CNI News - Volume 21.2 August 9, 1996 Published by the ISCNI News Center Editor: Michael Lindemann The stories in this edition of CNI News are: 1) NASA ANNOUNCES EVIDENCE OF LIFE ON MARS! Oh, You've Heard Already? 2) JAPAN'S "UFO MUSEUM" NOT ABOUT UFOS AT ALL! 3) NEW EYEWITNESS, MORE DETAILS EMERGE IN BRAZIL CASE Latest Count: 7 Captured Aliens -- Possibly 6 Remain Alive 4) ISRAEL'S UFO FLAP -- "THE LARGEST EVER" -- CONTINUES 5) CROP CIRCLES SPROUT IN HOLLAND -- HOAXERS SUSPECTED 6) BRITISH GAMBLER WINS BET ON E.T. LIFE The subject matter of CNI News is inherently controversial, and the views and opinions reported in the news are not necessarily those of ISCNI or its staff. The next edition of CNI News will appear on Friday, August 16. ======================================================== MEDIA WATCH IS BACK! We're pleased to welcome Bufo Calvin as our new Media Watch Editor. Media Watch will be emailed to you as a separate item immediately following this edition of CNI News. ======================================================== 1) NASA ANNOUNCES EVIDENCE OF LIFE ON MARS! Oh, You've Heard Already? by Michael Lindemann Yes, by now just about every sentient being within range of a radio or TV probably knows that NASA held a positively stunning press conference on Wednesday, August 7, to announce evidence of possible primitive life found within a meteorite from Mars. No need to rehearse the details here -- we expect you've heard them all before. But it does seem relevant to repeat an item we wrote in the August 1 edition of the ISCNI*Flash, a scant six days before the ANNOUNCEMENT. To wit: "Here at the Flash, we note with both amusement and fascination a gradual but unmistakable shift in the public statements of space scientists regarding prospects for life on other planets. It is now considered virtually certain that life exists elsewhere in the universe, on other planets circling other stars. But just as significant, it is increasingly acceptable to propose the possibility of life -- albeit primitive, or even extinct -- on very nearby worlds, including Mars and the moons of Jupiter. If we were in charge of gradually preparing the public for the 'discovery' of aliens, we might use this strategy too!" And so we might. It is notable that the public reaction to this NASA announcement was resoundingly, stupendously positive. It is also notable that the scientists who presented the information, along with NASA chief administrator Daniel Goldin, seemed hardly able to contain their own enthusiasm. Though each of them in turn articulated the necessary (and appropriate) caveats -- "these are preliminary findings that suggest, but do not PROVE, life on Mars, and much more work is needed to confirm them," etc. -- the TONE of the affair seemed to say, "By God, this is true until proven otherwise!" The net result, despite various skeptical protests, was to implant in the public mind the vitual certainty that life did (perhaps does?) exist on Mars. And of course, that is a very big deal. But you know that already. We were pleased to see that a representative of Operation Right to Know got in a question at the press conference, a very important one concerning NASA's plans (or non-plans) to re-image the Cydonia region of Mars (site of the famous Face) during the upcoming missions that will arrive at Mars next summer. Daniel Goldin, amazingly, all but promised that the Cydonia region WOULD be re-imaged, though he also stated it was not a top priority. Now that Goldin's assurances are public knowledge, it is important to INSIST that any new images of Cydonia be given over without delay to impartial, independent scientists for evaluation. We were also pleased to see that CNN invited Richard "Mr. Face on Mars" Hoagland to be a featured guest on their "Talk Back Live" program immediately following the press conference. Richard, true to form but very appropriately, said the entire affair smacked of politics. We confess we must agree. It is also notable that President Clinton -- after making his own enthusiastic remarks about the discovery on the White House lawn just before the Wednesday press conference -- is vacationing in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, this week. This can only mean, we think, that he's staying at the ranch of Laurance Rockefeller, the billionaire who earlier this year funded and privately circulated the "Unidentified Flying Objects Briefing Document," and who has waged a quiet campaign for at least three years to persuade the Clinton administration to release UFO information. We marvel at the coincidence of NASA's announcement and Clinton's vacation. So much more could be said... But perhaps we'll leave it right there for the moment. One thing is certain -- this is not the end of it. It feels more like the beginning. ======================================================== 2) JAPAN'S "UFO MUSEUM" NOT ABOUT UFOS AT ALL! by Michael Lindemann For more than a year, international news sources and countless UFO enthusiasts have anticipated the July, 1996 opening of a well-funded "UFO Museum" in the city of Hakui, Japan. Promotional information about the museum had been unequivocal: the museum was intending to present a wide variety of exhibits pertaining to the reality of UFO phenomena and close encounters between humans and aliens. Stories in the mainstream press said the Japanese government had provided the equivalent of $60 million worth of funding for the museum project. Coinciding with the museum's opening, a symposium was planned that was to feature a number of well-known UFO researchers as guest speakers. On June 12, 1996, a strange announcement was issued by Teleport USA, a Los Angeles-based provider of banking and promotional liaison services between the City of Hakui and the United States. Previously, personnel at this office had spoken enthusiastically about the museum and had actively promoted US tourism to the opening symposium. Suddenly, however, the symposium was canceled, and the reasons given were vague at best. The statement from Teleport USA read as follows: To whom it may concern: RE: Cosmo Isle Hakui Museum We regret to inform you that the Cosmo Isle Hakui Museum Symposium scheduled for July 19 - 21 and the Tour that was set for July 16 - 23 has been canceled. At this late stage in time, it is very unfortunate that for political and bureaucratic reasons this symposium has been canceled. There is opposition and controversy regarding the usage of the word UFO and some of the material that was set to be displayed. Museum officials have decided that now is not the appropriate time to hold this symposium. Museum officials are looking to reschedule the symposium at a later date. Since no official statement has been made about the Grand Opening, it is anticipated that it will open July 1. Please be aware that The Opening Ceremony is by invitation only. Thank you for your understanding. Sincerely, TELEPORT USA When CNI News contacted the office of Teleport USA, we learned that the museum did open as scheduled on July 1. We asked for more information about what pressure, if any, might have caused the museum to remove or delay its intended UFO exhibits, but we received only politely evasive answers. Spokesman Tetsu (Ted) Matsuo alluded to "election year" concerns among local officials in Hakui, but would not elaborate. He also said the symposium might be rescheduled when "more of the desired speakers" were available. He refused to comment on the allegation, already circulating on the internet, that pressure from U.S. officials might have derailed the museum's plans. But Matsuo did imply, both in what he did and did not say, that the museum had at least intended to display UFO-related material. Now, CNI News has learned that the "UFO Museum" might have been an elaborate fiction created by wishful thinkers, and probably never had any backing from the Japanese government. When asked to fax a description of the museum's displays, Matsuo assured this writer he would do so immediately. But when the information finally did arrive nearly a week later, it was obvious that the museum's entire focus was on mainstream space exploration, heavily weighted to the U.S. space program. There was no indication of any UFO material whatsoever. But a much clearer picture of the real situation emerged from a report sent to CNI News in early August by Mr. Jun-Ichi Takanashi, chairman of the Japan UFO Science Society. From Mr. Takanashi, we learn that a self-styled Hakui museum spokesman named Johsen Takano may have been responsible for creating an unwarranted international anticipation of a "UFO museum" that would never become reality. With thanks to Mr. Takanashi and the Japan UFO Science Society, excerpts from their report, titled "So-Called 'UFO Museum' and Mr. Johsen Takano" follow. "The much publicized 'UFO Museum' in Hakui City, Japan, has opened on July 1, 1996, as scheduled... but it turned out to be an ordinary space museum. "It has never been called UFO Museum in the district [of Hakui]. Only Mr. Johsen Takano, an officer in charge of land planning in the Hakui City municipal office, called it so abroad. It has always been called 'Space Museum' in the city, and it was changed to 'Cosmo Isle Hakui' at the end of 1994. "This 'UFO Museum' was publicized as 'the beginning of a very important government program following adoption of a new policy to educate the Japanese people about the UFO phenomenon within the next three years' in the Fall 1993 issue of the Circle Phenomenon Research International Newsletter, as the result of a conversation between Mr. Johsen Takano and [British crop circle researcher] Colin Andrews. It caused a worldwide uproar of doubts and comments from all serious UFO researchers. "But, it was a total laughing stock for all Japanese UFO researchers. We have never known our government's interest in the UFO subject -- there was absolutely no inkling of such interest on the part of our government in the past. Perhaps Mr. Takano expressed his own interest or his small town's interest in UFOs as government interest... and Colin Andrews was deceived, and by his naive or deliberate propagation of this false news, the world was deceived. Ever since, the world has been awaiting the opening of the 'UFO Museum,' but that proved to have been a dream." Takanashi's paper goes on to describe an apparent effort on the part of certain Hakui city officials to draw tourism to the small (population 27,000) and rather out-of-the-way village by establishing Hakui as "the town of UFOs" in Japan, somewhat as Roswell, New Mexico has done in the United States. Takanashi pointed out that many cities and towns in Japan have museums dedicated to space exploration, a subject that is obviously very popular among the Japanese. After a successful "International Space and UFO Symposium" in 1990, Hakui officials evidently came to believe they could distinguish their own museum from the many others by adding the element of UFOs. However, that idea was dropped as the museum developed -- but not before it had spread all over the world. Takanashi says, "This was not the government's plan, but the city's (Hakui's) own plan, and it now appears that they have failed in such endeavor miserably... And it appears that the town has already given up the policy to utilize the UFO subject as the special attraction to lure visitors to this remote community." CNI News sincerely regrets that "Japan's UFO Museum" has turned out to be a fable. We admit we wanted it to be true. And we still do. If Japan is not ready to build a truly serious UFO museum, then let it happen somewhere else -- hopefully the United States, among other places -- and soon! ======================================================== 3) NEW EYEWITNESS, MORE DETAILS EMERGE IN BRAZIL CASE Latest Count: 7 Captured Aliens -- Possibly 6 Remain Alive [CNI News thanks Masinaigan, editor of the UFO Roundup, for this update on the fantastic story of captured aliens in Brazil. CNI News cannot confirm that all details in this update are factual. We reproduce the text as it appeared in UFO Roundup vol. 1, number 25, dated August 4.] Brazilian UFO groups investigating the crash of a UFO north of Varginha, a city of 120,000 in Brazil's Minas Gerais state during the early morning house of Saturday, January 20, 1996, have released more information on the controversial incident. College student Hildo Lucio Galdino, 20, who lives in the Jardim Andere section of Varginha, has reportedly told UFO investigators Ubirajara Franco Rodrigues and Vitorio Pacaccini that he saw one of the alien survivors shortly after 8 a.m. that morning. Opening his bathroom window, Hildo looked out and saw "a creature with oily dark brown skin crouched in the alleyway." The alien, which Hildo described as having "very small hands with three extremely long fingers, kind of like a starfish," ran away when Hildo cried out. According to the investigators, men of Varginha's Fire Department apprehended the first alien at 10:30 a.m. in front of the house at Rua Suecia 3, Jardim Andere, Varginha and threw a net over it. On Monday, January 22, after the aliens were caught and locked up at the Escola Sargentos de Armas in nearby Tres Coracoes, Dr. Marco Alves de Carvalho, the veterinarian at the Varginha Zoo, was reportedly brought to the military post by the army to examine the six surviving extraterrestrials. The following day, Tuesday, January 23, at 4 a.m., an Army truck convoy brought the aliens from the Hospital Humanitas in Campinas, Sao Paulo state, to the Escola Prepatoria de Cadates do Exercito, a military school outside Campinas, where they remained for nine hours. The dead alien was autopsied at the Hospital Humanitas. The physicians alleged to have performed the autopsy were Dr. Fortunato Badan Palhares and Dr. Coradin Nesve, the UFO groups claim. Dr. Badan attained notoriety in 1989 when it was revealed that he had performed the autopsy ten years earlier on the fugitive Nazi, Dr. Joseph Mengele. Following the autopsy, the dead alien was taken to Amarais Cemetery near the University of Campinas and frozen for shipment to the United States. At 9 p.m., the six aliens were driven to Campinas airport where they were put aboard a twin-engined EMB Buffalo owned by the Forca Aerea Brasileira (Brazilian Air Force) and flown to Sao Paulo. When they arrived, the Buffalo taxied out to an access runway where a U.S. Air Force C-17 transport plane was waiting. The aliens were then marched aboard the C-17. According to sources in the Sao Paulo tower, the C-17's destination was Albrook Air Force Base in Panama. Sra. Thereza Starace de Magalhaes Teixeira of Campinas told the UFO researchers that her husband, Adalberto, who was at the Hospital Humanitas for an operation, saw the dead alien being wheeled out of the morgue on a gurney. Sra. Luiza Helena Fatima de Silva, mother of two of the girls who saw a live alien in the park at 3:30 p.m. January 20, said that four "intelligence agents," three of them American, who came to her home on April 29, offered her $20,000 in U.S. dollars, cash, if she would go on Brazilian TV and deny her daughters' story. Six Brazilian groups have teamed up to solve the Varginha case. They include the Sociedade de Estudos Extreterrestres (SEE) of Florianopolis, the Uniao Brasileira para Pesquisa de Discos Voadores (UBPDV) of Rio de Janeiro, the Centro de Pesquisas Exologicas (CPE) of Rio de Janeiro, Grupo de Pesquisas Aereo- spaciais Zenite (GPAZ) of Salvador, Associao de Pesquisas Ufologicas do Campo (APUC) of Manaus and Grupo Espirita de Pesquisa Ufologica (GEPU) of Nova Iguacu. ======================================================== ISCNI'S WEB SITE TOPS 50,000 VISITORS IN FIRST YEAR ISCNI is very proud to announce that over 50,000 visitors have come to our site on the Worldwide Web (http://www.iscni.com/) since we officially opened the site on August 20, 1995. The number went over 50,000 on August 6. At the current daily rate, we anticipate that our first year total will be about 53,000 visitors; and we anticipate well over 100,000 visitors in our second year. ======================================================== 4) ISRAEL'S UFO FLAP -- "THE LARGEST EVER" -- CONTINUES [CNI News thanks Dani Zisserman ([email protected]) of the Israel UFO Research Center for sending this information, which he has gathered and translated from various Israeli news sources.] by Dani Zisserman On Monday, July 29th, at 20:30 EET (18:30 GMT) the residents of Yad-Eliyahu, an area in Tel Aviv, reported seeing two bright lights in the night skies, which proceeded to emit several smaller lights, coloured red, green and blue. The coloured lights seemed to emerge from the primary lights and continued to fly around independently. The lights were reported to be the size of ping-pong balls. Police who were called in reported seeing a bright light in the sky. The lights continued to remain in the skies during the night, and vanished only with daybreak. The IDF (Israeli Defence Force) spokesman stated that no UFO reports were received by the Air Force. The issue seems to be increasing in intensity, and the [public] interest is peaking. On Sunday, August 4th, at 1:30 a.m., a police station in the southern city of Eilat (on the banks of the Red Sea) received a report of a UFO in the night sky. The report was of glittering spots of light and flashes of light. The flashes were of alternating colour. Hundreds of citizens came out equipped with binoculars and telescopes to witness the phenomena. Some of them reported seeing three sources of light -- one large and two smaller, which emitted scintillating flashes of light. At 2 a.m., the UFO sighting was reported on local radio, which caused many more citizens to come out and try to see the UFO. In this case, however, the policemen present reported not to have seen anything and surmised that the lights were originating from an elevated highway across the Jordanian border. This sighting, despite the fact that it involved hundreds of witness, does appear somewhat inconclusive, but even then it remains significant in showing the growing interest and awareness of the phenomena. The chief debunker in Israel at this time seems to be Prof. Ariel Cohen, from the Atmospheric studies department in the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Prof. Cohen has been interviewed several times by the national media, and published several newspaper articles, where he tries to explain away the UFO sightings as atmospherical displacement phenomena, weather balloons, or, lo and behold, the planet Venus (Philip Klass, you've got yourself a buddy here.). This distinguished Professor wrote to the Minister of Science, and requested a committee to be established in order to investigate and DISCREDIT (yes -- he actually said it), using scientific tools, all of the recent sightings. The Minister stated that he opposes such a committee -- but I wouldn't be too surprised if such would be eventually established. The Israeli UFO Research centre has requested to take part in the investigations of such a committee if it were to be established. ======================================================== 5) CROP CIRCLES SPROUT IN HOLLAND -- HOAXERS SUSPECTED [CNI News thanks Dutch journalist Filip Coppens ([email protected]) for sending this report on the latest crop circle activities in his country.] by Filip Coppens In the summer of 1994, Holland took notice of a new phenomenon: crop circles. Suddenly, all over Holland, crop circles were discovered. Though none of them were as grand as those appearing in English fields, complex figures were found. What was happening? The media wanted to know and sent out TV crews to interview people who just passed by. One woman stated she had stopped along the road as someone was saying an ET craft had landed in the field nearby. The evening news invited "experts" over to voice their opinion on what was happening. Had ETs landed? Was it a natural phenomenon? Or were these just pranks performed by students -- as some people had claimed to have made certain formations? The year passed by, and 1995 saw nothing but a book being published on the subject in the Dutch language. The experts, with one year of field experience, were confronted with a few crop circles, which they could quickly classify as "human made formations." The media was not interested. 1996 is now an echo of 1994. The written media, not only in Holland but also in Belgium, has devoted several pages to crop circles over the last few weeks. The most famous formations are found in the South of Holland, close to the Belgian border. The farmers are not happy with the situation, though one was charging admission. Another farmer had harvested the field as soon as he had found one. Various theories were voiced, and the media, reporting on the phenomenon, were clearly playing the game along. On August 6, newspapers reported a Dutch farmer had at least found part of the solution. After having discovered a crop circle in one of his fields, nearby he discovered a rope that had formerly been used for loading and unloading ships. His crop circle had a diameter of 20 meters, the rope was ten metres long and covered with pieces of wheat. He felt it was pretty easy to put rope and circle together, and conclude humans had made the formation. In the north of Holland, three formations were discovered. Investigators felt they might have been made using helicopters. How they did this was, however, unclear. Magazines specializing in the "weird" received several phone calls of people who wanted to visit these circles; some wanted to meditate. A patient suffering from terminal cancer went to a crop circle, hoping to find a cure for his illness. The farmers are pretty much in favour of a terrestrial explanation and believe pranksters are constructing them. They want these "vandals" stopped, if only because they fear that the massive publicity they are receiving might lead to more crop circles, and more problems for the farmers owning the fields they appear in. In 1994, about 20 people became interested in investigating the phenomenon to the core. Though it is unlikely they will achieve their objective this year, it is quite certain others will now join their ranks, in search of the holy grail of the crops. ======================================================== 6) BRITISH GAMBLER WINS BET ON E.T. LIFE LONDON, Aug 7 (Reuter) - A British gambler won 1,000 pounds ($1,540) with a bet he placed last August that alien life would be discovered within a year, The Sun newspaper said. Little expecting Wednesday's announcement from NASA that it had found evidence in a meteorite that life once existed on Mars, bookmaker William Hill gave odds of 10-to-one on the bet placed on August 21, 1995. "I'll spend my winnings on a fantastic holiday, but I won't be going quite as far as Mars," winner Steve Upton told The Sun. William Hill earlier said it had cut its odds on the discovery within a year of intelligent alien life to 25-to-one from 500-to-one. ======================================================== CNI News is a proprietary publication of the Institute for the Study of Contact with Non-human Intelligence. It is emailed exclusively to ISCNI members and guest recipients and is not intended for redistribution in any form without prior permission. Send all redistribution requests to Michael Lindemann, Editor, at [email protected]. # # #