Wednesday, October 31, 2007


Radar Online
Radar Online, NY - 10 hours ago
During the debate, Kucinich
stood by his claim that a UFO
hovered above his low-reaching
head for 10 minutes during a 1980s
visit to actress Shirley ...

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JOHNSONBURG, Pa. -- It's been a topic of debate for decades, but an Elk County man said he may have pictures of Bigfoot. Rick Jacobs said he was surprised to see what looks like the legendary creature on photos he took in September. After sending the photos to the Bigfoot Field Researchers Organization, representatives there told him they believe the image is that of a juvenile Sasquatch.
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MOSCOW (Reuters) - Moscow schools have been ordered to ban students from celebrating the cult of the dead, better known as Halloween, despite the widespread popularity of the imported festival to Russia.

Halloween is being forced underground because it "includes religious elements, the cult of death, the mockery of death," a spokesman for the city's education department Alexander Gavrilov said on Wednesday.

"It's not an attempt to block the celebration of this holiday completely, just in schools and colleges," he added.

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Halloween special: the 'real' werewolves
MELBOURNE: According to unreliable sources from medieval Europe, in the light of the full moon, some men transform into howling, hairy, wolf-like creatures.

Is it surprising, then, that sufferers of hypertrichosis – literally 'too much hair' – have ended up being tagged with 'werewolf syndrome'?

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The pre-Halloween Democratic Debate was the usual boring candidate circle jerk until UFO nut Tim Russert brought up his love of Space Monsters and Shirley MacLaine to Congressman Dennis Kucinich. Like Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter, Kucinich has seen a UFO.

Russert had his big joke ready, about how 14% of Americans have also claimed a UFO sighting — that’s 42 million people, or just 8 million fewer who voted for George W. Bush in 2000. But the Funny didn’t do so well once Kucinich compared the figure to George W. Bush’s current approval rating.

Oh, and then, Kucinich goes all crazy and brings up the “Constitution” and war or whatever. Freak!

And then Tim Russert ate Bill Richardson, the end.

Democratic candidate 'saw UFO'
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 5 hours ago
In the US election campaign's most startling revelation yet, a Democratic congressman running for president said he once saw a UFO over actress Shirley ...
Baltimore Sun, United States - 6 hours ago
by Mark Silva Rep. Dennis Kucinch of Ohio was asked this during a debate of the Democratic candidates for president tonight: Has he ever seen a UFO? ...

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A manned mission to an asteroid sounds far-fetched, but a new study says Armageddon style mission will soon be possible.
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

To see how to fly into an asteroid in three easy steps, launch the gallery here.

Here we are, nearly eight years into the 21st century, and the most spectacular manned mission NASA can pull off is a trip to the International Space Station, a mere 210 miles above the Earth. Even the most ambitious part of NASA's current plans for human spaceflight involves visiting a celestial body we've already been to: the moon. Astronauts, space buffs and an unimpressed public hunger for space exploration that's more dramatic, more heroic, more new. Something like, say, landing astronauts on a distant rock hurtling through space at 15 miles per second.

That's exactly the kind of trip NASA has been studying. In fact, scientists at the space agency recently determined that a manned mission to a near-Earth asteroid would be possible using technology being developed today. The mission wouldn't be easy. A crew of two or three would spend months riding in a cramped spacecraft before reaching their barren, nearly gravity-free target. That such a mission is even being considered, though, says a lot about the versatility of NASA's next fleet of spacecraft and the ambitions the agency has for them. If nothing else, it's a signal that space exploration could soon get much more exciting.

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Wiccan Lottery Winner Uses Loot to Open Witch School
Elwood "Bunky" Bartlett says his Wiccan beliefs led him to win a $33 million lottery jackpot. Bartlett is using his winnings to open a school for witches in Maryland.


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Oregon Public Broadcasting - Oct 30 4:11 PM
Water is spilling onto farmland next to Upper Klamath Lake in southern Oregon. That’s because nearly two miles of levees were destroyed in a series of explosions Tuesday. But it’s no accident.


PRWeb - Oct 30 10:17 AM
Nature Conservancy and Partners Use Carefully Placed Explosives to Breach Levees, Restore Wetlands for Fish and Wildlife (PRWeb Oct 30, 2007

Wonder if is why the blew the New Orleans Levees for?
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Satellite and Alaskan array will test whether RF injections into the ionosphere could halt geomagnetic storms.

24 October 2007—Ever since the Van Allen radiation belts were discovered, the U.S. armed forces have been interested in understanding—and maybe even controlling—how the belts influence wireless communication. For example, the U.S. Air Force, wanting to keep in touch with airborne fighter pilots at all times, would like to understand exactly how geomagnetic storms in the atmosphere will cause disruptions. Today, the armed forces are sponsoring two big experiments to gain more knowledge about the Earth's ionosphere.

The first of them is the High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP), located in Gakona, Alaska, about 300 kilometers from Fairbanks.

Built on an old Cold War site meant to house an over-the-horizon radar, HAARP's main job is to produce radio waves to probe the ionosphere. Gakona is a particularly interesting location for HAARP, because “the Earth's magnetic field lines come down to Earth there,” says Paul Kossey, HAARP's program manager for the Air Force Research Laboratory.

One of the chief instruments at HAARP is a multimegawatt radio transmitter operating in the high-frequency (HF) range, known as the Ionospheric Research Instrument, which reached full power only last March.

The idea is to beam radio signals into the ionosphere and thereby stimulate or heat small, well-defined volumes of ionosphere. Back on the ground, an array of geophysical research instruments—such as low-frequency receivers, magnetometers, an ultrahigh-frequency (UHF) diagnostic radar, optical, and infrared spectrometers and cameras—try to see what happens to the ionosphere as a result of these signals.

“A lot of things we are doing are to mimic natural processes in a controlled fashion,” says Kossey. He says that the transmitter would be able to radiate about 3 to 4 megawatts—“about three times the power of Radio Moscow or Voice of America.” In the future, HAARP scientists hope to complete a UHF radar to allow measurement of electron and ion temperatures and electron densities, which are important to understanding the origins of satellite-damaging so-called killer electrons.

The other Air Force Research Lab ionosphere experiment is a spacecraft called the Demonstration and Science Experiments (DSX) satellite, which is set to launch in 2009. DSX is designed primarily to investigate the sometimes harsh radiation that environment satellites are subject to in a medium Earth orbit.

The satellite will also have an instrument designed to monitor very-low-frequency (VLF) transmissions in the magnetosphere—the magnetic shell surrounding the Earth—and will explore whether natural and man-made VLF waves, including those from HAARP, can reduce satellite-damaging space radiation. Several years ago, Stanford University electrical engineering professor Umran S. Inan theorized that low-frequency electromagnetic radiation injected into the lower Van Allen belt could cause the high-energy electrons there to prematurely rain out into the atmosphere, potentially ending a monthlong geomagnetic storm in a matter of days.

Lieutenant Colonel Jon Schoenberg, program manager for DSX, says that the satellite will be outfitted with instruments that measure electron energy over a wide range (20 electronvolts to 200 megaelectronvolts). The satellite will also test advanced electronics, solar panels, optical coatings, materials, and other components to see how they fare in such a harsh environment, so engineers will know whether to use them in future generations of spacecraft.

Schoenberg says that DSX's particular specialty will be the regions between the inner and outer Van Allen belts. The compact inner belt (discovered by a Geiger counter that was added to a U.S. satellite by University of Iowa physicist James Van Allen in 1958) lies 700 to 10 000 kilometers above the equator and is believed to be the by-product of cosmic radiation. In it are mostly energetic protons that can damage spacecraft instruments and human tissue; spacecraft tend to avoid it. The outer belt is thought to be caused by plasma trapped by the Earth's magnetosphere. It stretches from about 13 000 to 65 000 kilometers above the planet's surface. There are more charged particles in this belt, but most of them tend to be relatively low energy, although some high-energy electrons may also be found. Most of the magnetic storms that disrupt communications on Earth happen in this region. Scientists have also found that the regions between the belts are host to interesting and little understood physical phenomena.

“These regions fill with energetic particles during [magnetic] storms,” Schoenberg says, and the particles only gradually dissipate. “The storms are not easily predicted, and having a spacecraft in this region will help us understand what is going on.”


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