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October 7, 1999: Preparedness - Stan Deyo & Holly Deyo | NIDS Hotline Reports - Colm Kelleher
Published 1 year, 8 months ago
Description
Art Bell speaks with Dr. Colm Kelleher of the National Institute for Discovery Science about early results from their new UFO hotline, then shifts to preparedness experts Stan and Holly Deyo broadcasting from Australia. Kelleher describes roughly 70 reports received in just weeks, including a massive silent triangular craft spotted over Oklahoma and a deeply strange encounter on Bob Bigelow's research ranch where a glowing blue orb and a large black object were visible to one investigator but completely invisible to another standing fifteen feet away.
Stan Deyo shares alarming observations about ocean surface temperatures, describing an anomalous cold circle in the North Atlantic that behaves like a thermal sink, along with unusual solar activity including new ultraviolet frequencies the sun began emitting in 1991. Holly Deyo discusses their book Dare to Prepare, offering practical advice for urban and rural families facing potential disasters from weather disruptions to Y2K uncertainties.
The conversation turns to persistent rumors of a possible event in November 1999, asteroid detection gaps caused by the shutdown of Australia's Space Guard program, and a striking map showing that 70 percent of known meteor impact craters are concentrated in the Northern Hemisphere.
Stan Deyo shares alarming observations about ocean surface temperatures, describing an anomalous cold circle in the North Atlantic that behaves like a thermal sink, along with unusual solar activity including new ultraviolet frequencies the sun began emitting in 1991. Holly Deyo discusses their book Dare to Prepare, offering practical advice for urban and rural families facing potential disasters from weather disruptions to Y2K uncertainties.
The conversation turns to persistent rumors of a possible event in November 1999, asteroid detection gaps caused by the shutdown of Australia's Space Guard program, and a striking map showing that 70 percent of known meteor impact craters are concentrated in the Northern Hemisphere.