AudioBlog: A UFO and Bigfoot Like Creatures in Pennsylvania
These days, more and more researchers are considering the idea that
there is a unified theory for all things paranormal from Bigfoot to
ghosts to UFOs. The idea that all, or at least many, things
paranormal derive from a common source...
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Podcast UFO is place where you can listen to audio podcasts about UFOs, close encounters and people associated with the UFO phenomenon. Witnesses involved in such things as sightings, views on cover-ups and more. Listeners are welcome to interact with....
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vor 3 Jahren
These days, more and more researchers are considering the idea that
there is a unified theory for all things paranormal from Bigfoot to
ghosts to UFOs. The idea that all, or at least many, things
paranormal derive from a common source was considered as
early as the 1940s by Meade Layne and other members of the
Borderland Sciences Research Association. This has been popularized
in more recent times by John Keel and Jaques Vallée. There was a
great deal of resistance to this way of thinking among paranormal
enthusiasts, but a case in Pennsylvania from 1973 has elements to
it that that likely caused many to reconsider their positions.The
case is described by Berthold Eric Schwartz, M.D. in the July
1974 issue of Flying Saucer Review in his
article, “Berserk: A UFO Creature Encounter.” According to
Schwartz, he got a call on a Sunday in September from Allan Noe of
the Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained (a New Jersey
based organization founded by Ivan T. Sanderson) and Stan Gordon,
director of the Pennsylvania based Westmoreland County UFO Study
Group. They told him they were in the midst of a great deal of
activity involving UFOs and creatures. Gordon, in the
documentary, Invasion on Chestnut Ridge, describes the
activity as “a major UFO-Bigfoot wave.” Read more
there is a unified theory for all things paranormal from Bigfoot to
ghosts to UFOs. The idea that all, or at least many, things
paranormal derive from a common source was considered as
early as the 1940s by Meade Layne and other members of the
Borderland Sciences Research Association. This has been popularized
in more recent times by John Keel and Jaques Vallée. There was a
great deal of resistance to this way of thinking among paranormal
enthusiasts, but a case in Pennsylvania from 1973 has elements to
it that that likely caused many to reconsider their positions.The
case is described by Berthold Eric Schwartz, M.D. in the July
1974 issue of Flying Saucer Review in his
article, “Berserk: A UFO Creature Encounter.” According to
Schwartz, he got a call on a Sunday in September from Allan Noe of
the Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained (a New Jersey
based organization founded by Ivan T. Sanderson) and Stan Gordon,
director of the Pennsylvania based Westmoreland County UFO Study
Group. They told him they were in the midst of a great deal of
activity involving UFOs and creatures. Gordon, in the
documentary, Invasion on Chestnut Ridge, describes the
activity as “a major UFO-Bigfoot wave.” Read more
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