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Eisenhower White House On
Mars' Moon Phobos Being Artificial
From Presidents UFO Website
www.presidentialUFO.8m.com
2-25-2
http://www.rense.com/general20/eisenhowerWH.htm
- Mars May have Orbiting Space Base, says White House
Advisor
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- March 1960 - The
Martian moon Phobos, generally accepted as a celestial body, actually
may be an artificial satellite launched long ago by an advanced
Martian race, according to Dr. S. Fred Singer, special advisor to
President Eisenhower on space developments. No mention was made of the
other Mars moon, Deimos.
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- In his published opinion, Dr. Singer backed a claim
first made by the Soviet astrophysicist Shklovsky. The Russian
scientist's announcement that Phobos was a hollow, artificial
satellite, proving the existence of a Martian civilization, set off
heated arguments among astronomers. Shklovsky based his decision on a
long study of Phobos' peculiar orbit, which other astronomers have
noted. The Russian claim has calculations and those of earlier
astronomers prove Phobos cannot possibly be an ordinary moon.
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- Though Dr. Singer said the figures still had to be
proved, his Phobos statement in the February Astronautics, rejected
other astronomers' objections.
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- "I would be very disappointed if it turns out
to be solid," said the White House advisor. If the figures were
correct, he stated, then Phobos undoubtedly is a hollow, artificial
satellite. If it is, he said, its purpose would probably be to sweep
up radiation in the Mars' atmosphere, so that Martians could safely
operate around their planet. Dr. Singer also pointed out that Phobos
would make an ideal space base, both for Martians and earthlings.
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- **** In light of this
article, there was an interesting assessment of Mars given during a
space briefing presented during an Eisenhower cabinet meeting. The
briefing, by Eisenhower Science Advisor Dr. James Killian, was given
March 14, 1958 -- "Mars - Much more exciting. Conditions more
similar to earth -- Undoubtedly some form of life, although probably
not ones which we would recognize."
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- In 1963, Raymond H. Wilson Jr., Chief of Applied
Mathematics at NASA, joined Shklovsky and Dr. Singer in their Martian
conclusions. He stated that "Phobos might be a colossal base
orbiting Mars." He also stated that NASA itself was considering
the possibility, and was planning for special probes that would answer
the question.
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- Dr Iosif Shklovsky based his conclusion on
calculations that had been done by the U.S. Naval Observatory (rumored
in the 1980s to have been the home of the elusive MJ-12 group).
Shklovsky stated Phobos was being "slowed by electromagnetic drag
and tidal friction more than was possible was an actual solid
moon."
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- Shklovsky is also famous for having written a 1966
book on SETI called Intelligent Life in the Universe. A famous
astronomer by the name of Carl Sagan was asked to edit the book. When
he had finished adding all his viewpoints the book had doubled in
length and he became a co-authored with Shklovsky. Their views on
extra-terrestrial life still remained at odds. During the Symposium on
Unidentified Flying Objects - Hearing before the Committee on Science
and Astronautics, Sagan was asked by Congressman Roush if Shklovsky
shared his views. Sagan replied:
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- "I think he shares my restraint. I think both
of us would say we think this is an extremely important subject, that
we are on the frontier of being able to find out, but that neither of
us knows whether there is or isn't life out there. Let me say if it
turns out there isn't life on Mars, that is almost as interesting as
if we find there is life on Mars, because then we have to ask, what
happened different on Mars than on the Earth, so that life arose here
and not there. That will surely give us a very profound entry into the
question of follow-up of evolution and the cosmic context."
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