UFO book. Fly-
in.g Saucers Ha/,)e Landed, which
turned out to be one of the mosthighly publlcizoo book~ of our
time, was printed in 18 different
languages, and shows betU;!r thana quarter-million copies sold sinceIts first publication. Its sequeLInside the Spac(J Ships, has sold
Qver 100,000 copies.
Born of II Polish father and anEg:V"Ptian rnoth~r, Adamski choseto live at Palomal' Gardens, a qwetCalifornia retreat eleven miLe3from the world'SJ large!1t telescope.
George Adamllki served two ell-
listmentR in the U.S. Army priorand during World Wilt r. His lifefrom that time until 1928, whenhe began teaching philosophy inLos Angeles. is a mystery.
6E086E ADAMSKIIn 1933 he moved to Laguna
Beach, C.aliforni!l., and acquired arollov,.;ng hy lecturing o.••...er the air.
Adaml',ki imparted the priceles8
knowled~e of ancient laws "known
by occidental people today but
l>€ldom found outside of Oriental
Philosophy. "It W<l,8 not long bC!Qt:c George
Adamski adopt.ed the title 01 "Pro-
fc,"il'.oI"." an honor supposedly con-ferred upon him by hi s ~tuden ts.
He was ahm esl.ee.med by the giftof n sb:~inch Tin!!ley .reflecting
telescope, which was to become
lamou!'; a decade later fm sup-
posedly having taken the first
photo~apha of a space ship from
another world.In 1944 Adamski purchaged 20
acres on the southern slopes of
Palomar MOlll1tolin, "on the ad-viee", he says, Hof scientist friend[:;
who had been instructing me in the
fIeld of a~tronom r and the opera.tion of the l8.inch Schmidt tele-
scope atop Mt.. Palomar."On Odober 9, 1946 Adamllki
says he saw hil) fil'8t "spaC€ .ship."
Observing the !;ky during a meteorshower. Adamski spotted a large,
black, diriglble-~haped object whicl
he at first mi.\',took for an Ameri-
can s-ecrct weapon.Augu~t, 1947 provided the first
mas~ sighting for AdamsJti and his
friends. 184 flying saucers, no less,
traw::ling in "squadnms of 32.H
In late 1949 Adamski claims he
was apDrool:hed by four govern-ment scientjsts who wished to en-
hl't his help in obtaining "photo-j{raph!';. of strange croft rIyin Ii
GEORGE ADAMSKI exhibits n9WS-p2llXlr h92ldline made during hisworld lecture tour. Aus~rElli.annewspaper hes Adamski proclaim-ins: "Sp~c9men are my triendsl"
through s-pace." Soon Adamski
came uv with tv,"O photographs,
which he claims to bave tumed
over to J. P. Maxfield and G. L.Bloom of the Point Lorna Naval
El€ctronies LAboratory. Adamskireceived hi~ first newspaper pub-
lici t, when personnel a.t t.he labor-
ll.lory denied ever having receive<!the photographl:>.
Th~ y(;!~r 1950 was dissappoint-
ing for Adamski. He was able to
photograph only I'white spots furout in $pace."
The next two years were morerewarding, howeVCl'.
"Th6 spacecraft seem to 00 mov-ing closer to earth in ever im:re3.<;-
jng numbers," he reported.Out of 700 negatives exposOO., 18
were good enou~h to "prove,'f aC-
cordlng to George Adamski. theCtbjecUl came from DUrer space:.
By thi~ time Adamski was pre-senting his "proof" to serviceclubs, hi5 sole stated purpose be-ing "to get people thinking <ll1d
t.alklog flying saucers." To aug-
ment his lecture income he be~an
selling his photograph!> for 75~
car:h.
When Adamski is questioned asto why he was able to corne up
with so many fine saucer photo.~when other eq ually energetic perw
SOnS ended in dismal failure, he
had this to lla)':
"My pictures aren't exclusive.
Large ohserva torics as well as the~overnment agendel; alflo hn ve
good, an d in ~orne cases better pic-tures, but they are clasllifi.eil. The
av€rage person never gets a look at
these photos".In addItion, Adamski claims he
actually spends more time sky
watching, not to mention the fact
tha t Mt. Palomar Lies bet.ween tWO
"na tura] vortexes" (which some.how seems to attract the saucers
Iike flies to sugar).ADAMSKI .o\LSQ HAS SlEVRRAl.
opinions as to why the governmentsuppresses pictures of fiying sauc-ers. .' }'irst it lvould upset th~ ap-
plecart of our school system toofa.st. And the economic sy~te!I1
could be upset if too much infor-
mation is given ~uridenly."However, by 1951 and 1952, our
enthusiastic sky watcher decided
that photographs of distant space
ships were not enough, and heinitiated several excursions intothe desert, where 1'UmOr had itthat. the "little people" were
abounding aplenty.
I t was on one of these tripswhich produred not only manyphotographs, but Adamski's now-
famoWl meeting with his Venus-
ian near the small town of Desert
Center, California.After the historic meeting, all
wa5 quiet until ThlcembeI 13, 1952.Suddenly at 9 a,m, Adamski wasawa.kened by the roar of jet planes
circling overhead. Outside he ob.
serve<! "a.n irridescent glasB-like
craft" hovering 400 feet ahove a
nearby valley.Adaro!:!ki took four picture!:! of
the saucer, alter which it aproach-
ed to within 100 feet of the photo-grapher. A porthole opened. andan extended hand dropped a filmholder which Adam8kl had given
his friend on the K ovember 20th
meeting. Then the hand waved,
and the spaceship sped away.Upon development, these nega-
tives comprised an essential paTtof Adamski'B best-&eller, Fiyin.gSaucers Have Landed. The bookalso contained the following affi-
davjt, signed by all the witne~;!3esto Adamski's contact with outerspace:
"We, the undersigned, do sol-emnly state that we have read the
aocount herein of the peI'$Ooal con-
tact between George Adamski and
a man from another world, broughthere in his Flying Saucer (Scout'
ship. And that I was party to, and".,.itness to the event as herein re-counud."
Upon close questioning two of
the witnesses decided they did not
qui te see everything Adamski re-
ported. One lailed to see the flying
saucer, but did sec a Clfbsh" aboutthe tim€ the saucer was supposed
to have taken off. The other wit.ncs!'. failed to see Adamski talkingwith the spaceman becawe he may
have been "looking a few degrees
off."There were many divergent
views on Adamgki's photograph5.
In a much publicized statement,Peverly Marley, a noted Holly-
wood cinematographer, claimed
that if Adam~ki's pictures had beenfakecl, they emibited. the cleverest
trick photography he had ever
seen.The Air Force's Air Technical
Intelligence Center in Dayton,
Ohio felt differently, ho •••..ever. Ed-
ward J. Ruppelt, who headed theofficial nying .9B.ucer inve5tigutive
body at the time, Pro.Teet BlueBook revea.led the oWcial ven:l.iet:
"'riley oould be genuine, 01course, but they could ha.ve been
easily faked by a knryear-old witha Bro\\-nie camera."
While Adamski bas had many
alleged contacts since the meetingwi th th-e Venu.9ian (he claims atleast seven), he produced no morephotographs that showed anything
more than whlte hlotcheg againsta darkened background.
DURING ONIt OF THESE "con-tacts: t he met two other spacebrothers who identifled themselves
a~ Firkon and Zuhl. These expel".ienres were recorded in Ad.amski'~~cond bestrBeller, Inside the SpaceShip..",.
Although Adamgki maintain~
that he has been neither to the
,.Flying Selucel" showin8 heat ra-diatlon" photosrapned iM 1:30p.m. on 12/ 1J 51, with his 6.inchreflecting telel!leope. This is one ofsome 800 photos Ad l<tfT1$1< i allegesto have taken of space ships.'though he s.ays I&ss then two doz-en turned out satisfactorily.
moon nor any other planet to date,he does claim to have been granted
.a trip into outer space aboard thecigar,s1laped mother ship.
In their airborne "laboratory,"the cooperative brothers turned a
television sca.nner onto the moon,
which was a mere 40,000 miles dis-
tant at the time. Peering down dthe dim screen, Adllmski'~ eyes
.suddenly "'1derred."You will find bases up there,"
he told me. "You're going to find
dwellings - not palatial, Lul nice
dwellings where the people thatmaintain the bases arc living. Ieven saw what appeared to be an
animal through an opening in aforest or brush. It ran J.:laoS13 thisli~tle opening and it looked like itcouJd have heen ;8 ~mall dog. May~
be it wasn'l a dog at all, but it
looked something like a small dog
would Look mnning across an open
path."
But life on the moon didn'tsttlrtle the amateur astronomer,
"Watch for movement in thecraters", Dr. Johnson and Dr.Wilson of Mt. Palomar allegedlytold Adamski. "The movement in
CONTINUED NEXT FtAGE
AdamSKt believes the space peop'e had somehow remov@d thE! orisir'lalphotoSr'~phieil"l1~e:e <!r'\cl substituted this message pertaining to fhepropufsion of ~pace ships.
the craters cannot be anything butair."
On this issue Adamski standsalonet for alltronomers are virtuallyunanimous in their opinion thatthe moon cannot support life. Theystate tbat the monn lacks bothwater vapor .and atmosphere, both
of which are prime requi!!li tes foranything but the mOBt elementary
organisms.
Not only doe.'! Adamski claimthere is life on the moon, but ahogigan tic fore st.'! which appear 8!l
nothing more than da.rk blotchesto our scientists.
I n Adelaide, Australiat on bi~
first lecture tour, Adamski ~a.id hemet a space woman. She was em-ploy~d as a lawyer for a steamshipcompany.
Adamski claims that many space
people live as humans on thilJplanet. Several thousandl at lea!;t.
(He is qnick to point out thereare supposedly ten million per-sons on thi~ planet whose origins
are unknown).Adamski also 8saerts there have
been some 2.500 contacts, 800 or900 of which are genuinE!.
"The others have merely hadmental experiences", he asserts.
Of the many space visitors
Adal1Ulki has met, the majority,he claimed are Venusian scientists.
"If we can accept this thing,we hll.ve a chance to go fartherthan any civilization in history/'
Adarn~ki claimed. "The visitors
didn't come here to be worshipped.They just want to help.J>
Such unorthodox thinkitJg pro-
voked a neat-riot among 300 stu-dents when Adamski lectured at auniversit.y jn Zurich, Switzerbnd.The students apologized the fol.
lowing day. and Adamski dutifullyexplained that they had been the\.ietirns of an "intffi'national con-~piracy" which was attempting todiscreclit him.
The highllght of Adamski'sEuropean tour, how€verj Wli,S thewarmhearted reception accordedhim by Queen Julianna of th~Nea therland9.
While the press was quick topojnt out that JlJlianna was akook - she had empl{1yed a faithhealer five years earlier to help
cure h(!r yolJIl.ger daughter ofpartial blindness - this did not
deter' the Queen in her misA.ion,The Queen Wlth her husband,
Prince Bernhard - a noted avia-
tor - and an assortment of DutchAir Force pensorme1, aBtronomer.s,and physicists listened intently towhat Adamaki had to say.
What the results of the historicmeeting were never came to light,but Adamski regarded it as atriwnph - not to him~l£, but~lfor the cause". ..It gave pres-tige to the flying saucer programT01' tha first tim-e/' Adam.ski pro-
claimed.
Following this world tour, Ad.aImiki came to the conclu!3ion thatforeign countries are more re~pec-tive to space visitors than i~ Amer-
ica.
4'There have been a number of 'landings in Rwsia," he stated."They even dined with the vjsitors
~ treated them like humansshould h:eat humnns - and nat-urally they learned a lot that way."
While Adamski himseli was a
contacree, he pointed out brisklytha t he has only contempt for themajority of psychOJl, crackpots,
and conridence men that put fort.hthis claim. He consjdered himse11a lone ~'Olf, and took pride in thelad that he never belonged to aflying saucer dub or attended aconvention.
It ha~ been estimated that105,000 people attended his lec-tures during his world tour. andthat allother 45 million heard himspeak over radio and television.And. while he clalmed to have
netted no income from his worldMUTt it is commonly beHeved that
his books have netted him a smallfonune.1f~t flymg ~u~r~ Adwns~
said, hail from nur :!lohn system.
And as far as he knows. all thevisitors are friendly.
"While jt would be poos.ible lor
cultures less developed than our-sel\'es to invent space$hips andvisit our planet for selfi9h pur-
pOSE$", Adamski explained, "none
have shown up to date." In thepalit years the whole program 01the space visitors has changed, hecontinued. The idea now is to place
many space men in high scientificand government job~ thUg up-grading our technology and getting
us into l';paoe as 600n as poslJible."There could be a million con-
tacts a.nd billions of sil{htings, and
it wouldnlt convert the world. Butif just one of our &paC6ships landson a. planet and brin~s. back wordof life and civiliUltion, jt would domore good than millions of sau~r8in mass landings. And it wouldn't
frighten the people to death,eithel'.'t
ThWl declared Ceorge Adam5ki.
PhHosopher, student, teacher. gau-cer researr:her. •