THE PARACAST NEWSLETTER
September 22, 2013
Discover the “Real” Area 51 on The Paracast
The Paracast is heard Sundays from 2:00 AM until 5:00 AM Central Time on the GCN Radio Network and affiliates around the USA, and online across the globe via download and on-demand streaming.
Why It's Important for You to Donate to The Paracast: Although ads help cover a small part of our expenses, the income they produce is never enough to pay your humble hosts decent wages. Also, we do not receive any revenue from the ads placed on the show by our network or local stations. So we hope you're able to help fill the gap, if you can, to help us cover increasing server costs and other expenses -- or perhaps provide a little extra cash for lunch and utility bills. No contribution is too small (or too large
. It’s easy to send a donation. We have a Donatelink on our home page, below the logo and audio player. There's also a Donate link on our forums, at the bottom of the sidebar on the right. Or just send your PayPal donation direct to sales (at) theparacast (dot) com. And if you’ve had a problem getting to our Donate screen, please try again. We just fixed a serious PayPal access problem, and it should wor k properly now.
Attention U.S. Listeners: Help Us Bring The Paracast to Your City! In the summer of 2010, The Paracast joined the GCN radio network. This represented a huge step in bringing our show to a larger, mainstream audience. But we need your help to add additional affiliates to our growing network. Please ask one of your local talk stations if they are interested in carrying The Paracast. Feel free to contact us directly with the names of programming people we might be able to contact on your behalf. We can't do this alone, and if you succeed in convincing your local station to carry the show, we'll reward you with one of our special T-shirts, and other goodies. With your help, The Paracast can grow into one of the most popular paranormal shows on the planet!
Please Visit Our Online Store: You asked, and we answered. We are now taking orders for The Official Paracast T-Shirt and an expanded collection of other specially customized merchandise. To get your T-Shirt now featuring our brand new logo, just pay a visit to our online store at The Official Paracast Store to select your size and place your order. We also offer a complete lineup of other premium merchandise for your family, your friends and your business contacts.
About The Paracast: The Paracast covers a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions across the planet.
Set Up: The Paracast is a paranormal radio show that takes you on a journey to a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions. The Paracast seeks to shed light on the mysteries and complexities of our Universe and the secrets that surround us in our everyday lives.
Join long-time paranormal researcher Gene Steinberg, co-host and acclaimed field investigator Christopher O'Brien, and a panel of special guest experts and experiencers, as they explore the realms of the known and unknown. Listen each week to the great stories of the history of the paranormal field in the 20th and 21st centuries.
This Week's Episode: Gene and Chris present Donald R. Schmitt, co-author (along with Thomas J. Carey) of "Inside the Real Area 51: The Secret History of Wright Patterson." We all know about Nevada's Area 51 all right. Even the government admits it's real. But what about the "real" Area 51? Where might the actual wreckage of the Roswell crash be stored? You'll learn about this and other mysteries on this fascinating episode.
Chris O'Brien's Site: http://www.ourstrangeplanet.com
Schmitt’s Site: Roswell Investigator | Roswell Investigator
Reminder: Please don't forget to visit our famous Paracast Community Forums for the latest news/views/debates on all things paranormal: The Paracast Community Forums. We recently completed a major update that makes our community easier to navigate, and social network friendly.
Was There Early Government infiltration in the UFO Field?
By Gene Steinberg
As most of you know, I first got heavily involved in the UFO field in the 1960s, and, over the years, met many of the so-called famous investigators. I even interviewed a few, although some of those interviews have vanished as the result of defunct publications, or simply manuscripts that didn't survive moves from one part of the country another.
Perhaps the most famous early figure with which I came in occasional contact with was Major Donald E. Keyhoe. I first met him near his home in Luray, VA in the mid-1960s, accompanied by several fellow UFO enthusiasts, including Allen Greenfield and Rick Hilberg.
Now I had looked forward to meeting Keyhoe, since I got interested in UFOs as the result of reading some of his best-selling books. Even in the early days, Keyhoe was an outspoken activist trying to convince the U.S. Congress to hold hearings on the flying saucers.
In the 21st century, such hearings don't amount to a hill of beans, but the U.S. government was taken seriously in those days, and Keyhoe was clearly convinced he'd actually get somewhere if only enough members of Congress would take notice and treat the subject seriously. He always believed that the Air Force and other agencies had guilty knowledge that UFOs were real and extraterrestrial. This is a belief Keyhoe appeared to hold until the end of his days.
In the 1960s, Keyhoe most important task was serving as Director of a worldwide flying saucer club, NICAP, short for the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena. Keyhoe and some of his ex-military pals firstr took control of the group in the 1950s, when the original founder, physicist Thomas Townsend Brown, got the group into financial difficulty and was forced by his board to take a hike.
Keyhoe's presence brought even more ex-military onto the board, including a classmate of his from the Naval Academy, one Vice Admiral Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter, who was the first head of the CIA.
To Keyhoe, having a board heavily laden with former military figures was a matter of pride. They were his friends and fellow travelers. But to the some, the state of affairs seemed just a tad suspicious. There were even rumors, not confirmed I might add, that NICAP was merely a government front designed to redirect interest in UFOs from organizations that were attempting to make real progress in finding out what was going on. It seemed that NICAP was mostly collecting evidence to help advance Keyhoe's case for Congressional hearings, as if that would be the magic bullet that would force disclosure.
Unfortunately, Keyhoe wasn't considered a terribly good manager either, and NICAP continued to flail and flounder. The monthly newsletter, The UFO Investigator, was frequently late, and there were repeated pleas from Keyhoe for membership drives and donations to help the cause. More to the point, Keyhoe was not a daily presence at NICAP's headquarters either; at best being director was a part-time job.
So that was NICAP. But Major Keyhoe was always the gentleman, friendly and sincere. If his organization was actually a front for disinformation or other nefarious activities, I felt that perhaps he was simply out of the loop. Maybe he was just being manipulated.
In any case, on the day after our meeting with Keyhoe, my friends and I visited NICAP's unpretentious offices, off DuPont Circle in Washington, D.C. Upon entering, the manager, Richard H. Hall, announced that I had become persona non grata to the organization and, with shaking finger, ordered me to leave. His words, "You're not welcome here!"
I was half tempted to assert my rights to visit the organization as a paying member, but not wishing to start a disturbance, my friends and I departed.
Now I always suspect that what got Hall so riled up about me was my friendship with Jim Moseley, with whom he had been feuding for curious reasons. So on one occasion, Moseley telephoned Hall and asked him about something in connection with a story he had planned to run in "Saucer News." But Hall became irate and accused Moseley of taping the conversation. Now those of us who knew Moseley well realize that he didn't own a tape recorder at he time, and was too much of a luddite to have much awareness of the process of recording a conversation, any conversation. To the end of his days, he used standard electric typewriters. He never bought a personal computer, and he never even set up an answering machine or voicemail system on his phone. Forget about cell phones and tablets.
Years later, I encountered Hall at a UFO conference, and we buried the hatchet. Hall no doubt understood that his emotional behavior in the early days didn't advance anyone's cause, and only created more animosity in a field that was already rife with personal quarrels and far too much nastiness.
All right, NICAP is long gone, and so is Keyhoe and Hall. In passing, I actually hoped to have Hall on The Paracast a year or two before his passing in 2009, but he was already too ill to commit himself to an interview.
These days, some still believe that NICAP had a nefarious purpose, and that Keyhoe and his associates, including Hall, may have been working to deflect UFO investigation from areas where it could do some good.
I suppose anything is possible, but I prefer to believe that Donald Keyhoe, Richard Hall and even NICAP sincerely attempted to make a difference. Was there some sort of government infiltration involved? Well, the presence of ex-military officers did raise suspicions, but maybe it was just too obvious.
You'd think that, if the government wanted to take control of a UFO organization, they'd be far more subtle about it. They would, instead, get involved in activities that did not have any tinge of a possible military connection. Why do the obvious -- or was that just a trick to divert everyone's attention? NICAP seemed such an obvious candidate as a disinformation source that, of course, they couldn't be. Or maybe they were. It doesn't matter, as the final vestiges of the original NICAP died in 1980, although some of their publications and other material are still available online.
Copyright 1999-2013 Making The Impossible, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy: Your personal information is safe with us. We will positively never give out your name and/or e-mail address to anybody else, and that's a promise!
September 22, 2013
Discover the “Real” Area 51 on The Paracast
The Paracast is heard Sundays from 2:00 AM until 5:00 AM Central Time on the GCN Radio Network and affiliates around the USA, and online across the globe via download and on-demand streaming.
Why It's Important for You to Donate to The Paracast: Although ads help cover a small part of our expenses, the income they produce is never enough to pay your humble hosts decent wages. Also, we do not receive any revenue from the ads placed on the show by our network or local stations. So we hope you're able to help fill the gap, if you can, to help us cover increasing server costs and other expenses -- or perhaps provide a little extra cash for lunch and utility bills. No contribution is too small (or too large
. It’s easy to send a donation. We have a Donatelink on our home page, below the logo and audio player. There's also a Donate link on our forums, at the bottom of the sidebar on the right. Or just send your PayPal donation direct to sales (at) theparacast (dot) com. And if you’ve had a problem getting to our Donate screen, please try again. We just fixed a serious PayPal access problem, and it should wor k properly now.Attention U.S. Listeners: Help Us Bring The Paracast to Your City! In the summer of 2010, The Paracast joined the GCN radio network. This represented a huge step in bringing our show to a larger, mainstream audience. But we need your help to add additional affiliates to our growing network. Please ask one of your local talk stations if they are interested in carrying The Paracast. Feel free to contact us directly with the names of programming people we might be able to contact on your behalf. We can't do this alone, and if you succeed in convincing your local station to carry the show, we'll reward you with one of our special T-shirts, and other goodies. With your help, The Paracast can grow into one of the most popular paranormal shows on the planet!
Please Visit Our Online Store: You asked, and we answered. We are now taking orders for The Official Paracast T-Shirt and an expanded collection of other specially customized merchandise. To get your T-Shirt now featuring our brand new logo, just pay a visit to our online store at The Official Paracast Store to select your size and place your order. We also offer a complete lineup of other premium merchandise for your family, your friends and your business contacts.
About The Paracast: The Paracast covers a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions across the planet.
Set Up: The Paracast is a paranormal radio show that takes you on a journey to a world beyond science, where UFOs, poltergeists and strange phenomena of all kinds have been reported by millions. The Paracast seeks to shed light on the mysteries and complexities of our Universe and the secrets that surround us in our everyday lives.
Join long-time paranormal researcher Gene Steinberg, co-host and acclaimed field investigator Christopher O'Brien, and a panel of special guest experts and experiencers, as they explore the realms of the known and unknown. Listen each week to the great stories of the history of the paranormal field in the 20th and 21st centuries.
This Week's Episode: Gene and Chris present Donald R. Schmitt, co-author (along with Thomas J. Carey) of "Inside the Real Area 51: The Secret History of Wright Patterson." We all know about Nevada's Area 51 all right. Even the government admits it's real. But what about the "real" Area 51? Where might the actual wreckage of the Roswell crash be stored? You'll learn about this and other mysteries on this fascinating episode.
Chris O'Brien's Site: http://www.ourstrangeplanet.com
Schmitt’s Site: Roswell Investigator | Roswell Investigator
Reminder: Please don't forget to visit our famous Paracast Community Forums for the latest news/views/debates on all things paranormal: The Paracast Community Forums. We recently completed a major update that makes our community easier to navigate, and social network friendly.
Was There Early Government infiltration in the UFO Field?
By Gene Steinberg
As most of you know, I first got heavily involved in the UFO field in the 1960s, and, over the years, met many of the so-called famous investigators. I even interviewed a few, although some of those interviews have vanished as the result of defunct publications, or simply manuscripts that didn't survive moves from one part of the country another.
Perhaps the most famous early figure with which I came in occasional contact with was Major Donald E. Keyhoe. I first met him near his home in Luray, VA in the mid-1960s, accompanied by several fellow UFO enthusiasts, including Allen Greenfield and Rick Hilberg.
Now I had looked forward to meeting Keyhoe, since I got interested in UFOs as the result of reading some of his best-selling books. Even in the early days, Keyhoe was an outspoken activist trying to convince the U.S. Congress to hold hearings on the flying saucers.
In the 21st century, such hearings don't amount to a hill of beans, but the U.S. government was taken seriously in those days, and Keyhoe was clearly convinced he'd actually get somewhere if only enough members of Congress would take notice and treat the subject seriously. He always believed that the Air Force and other agencies had guilty knowledge that UFOs were real and extraterrestrial. This is a belief Keyhoe appeared to hold until the end of his days.
In the 1960s, Keyhoe most important task was serving as Director of a worldwide flying saucer club, NICAP, short for the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena. Keyhoe and some of his ex-military pals firstr took control of the group in the 1950s, when the original founder, physicist Thomas Townsend Brown, got the group into financial difficulty and was forced by his board to take a hike.
Keyhoe's presence brought even more ex-military onto the board, including a classmate of his from the Naval Academy, one Vice Admiral Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter, who was the first head of the CIA.
To Keyhoe, having a board heavily laden with former military figures was a matter of pride. They were his friends and fellow travelers. But to the some, the state of affairs seemed just a tad suspicious. There were even rumors, not confirmed I might add, that NICAP was merely a government front designed to redirect interest in UFOs from organizations that were attempting to make real progress in finding out what was going on. It seemed that NICAP was mostly collecting evidence to help advance Keyhoe's case for Congressional hearings, as if that would be the magic bullet that would force disclosure.
Unfortunately, Keyhoe wasn't considered a terribly good manager either, and NICAP continued to flail and flounder. The monthly newsletter, The UFO Investigator, was frequently late, and there were repeated pleas from Keyhoe for membership drives and donations to help the cause. More to the point, Keyhoe was not a daily presence at NICAP's headquarters either; at best being director was a part-time job.
So that was NICAP. But Major Keyhoe was always the gentleman, friendly and sincere. If his organization was actually a front for disinformation or other nefarious activities, I felt that perhaps he was simply out of the loop. Maybe he was just being manipulated.
In any case, on the day after our meeting with Keyhoe, my friends and I visited NICAP's unpretentious offices, off DuPont Circle in Washington, D.C. Upon entering, the manager, Richard H. Hall, announced that I had become persona non grata to the organization and, with shaking finger, ordered me to leave. His words, "You're not welcome here!"
I was half tempted to assert my rights to visit the organization as a paying member, but not wishing to start a disturbance, my friends and I departed.
Now I always suspect that what got Hall so riled up about me was my friendship with Jim Moseley, with whom he had been feuding for curious reasons. So on one occasion, Moseley telephoned Hall and asked him about something in connection with a story he had planned to run in "Saucer News." But Hall became irate and accused Moseley of taping the conversation. Now those of us who knew Moseley well realize that he didn't own a tape recorder at he time, and was too much of a luddite to have much awareness of the process of recording a conversation, any conversation. To the end of his days, he used standard electric typewriters. He never bought a personal computer, and he never even set up an answering machine or voicemail system on his phone. Forget about cell phones and tablets.
Years later, I encountered Hall at a UFO conference, and we buried the hatchet. Hall no doubt understood that his emotional behavior in the early days didn't advance anyone's cause, and only created more animosity in a field that was already rife with personal quarrels and far too much nastiness.
All right, NICAP is long gone, and so is Keyhoe and Hall. In passing, I actually hoped to have Hall on The Paracast a year or two before his passing in 2009, but he was already too ill to commit himself to an interview.
These days, some still believe that NICAP had a nefarious purpose, and that Keyhoe and his associates, including Hall, may have been working to deflect UFO investigation from areas where it could do some good.
I suppose anything is possible, but I prefer to believe that Donald Keyhoe, Richard Hall and even NICAP sincerely attempted to make a difference. Was there some sort of government infiltration involved? Well, the presence of ex-military officers did raise suspicions, but maybe it was just too obvious.
You'd think that, if the government wanted to take control of a UFO organization, they'd be far more subtle about it. They would, instead, get involved in activities that did not have any tinge of a possible military connection. Why do the obvious -- or was that just a trick to divert everyone's attention? NICAP seemed such an obvious candidate as a disinformation source that, of course, they couldn't be. Or maybe they were. It doesn't matter, as the final vestiges of the original NICAP died in 1980, although some of their publications and other material are still available online.
Copyright 1999-2013 Making The Impossible, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy: Your personal information is safe with us. We will positively never give out your name and/or e-mail address to anybody else, and that's a promise!

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