Archive for December, 2007

Battle of L.A. Videos and Information

This is an overview of The Battle of Los Angeles posted on DamnInteresting.com. A new blog post was made on the Strange Corridor blog on the 10th of this month that details the events of this case, providing a wealth of information and pictures as well as some external links if you feel like reading further. I think you’ll find this story very interesting…

Content from external source:

From DamnInteresting.com

Picture from the Los Angeles TimesPicture from the Los Angeles TimesIn early 1942 the United States was still reeling from the Attack on Pearl Harbor. They’d declared war upon the Empire of Japan, but had thus far fought unsuccessfully in every engagement. The West Coast was wary, and prepared for a seemingly inevitable invasion. Cities from Seattle to San Diego had invasion plans including things from air-raid sirens to blackout procedures. Nerves were drawn taut, and there was no shortage of false alarms.

On the night of 24 February 1942 the Air Raid sirens sounded, and the Coast Guard Anti-aircraft guns were ordered to “green alert,” putting them in readiness to fire. From the time the battle began until it ended in the early hours of the morning, thousands of people had witnessed the search lights around Los Angeles fix on a target hovering above the city, and anti-aircraft rounds detonate in the sky. Reputable news agencies reported the attack, complete with eye-witness accounts. But the Japanese claim that they never attacked, and there was no wreckage to indicate that anyone actually did. These conflicting accounts cast uncertainty on the nature of the unidentified aircraft that caused the Battle of Los Angeles.

The first sightings of the incoming aircraft came from the Coast Guard shortly after 11:00 PM. Because commercial and private aircraft were fairly common, the Civil Defense Service reacted cautiously to the initial sighting. As reports of the incoming plane–or sometimes fleet–continued and progressed nearer to land, artillery posts were put on alert. By the time they started getting reports of an overhead object from people inland, things were put into action, and the Air Raid Wardens were called in to put the city into blackout. Thousands of volunteer Air Raid Wardens began calling the homes of people in their areas, and ordering them to douse the lights; in so doing they incited people to go out and seek the object that was crawling slowly through the sky.

Some witness accounts describe the interloper above the city as a tremendous single object, while others stated that it was a dispersed group of smaller objects. Many people reported to the papers that they were certain they’d seen US planes approach the object before the shelling began, however the army reported that 4th Interceptor Command was only on alert, and no planes were ever launched. Spotlights lit the skies and illuminated an object moving slowly–sometimes hovering.

At 3:16 AM the 37th Coast Guard Artillery Brigade opened fire while the target was over Culver City. With the city lights all snuffed for the blackout, the barrage of AA shells was the center of attention. The firing continued intermittently through the night until the blackout lifted at 7:21 AM.

The morning papers were filled with details of the incident. Some reported that two Japanese airplanes had been shot down, but such wreckage was never found. Some buildings had been damaged by shells, and there were six casualties– all of them were on the ground. There were three killed by friendly fire and three more of stress induced by the attack. The Los Angeles Times ran a front page picture depicting the object caught in the search lights; it is uncertain if this picture is an actual photograph or an artist’s depiction because of the lack of clarity, i.e. the fact the search lights terminate on the object rather than cast streams past.

The Secretary of the Navy, Frank Knox, immediately denounced accounts of the affair, calling it a false alarm brought about by “war nerves”. Since the battle many have proposed that the mysterious object that was seen moving over Santa Monica to Long Beach was a weather balloon, or perhaps an early Japanese Fire Balloon. However to suggest that the Coast Guard commenced firing at a balloon for over an hour implies a degree of incompetence, to say the least.

There are others who have a less pedestrian explanation for that night: that it was a mass Close Encounter of the First Kind. Some stories have circulated that two downed aircraft were found: one in the sea, and one in the San Bernardino mountains, and that they were of obvious extra-terrestrial origin.

The variation in personal accounts contribute little to the solving of this mystery. Some saw one large object in the sky, some saw many smaller objects. Reports on the object’s altitude ranged significantly. However, it seems certain that there was something in the sky that night because despite the disparity in the reports, the fact that there were tens of thousands of witnesses make the existence of the object over LA that night impossible to dismiss.

Related reading:
Wikipedia entry
Eyewitness account, and analysis of picture. (slant toward otherworldly sight-seers)
San Francisco Museum Article (slant toward military incompetence)
Cosmic Paradigm Article (slant toward aliens with map to the “homes of the stars”)

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UFO Oregon: The Trent Case

If you haven’t heard of the Trent/McMinnville UFO sighting, this is a good read. I will add that “skeptics” should be replaced with “debunkers”. Make sure to click on the source button for the full two-page article!

Video!

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One of the classic UFO cases is the Trent/McMinnville UFO sighting. On May 11, 1950, approximately 7:00 pm, Evelyn Trent was outside feeding their rabbits when she spotted a flying saucer, or UFO, above their tiny farm in McMinnville, Oregon. She ran and called to her husband Paul, who came out, armed with his camera. He managed to take two photos of the object before it sped off.

This event made news around the world. Popular Mechanics determined the photos appeared genuine, as did the local newspaper, the Telephone Register’s Bill Powell, who did his own analysis of the photos. Years later, Dr. Bruce Maccacbee, well known in the UFO field as an investigator who analyzes photos and images of UFOs, has also determined the event to be genuine.

More than fifty years after this UFO event, the Trents stick to their story, despite the usual efforts by the skeptics to disprove or debunk the photos. There is a good DVD about this case. It’s entitled, simply, The Trent Photos, and includes interviews with Mrs. Trent. It is clear that Evelyn Trent saw something unusual that day, and the memory of that event has stayed with her all these years.

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Easter Island stone heads are ‘dying’

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Sloping slightly sideways on the grassy hills beneath the Ranu Raraku volcano, a giant stone head known as a moai shows the wear and tear of time on this triangular 64-square-mile island. On the right side of the oblong rectangular face with male features, the rock is lighter in color and its long, carefully sculpted ear and nostril are clearly visible. But on the statue’s left side, the sun and wind have eroded the nose, lip and ear. “The moai are dying by natural causes,” said archaeologist Sergio Rapu, a lifelong researcher of this isolated South Pacific island of hills and extinct volcanoes also known as Rapa Nui. “The prehistoric Rapa Nui people noted it would take 300 to 400 years for the statues to become completely eroded.” Such predictions loom bleak for the island’s nearly 1,000 signature moai statues, as the constant battering of erosion and rain is slowly eating away at the island’s porous volcanic stone. Easter Island is among the world’s most isolated inhabited islands with about 4,000 inhabitants. It lies 2,237 miles west of Chile, which annexed the island in 1888. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Rapu said erosion can be stopped by using chemical resins that seal the stone, as well as stabilizing the ahu, or altar platforms that support some of the moai, many of which are slowly falling into the ocean. But that would be costly, he said. Archaeologists had hoped this summer’s New Seven Wonders of the World contest – organized by Swiss film producer and philanthropist Bernard Weber – would spark the release of funds to restore the moai. The statues were carved between 1200 and 1550 to honor the gods.

After placing in the top 10 favorite sites during preliminary results, the island failed to make the final seven, chosen by 100 million people in a popular vote by Internet, phone and mail. When the moais finished eighth, Weber sent Chile a letter saying the statues were “morally” one of the New Seven Wonders, according to the local press. In the meantime, Jose Antonio Viera, minister of the presidency, said it is urgent for the Chilean government and the international community to come to the rescue.

Source (and pics)

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Ghost hunters uncover old murder

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By Josie Hill

A team of paranormal investigators from Lancashire got more than they bargained for on their second visit to an Inn in Leyland.

During the investigation the team undertook an experiment where they asked the spirits to move a table.

The table moved suddenly and violently, then spun around several times, nearly knocking one team member off her feet.

Other strange phenomena included all of the group hearing a low pitch groan at exactly the same time, lights flickering, and unexplained sensations felt by a member of the group.

Team member Andy Proctor, from Blackburn, describes events on the night of the visit as “the most amazing night of phenomena we have ever witnessed”.

The Ley Inn, in Chorley, is subject to many rumours of a hanging in the late 18th century.

During the Ouija experiment a former Inn owner Robert O’Neil and his employee James Silcock came forward.

Andy said: “Robert informed us that he once owned the land which the Ley Inn now stands on, and that he accidentally killed James Silcock, who it seems was making advances towards Robert’s daughter.

“We were informed, that Robert tied up a rope and wrapped it around James’ neck, in order to scare him in to leaving his daughter alone, however, these actions resulted in James’ death.

“Whether or not these stories are connected to the original claims of the hanging which took place here, we are not sure.”

Fellow team member Victoria Taylor said: “We made contact with a spirit called Arabelle, who we think was Robert O’Neil’s daughter.

“She was born in 1746 and died at the age of 17. She said she’d been strangled by James Silcock, which would explain her father’s actions.

“We think we’ve solved a mystery dating back nearly 250 years.”

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What is The State of Ufology? Wrong Question!

After I listened to the last episode of The Paracast, I was, I guess you could say, disappointed. I know many people (including Mr. Biedny) would like to think of the dying field of UFOlogy as a valid topic for discussion, but quite frankly, I think that those who share this opinion may be falling victim to their own criticism. It’s true, what they say, UFOlogy has seen better days, but to think that “complaining” about will make any amount of difference is just simply not acceptable to me.

Frank Warren recently posted his thoughts on the subject, and I agree with him:

Content from external source:

Along with many of my colleagues, I routinely make the trek over to the Paracast to listen to the latest guest of interest (to me); recently the one closest to the top of the “archives” that met that criteria was author, “Rich Dolan.”

As usual I clicked on the link to start the podcast; was finishing some writing chores simultaneously, got about two minutes into the program, quickly paused it, then restarted it from the beginning; again, I got about two minutes into the program, stopped it, and started over again; about that time, the phone rang, and I wasn’t able to finish listening, and still haven’t as of yet.

The reason I repeated the first two minutes of Dolan’s interview, is because he articulated some of the most accurate, portentous and perceptive analysis of Ufology that I have heard in a long time, if ever!

David Biedny began the interview recalling previous discourse and reiterating his notion about the “terrible state of Ufology,” and the need for a restructuring; to that Dolan replied, “What is the structure . . . I really don’t perceive much of a structure.”

No truer words have ever been said in my view; pundits often criticize what they deem to be Ufology, and or it’s condition, good or bad, but what are they really impugning? They’re condemning the “state of Ufology” when they should be asking, “Where is the state located?

Barring individual research and study, and some small organizations, e.g., MUFON to name one, as Dolan correctly points out—“there is no structure!”

There are many “individuals” past and present who are more “visible” (and vocal to which I am one) via public speaking, and or that participate in various media venues, i.e., “TV interviews,” symposiums and conventions etc.; however, although these folks are the most prominent, this doesn’t mean that their respective ideologies are the “central theme” of Ufology.

Quite frankly it’s impracticable to criticize the “state of Ufology” as given the fact that a “governed body” doesn’t exist, one can’t offer a cure for an ailment to a patient that one can’t find!

Consequently, condemnation or praise for that matter (of Ufology) should be as individualistic as the field is at present; or, perhaps rather then criticize the “periphery of the problem” why not address the gist of it—that is the lack of any type of consortium period!

If the rest of the interview with Dolan is as worthy as the first two minutes, then I highly recommend a visit to the Paracast to check out the rest of the exchange.

Source

Listen to the Interview

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Youtube – Ovni en Costa Rica

New video floating around the Youtube that was taken via cellphone camera by Sr. Marvin Badilla.

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‘Spooky’ face on skin-bound book

This is just less than a week old, but an interesting story nonetheless.

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A “spooky” image of a priest executed for treason over the Gunpowder Plot has appeared on a 17th century book thought to be bound in his skin, it is claimed.Auctioneers said the face of Father Henry Garnet could be seen peering from the cover of the “rare and macabre” book about the Jesuit priest’s death.

The item will go under the hammer at Wilkinson’s Auctioneers in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, on Sunday.Garnet, was hanged in May 1606 for his involvement in the Gunpowder Plot.

Sid Wilkinson, from Wilkinson’s Auctioneers, said: “It’s a little bit spooky because the front of the book looks like it has the face of a man on it, which is presumed to be the victim’s face.”

Role disputed

The book, called A True and Perfect Relation of the Whole Proceedings Against the Late Most Barbarous Traitors, Garnet, a Jesuit and his Confederates, was published in 1606 just after his execution.

The lot is considered so unusual there is no reserve price attached to it.

Garnet’s involvement in the plot to kill King James I was controversial. He claimed he knew about the conspiracy but was not involved.

Some scholars now believe he had been trying to prevent the plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament rather than conspiring to kill the King.

According to legend, a piece of bloodstained straw found at the scene of his execution started to develop an exact image of the priest’s face.

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Scientists get rare look at dinosaur soft tissue

This is indeed paranormal, if you take the word literally. What this group found blows me away. Sure, I have heard of a fossilized dinosaur, but a mummified one is a completely different thing.

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A high school student hunting fossils in the badlands of his native North Dakota discovered an extremely rare mummified dinosaur that includes not just bones but also seldom seen fossilized soft tissue such as skin and muscles, scientists will announce today.

Read:  Scientists get rare look at dinosaur soft tissue

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Experts in Nepal raise doubts over US ‘Yeti’ footprint claims

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KATHMANDU (AFP) — Mountaineering and wildlife officials in Nepal said Monday they doubted whether footprints found by a United States team from a science fiction programme were those of a Yeti.

The host and crew from “Destination Truth” spent around a week in the foothills of Mount Everest and returned to the capital Kathmandu last week with claims that they had found footprints belonging to the legendary creature.

“The footprints may be from a Himalayan bear,” Ang Tshering Sherpa, the president of Nepal Mountaineering Association told AFP after looking at pictures of the prints.

“It is believed that Yetis have only four toes but the footprints recorded by the US team have five toes,” said Sherpa, whose father went unsuccessfully looking for the legendary beast in the 1950s.

The Yeti — described as massive half-human, half-ape-like creature — has captured the imagination of explorers and climbers in the Himalayas for generations.

Dozens of costly expeditions have taken place, none of which have proved the existence of the beast.

After seeing what he thought was a fleeting glimpse of a Yeti in 1986, climbing legend Reinhold Messner began investigating the myths and stories that surround it.

In his 1998 book “My Quest for the Yeti,” Messner concludes that it only exists in peoples’ imaginations and the Himalayan black bear was probably behind most sightings.

“Destination Truth” — which investigates the existence of mythical creatures — is being made for an American science fiction channel.

Host Joshua Gates told AFP Saturday that the programme would further investigate the footprints, which were found last week on the bank of the Manju River, 150 kilometres (94 miles) northeast of Kathmandu.

“The footprint is 13 inches (33 centimetres) long and the toes span nine inches (23 centimetres) across,” Gates told AFP at a hotel in Kathmandu.

“This is really an intriguing piece of evidence and we all feel a little bit unable to explain what we saw,” he said.

But Laxmi Manandhar, a spokesman at the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, told AFP: “People living in the high Himalayas believe in this strange creature called a Yeti but nobody has actually seen it.

“The footprint castings brought by the US television crew are strange, but there is no supporting evidence to back up the claim that these are footprints of the Yeti.”

Source

How did I know this was coming? Hmmm…

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An open response on the “MiniBox”

 

Content from external source:

Rick Moran: By way of introduction, my name is Rick Moran and I am the Coordinator of the Association for the Study of Unexplained Phenomenon, a 35 year old research and educational organization that by our own corporate charter is dedicated to seeking proof of the survival of the human spirit after death. We are a 501 ©(3) non-profit corporation that is now based in Texas, and was originally founded in New York City. We have been involved in dozens of major cases, from Amityville and Mothman to our present day work on cases like the Skinwalker Ranch, not to mention a few hundred more that never got any media coverage. In the past I have counted folks like Scott Rogo, Peter Jordan and Paul Hoffman old friends. I continue to write for Fortean Times, Fate, and yes, Haunted Times on a regular basis. I am pleased to say that the ASUP is a very serious group with serious aims. Two years ago a member of our group came to me with a report he prepared on ITC or more commonly known as Spirit Comm. I was intrigued and began to look a little deeper, which led me to the work of Frank Sumption and his creation, Frank’s Box. I reached out to friends in our field for the purpose of securing a Box for testing and then I waited and waited. Finally I found the flow chart for Frank’s Box on the Internet. I have been a ham radio operator for longer than I have been researching the paranormal, so the layout was easy to interpret. Later I came into the possession of a schematic diagram, courtesy of Frank Sumption and became even more intrigued but still even more puzzled about how this device could possibly communicate.

Read: An open response on the “MiniBox”

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