DOUG
I wasn't sure whether to put this thread in Humor, Science, or Other. I chose Other.
The Black Mailbox
===========
TIKABOO VALLEY, Nev. - The only landmark for about 40 miles on a barren stretch of highway is a mailbox battered by time and desert gusts. It’s known as the Black Mailbox, although it’s actually dingy white.
Over the years, hundreds of people have converged in southcentral Nevada to photograph the box - the size of a small television - held up by a chipped metal pole. They camp next to it. They try to break into it. They debate its significance or simply huddle by it for hours, staring into the night.
Some think the mailbox is linked to nearby Area 51, a military installation and purported hotbed of extraterrestrial activity. At the very least, they consider the box a prime magnet for flying saucers.
A few visitors have claimed to have encountered celestial oddities. But most enjoy uneventful nights at the mailbox, situated between the towns of Alamo and Rachel.
...The owners of the mailbox, Steve and Glenda Medlin, moved in 1973 to a cattle ranch in Tikaboo Valley, about 80 miles north of Las Vegas. There was no talk of aliens and no home mail delivery.
A few years later, a local tungsten quarry reopened. Some miners moved to a trailer park nearthe Medlins; it grew into the town of Rachel. Postal carriers began delivery, and the couple put up a common black rural mailbox about six miles from their home, near Nevada 375.
In 1989, according to a history of Rachel, a man named Bob Lazar told a Las Vegas television station that he had worked with alien spacecraft at nearby Nellis Air Force Base. He and his buddies, Lazar claimed, also watched saucer test flights in Tikaboo Valley.
So many tourists soon descended on Rachel - on the edge of the valley - that the Rachel Bar & Grill was renamed the Little A’Le’Inn. People downed Alien Burgers and quaffed beer before visiting the mailbox, the only landmark in Tikaboo Valley. The mailbox acquired a cultlike following.
“For some reason, Tuesday nights was when they thought the aliens came out. Then it was Wednesdays,” Glenda Medlin says with notable disdain.
...Three years ago, after seeing the Little A’Le’Inn on television, Spidell and her husband headed to Tikaboo Valley in early summer. She recalled peering out her car window on that trip and glimpsing three orange UFOs, followed by a giant saucer.
“We watched it for a little bit,” she says, “and then it went over the mountain, and it glowed for two or three minutes. It landed at Area 51.”
The Spidells have returned every year since.
See here.
UFO
- Doug
- Posts: 3388
- Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2006 10:05 pm
- Designate the number of cents in half a dollar: 0
- Location: Fayetteville, AR
- Contact:
Re: UFO
Believing in aliens not opposed to Christianity, Vatican’s top astronomer says
Vatican City, May 13, 2008 / 01:59 pm (CNA).- The Director of the Vatican's Observatory, Fr. José Gabriel Funes, said in an interview with the Vatican daily, L'Osservatore Romano, that believing in the possible existence of extraterrestrial life is not opposed to Catholic doctrine.
The 45-year-old Argentinean priest heads the Vatican Observatory, founded by Pope Leo XIII with offices at Castelgandolfo, near the Apostolic summer palace, and another in Tucson, Arizona. Fr. Funes has been in charge of the Observatory since August 2006.
The astronomer began the interview titled, "The Alien is my Brother," by saying that, "Astronomy has a profound human value. It is a science that opens the heart and the mind. It helps us to put our lives, our hopes, our problems in the right perspective. In this regard, and here I speak as a priest and a Jesuit, it is an apostolic instrument that can bring us closer to God", said Fr. Funes in the interview.
Regarding the beginning of the universe, Fr. Funes says that he personally believes that the "big bang" theory seems to him the most plausible, and that it does not contradict the Bible. "We cannot ask the Bible for a scientific answer here. At the same time, we don't know if in a near future the 'Big Bang' theory will be superseded by a more complete and precise explanation of the origin of the universe."
See here.
When he was asked about the possibility of extraterrestrial life, the Director of the Vatican Observatory responded that "it is possible, even if until now, we have no proof. But certainly in such a big universe this hypothesis cannot be excluded."
Vatican City, May 13, 2008 / 01:59 pm (CNA).- The Director of the Vatican's Observatory, Fr. José Gabriel Funes, said in an interview with the Vatican daily, L'Osservatore Romano, that believing in the possible existence of extraterrestrial life is not opposed to Catholic doctrine.
The 45-year-old Argentinean priest heads the Vatican Observatory, founded by Pope Leo XIII with offices at Castelgandolfo, near the Apostolic summer palace, and another in Tucson, Arizona. Fr. Funes has been in charge of the Observatory since August 2006.
The astronomer began the interview titled, "The Alien is my Brother," by saying that, "Astronomy has a profound human value. It is a science that opens the heart and the mind. It helps us to put our lives, our hopes, our problems in the right perspective. In this regard, and here I speak as a priest and a Jesuit, it is an apostolic instrument that can bring us closer to God", said Fr. Funes in the interview.
Regarding the beginning of the universe, Fr. Funes says that he personally believes that the "big bang" theory seems to him the most plausible, and that it does not contradict the Bible. "We cannot ask the Bible for a scientific answer here. At the same time, we don't know if in a near future the 'Big Bang' theory will be superseded by a more complete and precise explanation of the origin of the universe."
See here.
When he was asked about the possibility of extraterrestrial life, the Director of the Vatican Observatory responded that "it is possible, even if until now, we have no proof. But certainly in such a big universe this hypothesis cannot be excluded."
"We could have done something important Max. We could have fought child abuse or Republicans!" --Oona Hart (played by Victoria Foyt), in the 1995 movie "Last Summer in the Hamptons."
- Doug
- Posts: 3388
- Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2006 10:05 pm
- Designate the number of cents in half a dollar: 0
- Location: Fayetteville, AR
- Contact:
Re: UFO
See here.
Norm Walker (l) and Doug Krueger (r).
Doug Krueger as part of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) was in Sunday's paper.
=================
"A skeptic isn't somebody who just disbelieves," Krueger said. "A skeptic is somebody who wants to see the evidence.
"It seems to me that so many people, around the United States and around the world, were reporting seeing something in the sky that it's of interest to me to try to follow up on that and see what can be ascertained about the origin of these sightings. … There's enough [sightings ] that seem inexplicable in an immediately obvious way that someone ought to be investigating these things."
... "If we weren't doing this work, there would hardly be anyone doing it," Krueger said.
=======================
Norm Walker (l) and Doug Krueger (r).
Doug Krueger as part of the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) was in Sunday's paper.
=================
"A skeptic isn't somebody who just disbelieves," Krueger said. "A skeptic is somebody who wants to see the evidence.
"It seems to me that so many people, around the United States and around the world, were reporting seeing something in the sky that it's of interest to me to try to follow up on that and see what can be ascertained about the origin of these sightings. … There's enough [sightings ] that seem inexplicable in an immediately obvious way that someone ought to be investigating these things."
... "If we weren't doing this work, there would hardly be anyone doing it," Krueger said.
=======================
- Doug
- Posts: 3388
- Joined: Sat Jan 21, 2006 10:05 pm
- Designate the number of cents in half a dollar: 0
- Location: Fayetteville, AR
- Contact:
Re: UFO
I hope this helps the credibility of the Fayetteville Freethinkers. Anyone who would spend time in a UFO group can't be narrow-minded, right? The proponents of the "dark side" can't accuse us of not going out there and looking for evidence of the paranormal.
Speaking of which, is it time to once again have our prize offer in the newspaper?
Speaking of which, is it time to once again have our prize offer in the newspaper?