0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes) 150 views8 pagesSagas UFO Special Vol 3 (1972) PDF
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, 
claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SAGA / EXCLUSIVE
SECRE
MESSA
FROM
UFOS
For the first time in any magazine SAGA
presents concrete proof—although in a
code that has yet to be broken—that
 
flying saucers have t
with us many times!
By Otto 0. Binder
24. SAGA
ied to communicate
gnoring his wife's pleas to be
careful, the man stepped out of
his car holding a flashlight. He
Pointed it at the incredible machine
drifting slowly over a nearby
mountain. It carried many lights
like a "theatre marquee.” Though
scared, the observer was also in-
tensely curious.
Was this amazing UFO from an-
other world? Were there intelligent
people aboard? There was only one
way to find out...
‘The man blinked his light in a
deliberate and simple code—three
long flashes and one short. Instant-
 
This sheet of “outer space music” was transcribed
from note patterns received via radio from beyond
the earth’s atmosphere.ly, the huge lower lights of the UFO
flashed bright and dimmed in the
same code—three long flashes and
fa short one. Excitedly, the man
signalled them again, and they re-
sponded five times.
It was March 6, 1967, and a
redletter day in the life of Forest
Kerstetter of Shamokin, Pa. “What
do you know?” he said to his wife.
"Somebody aboard that weird fly-
ing machine said hello to me!”
In UFO lore to date, this is one
of the crudest and simplest ex-
changes of “"messages’” between fly-
ing saucer occupants and earth
people. There are a handful of other
cases where lights of some kind
were blinked off and on and were
repeated in answer by UFOs,
dicating beyond doubt that intelli-
gent creatures were aboard.
‘What other kinds of messages, of
a. more meaningful nature, have
come to us from the mysterious
saucermen?
   
 
  
Outside of “contactees” and their
very voluble friends from other
worlds—which we will discuss later
—UFO messages of any type are
quite sparse. The flying saucers not
only try to avoid being seen but
are also very closemouthed in com-
municating with earth. And many
of their messages are in unknown
codes or “hieroglyphics.”” We will
deal with the various reported
“messages” or communication at-
tempts by UFOs in categories.
Written Messages
There are a fair number of UFO
messages written in English. Many
of them are trivial (and dubious),
promising such things as returning
again, or giving simple greetingsto
earth. But other saucer messages
are more significant, as in the
case that occurred in Russia in
1960.
‘A woman parachutist during a
practice exercise jumped from @
plane—but did not come down until
three days later. She explained that
she had been snatched up in mid-air
by a swooping UFO. They treated
her well for those three days and
gave her a ride into space, showing
her the thrilling sight of earth.
Upon releasing her—again dangl-
ing from her parachute—she found
herself once more over the exercise
field. When she finally got down to
the ground, she claimed she had
‘a special writien message for top
Soviet authorities and turned the
sealed envelope over to the police
chief of Saratov. However, no furth-
er news of whatwasinthat message,
or whether the Soviet leaders ever
saw it, has leaked through the Iron
Curtain,
Two other items presumably writ-
ten by saucermen are of a more
sensational nature.
One is a book claimed to befound
under and in Venezuela, in 1967.
‘The contents seemed to be in diary
 
 
TO.
D
 
 
 
 
SAGA ELAV SS
 
‘The decoded translation, above, made by the
Air Force, is part of a message found by John Reeves
of Brooksville; Fla., in March 1965. Reeves found
the code on paper after a UFO landed on his farm.
‘This message was left at Sao Paulo, Brazil, in
1959 by a UFOnaut who said "An earthman
will have to decipher it, and when that had
been done, we shall know what to do.” Repe-
titious “letters” are marked A and B.k
ae
SP picked up this "Martian alpha-
bet’ in Geneva from 1894-96.
ce
This symbol was seen on a UFO in
Brazil on April 24, 1959.
 
(A
ef
7 a
The above example was sighted on
UFOs in the States during 1964-5.
ae
This symbol was photographed on
@ UFO in Madrid on June 1, 1967.
 
 
with its strange symbols, is only part
of the communication gap with our visitors from space.
Even more puzzling are some of the verbal messages
our astronauts have picked up. Way back during the
Mercury flights, Gordon Cooper in Faith-7 heard weird
voice transmissions during his fourth pass over Hawaii.
He called it an “unintelligible foreign language.” It soon
 
 
proved it was not a foreign language but an alien lan-
guage, for tapes of the “bootleg” voices were replayed
 
 
 
26 C1 SAGA
ever and over for NASA linguist experts. They threw
up thi
 
missions repose in NASA’s
lated to this day!
form, partly in English, partly in
Russian, and some of it in an in-
decipherable code. It seemed to be
the “log” of a flying saucer. Many
startling things are revealed in the
book, including how saucers fly,
how far from earth they came, and
how they manipulate “radiations”
in uncanny ways.
One intriguing portion ofthebook
goes into cosmology and states that
all intelligent beings in the universe
came from the same stock and are
thus allhumans. Iftrue, anthropolo-
gists and biologists on earth should
be shook up, for they would have
to give up all theories of non-hu-
mans or monster-men that might
inhabit other planets.
‘The second case also deals with a
book but one by an earth— man
Dr. Morris K. Jessup, who allegedly
Killed himself in 1959. Before his
untimely death, Jessup had written
several scholarly books on UFOs,
Including The Case For the UFOs.
When it appeared in paperback
form in 1955, Jessup was called
into the office of Naval Research
ii Washington. To his astonish-
ment, they showed him a copy of
his book they had received by mail
from an anonymous source, with
strange notations written all over
the margins.
‘The “notations” were written in
three differentcolored inks and
initialed by three separate persons,
who wrote as if they were saucer
‘men and not earthmen.
Forexample—"Itseems quixotical-
ly reliable of humans to wait until
 
 
hands in defeat, though they can analyze any
language in history, including ancient Sanskri
The trans-
les— never solved or trans-
 
they themselves know of flight, and
think now of space flight, before
admitting that others, too, have
flight. . .""The notation’ goes on,
sarcastically comparing clumsy
earth planes and rockets with
their” superb flying saucers
‘The Navy seemed to take the
affair seriously, and one of their
researchers listed dozens of phrases
that an earthman—if it was a hoax
—would be quite unlikely to think
of: such things as forcefields, sheets
of diamond, force cutters, magnetic
nets, cleartale telepathing, and
other bizarre terms that seemed to
hint of a great science-technology
far beyond that of earth's.
If genuine, what was the purpose
of the alien notewriters in sending
the annotated book to the authorit-
ies? They nevermade further contact
with the baffled Navy scientists, and
Jessup himself could shed no light
fon the mystery. The matter has
since been engulfed in the obscurity
to which the authorities consign all
UFO clues and riddles.
So much for the types of written
‘communications from UFOs.
 
Verbal Messages
We will examine here the rather
brief verbal contacts made by var-
fous (Continued on page 44)
 
Astronaut Edwin E, Aldrin, Jr., i
shown moon walking during Apollo
11 mission in July 1969, VHF.
receiving sources, other than NASA,
say they heard Aidrin and astronaut
Armstrong. talk of seeing UFOs.MESSAGES FROM UFOs
(Continued from page 26)
witnesses with the occupants of landed
‘saucers. There are a mounting number of
‘these cases. A few of the typical and some
of the outstanding ones follow:
A'Mexican chauffeur named Salvador
Medina states that on August 20, 1953, he
was driving two Texas tourists to Laredo,
‘when a tire went flat. The tourists beran,
hiking to find a hotel, Meanwhile, Salva.
dor began to change the tire.
Suddenly, a four foot tall creature
peared, dressed in an odd outfit including
{i diver's helmet and a belt with tiny la
ing lights. Later, a taller man appeared
fand they engaged Salvador in conversa-
tion for most of the night, speaking good
Spanish.
"The two men claimed they were from a
far-off world and gave many details of
their life there, Salvador was skeptical
land suspected a hoax or prank—until they
invited him to walk over the hill where a
dise-shaped craft was sitting, They in.
vited him aboard but Salvador ran in
fight. He then saw the UFO rise and
shoot away at tremendous speed.
"Now he believed their “fairy tale” and
reported his experience to the police,
stubbornly insisting (to this day) it was
all true.
Carroll Watts, a farmer of Wellington,
‘Tex., had a similar experience in March
1967. While driving home one night,
Watts stopped in surprise when he saw a
vehiele 100 feet long near an abandoned
‘bam. A door opened into the lighted inte-
rior, filled with strange instruments, and a
Saucerman smilingly invited Watts
sxamination. If
he pasted, he would be given a fantastic
ride in the flying saucer. But like Salva.
dor, Watts thought escape was the better
part of valor, and the UFO soon darted
away.
‘Of courte the saucerman spoke perfect
English, while Salvador had heard perfect
Spanish. Judging by the many reports
from foreign countries of talks with UFO-
nauts in the witnesses’ native tongues, the
Saucermen must indeed be versatile ling
 
 
 
   
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
else, as some UFOlogists believe,
they may simply communicate via telepa
thy and the witness then “hears” it in his
head as his own language. However, both.
‘and others, have in-
sucermen's lips move
fend heard actual verbal sounds. But then,
if the flying saucers have been around
earth for thousands of years, as, seems
Tikely, why shouldn't they have learned
‘many if not all languages, even dead ones?
‘Except that as usual with UFOs, we im.
mediately run into @ paradox, for dozens
‘of witnesses claim that the UFOnauts
‘they met spoke in “unintellisible garbles”
and were equally baffled at earth speech.
‘The visitors usually gave up trying to get
their message across, whatever it was, and
zoomed away in their saucers, presumably
in disgust.
'Not all witnesses are farmers or other
“untrained” persons whose testimony is
cof “low credibility.” On November 17,
1966, police officers A. G. Huskey and
Charles Hutchins of Gaffney, S.C., were
44 SAGA
 
 
 
 
 
‘on a routine early-moming cruise. They
suddenly came upon a spherical UFO
‘with a rim around it (the “Saturn” type).
‘Events escalated from the fantastic to
‘the unbelievable as a little man, four feet
tall and dressed in a gold suit, descended
from a ladder and confronted the two
dumbfounded policemen. In a friendly
‘manner, the small humanoid spoke in
good English like a "college graduate”
fand aaked questions such as why the two
 
ripped away in his 20-foot saucer, leaving
the two officers gaping and wondering if
they had dreamed it all. But upon revisit-
ing the spot the next day, they, found
clear-cut footprints of ‘child's size” where
the undersized creature had stood
—undeniable proof to them that it had
nnot been a dream or delusion. Dutiful-
ly recording their experience on the police
Dlotter, they were subjected to the usual
ridicule and a skeptical third-degree inter-
rogation, to the point where one officer
‘was forced to resign, while the other clam-
‘med up and refused to discuss the matter
any further.
Here we have two reliable witnesses
trained to observe things carefully. to nev-
ce be taken in by false appearances, and
Sworn to report any event in factual,
domed detail, just “like it was.” Can such
solid, mutualiy-supporting testimony be
denied?
If a hoax is suspected on their part,
‘what motive could prompt them into con-
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
vite ridicule and official
‘And two men simply cannot share the
same hallucination. Obviously, they did
‘meet and converse with an unearthly little
man, thus making tenable all other re-
ports of aliens speaking in earth lan-
 
sruages.
Other verbal contact cases are often of a
trivial nature, such as the UFOnauts ask
ing what time it is, or seeking directions to
‘some city, or even asking if they ean have
2 dog to take away. But a goodly portion
fof the spoken messages tell of strange
faraway worlds and reveal scientific "se-
crets" that only puzzle the witness.
But the next caterory brings in some
real brain-teasers.
Radio Calls
""Stendec!” came a loud clear voice over
the radio, It had burst in at the end of
routine message from the British airliner
Lancaster Star Dust in 1947, flying to-
ard Santiago, Chile, And after that
‘alien” word was spoken, the plane com:
pletely vanished with its five crewmen
‘arn six passengers. No wreckage or bodies
‘were ever found.
‘Was Stendec some word in an oth-
er-world language, meaning seize” ot
“capture”? Only’ the saucermen may
know.
‘West Virginia, always a hotbed for
UFO reports, came up with a new mystery
in early 1967. Strange voices began cut-
ting into all police-call channels and CB
(Civilian Band) wavelengths. Baffled
people reported that the voices sounded
Tike "‘speeded-up phonograph records.”
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
‘Then in August 1968, in Minnesota, 2
strong voice cut into several commercial
channels with a dramatic statement
"Stand by for a message from outer
space!” The message never came. If it
‘was a hoax, the prankster must have spent
‘an awful lot of money for a 250,000 kilo-
‘watt transmitter able to drown out pow-
‘erful commercial radio stations for that
brief sentence.
From the above, one wonders at times if
the UFOs have not been trying for years to
‘make radio contact with Us, only to be ig-
nored, tuned out, or passed off as hoaxes
‘A-case that poinis this up occurred in 1964
near Holloman Air Foree Base at White
Sands, NM.. the U.S.'s great missile
range
"Two UFOs were spotted by radar, firs.
‘Then the radio shack crew was astounded
to pick up standard FAA recognition siz
nals. Apparently, the UFOs had mastered
the highly complex. transponder system
‘needed to transmit precise signals in code
Earth code, that is. Were the UFOnauts
‘anxious to get a “recognize” response fol-
owed by the “interrogate” signal, ready
to release some vital information to the
‘Air Force base?
‘You can readily guess what hap-
pened—signals ignored, contact not in
Hated, objects declared “weather ano-
‘malies" in the radarscopes and over the
 
 
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
‘una. radio-sensors
‘How many messages by radio from
UFOs is the world missing?
It's hard to say, but one UFO:
researcher succeeded in establishing two-
way contact. Dr. George Hunt William-
fon, archeologist and author of UFO
books, hooked up a radio-telegraphy unit
in 1952 and claimed steady inte
communication thereafter with various
UFOs high above earth, even out in space.
Long return messages and much informa:
tion came through in answer to his ques-
tions, he states, revealing many facets of
 
 
‘at times, Williamson has interpreted
them to his own satisfaction but says each
‘person would have to find his own mean-
 
 
"Messages from Mars have occasionally
hit the headlines through the years, going
‘way back. In 1899 the famed electrical
‘wizard, Nicola Tesla, constructed a giant
‘apparatus like a radio receiver (before ra
dio came) and recorded a series of enig-
‘matic codings that he firmly believed
me from intelligent beings on Mars, or
Somewhere in space.
In 1921, Marconi, the father of radio,
eked up strange signals aboard his yacht
‘and was convinced they came from Mars.
‘And of course, one favorite theory of UFO-
ogists is that, even if Martians do not ex-
ist, the UFOnaute from outer stellar space
‘might have bases on Mars,
In more modern times, 1995, five expert
shortwave radio hams picked up uniden-
tified signals from a powerful transmitter
that used the 49-meter waveband and an
‘SR call sign. Expert cryptologists were
tunable to decode the rhythmic signals
which remain @ mystery today. For that
‘matter, amateur radio hams constantly
(Continued on page 46)(Continued from pase 44)
report unidentified signals they pick up
from odd points all over earth and above
earth, often hearing strange “voices”
speaking « language never heard on earth
before.
In 1954, John Otto, an electronics engi-
per as well as ardent UFOlorist, devised
his own infrared audio-amplifier
which he claimed to pick up code sign:
from outer space, also “syllabic voices,
‘one high-pitched and feminine, the other
deeper and masculine. They spoke, he
ssaid, an utterly unfamiliar language that
hhad no possible connection with earthy
speech. Whether the messages were di-
rected to him, or whether John Otto hap-
pened to accidentally “eavesdrop” on
transmissions between UFO ships, he
oes not know. All'he knows is that they
were utterly “alien” voices from nonter
restrial throats,
‘This brings us to a separate category of
radio calls of special importance.
 
  
 
 
word in authenticity, backed up by NASA.
(Gehen itis willing to talk)
First of all, itis a matter of record that
UFOs have been detected during most of
‘our space shots. One or more UFOs were
spied by our astronauts in all 12 of the Ge-
‘ini flights. Photos were obtained in sev
feral cases that neither NASA or the spa-
‘etrack system could positively identify
‘earth satellites.
‘On June 1, 1966, the launch of Gemini 9
was suddenly scrubbed due to “inter
ference” within the radio hook-up. NASA.
then amazingly and probably reluctantly
released a statement, presented over na
tionwide TV, admitting that genuine
UFOs or “unknowns” had been seen by
‘astronauts more than once.
But there were more than mere
slimpses of UFOs in space, There were
also mysterious radio messages.
Way back during the Mercury flights,
Gordon Cooper in the Faith-7 (MA:9, May
15, 1963) heard weird voice transmissions
during his fourth pass over Hawaii, He
called it an “unintelligible foreign lan-
fruage” but the puzzling part ws
fut in on the VHF channel reserved ex-
clusively for spaceflights and no nation on
wrth would violate that intemational
‘ereement.
Tt soon proved it was not a foreign lan-
‘guage but an alien language, for tapes of
the "bootleg" voices. “queer gruntings””
‘wore replayed over and over for NASA
Tinguistexperts. They threw up their hands
in defeat, though they could have
analyzed any language in history, in-
cluding ancient Sanskrit. This one they
simply could not analyze at all. The
transmissions repose in NASA's files,
never solved or translated,
‘Apollo 8, the first round-the
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
orbit, the UFO again harassed them with
46 1 SAGA
 
‘a wave of internal heat within the space-
‘raft, plus more brilliant
spacecraft even began to pitch and yaw
‘unaccountably before the three men were
‘control of their vehicle and
 
   
 
by NASA in the publie broadcasts of the
flight. but radio hams with top notch
equipment caught the full reports by. i=
rect pickup from the astronauts. The
‘Apollo 8 tribulations sound very much
like UFOnauts attempting to prevent our
astronauts from rounding the moon. Why’?
Pethaps to keep human eyes from spying
‘on the hidden lunar bases that the saucer-
men reputedly have. Oddly enough, all the
‘manned Apollo moonflights ran into sim-
ilar of worse troubles.
During the second moon-circling mis-
sion (Apollo 10, May 1969) bursts of
strong “static” intermixed with a
rarble periodically plagued the astronaut
‘rio, during their radio transmissions to
‘mission control on earth
‘Then, everyone knows how the ill-fated
Apollo 13 flight met disaster on their way
to the moon, when their service module
blew up. Radio hams again reported they
hhad picked up an astronaut report of a
UFO pacing them. Had it deliberately
sabotaged the Apollo craft with some sort
‘of “explosive” ray?
‘Skipping back to the great moon- land-
wf flight of Apollo 11 (July 1969) it
seemed to go smoothly "by the boo
   
 
far as TV-viewers were concerned. But be-
hind the scenes that epic journey to anoth-
er world also had its UFO bedevilments
Suddenly,
during the approach to the
 
through the radio Ii
the point where mission control asked in
perplexity—"You sure you don't have
“anybody else up there with you?” (NASA
was caught unawares and didn't splice
that one out.)
Later radio noises included sounds like
f loud siren and a buzz-eaw, plus “sig
les" in a high-pitched tone. Even a “tr
whistle” and “chugging engine” rever
berated through the earphones. By the
third day, mission control was concemed
land jittery enough to keep interrogating
the astronauts as to their equipment. Was
it faulty? But tests proved nothing wrong
swith it
‘The meddling noises came from
source outside the spacecraft. And since
Sound cannot travel through airless space,
the tounds had to be broadcast radio sig:
nals, But who or what would be broad-
‘casting in those empty reaches stretching
for 250,000 miles between the earth and
‘Though Collins, Aldrin, and Armstrong
id not report seeing a UFO, this might
have been blocked out of their radio re-
ports by_a sensitive and worried NASA,
afraid of alarming hundreds of millions of
people all over the world who were tuned
{nto this tremendous moon-landing feat
that rivaled if not exceeded the voyage of
Columbus.
It is known definitely that NASA, des-
pite its protests at never “censoring” the
Voice transmissions of astronauts on pub-
Tic networks, has indeed trimmed out sig-
nificant snatches of conversation that
 
 
     
      
 
 
 
 
  
might have dealt with UFOs sighted in
‘space, especially on the moonflights. Fur-
thermore, the astronauts have been ad-
 
‘on the public radio channels, but to re-
serve it on tapes for private review by
NASA later
‘And the most vital deletion by NASA
red.on the moon itselfafter the land=
f the following undocumented story
ig trie. Certain sources with theit own
VHF receiving facilities that bypassed
NASA broadcast outlets claim there was
‘8 portion of earth-moon dialog that was
fuickly cut off by the NASA monitoring
staff
Tt was presumably when the two
‘moon-walkers, Aldrin and Armstrong,
were making the rounds some distance
from the LEM that Armstrong clutched
Aldrin’s arm excitedly and ex-
claimed—"What was it? What the hell
twas ft? Phat’ all T want to know.
“There followed further snatches of gas-
ping interchanges between the two astro-
pauts, with mission control also chiming
in frantically.
‘What's there? .. . malfunction
(garble) .. . Mission control calling
Apollo
"These babies were huge, sir
enormous... . Oh, Ged, you wouldn't be:
lieve it!” (Apparently referring to parked
UFOs in the distance).
‘m telling you there are other space:
craft out there... lined up on the far side
of the erater edge... . they're on the moon
watching us...”
‘There has, understandably, been no
confirmation of this incredible report by
NASA. or any authorities. We cannot
vouch for its authenticity but if true, on
‘can surmise that mission control went
into a dither and then into a huddle, after
‘which they sternly advised (ordered!) the
‘moon-walkers to “forget” what they
‘and carry on casually and calmly’ a:
nothing had happened. After all, an est
mated 600 million people around the
‘world were hanging on every word spoken
by the first two men to leave footprints on
the moon.
“This staggering proof of UFOs. and es-
pecially the existence of a saucer base on
tthe moon as long conjectured by UPOlog-
ists, simply could not be allowed to be
broadcast to such a large segment of lis-
tening humanity. When and if we'll ever
hhear the truth about this alleged incident
is anyone's guess,
‘That NASA had wind of strange things
it does not reveal to the public is substan’
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
subsequently had many contacts and con-
versations with them.
Quite unlike other ignored or ridiculed
contactees, Derenberger was called to
‘Cocoa Beach, Fla., by NASA officials. In
‘a secret meeting, he claimed they ques
tioned him in meticulous detail about all
his UFO experiences,
Now, hold onto your hats. They then,
astoundingly, showed him a star map and
id they knew more about it than he did
they even pointed out a certain star they
believed the saucermen came from
 
 
‘Derenberger retumed with pictures andscientists never explained the unbeliey:
‘able anomaly of Mariner lingering
‘minutes too long behind Mare—something
“impossible” in celestial mechanics.
* Ted was not using only American
space vehicles as sitting ducks. On March
1, 10965, Russia's Cosmos 50 satellite as-
toundingly burst into several hundred
fragments in orbit—because Ted had sent
upa "PK bomb" a week before.
© On March 12, 1965, Ted notified
George Clark of the CIA that he was using
some "mighty unusual PK" on the tense
wuation at Selma, Ala., during the no-
torious racial conflict there over Negro
voting rights. His particular targets were
Sheriff Clark and Judge Thomas, both al-
leged to be anti-Negro,
‘What should develop," Ted told the
CIA, “is a miraculous change of heart on
the part of those (persons).
‘Three days later on March 15th, the
Washington Star headlined—
DRAMATIC CHANGE OF HEART.
‘The story went on to state that Sher
iff Clark of Selma had relented and de-
cided to allow a Negro march, and that
Federal Judge Daniel Holcombe Thomas
of Mobile had apparently suffered a com:
plete change-of-heart. Judge Thomas ren
dered a verdict that pleased even Martin,
Luther King and swept aside all former
Alabama regulations, thereby allowing
Negroes to riser and vote without hin
‘One must admit that it is uncanny in-
deed that Ted Owens used that very
phrase—"‘change of heart”—three day
before the headlines. That is documenta:
tion hard to explain away.
‘© May 6, 1965, The Russian Zond or
Mars probe was destroyed by a PK
bomb" from Ted, predicted in his letter
the day before. This was another space
surprise that baffled all Soviet scientists.
Instrumentation said all systems were
0." But their telemetry failed to tell of
‘Ted's PK bomb arriving and méssing ev-
erthing up,
* August, 1965. Ted had put a PK hex
on the Gemini 5 fight, calling for a power
failure, and promptly on August "22nd,
its fuel cells malfunctioned. NASA. au:
thorities debated whether to bring the
‘manned ship down and abort the mission.
But the SIs communicated with Ted
and said they would, on their own, return
the power as a gesture of "good will” to
the President of the United States. And
the next day full power magically. re
fumed to the Gemini craft, although the
fuel cells were still faulty’ according to
telemetric data. Ted calls this another
“on the button’ feat in partnership with
the SIs,
‘© January 18, 1966. Ted wamed gov-
emment officials and the weather bureau
that the SIs would produce
record-breaking winter storms across
America. ‘The storms started almost im
mediately, and on January 27th the
weather bureau proclaimed the “Blizzard
of 1968” the worst in 33
January 30th, most major cit
north reported record-breaking cold
‘raves, plus crippling storms of sleet and
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
When the launch of the\OAO-1 (Or
biting Astronomical Observatory) was
postponed four times in April 1966,
 
 
 
 
e failures,
and various vexing “technical” problems,
‘Ted Owens had a different answer—his|
PK working to abort this particular pro
ect,
‘The vehicle was finally launched into a
{500-mile orbit on April 8th and scientists
rubbed their hands in glee. ‘They  were|
soon wringing their hands on April 10th,
when all power abruptly shut down, and|
the OAO-1 went into space history as
dismal dud,
‘They should have peeked in Ted's dia
where he stated that even though his first
PK force had not prevented the launch but
edit, his second and more pow
shot” would disable the OAO
completely, up in space
‘Ted's PK power had overcome all sci
er. Scientists were quoted a5
“They had no idea what went
wrong.” If all systems were working per-
fectly. as they claimed, what did stop the
QAO? We can surmise that Ted was home
chuckling,
‘* March, 1966. All the nation was
‘aroused at the UFO sightings reported by
coeds of Michigan State University, as
well as many other witnesses, When Dr.
J. Allen Hynek announced his illfamed
“marsh gas” explanation—but only at the
“urging” of the Air Force—all the faithful
in UFOdom were enraged.
Among them was Ted Owens, In a let
ter dated March 26, 1966, he gave the CIA
the bad news. The SIs, in retaliation at
this utterly irresponsible and deceitful
way of debunking UFOs, were going to
unk" the U.S. Air Force and give them
4 “lesson they would never forget.” It
would last through the year,
What form this “lesson” would take
soon became clear in a series of disastrous
USAF plane crashes. Among the most
spectacular was the “collision” of the Air
Force's giant experimental SB-70A
sweptwing bomber and an F-104 chase
plane. ally, the pilot who died
aboard the F-104' was Joseph Walker,
famed pilot of the X-15 rocket-plane in
which he had soared over 60 miles
hhigh—and where he reported and photo
sraphed flying saucers (never released by
the Air Force). Heads rolled over this
ghastly “accident” and the whole Air
Force was shaken up.
Before and after this major calamity,
‘Ted Owens and the Sls chalked up dozens
of adverse events against the Air
Force—trouble launching the Gemini 9
three disastrous fires at Air Force
bases, including the tremendous lose of
Elgin AFB in Florida, ... serious injury
to another test pilot of the experimental
M2P2 craft... and an extraordinarily
igh rate of training jets falling from the
sky for unknown ceasons.
It was a bad bad year for the Air Force,
all for hoodwinking the American public.
ificant. incident oc-
curred at the very start of this chastise.
ment of the USAF. On March 27th-the
day after Ted wrote his “spanking” let
ter—a huge UFO hovered over
‘Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Day.
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
    
 
ton, Ohio. This happens to be the Air
Force's center for saucer investigations,
home of Project Blue Book
‘© One of Ted's most remarkable “prog-
 
PPK
22 CAL.
PELLET
FIRING
 
only ei 25,
“STINGER AUTOMATIC’
5022 Cal. Pellets Fre
a
miss pus 2 Not Soa fin hy en
‘aa
eRe ely
ry
Pr
1395 pa
Srenkecwissiclemtenay
Teeecear han meant
Pouce coupucrr ca, oe Bhte
 
  
er
PV TN aA
omy $375 =
     
    
 
WESTBURY SALES CO.
7.0. ba Dep Tot! Wenn Yor 1188
ap cover Your Snot amor
.
TEN
isometric Muscle Building, so
40°
 
 
Endurance, Stunts, etc.
2 RoE Best ors a roon
 
     
  
Karate Practice
and Nerve Center Chart
 
FREE
 
 
 
 
 
  
SO MOK wil live
HEART FUNDnostications”” came on October 27, 1968.
Friends from Canada were visiting him
and asked for some SI demonstration to
come. They were in a restaurant and Ted
sketch, clearly
rea in the center
of the U.S. was in “danger” from some
natural catastrophe. He even drew a
skull-and-erossbones within the circle to
emphasize the major proportions of this
coming debacle
Three weeks later on Novernber 18th,
ines screamed—QUAKE JOLTS 20
STATES IN MIDWEST AND SOUTH!
‘The epicenter was in southern Illinois,
precisely the center of the “circle of dan-
fer” Ted had sketched, One newspaper's
imap of the quake area was in the shape of,
4 jassed circle that matched et's ex
How many people would dare to make
such a precise prediction of a coming dis
aster area and delineate itso firmly, hop-
ing for it to come true by sheer hick? Try it
yourself sometime, choosing any area in
the U.S. of on earth, then sit back and
wait for the headlines to bear you out. You
will sita lone time,
It's easy to deny that Ted Owens has
any supernatural powers bestowed upon
hhim by the Sls. But then we're left hold:
ing the bag of how to explain his eerie
hits” made s0 consistently. Either Ted's
‘off his trolley ~or we are,
Equally baffling is the event that be-
am in October, 1968, when Ted wrote the
National Hurricane Center at Coral Gab
les, Fla. and said frankly that for the first.
time in five years he had not successfully
demonstrated his “control” over hurri-
‘canes. But to make up for this lapse he
‘would see to it that at Teast one more
storm arose and, he added, “even ift had
to come forth after the hurricane season is
‘over.”" He then said his target date might
be-as late as February.
‘The hurricane experts must have rolled
‘on the floor with laughter at that one
Didn't Ted know that no hurricane had
‘ever come that late? No, probably Ted
didn't know. But why should that stop
him?
Headline of February 16, 1968—HUGE
STORM, TORNADOES RIP FLOR.
TDA, The weather bureau people, quoted
by newspapers, tried to past it off as
something other than a full-blown hurt
cane, calling it merely a "severe winter
Storm." But when winds roared up to 90
miles per hour. they had to lamely admit
that "winds in excess of T4 miles per hour
are considered of hurricane force.
"Thuis, Ted had done the impossible in
meteorological terms~produced the lat
‘est hurricane ever known in the US, And
if you think that Ted has perhaps secretly
Studied weather phenomena to thoroughly
that he is able to simply forecast unusual
storms (without actually ereating them)
then you'll be balked by his diary-and pri-
vate papers covering his entire life. Not
‘one word about studying meteorolosy: he
just makes his own storms,
* During August, 1968, ‘Ted and his
family were invited to Maine for a
two-week, all-expenses-paid vacation by a
troup of Maine businessmen. They were
interested in ‘Ted's “hurricane hexes,
possibly seeing it as a big “cane busting’
‘enterprise involving the dollar sign. If Ted
could make hurricanes “turn” into the
70 1 SAGA
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
coast at will, he could obviously make
them turn away if he wished (which Ted
hhad been tirelessly telling the eovernment
all alons),
But wanting more proof of his PK pow
ers and his alleged contact with the
all-powerful Sis, they asked Ted to have
at least one UFO appear over the area in
those two weeks, spectacular enoush to
make the local papers,
Before the two weeks were over, nine
fying saucers were sighted by Ted and
many other witnesses, one of which re-
ceived huge headlines. He had simply si
nalled an "SOS" to the Sls, asking them
to “put up or shut up” in his behalf. Act-
ing for ‘Ted, the Sts certainly did put
‘up—and the businessmen shut up.
But ironically even in the face of such a
startling demonstration, the business
soup. for some unknown reason, gave up
their plan to util
ccane-taming powers.
‘Just how does Ted Owens’ PK power
‘work? [tis @ most fascinating and com:
plex picture. Throughout his diary are
technical” notations about using “16
units of white PK.” “1,000 red units,” and
sometimes enormous jumps into “one mil:
Tion black units.” Elsewhere he lists the
various kinds of PK unite and their specif-
‘These are far too abstruse to go into,
Dut it seems that white PK unite are for
protection, sree units for healing, red
tunits for creating storms, and black units
for blocking anything he wants to fail
‘These “units” are the amount of power
put into any single PK feat
‘Then there are the types of PK powers
themselves~Space PK, Missile PK, Hur.
ricane PK, Healing PK, and s0 on. Ted,
who once did psi-experiments for Dr. J. B.
Rhine at Duke University, has evidently
carried on his own retearches into psy
chokinesis far beyond the elementary
Rhine tests where PK merely controls the
roll of dice
If PK from the human mind can make a
pair of dice come up with certain numbers
(as Dr. Rhine has proved in countless
‘runs") why can't it affect other and big
ver things? Things such as the tumultuous
air-currents that make up hurricanes, or
the powered flights of missiles
‘Apparently Ted so reasoned, and grad-
ually developed his PK powers to range in
‘many directions, accounting for his amaz
ing repertoire of PK feats, most on a grand
scale that would make Dr. Rhine gasp.
Yet parapsychologists like Dr. Rhine
have never stated there is any limit to PK.
power, only that they have not yet tapped
them, Ted has tapped therm, however, and
hhas made a quantitative jump’ forward in
utilizing PK power
But none of this would be possible, as
he himself quickly admits, without the aid
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
fof the Sls, who specifically chose ‘Ted
‘Owens as their spokesman and have, Ted
believes, “operated” on his brain to charge
it with the enormous PK power he exhib:
Even more complicated than the PK
units of power are the “PK boxes” that
‘Ted uses, These seem to be box-like con-
tainers that Ted tisualizes in his mind,
that emit not only PK forces but other
paranormal miracle-working powers. He
lists a bewildering array of such PK
boxes Weather Control Box, Universal
Mind Bor, Poltergeist Box, Wisdom of
the Ages Box, and, skipping far down the
line, the Angel Box
‘This last is intriguing in context with
the “change-of-heart” feat in Selma, Al
fas deseribed earlier, Ted has a significa
note in his diary for March 12, 1965:
Started to hit Selma... cops, Sheriff
Clark, Wallace, etc... witha black PK.
But something told me to put in Angels
100... and a small magic cross on
each of those people. Now T know what
‘Jesus meant by love your enemies!”” Ted
‘meant that loving your enemies is not just
‘ pious platitude but can work wonders on
them that direct opposition cannot
achieve.
‘Ted works hard at his PK “spells.” In
his diary he often mentions being "played
‘out the next day, oF extremely nervous
‘and agitated, and is sometimes forced to
Stay home from work to recuperate.
‘The honesty and integrity of Ted's
diaries are a potent factor in backing up
his claims, For instance, Ted at one time
felt gnawing doubts about getting mes
‘sages from the Sis, and felt crawling fears
that he was going mad and conjuring up
hallucinations. But the Ss expelled his
doubts and fears,
It is quite impressive to look over Ted's
list of "PK feats accomplished” and see
that many are marked as occurring in
three days,” "five days.” or "nine days.
jome are even overnight, while others
take a month or more, But the numerous
close-hitting cases compel one 10 seek a
paranormal rather than a “chance” or a
“luck” explanation,
One question remains. Is Ted un:
wittingly using pure precognition and only
that? That is, does he have the power
(miraculous in itsel0 to peer into the fu-
ture and see coming everts that tum out
true 85 per cent of the time? The SI and
his contact with them could then be sheer
‘mental "window dressing” out of his sub-
conscious mind, as it somehow delves
with uncanny’ accuracy into the future.
‘This would mean too that all his so-called
powers are imaginary-that he does not
Control or make hurricanes, and has never
spoiled a space shot with @ PK shot
He would, in short, be foreseeing those
‘events by his purely prophetic powers, and
nothing more, with his subconscious imag:
ination supplying the rest. But, because of
his overwhelming list of “hits.” that
would still make him the greatest seer of
All time, far above Jeanne Dixon or any
others today. and even dwarfing the feats
of the biblical prophets or the Oracle of
Delphi
Explaining a fantastic phenomenon by
fone even more fantastic is hardly a ratio
(Continued on page 72)(Continued fom page 70)
al way of solving a riddle,
‘Dr. Rhine would be the fatto snort at
‘hie explanation. for hin precomition x
periments with ESP cards have reveed
fo sich enormous prophetic powers inthe
Ihoman’ mind’ or prvche: Tio with the
breconiive theory there x nothing toe
plain why Ted Owens should alone be
ible toed the future ike a book —unees
‘God himeoit has lent him divine powers
“The other explanation ives us some
‘hing’ more rational ax a methodthat
‘therdimension beings with their tu
beracience have given Ted PK powers to
‘erform feats he merely astaner in ad.
 
 
 
And one other strong point backs up
‘Ted's SKecontact claim There are fying
sacer seen all around earth funleet
ditch skeptic) Ifthe UFOs =
then the people who fy them ex
CCertsnly they’ cannot be ordinary sans
taut must be far Beyond ta in intellect!
Thus, there is no great assumption to
makes tothe very probable sxiatence of
the Sle shat Ted claims to talk to. Nor
doce his contact by ESP—now t
‘ellestablished phenomenon in any
Sy necch the imarinaton
“The pure precoration theory is barely
posi while the Sl-sontect explanation
{s'more hihly probable
On top of thet, the Ss have a definite
 
 
 
 
urpote on earth, which they revealed to
‘Ted that you wi ind shocking but sso.
lately believable. But itt for fo tne to
be taken up bere and il be dicloed in
Pr in the ext eso ofthis magasine
 
to he ther spokesman and representative
iow they have rained his for avery Se
{Ife Yank’ of colonal importance And
that the. mht” mission Where are mo
‘ther words for) i tobe
Tt Incolver the fate of everyone on
‘arthnan woman and child Te wil
Shake you, probably frighten you. but it
jet of erat hope for 8
 
 
 
«SAGA’S UFO SPECIAL»
VOL 3 - 1972