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61 free of rock particles which had stuck to them and then put through chemical analysis. To the suprise of the scientists, they we found to contain large amounts of cobalt and other metallic substances. That was not all. When placed on a special turntable - according to Dr. Vyatcheslav Saizev, who described the experiments in the Soviet magazine Sputnik - they vibrated or ‘hummed' in an unusual rhythm as though an electic charge was passing through them. Or as one scientist suggested, "as if they formed some part of an electrical circuit." At some time, they had clearly been exposed to extraordinarily high votages. Did the discs actually record an abortive space mission by alien astronauts 12,000 years ago? Nearly all the leading 'space speculators' - theorists like Erich von Daniken and Peter Kolosimo - believe so. aoa od 1 yoo4 4 es ve) For once one accepts the proposition that aliens may have already have visted earth, then it follows that some of their space-probes must have failed and the astronauts must have been Aa sa ----a destroyed. Posted by John Winston johnfwin@mlode.com June 7, 1999 NASA and the scientific community are actively searching for evidence of extraterrestrial life, but what if we were confronted with undeniable proof that ETs exist and have been visiting nua Earth? A nationwide survey by the Roper Organization has uncovered the following: ..one out of four Americans think most people would "totally freak out and panic" if such etal 2 ee et 4 ..eighty percent of influential Americans think the US government would classify or suppress evidence of extraterrestrial life. The Roper survey was conducted on behalf of the National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS), a privately funded scientific research organization based in Las Vegas, NV. The pollsters asked a nationwide sample of 1,971 men and women a variety of questions concerning a sudden confirmation of extraterrestrial life. (The poll has error margins of 2.5 percent.) Among other findings: When asked what they thought UFOs were: 25% thought they were alien spaceships 19% said UFOs a1 are normal events that a are re misinterpreted by witnesses ANAT a8 ea ate --- a ae --- -- 12% thought they were secret government programs 9% said hallucinations 14% said the government 11% said religious leaders 20% said a private organization that had planned for such a contingency. "There have been no systematic studies about the potential impact of confirmed contact", says Dr. Colm Kelleher, deputy administrator of NIDS. A 1960 report by the Brookings Institute and an internal RAND document from 1968 predicted profound social consequences if How Would Humans React If ET Landed? Source: National Institute for Discovery Science (NIDS) evidence were confirmed. 7% said travelers from other dimensions When asked whom they would choose to make first contact with ETs on Earth: 20% said the military _ 29% said scientists