Les nouveaux Forums de Radio Ici&Maintenant !
A dificultnspa,Je me suis permis de corriger ton premier post, au niveau du titre...
Mais bon, j'ai rien contre l'idée qu'ici, en France, on se lance aussi pour de bon dans la bataille et que l'on crée un mouvement exopolique... Je la trouve même très bonne ton initiative !!
UFO Experts Dean, Stevens to speak in MesaAugust 15, 1:48 PMPhoenix UFO ExaminerLarry LoweBob Dean at the European Exopolitics Summit, Barcelona, 25 July 2009.August is a banner month for those seeking information about the UFO phenomenon as two of the most well known UFO investigators will be speaking in separate appearances at the Mesa Main Public Library in the coming weeks. Retired Command Sgt. Major Bob Dean will be speaking under the auspices of MUFON-Phoenix on Sat, Aug 15 at 1:00 PM. Retired Lt. Col Wendelle Stevens will be speaking for the UFO 2012 Group on Saturday Aug 22, also at 1:00 PM. Both of these individuals have first-hand experience with the military compartmentalization of the truth regarding the UFO and ET activity not generally recognized by mainstream media.Bob Dean is best known for his account of the contents of a Cosmic Top Secret briefing book he was allowed to read while serving at the Supreme Headquarters of the allied forces in Europe during the height of the cold war. According to Dean, the briefing document contained descriptions of non-human craft and beings to the extent that military intelligence could define them at the time. Included in the briefing was the fact that some alien entities looked sufficiently human that they could put on a uniform and walk the corridors of the Pentagon and not be recognized as alien.After concluding his military career, Dean elected to go public with his account of the contents of the briefing document and has been working to inform the public and effect disclosure of the truth of non-terrestrial presence on earth for decades. Dean has just returned to Arizona from a successful appearance at the European Exopolitics Summit in Barcelona Spain where he delivered a comprehensive discussion of photographic evidence of alien structures on both the Moon and on Mars. • • •Wendelle Stevens has been collecting UFO photographs and writing books detailing contact from various star systems from his base in Tucson for over 4 decades. Stevens was a P-47 pilot in WWII and served with a photographic reconnaissance unit in the arctic after the war, where he witnessed a silver disc flying in formation with the B-29 he was in at the time. Perhaps best known as the original US investigator of the remarkable Billy Meier photographs, Stevens painstakingly developed a comprehensive photo library of UFO photos from around the world, which was recently acquired by Open Minds productions in Tempe. A comprehensive and even handed account of the Meier contact case and Steven's involvement in it can be found in the book 'Light Years' by lawyer Gary Kinder. Stevens will be discussing the recent revelations of a security guard from the highly secure S-4 section of the not-so-secret flight test facility at Groom Lake. According to the story told to Stevens, the guard saw former Vice President Dick Cheney enter an area where retrieved alien craft and bodies were stored. The story, which implicates the highest levels of governement in the recent administration in the truth embargo of UFO/alien contact, first broke in the Examiner when it was presented by Honolulu Exopolitics Examiner Michael Salla.Either of these senior UFO investigators would make a compelling program for those interested in inside detail of the military compartmentalization of UFO information--having both of them presenting new material on successive weekends is a rare treat indeed for the Phoenix area UFO student. Both events should be well attended, so arrive early to get a good seat.For more info: Phoenix MUFONUFO 2012 Group
They will come in fun to Exeter's first UFO Festival Sept. 5By Ryan AlanThursday, August 27, 2009UFO sighting over McMinnville, Oregon, May 11, 1952.(Photo by Paul Trent) Doubters, believers and those who frankly really don't give a darn either way can agree on one thing Sept. 5: fun!Organizers of the debut Exeter UFO Festival are certain there will be no shortage of that in what they hope will be the first of many annual gatherings spotlighting the community's and the Seacoast's long connection to this out of this world subject.Whatever your stance on the existence of UFOs, there is definite entertainment to be experienced for all ages from 8:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. that Saturday, assure planners. "The festival will be a very unique experience — the theme is 'free, fun, family and raising money for charity' — and thought provoking," promises event organizer Dean Merchant of Stratham, a historical researcher and journalist whose interests include UFOs.The goal is to provide an enjoyable day for the entire family, adds UFO researcher, author and lecturer Kathleen Marden of Stratham — from, she said, "frivolous and fun" activities to serious lectures by nationally and internationally respected UFO researchers. Among those responsible for the upcoming UFO Festival is author and Stratham resident Kathleen Marden.The options range from a full morning of children's activities (including construction of a UFO at Founder's Park (near the center of town on Chestnut Street, next to Exeter Public Library) at 10 a.m., and an ET costume contest and sidewalk parade at 11:30 a.m.; to a UFO conference for adults (starting at 9 a.m.); from a Happy Hour discussion at the Alien Café (the Loaf and Ladle) from 6-7:30 p.m., to a 1960s' Earthlings and Aliens Ball from 8-11 p.m. featuring one of New England's favorite bands, the classic rock group, the Morlocks, who appropriately take their name from the creatures featured in the movie, "The Time Machine." Participants are encouraged to attend in costume. (No one is likely to complain if real aliens "come as you are.")Kids also are encouraged to reach into the "buckets of chalk" available at downtown merchants and create aliens and UFOs on the sidewalks, starting at 9 a.m. The Exeter UFO Festival is being dedicated to the memory of Bill Foster.Maps will be available for self-guided tours to what is known as "UFO Alley" on Route 150 and the "UFO Circus" around Applecrest Farms on Route 88 in Hampton Falls, areas in which UFOs have been reported. "Exeter and New Hampshire are considered the hottest areas for UFO sightings in the world," Merchant said. This UFO day won't change anybody's mind if they've already made it up, reasons Pam Gjettum, president of the Kiwanis of Exeter and a member of the Exeter Historical Society. "But there will be lots of information available for anybody willing to listen and lots of entertainment for everybody," she added.The Kiwanis, who will be selling coffee, doughnuts and hot dogs, also sees this as a "terrific fundraiser," she added. This UFO sighting photo in Jutland Denmark, 1974 , was provided by Peter Robbins who noted: "I stress here that all of the above (see additional photos below) are absolutely authentic, in that they have all be through hundreds of hours of photo-analysis, and that all but the Denmark photo, though highly regarded, were multiply witnessed.""The point (also) is to have a day when people will come to Exeter, the merchants will have sidewalks sales, there will be lots of things going on at the churches and the library and around the town generally, and people will have a good time and spend money." Gjettum is a retired Exeter librarian who put together the 25th anniversary of "The Incident of Exeter" UFO observance at the library. "They had so many people come that they had to turn people away," said Merchant.Merchant also views the festival as a potential other worldly economic stimulus for the region. "I think good will always benefits a community and hopefully people experiencing Exeter for the first time will tell their friends and neighbors they must 'do Exeter,' " he said. In researching "Ufology," he said he found a number of UFO festivals in communities throughout North America. Washington, July 1952"The crown jewel of festivals is Roswell, N.M., which over the July 4th holiday brings in 30,000-40,000 people," he said. "It came to my mind that a UFO festival, although on a much smaller scale than Roswell, could be beneficial to Exeter in this economy, given the Exeter area's significance in UFO history, coupled with the continued interest in John Fuller's book 'Incident at Exeter.'"Fuller's work, said Merchant, may be the best selling UFO book in history. It made the New York Time's list, with more than half a million copies sold. The "Incident" of Sept. 3, 1965, said Merchant, is one of the most important events in all of UFO history and is the impetus for the Exeter UFO Festival.As UFO researcher Kathleen Marden relates, the late Norman Muscarello had been hitchhiking on Route 150 in Kensington, just outside of Exeter, when at about 2 a.m. he reported seeing an 80 to 90 foot disk with pulsating red lights rapidly descend in his direction. He said it was as large as the nearby house over which it directly hovered.The frantic young man stopped an oncoming car and was taken to the Exeter police station. Officers Eugene Bertrand and David Hunt drove to the site where they, along with Muscarello, said they watched the craft as it moved erratically and hovered 100 feet above the field. That observation is filed in the official police report."Additional eye witnesses from Hampton and the Route 101 overpass two miles outside Exeter alerted the area police," Marden said. Brazil 1958The classic book "Incident at Exeter" is in every area library, and is a good read, said Merchant.Portsmouth historian Dennis Robinson, then an English teacher at Exeter High School, had Norman Muscarello and Gene Bertrand come to his classroom and students were able to interview them. "Those interviews can be found on line and are excellent primary material," Merchant said. Officer David Hunt is still alive, but does not do interviews about the incident, he added."Unlike most reported sightings, the Air Force and all debunkers have never come up with an explanation for what occurred that night," said Merchant. "UFO sightings began that night over Pease Air Force Base in Portsmouth and, according to written reports of the time, ended in Plaistow. Our festival commemorates that dramatic night."Veteran UFO investigator Peter Geremia of Rye, who once held a secret security clearance while working as a civilian federal employee for more than 20 years, specializing in flight simulation, will discuss Muscarello's close encounter and Granite State UFO reports from 9-10:30 a.m. He is considered an expert on Seacoast sightings and is director emeritus of New Hampshire's Mutual UFO Network (MUFON).(MUFON is a publicly supported organization whose mission is the scientific study of UFOs for the benefit of humanity through investigation, research and education. The website is www.mufon.com)"Peter's slides which simulate the actual UFO event, combined with his nuts and bolts approach are fascinating," said Marden, who recruited the conference speakers and will serve as its master of ceremonies.Following Geremia's program, Marden will present "Captured! The Betty and Barney Hill UFO Experience" from 10:30 a.m. to noon.The virtual reality slide show is based on the book of the same name that she co-authored with nuclear physicist and scientific ufologist Stanton T. Friedman about the reported 1961 UFO abduction in New Hampshire's White Mountains of her aunt and uncle, Portsmouth residents, that stirred worldwide interest.Marden has appeared on the History and Discover channels and internationally televised documentaries.(More information as well as photos on the Betty and Barney Hill story and on Marden are available at http://kathleenmarden.googlepages.com.)Fittingly, the conference — and the dance — will take place in Exeter Town Hall, whose lower level housed the Exeter police department in 1965. "It was through those doors that Normal Muscarello ran to tell the police about the UFO in Kensington," Merchant said. The police station is the focal point of the Fuller book. All of his research was donated to Boston University and can be studied at the school library.Festival supporter Dan Chartrand, owner of Water Street Books, located across the street from Town Hall, will hold a UFO authors reception from noon to 1 p.m. in his store that day. The festival is dedicated to the memory of Bill Foster of Portsmouth, who died last month, and was co-author with his wife Peggy of "The Black Triangle Abductions." He was to have been a speaker. His wife will participate in activities.Bassist Steve Gard of The Morlocks is looking forward to the fest. "I like that it is something different from any of the traditional festivals held in the area," said Gard, who summers in York Beach, Maine. "It has a central theme built around UFO sightings and combines education and entertainment that will appeal to all age groups."His band plans to do their part on the entertainment end. "We play good ol' rock'n'roll with a beat and a groove that will make people want to move," he said. They also will offer some songs related to the spirit of the festival.As for Gard's stand on UFO's?"We are Morlocks," he quips, "how do you know where we came from really?"(For festival details, visit www.exeterufofest.com)