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Cicero, in the 43rd chapter of his "De Divinatione", writes of ‘balls in the heavens’; Julius Obsequens, in "Prodigia", writes of ‘flaming shields', and these descriptions occur likewise in Aschylos, Plutarch, Seneca, and Valerius Maximus. Xenophon, in the 12th chapter of his "Anabasis", designates the objects as ‘bells’, ‘dishes’, and 'shells'. The ancient chronicler Lycostenes told of ‘crosses and beams in the sky*. Dio Cassius related that, at the first landing of the Romans in Great Britain under Aulus Plautus in the year 43 B. C., a round object flew like lightning from east to west. The news journal of Old Nurnberg in 1561 wrote about ‘balls, discs and tubes in the sky’, which held three, four, or more balls inside of them, and were seen over the city. ‘Dark globes' were seen over Basel in the Middle Ages, and similarly, there were ‘airships' in the skies of the United States toward the end of the 19th century, and beginning of the 20th century. During the second world war, ‘balls of light' and so-called 'foo-fighters' followed both the Allied and the German aircraft. In some of the caves of the Camonica Valley in Italy, in Tanum, Sweden, and the highlands of Tassili, in the Sahara, and in Australia, one can find rock wall drawings of men in ‘diving suits’, which even today the Australian aborigines refer to as ‘brothers of light’. In the caves of Budhistan at the foot of the Himalayas, an astronomical chart was found which shows the constellations as they appeared 13,000 years ago, with the route between Earth and Venus indicated. In St. Antonio, in the Susa Valley near Turin, there is an engraved elliptical form, from which radiate outwards other lines, in the midst of which one can detect a neat row of cup-shaped objects, approximately 5 cm. apart, as if the artist wanted to show that it pertained to a mother ship with flying discs on board. On the 12th of August, 1883, the astronomer, Bonilla, observed, from the observatory at Zacatecas, Mexico, a great number of oval flying objects crossing the disc of the sun. As he had just been making photographs through the telescope, he was able to photograph one of the objects which had left the formation and momentarily stood still. The same observation was made simultaneously from observatories at Pueblo and Mexico City. From the trigonometric calculations made possible by these astronomical observations, it was established that the flying objects were in the vicinity of Earth. On the 24th of April, 1874, the astronomer Schafarich observed an object of high intensity as it left the moon and quickly went off into space. The astronomer who discovered the planet Pluto, Professor Clyde Tombaugh, was sitting in the garden with his wife and mother-in-law, one summer evening a few years ago, resting from the heat of the day. Looking up, he had the good fortune, as he openly declared, to see a large space ship, whose portholes were illuminated with a bluish light. —Detailed descriptions of space ships and of experiences of being taken into them run through the accounts of Ezekiel in the Bible. "Besides the several types of spacecraft so far observed by Earth men, there are also monstrous sized cruisers of space. None of these have yet landed on this Earth! The cruisers, according to what | have been told, are of the size of a fair sized city." George Adamski, 16 January 1952 ANGELS IN STARSHIPS www.cosmic-people.com