Ike and the Alien Ambassadors
The Whole Tooth About the President's Extraterrestrial Encounter
Editor's Note: Better late than never. This information has
been mentioned in well over 100 books and by was talked about in the alternative
press for at least 45 years, even going back to the late (murdered) Morris
K. Jessup in the 1950's. I'm more inlcined to accept Phil
Schneider's version of the meeting, but anything from the Washington
Post along these lines is a step forward. Of course, they are probably putting
this out now as prepatory layering for the coming fake
alien invasion scenario. ..Ken Adachi]
By Peter Carlson, Washington Post Staff Writer
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/ikes1954etmeeting17jun04.shtml
June 17, 2004
By Peter Carlson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 19, 2004; Page C01
Fifty years ago tomorrow -- on Feb. 20, 1954 -- President
Dwight Eisenhower interrupted his vacation in Palm Springs, Calif., to make
a secret nocturnal trip to a nearby Air Force base to meet two extraterrestrial
aliens.
Or maybe not. Maybe Ike just went to the dentist. There's
some dispute about this.
The Ike-met-with-ETs theory is advanced by Michael Salla,
a former American University professor who now runs the Peace Ambassador
Program at AU's Center for Global Peace.
The Ike-went-to-the-dentist theory is advanced by the folks
at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kan. And by James M. Mixson,
a dentist, professor of dentistry and historian of presidential dental work.
Just to make things more intriguing: On the night in question,
the Associated Press reported this: "Pres. Eisenhower died tonight
of a heart attack in Palm Springs."
Two minutes later, the AP retracted that bulletin and reported
that Ike was still alive.
Indeed, Ike was alive. And he continued living until 1969.
But in the decades since his death, his activities on the night of Feb.
20, 1954, have become fodder for strange theories about alien beings.
Some facts are beyond dispute: Eisenhower was on a golf vacation
in Palm Springs on Feb. 20, 1954. After dinner that night, he made an unscheduled
departure from the Smoking Tree Ranch, where he was staying. The next morning,
he attended a church service in Los Angeles. Also that morning, his spokesman
announced to the press that Ike had visited a dentist the previous night
because he'd chipped a tooth while eating a chicken wing at dinner.
Salla, who has a PhD in government from the University of
Queensland in his native Australia, doesn't believe it. He figures the dentist
trip is just a cover story. He believes Ike went to Edwards Air Force Base,
where he met with two ETs with white hair, pale blue eyes and colorless
lips.
These aliens -- nicknamed "Nordics" in UFO circles
because they resemble Scandinavian humans -- traveled to Edwards from another
solar system in a flying saucer and, Salla says, they spoke to Eisenhower.
"There was telepathic communication," says Salla,
45, as he sits in his suburban Falls Church living room. "It's as though
you're hearing a person but they're not speaking."
The "Nordics" offered to share their superior technology
and their spiritual wisdom with Ike if he would agree to eliminate America's
nuclear weapons.
"They were afraid we might blow up some of our nuclear
technology," Salla says, "and apparently that does something to
time and space and it impacts on extraterrestrial races on other planets."
Ike declined the ETs' offer, Salla says, because he did not
want to give up the nukes.
Sometime later in 1954, Ike reached a deal with another race
of extraterrestrials, known as the "Greys" -- allowing them to
capture earthling cattle and humans for medical experiments, provided that
they returned the humans safely home. Since then, Salla says, the "Greys"
have kidnapped "millions" of humans.
Salla, author of "The Hero's Journey Toward a Second
American Century," published his ET theories in his new book, "Exopolitics:
Political Implications of the Extraterrestrial Presence" and in an
article on his "Exopolitics" Web site (www.exopolitics.org).
For much of the '90s, Salla studied conflict resolution and
tried unsuccessfully to apply that knowledge to prevent war in East Timor
and the Balkans, he says. Frustrated, he began looking for an extraterrestrial
connection to human misery and, he says, he found evidence of ET visitations
-- including the Ike encounter -- on the Internet.
"There's a lot of stuff on the Internet," he says,
"and I just went around and pieced it together."
Meanwhile, he taught at the School of International Service
at American University. In 2003 he founded the university's Peace Ambassador
Program, described on the AU Web site as a "summer program that combines
study, meditative practices, and prayer ceremonies at selected Washington
DC sites
aimed at promoting individual self-empowerment and Divine Governance in
Washington DC."
Salla stresses that his ET research is not connected with
his work at AU's Center for Global Peace. The folks at the Center for Global
Peace are also quite eager to stress that fact.
"The research that Michael Salla is doing is not research
that he is conducting on behalf of the center or in collaboration with the
center," says Betty Sitka, associate director of the Center for Global
Peace. "This is his own personal research."
Meanwhile, the question remains: Did Ike really meet with
ETs 50 years ago?
"Not to our knowledge," says Jim Leyerzapf, an archivist
at the Eisenhower Library. "There's nothing in the archives that indicates
that."
Then Leyerzapf bursts out laughing.
He has heard this theory before. "We've had so many requests
on that subject that we have a person who specializes in this."
That person is archivist Herb Pankratz.
"He specialized in transportation," Leyerzapf says,
"and we decided to add UFOs to that. He does trains, planes, automobiles
-- and flying saucers."
The library fielded dozens of questions about the alleged
Ike-ET meeting in the late '80s and early '90s, when several UFO books advanced
the theory, Pankratz says.
"It's interesting how these stories have changed,"
Pankratz noted in an e-mail. "Initially, the accounts claimed the President
made a secret trip to Edwards Air Force Base to view the remains of aliens
who had crashed at Roswell, N.M., in 1947. Later stories then claimed he
had actually visited
with live aliens."
Pankratz doesn't buy either theory. He believes the dentist
story, and he cites James Mixson, the dental historian and professor at
the University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Dentistry. Mixson's article
"A History of Dwight D. Eisenhower's Oral Health" -- published
in the November 1995 issue of the Bulletin of the History of Dentistry --
is the definitive work on Ike's teeth.
Citing the U.S. surgeon general's records on Ike's medical
and dental history, opened to researchers in 1991, Mixson reported that
on the fateful night of Feb. 20, 1954, Ike chipped the porcelain cap of
his "upper left central incisor" and it was repaired by Dr. Francis
A. Purcell.
Alas, Purcell is unavailable for comment. He died in 1974,
according to Pankratz.
"The lack of a dental record from Purcell's office,"
Mixson wrote, "has helped fuel belief in this UFO encounter."
But, Mixson quickly added, "the President had well-documented
difficulties with this crown."
Indeed, the crown, which was installed in July 1952, was chipped
and repaired in December 1952, the February in question, and again in July
1954, when the president's dentist, Col. James M. Fairchild, replaced it
with a thin cast gold/platinum thimble crown."
That may be more than you wanted to know about Ike's dental
work. If not, Mixson goes on at some length, quoting a long, lyrical passage
written by Fairchild on this troublesome presidential incisor.
Meanwhile, there's another perplexing question: Why did the
AP report that Ike died that night?
"Somebody was fooling around and it went out," Pankratz
says. "It wasn't supposed to go out but it did."
Ike never made any public statement about meeting ETs, Pankratz
says. But did he perhaps spill the beans to his family? Ike's son, John
S.D. Eisenhower, is a retired Army brigadier general and author of several
books on history, including "General Ike: A Personal Reminiscence."
Asked via e-mail if his father had ever mentioned meeting
with aliens, Eisenhower responded with a short but emphatic reply: "No."
He declined to comment further.
Forward courtesy of "Donna S." <mighty_nut@hotmail.com>
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