Showing posts with label Bucket List. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bucket List. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

“Symposium on Official & Scientific Investigations of UAP (UFOs)"

Bookmark and Share

“Symposium on Official & Scientific Investigations of UAP (UFOs)"

Too good to be forgotten

By Billy Cox
De Void
12-3-14

    Legendary reputation as the Dr. Funkenstein of holiday party monsters notwithstanding, De Void spent a decent portion of the Thanksgiving weekend in sedentary repose, reviewing DVD-archived presentations at last year’s “Symposium on Official & Scientific Investigations of UAP (UFOs)." De Void initially monitored this two-day conference with its stellar cast in lame remote abbreviated fashion when it happened in late June 2013. But after actually (finally) listening to the speakers, De Void easily recommends this package as a conversation-starter for academics fearless enough to contemplate the merits of The Great Taboo as potential brain-food curricula.

De Void’s belated look at a year-and-a-half-old UFO hearing was triggered by the apparent enthusiasm from American University faculty and administrators last month over the success of a smaller but no less compelling forum in Washington, D.C. AU's key speakers — author Leslie Kean, NARCAP founder Richard Haines, and retired USAF colonel Charles Halt — were also featured at the 2013 gathering, and honors course instructor John Weiskopf expressed a desire to offer the class again. It’ll take a lot of John Weiskopfs to build institutional support for UFOs as a scholarly concern, but De Void's betting this provocative and underpublicized DVD set is strong enough to nudge forward-thinking administrators off the fence.

Pseudo-skeptic: How big is De Void’s kickback? A: Zero. But De Void was sent a comp after wondering whatever happened to the guy who scraped together a small fortune to create the ad hoc Center for UFO Research, which financed that 2013 symposium in Greensboro, N.C.

Tar Heel Kent Senter, whose cancer diagnosis spurred him into action, is still alive and struggling with multiple myeloma, which is no longer in remission. He has no regrets about the range and depth of his lineup, which included a university political scientist, a textbook-writing astronomer, and a university sociologist. But audience turnout was dispiriting. Senter says the venue could’ve accommodated 2,000 people; maybe 200 showed up. Maybe he shouldn’t have scheduled it so close to Independence Day. Maybe he spent too much on cable advertising and not enough on online marketing. Maybe he could've drawn a bigger crowd if he'd booked more Little Green Men bauble vendors in the lobby.

“I wanted this to be as scientific as possible, not talking about space aliens or that kind of malarkey,” says Senter. “We can’t even get past things flying around in the sky, much less whatever may be inside these vehicles, if that’s what they are. Other countries like France and Chile are acknowledging this without it being a taboo, but we live in a culture where people still make jokes and laugh about it — and it’s got to stop.”

Senter, whose own repeated UFO encounters began when he was a kid and could fill a weird and lengthy book, had hoped his conference might create some sustaining momentum. In fact, high level representatives from two official foreign UFO research agencies — Xavier Passot of France and Jose Lay of Chile — bumped fists for the first time in North Carolina and resumed their data-sharing discussions last month in France. But the needle barely flickered on the home front.

“Oh, people still keep pointing to my conference and talking about it,” Senter concedes. “And our state director came up to me at a conference in Winston-Salem and said she’d gotten an invitation to speak about it at a community college, and that was nice to hear.”

That was Lakita Adams, director of North Carolina’s MUFON chapter, English teacher, and one-time environmental educator with the North Carolina Zoo. Adams takes the “militant agnostic” approach to The Great Taboo, i.e., pushing no particular theory, but being persistent and public in pursuit of answers. She's been a longtime advocate for college-level engagement. But that was futile until, at the Greensboro conference, she met a Guilford Technical Community College instructor who urged her to approach GTCC admin about staging a lecture.

“It took him about 18 months to get the speaker committee to agree to it,” says Adams, who finally landed a 45-minute GTCC speaking gig in November. Maybe 100 people showed up at the auditorium, and the event was live-streamed to its other campuses. She also got an invite to speak at UNC-Wilmington next April.

“I know Kent was disappointed with the turnout in Greensboro, but I think it probably went much farther than he knows,” Adams says. “It’s difficult, especially when you know most people won’t bother to get acquainted with the good material that’s out there. But you just keep chipping away at it a little bit at a time.”

Sure enough. So here's a rare De Void commercial plug: Go to centerforuforesearch.com/buy-dvds.html and order a $69 DVD set. Nope, no Little Green Men here or riveting CGI of Chick-File-A cows getting levitated into beamships, but hey, it's not like you'll be doing any heavy lifting, like having to -- ugh! -- read a book. And when you're done, pass it along to someone of high character at your local oasis of higher learning. If they bite, get back with me and I'll pack my bags.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

"I’d Like my Children to Know the Truth [Re UFOs]," says Dying North Carolina MUFON Researcher Kent Senter


Bookmark and Share

Ken Senter

Billy Cox By Billy Cox
De Void
6-27-13

     Hey, dig it, I’ve been away for so long now they’ve changed the blog format on me. Looks like they’ve ditched the social media comments in favor of something a lot more inclusive, the way it used to be when I started this exercise in futility back in ‘07. Yay. Too bad all the Facebook feedback got obliterated, but we’ll always have Paris or whatever. And really, I’m not all that “back” yet; I don’t know how much longer I can keep dog-paddling against the tides.

However, at least for now, I want to direct your attention to a symposium in Greensboro, N.C., this weekend sponsored by The Center for UFO Research. This is one hell of a good story and it isn’t getting nearly the hype that last month’s Citizen Hearing on Disclosure did. And that’s a pity because the speakers are all first rate. There’s not enough space here to go down the list, but check out the website and you’ll get the picture, or at least you hardcores will.

Among the factors that makes this one so compelling is, it’s being financed by a dying North Carolina MUFON researcher named Kent Senter. Like countless other Americans who’ve seen anomalies in the sky, Senter, 59, is sick and tired of all the official indifference/denial and is attempting to make a serious first step toward forging a way out of the mire. As he told the Greensboro News & Record, “I’d like my children to know the truth. It’s not going to happen in my lifetime. I know I’m going to die. But I’d like to see it happen in their lifetime. I want the truth out there.”

Several other things make this gathering a lot different from what happened in Washington last month. For one thing, the major buzzword here will be UAP, or unidentified aerial phenomena, in lieu of the more loaded UFO. Also, the decibel level will be much lower. Uncle Sam won’t be at the center of the dart board; in fact, two of the speakers are from countries that would like nothing better than to cooperate with the U.S. government.

France and Chile both have longstanding government-sponsored UFO — err, UAP — research projects going on, and their emissaries will both be in North Carolina this weekend to tell audiences how they do it. One would hope some federal-level types who have to pretend they’re not interested — or at least some enlightened NGOs — might take notes. What they’ll likely discover, among other things, is that it isn’t costing Chile and France a lot of money.

Chile’s program is called CEFAA, and its international director tells De Void in an email that he is one of only three paid staffers in a threadbare agency that falls under the equivalent of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration. CEFAA interfaces with a volunteer scientific committee from Chilean universities — “all skeptics, by the way,” he adds.

That might sound like a stacked deck, but given the level of transparency, Lay states, “in Chile the UAP/UFO phenomenon has never been surrounded by any stigma.” Military and commercial pilots are unafraid to file their reports, and interfacing with government agencies is a breeze. Or at least as easy as bureaucracies can be.

In France, GEIPAN operates under CNES, the French space agency. A 30-year CNES veteran, Xavier Passot has been running GEIPAN for the past two years and, like Lay, says the UAP mystery has been a legitimate scientific pursuit for decades. He reminds De Void of the 1999 COMETA report — compiled by former high-ranking military and government officials — and how “its conclusions were open to the question of an ET hypothesis.” Having an official French program, says Passot, actually cuts down on sensationalist media coverage. “The lack of an official ‘UFO bureau’” in the States, he writes, “and the riot of private UFO groups makes the debate very confusing.”

The closest U.S. counterpart is the nonprofit National Aviation Reporting Center on Anomalous Phenomena, which regularly publishes meticulously detailed research papers on some of the most mysterious cases, both here and abroad. Not coincidentally, NARCAP’s director, former NASA scientist Richard Haines, will also speak in Greensboro this weekend, as will New York Times best-selling author Leslie Kean. And for those wondering why American culture is so dysfunctional on this topic, academicians Ron Westrum and Alexander Wendt will present a sharply focused context.

If De Void could get out of town this weekend, it would be Greensboro. Kudos to Kent Senter. If the mainstream media covers this one, it’ll be an absolute miracle.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Mainstream Media Pays Heed To Senter UFO Conference | VIDEO


Bookmark and Share

Mainstream Media Pays Heed To Senter UFO Conference

Mainstream Media Pays Heed To Senter UFO Conference

UFO Symposium coming to Greensboro this weekend

By Brandon Jones
myfox8.com
6-28-13

     GREENSBORO, N.C. — As a young child, Kent Senter believed there could be life on other planets.

Senter, from Burlington, said he had his first sighting as a young child and his most “life changing” in Durham in 1985.

The curiosity of what is in outer space still resides with him today.

Senter has organized a conference that will bring research backed by college professors, retired military officers and government officials to the War Memorial Auditorium in Greensboro.

“They’re a lot more questions than answers,” Senter said.

Senter, who has terminal cancer, says the conference was on his bucket list.

“When you know the inevitable is coming, it’s never like you expected. So, I want to get this accomplish,” Senter said.

Friday, June 28, 2013

Scientific Research Behind UFO Sightings is The Thesis for an International Symposium in Greensboro This Weekend


Bookmark and Share

Scientific Research Behind UFO Sightings is The Thesis for an International Symposium in Greensboro This Weekend

International UFO Symposium in Greensboro Looks At Scientific Research Behind Sightings

By Keri Brown
wfdd.org
6-27-13

      An international conference this weekend in Greensboro will explore UFOs and the scientific search for extraterrestrial life.

The Center for UFO Research is sponsoring a two-day symposium at the War Memorial Auditorium.

Scientists, high ranking military personnel, and government officials from around the world will be in the Triad to talk about research related to UFOs.

“What we are trying to prove is that there are crafts and unidentified aerial phenomenon happening in our skies and we don’t know what they are, and we need to study it seriously and take the taboo out of talking about it, so every time there is a sighting people don’t think you are a crackpot,” says Michael Acosta, who is organizing the event with The Center for UFO Research in Burlington.

Acosta says, “We need to actually look at the data and find out what is going on in our skies. It’s an air safety issue, it’s a technological issue and it is an extremely important question.”

Acosta says about five percent of all crafts that are reported in the air are unidentified.

Some of the guest speakers at the event will include Dr. Richard Haines, former senior scientist for NASA, Jose Lay, International Affairs Director for the Chilean government agency on UAP, and Timothy Good, UK researcher and author. . . .

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

UFO Conference On Researcher's Bucket List Will Be Fulfilled


Bookmark and Share

Kent Senter and his wife, Patty

Man's bucket list includes hosting UFO conference

By Jeri Rowe
www.news-record.com
6-25-13

     BURLINGTON — Kent Senter knows his days are numbered.

He has cancer, the worst kind, he tells people. So, he is marking off items from his “bucket list,” those things he wanted to do before he dies.

Be an astronaut. That can’t happen. Drive an Indy race car. That can’t happen, either. Create a conference that shines a light on a subject many consider taboo.

UFOs.

That’ll happen this weekend in Greensboro’s Terrace Theatre.

When it comes to UFOs, Senter is no fly-by-nighter. He helped found the North Carolina chapter of the Mutual UFO Network nearly 20 years ago, and he has investigated dozens of cases.

Plus, he has seen UFOs twice. . . .

Saturday, July 03, 2010

The UFO Bucket List

UFO Bucket List
By James Carrion
Follow The Magic Thread
7-2-10

James Carrion     Do you have a UFO bucket list? Are there things about UFOs you want to unequivocally know before you die? The truth about alien visitation? The truth about alien abduction? The truth about reverse engineering of alien technology?

My bucket list is really simple – I want to know the truth about three famous UFO cases – Maury Island, Kenneth Arnold’s sighting and Roswell, all occurring within the span of a single month in 1947. Why these three? Well because they all occurred around the same time that an allied top secret weapons project, on par with the atomic bomb, and possibly airborne was leaked to the news media.

Authenticated documents show that the two principal scientists involved in this alleged top secret project purposely used the media to spread disinformation about the project. Further research showed that the ‘new weapon’ was never airborne to begin with, but was part of a real top secret project that was killed off in 1945 but promoted by these scientists as active in 1947. Why? Good question.

The chronology is intriguing – Top Secret possibly airborne weapon leak first, Maury Island Incident next, then Kenneth Arnold’s sighting , and Roswell last. Seems like a lot happening within such a short period of time. Coincidence or not? Well most Ufologists seem to gloss over the compact chronology and chalk up the UFO events occurring so close together as just part of the 1947 ‘wave’ while ignoring the Top Secret weapon project data altogether.

Speaking of buckets, it seems that some of the UFO blogs out there can’t understand why my research focuses on these three pivotal UFO cases and have suggested that I am discounting the reported sightings that have occurred before and after 1947. In other words, for them the entire spectrum of UFO data must be thrown into the same bucket from which some universal explanation must be extracted. Well that is the approach Ufology has used for the last 60 plus years and which has resulted in absolutely no conclusive proof of anything.

Compartmentalizing UFO data is important to understanding the phenomenon. Rather than taking the whole bucket approach, it is essential to focus on a subset of data and time, the same way that anthropologists do when studying human history or geologists, the history of the earth. My focus is on these three cases and answering the question, were they real or contrived?

As an example of how important it is to compartmentalize data as well as examine other events surrounding them, consider the 1942 Raid over Los Angeles that many Ufologists believe to be a UFO event. Studying just what occurred on February 25, 1942 while ignoring the events that surround that day is inexcusable. Ufologists gloss over the fact that the very first attack on US soil during World War 2 occurred two days before on February 23, 1942 when a Japanese sub shelled Ellwood Oil Field near Santa Barbara, California, causing Californians to believe that a Japanese invasion was imminent. What makes more sense, an extraterrestrial craft flying over Los Angeles or unnerved gunners already expecting Japanese bombers, shooting at whatever was crossing the sky that night? Unidentified? Yes. Extraterrestrial? Unlikely. Critical minds will see the logic; believers will see what they want to see.

So if you have a UFO bucket list, then by all means, don’t let life pass you by, but start on your list. Get active and research the UFO topic of your choice. Get out of the comfort of your armchair and get to work studying what interests you about the UFO subject. But, you will never accomplish what is in your bucket list if you live by proxy through other’s research or proclamations. Compartmentalize your subject and its data because if you take the whole bucket approach, you will end up leaving your existence as puzzled as you arrived. Don’t take my word for it. Just consider the graveyard of Ufology, where so many prominent researchers have come and gone despite their passion and dedication - never getting to the truth they so desperately searched for.

Oh, yes, I have one other thing in my UFO bucket list: to sit in on congressional hearings on UFOs where those in government who have manipulated the truth and have deceived the citizens of this country are held accountable for their actions. I am working on my UFO bucket list, how about you?