Here it is. Fantastic episode four has been broadcasted into orbit and wow, was it a good one. We had an interview with a local horror writing legend, Mr. Steve Vernon, who spoke to us about a number of fascinating spooky books he's written on the history of the Atlantic region, including his children's monster field guide primer 'Maritime Monsters'. A gentleman and spooky scholar, Mr. Vernon both entertains and informs. Also on the Exopolitical Pulse we look into the unidentified UFO's spotted AND photographed in Newfoundland in January this year, video footage of an alien abduction, and 9/11 being an inter-dimensional alien false flag operation. On the Sci-Tech news we explore the creation of artificial DNA and on the audiozone we listen to another installment of the Andrew Basiago saga. I think it's fair to say we may just start to move on from here with this story. We've played a segment every episode since inception and I think I may try and shake things up a little with some new clips depending on response. It is none-the-less an interesting and tantalizing story indeed. Perhaps we'll take a leap into some project Camelot material who are always blazing trails into whistler blowerdom.
So without further ado, buckle your safety belts because this....is the Unified Field, Atlantic Canada's ONLY paranormal radio broadcast.
Check out the articles we reviewed on this episode of the Unified Field...
Newfoundland UFOs still a mystery
Last Updated: Friday, May 28, 2010 | 5:03 PM ET
Angela Gilbert, CBC News
Residents of Harbour Mille, N.L., reported seeing three missile-like UFOs fly near their community on the night of Jan. 25, 2010, including this one photographed. (Courtesy of Darlene Stewart)
The unidentified flying objects spotted in January off Newfoundland remain a mystery to the government, despite extensive scrutiny, according to Department of National Defence (DND) documents obtained by CBC News.
The documents contain grainy images of a rocket with a long, fiery tail soaring skyward. The reports rule out missiles and model rockets, but don't suggest what the images might show.
Military experts discredit the possibility of ballistic and cruise missiles. DND's Directorate of Scientific and Technical Intelligence (DSTI) assessed the images and reported: "The object is not a ballistic missile, not a cruise missile in boost phase nor a cruise missile in-flight phase. It is also not a licensed model rocket launcher."
The Jan. 25 sighting happened on the southern coast of Newfoundland near Harbour Mille. Several residents reported seeing the objects, including a woman who was able to photograph one of them. She reported to the RCMP that she had seen three missiles soaring over the ocean and it looked as if they had come up out of the water.
Contact us: If you have more information on this story, or other investigative tips to pass on, please email investigations@CBC.ca
The DSTI says in the documents that the only missiles that can be launched from a submarine are ballistic or cruise missiles, but the country's top arms experts say the object photographed doesn't fit that profile.
"There are no distinguishing features on the object to use for identification … the shape of the flame is atypical of a missile launch," and "the length of the flame is greater than that of the rocket body. This eliminates the possibility that it is a cruise missile jet engine exhaust," said DSTI.
Undetected by Norad
The documents also note that it is the responsibility of the North American Aerospace Defence Command (Norad) to "provide aerospace warning and defence for North America," and that neither that agency, nor Canada Command, had any information on the rockets.
"NORAD and [Canada Command] have no evidence to support this sighting" reads the report.
The RCMP conducted an investigation, but according to the Jan. 28 report, the police didn't have an answer either.
"The RCMP … is calling the event an unexplained sighting."
The documents also say there were no navy ships involved, and no Canadian Forces missile exercises at the time.
The government has blocked nine pages and a several paragraphs of the UFO documents from public release.
One of the lines leading into a blocked-out portion reads, "Media reporting has linked the sightings to …"
At the time there was speculation the rockets may have come from a French submarine near St-Pierre-Miquelon, since a few days later the French government announced test-fires of its new M51 ballistic missiles were successful.
In a phone call Friday, however, the Directorate General of Armament for France said that the ballistic test-fires took place on Jan. 27, and not on Jan. 25, the day of the sightings off Newfoundland.
It is not clear if new information was uncovered about the UFO sighting since Feb. 1, as that date marked the closing time frame for the Access to Information request.
CBC News is awaiting the Department of Public Safety's response to the question of whether or not the UFO was eventually identified.
Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/05/28/ufo-newfoundland-dnd.html#ixzz0pJcIVDXY
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June 5 2010
Astonishing UFO video proves beyond doubt: They are here
www.allnewsweb.com
Every now and then a UFO video comes to light that leaves even seasoned UFO researchers stunned. Such a UFO video recently surfaced and made its way onto the Internet. The video below was captured by at least two clearly confused witnesses in a town in Russia. The extraterrestrial event seen below is believed to have taken place in the last few months in the vicinity of the city of Moscow.
Russian UFO researchers who have examined this footage believe that it is genuine. It is known that a number of video clips showing UFOs are in fact hoaxes created using computer generated images however the consensus amongst those who have studied this footage is that it is not such a clip.
Seen in the clip is a large flying saucer shaped craft. Ufologists have suggested this might be a Mother Ship. Recently Pyramid shaped UFOs have been seen above Russia too suggesting that more than one extraterrestrial race is visiting the region.
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About.com
Wednesday June 27, 2007
Stephen's Paranormal Phenomena Blog
By Stephen Wagner, About.com Guide to Paranormal Phenomena
Breaking news: Main claims video footage of alien abduction
According to UFO researcher Brian Vike (HBCC UFO Research), he has received a report from a man in Dickinson, North Dakota who claims to have videotaped an actual alien abduction in progress. Apparently, the man has been holding the potentially unprecedented footage for more than two months, not knowing what to do with it. "Once the video footage is received at HBCC UFO Research and another call to the man who provided the footage," Vike says in an American Chronicle article, "we will go from there with getting the footage released, along with an full interview on his ongoing experiences."
cosmicparadigm.com
Friday, March 26th, 2010
Growing Evidence 9/11 Was an Interdimensional ET-Related False Flag Operation
If so, this would explain why the controllers have gone to such lengths to have evidence concerning 9/11 and the bank-based international corporate crime syndicate — otherwise known as the New World Order — suppressed: its existence intersects with several above top-secret issues — the ancient extraterrestrial presence on earth, time travel and Tesla-based free zero-point energy.
It is also significant in my view that Andrew Bassiago, who — along with President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s great-grandaughter and her friend/witness — is a NASA/US military time-travel technology/secret bases on Moon/Mars whistleblower interviewed by Project Camelot — was one of only two US lawyers who expressed interest in working with me on Campbell vs. the United States, one of the very few active federal court cases that lays bare the political and economic structures underlying the New World Order and its multifaceted operations. We agreed that he should not do so, as he, like myself, and many other altruistically-oriented activists, was living too near the edge, and so immediately needed to find remunerative cases to represent — REC
http://www.examiner.com/x-2912-Seattle-Exopolitics-Examiner~y2010m3d16-Secret-time-travel-planning-HAARP-weapons-key-to-30year-operations-plan-behind-false-flag-of-911?cid=examiner-email
MSNbc.msn.com
It's alive! Artificial DNA controls life
Synthetic genome blazes trail for new drugs and biofuels.
Blue colonies indicate a successfully transplanted genome in bacteria.
By Eric Bland
updated 5:12 p.m. ET May 20, 2010
It may not quite be "Frankenstein," but for the first time scientists have created an organism controlled by completely human-made DNA.
Using the tools of synthetic biology, scientists from the J. Craig Venter Institute installed a completely artificial genome inside a host cell without DNA. Like the bolt of lightning that awakened Frankenstein, the new genome invigorated the host cell, which began to grow and reproduce, albeit with a few problems.
The research marks a technical milestone in the synthesis and implantation of artificial DNA. Venter expects the research will lead to cheaper drugs, vaccines and biofuels in several years — and dozens of other companies and researchers are working toward the same goal.
"This is the first synthetic cell that's been made," said Venter. "We call it synthetic because the cell is totally derived from a synthetic chromosome, made with four bottles of chemicals on a chemical synthesizer, starting with information in a computer."
The research, published Thursday by the journal Science, combines two of Venter's past achievements.
DiscoveryNews.com
In 2007 Venter transplanted the genome of one Mycoplasma bacterium into another. Venter and his colleagues also synthesized a trimmed down, artificial version of Mycoplasma's DNA, a project known as the Minimal Genome Project. Attempts to implant the synthetic DNA all failed, until now.
In the current research, Venter and his colleagues, who include Nobel laureate Hamilton Smith, first synthesized Mycoplasma's full genome. Then they added hundreds of thousands of additional base pairs to "watermark" the DNA and distinguish it from a natural one.
Venter and his colleagues created a special code, similar to Morse code, to "write" within the DNA itself. Instead of dots and dashes, they used the sequence of four DNA nucleotides, thymine (T), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and adenine (A), as a code for any letter, number or punctuation mark. Using the code, the team included the names of the study co-authors, a website and even several philosophical quotes, complete with punctuation.
The completed DNA sequence was more than 1 million base pairs long. The human genome, by comparison, is more than 3 billion base pairs long.
Cells build up full sequence
No machine can turn out a single piece of DNA anywhere close to that long, however. Instead, Venter and his colleagues started with many relatively small pieces of DNA. Then the scientists transferred DNA pieces back and forth between a yeast cell and E. coli bacteria, turning the many short pieces into fewer but longer DNA segments.
Once the synthetic DNA segment reached the desired length the scientists injected it into a Mycoplasma bacterium that had had its own DNA removed earlier. Needless to say, the process of assembling such a lengthy piece of synthetic DNA was complicated.
"I hope the day comes when making genomes is something everyone can do," said Pamela Silver, a systems biologist at Harvard Medical School.
Some genes suffered glitches
The new, synthetic DNA "booted up" the bacterium, but not without a few problems: Several of the synthesized genes didn't work properly. And the genes that did work didn't do anything particularly useful, at least by human standards.
This micrograph shows stained Mycoplasma mycoides cells dividing after transplantation of an artificial genome.
The Mycoplasma bacteria grew and reproduced, but that was about all. Within several years however, Venter and his colleagues hope to create more exciting bacteria that will speed up the production and drive down the costs of biofuels, vaccines and drugs.
Venter has teamed up with a major oil and gas company, and a pharmaceutical company, to help realize these goals.
Venter's work falls into a nascent field of science known as synthetic biology. Synthetic biology builds on the decades-old field of genetic engineering. Unlike genetic engineering, where scientists introduce a handful of new genes into an organism, synthetic biology aims to reprogram entire organisms, including bacteria and viruses.
The creation and insertion of a synthetic genome more than 1 million base pairs is a technical landmark, said Frances Arnold, a synthetic biologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. He said the feat showcases scientists' ability to precisely manipulate long sections of DNA.
But before consumers see any benefit several significant hurdles have to be solved. One of the biggest problems is that scientists are still searching for the specific genetic code to produce cheap drugs, biofuel and other products.
"We can write anything we want," said Arnold. "The problem is that we don't know what to write."
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