Idaho was the top ranked state for per-capita UFO sightings during the first three months of 2020, according to a new report.
The internet company used data from the National UFO Reporting Center and issued per-capita rankings based on state population data.
Idaho residents have reported 164 UFO sightings — or 9.18 sightings per 100,000 people — according to the study. Other top states included Montana, New Hampshire, Main and New Mexico, which is home to Roswell, renowned for an alleged UFO crash in 1947 and home to the International UFO Museum and Research Center.
Not to change the topic here:
US Navy 'UFO task force' exists, and Sen.
Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee Chairman Marco Rubio (R-FL) presides over a hearing on June 10, 2020 in Washington, DC. As part of a Senate committee request, Rubio asked for information pertaining to unidentified aerial phenomen
The Office of Naval Intelligence has an “Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon Task Force,” and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio is requesting a detailed analysis of their findings.
The reveal of both the task force’s existence, as well as Rubio’s data request, came in a June 17 Select Committee on Intelligence report authored by Rubio on the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 .
'I have seen a UFO': Police reveal logs of sightings over past three years | Express & Star
Roswell’s UFO Festival to go on virtually | KRQE News 13
ROSWELL, N.M. (KRQE) – The COVID-19 pandemic has forced some of the biggest events in New Mexico to cancel. The UFO Festival was scheduled to take place this weekend before it was canceled. However, Roswell is still going forward with a different kind of festival.
“I’m just really blown away by the positive, the positivity you know,” said Marie Manning. MainStreet Roswell, the organizers for the UFO Festival said even though they are not allowed to hold the traditional festival that everyone is used to, they have decided to hold a virtual one instead.
This may worth something:
UFOs over Washington: The first report of 'flying saucers' | The Spokesman-Review
On June 24, 1947 – 73 years ago Wednesday – automatic firefighting system company owner and licensed pilot Kenneth Arnold of Boise, flying from Chehalis to Yakima, spotted nine large metallic-looking objects flying rapidly near Mount Rainier. It would be the first of many reports of "flying saucers" or unidentified flying objects from around the world.
While flying to Yakima on a sales call, Arnold read about a downed Marine C-46 transport that had crashed near Mount Rainier in January. With skies clear and a little time on his hands, Arnold lingered over the area in hopes of spotting the wreckage and earning a $10,000 reward.
A Search for U.F.O.s Leads to Utopian Dreams in This Debut Novel - The New York Times
In the summer of 1947, a private pilot crossing the Cascade Mountains in Washington State reported seeing nine shiny objects in the sky. The sighting led to the first use of the term "flying saucer" and a global obsession with U.F.O.s.
Seekers of what? Vision of what? The answers to those questions are rather opaque. At the start, it seems Oliver promises his followers that they will be "taken up" by extraterrestrials, that "a new dawn would come." But the mission morphs. One of the followers, a leftist radio host named Alice Linwood, recalls the early days of the movement as a kind of proto-hippie commune: "Funny thing was she started to believe. Belief, she liked to say later, infected her.
Berkshire UFO Story on Netflix
Netflix is reviving the docuseries "Unsolved Mysteries ,"and an upcoming episode will feature the Berkshire Athenaeum.
* * *
"Unsolved Mysteries" is being produced by its original creators and the producers of the Netflix hit "Stranger Things."
The Berkshires episode is the fifth episode of the six-part summer series. It will be available to stream on July 1.
'Unsolved Mysteries' Returns Because 2020 Isn't Scary Enough - The New York Times
"Unsolved Mysteries," the alternately chilling and far-out docu-series, which returns to TV this week, began with a solved one.
In the fall of 1982, William Catterson, a New Jersey father of two , failed to return home from his fast-food job. His car was found, abandoned. A chocolate cake, an anniversary present for his wife, still rested on the passenger seat. Two years later, the writer and producer Terry Dunn Meurer included his case in an HBO documentary: "Missing Persons: Four True Stories." Catterson, who had faked his own disappearance, saw it. He turned himself into police, then reunited with his family.
No comments:
Post a Comment