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8106b
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=== Page 1 of 10
P.S. For those of you who might be interested a new book is out having a description of my work in it: "UFO Encyclopedia" by Margaret Sachs. (Huge paperback.)
June 2, 1981
Scientists and Contacts ...
Dr. Mishlove and D. Scott Rogo have written a true and accurate account of my work.
Their book... has been unfairly blocked from being published. (My UFOs say the matter is invalid, and I believe them.) My UFOs have communicated tonight... that if the Mishlove/Rogo book about my work is not truly bought for publication this summer and published... then they, the UFOs, will destroy the U.S. Stock Market, far worse than in 1929. The UFOs have my permission.
Ted Owens
"PK Man"
=== Page 2 of 10
May 30, 1981
P.S. Interesting note: The SIs have told me that they are also going to attack U.S. scientists who conspire to block them and block me.
Owens
Scientists and Contacts
As you know, from my letter to you of May 6... my UFOs told me that because their Base ($5,000,000) had not been provided (with me, PK Man, as the mainspring), they were going to attack the "higher-ups of government." I even telephoned this fact to Dr. Mishlove in San Francisco. Naturally I assumed this to mean the United States government since I was aware that my UFOs were "at war" with the U.S. govt.
Then followed the shooting of President Reagan. Then the shooting of the Pope... and I began to realize that my UFOs had all humanity in mind. Then President Roldos of Ecuador was killed. Then President Mesa of Bolivia quit. Then President Rahman of Bangladesh was killed. And I realized that my UFOs were going to strike all around the world at "higher-ups in government (not only the U.S.). They are escalating their attack.. I can only hope that their Base is provided soon.
Owens
=== Page 3 of 10
- UFO "Higher Ups" - (Reagan, Pope, Roldos)
# Ecuador president killed
QUITO, Ecuador (UPI) -- President Jaime Roldos of Ecuador was killed in a fiery plane crash in a mountainous border region near where Ecuadorian troops clashed with Peruvian forces in a brief border war earlier this year, the government said.
All nine people aboard the Beechcraft SK-200 were killed in the crash Sunday afternoon, including the president's wife, Marta, and Defense Minister Gen. Marco Subia, a government statement said. The cause of the crash was not immediately known.
Vice President Osvaldo Hurtado immediately assumed the presidency for the remaining three years of Roldos' five-year term. Roldos, 40, was the youngest chief executive in the Western Hemisphere.
The government announcement said the U.S.-built presidential plane crashed and burned near the village of Guanchañama, 30 miles north of the border between Ecuador and Peru. Reports from the crash site said the nine bodies were burned beyond recognition.
Also aboard the plane were Subia's wife, two army colonels and three crew members.
In Washington, President Reagan sent a telegram to Hurtado saying he and the American people were "shocked and saddened" to learn of Roldos' death.
"Please accept our deepest condolences and our sympathy as we join the Ecuadorian people in mourning this terrible loss," Reagan's telegram said.
Roldos was flying to an army outpost on the tense Ecuadorian-Peruvian border, the site of several bloody clashes in January, when the crash took place.
Elected in 1979 as the candidate of the Popular Forces Party, he was swept to power in a landslide victory after nine years of civilian and military dictatorship.
Born Nov. 5, 1940, in the tropical port of Guayaquil, Roldos graduated at the top of his law school class, was elected leader of a national student federation and later taught law and served as an assistant university dean.
He served two years in the national legislature before it was closed by decree in 1970, and was a member of the commission that drew up a new constitution in 1978. Among other changes, the new charter lowered the minimum age for the presidency from 40 to 35, making Roldos' election possible.
Roldos and his wife are survived by two teen-age daughters and a 10-year-old son.
5/25/81
- UFO "Higher Ups" -
# Bolivian president gives up army control, says he'll quit
By TOM FENTON
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- President Luis Garcia Meza, his authority eroded by two military revolts in as many weeks, stepped down as army commander Tuesday and said he would surrender the presidency Aug. 6.
In a nationwide radio address during a ceremony in which he was replaced as army commander by Gen. Humberto Cayoja, the president pleaded for support, announced two other key army staff changes and called for a meeting of military commanders July 17 to choose his successor. July 17 is the first anniversary of the coup during which he seized power.
Senior military officials said Garcia Meza decided to step down from the army command under strong pressure from district military commanders.
Foreign political analysts based in La Paz saw the move as an effort to ease Garcia Meza out peacefully and avoid a bloody confrontation between units of the armed forces.
Garcia Meza, who ousted a fledgling democratic government, has been unable to get U.S. recognition or international financing needed to restructure Bolivia's $4 billion foreign debt.
"What we asked for was a restructuring in the military high command. He apparently has accepted our suggestions," Col. Felix Villaroel, army 6th Division commander, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Trinidad, 250 miles northeast of La Paz.
Garcia Meza told military leaders at the ceremony Tuesday at Miraflores army headquarters: "It is my duty to ask you to collaborate with me to designate my successor July 17, so that we can turn over command of the nation next Aug. 6."
The president also said Col. Lucio Anez would replace Gen. Jorge Aguila Teran as army chief of staff and that Col. Faustino Rico Toro would take Anez's job as head of the military academy in La Paz. Garcia Meza had commanded the academy before the coup.
Garcia Meza said his regime was launched "with absolute unanimity," but admitted dissension had been growing.
"I want to tell you we have done everything possible to carry out our mission despite the criticism ... and obstacles," he said. 5/27/81
=== Page 4 of 10
Score: 5 so far, but recently the whole thing got out of hand. (1-7-81)
"For higher ups" - (Rahman, Rafiq, Patu, Abdullah, Pasha, Anis, (2) Rana, Rahman.) {For your}
Oregon Journal, May 30, 1981
# Bangladesh president assassinated
ZIAUR RAHMAN
...slain by army rebels
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) - A disgruntled general leading army rebels and separatist guerrillas assassinated President Ziaur Rahman of Bangladesh and eight aides in the city early Saturday, official Dacca radio reported.
Gen. Manzur Ahmed, commander of the army in eastern Chittagong province, led mutinous troops and leftists agitating for independence in the attack.
Under Zia, 45, commonly called Zia, impoverished Bangladesh had become one of the largest recipients of U.S. aid.
The assassins shot Zia, two aides and six body guards as they slept in the district guest house at 3:30 a.m., the radio said.
Bangladesh army Chief of Staff H.M. Ershad called on Manzur, whom Zia had demoted, according to the radio monitored in India.
Vice President Abdul Sattar declared a national state of emergency, cutting all outside communications and halting all flights to and from Bangladesh, the radio said.
Sattar put all major towns in Bangladesh under indefinite curfew.
A radio announcer interrupted chanting from the Koran, Islam's holy book, to announce intermittently: "A grave emergency has arisen threatening the security of the country by internal disturbance."
A council in Chittagong, where Zia proclaimed Bangladesh's independence from Pakistan in 1971, also took over the provincial radio station and proclaimed a revolutionary council had taken over the nation.
Vice President Abdul Sattar took control of the government from Dacca, Zia's official assassination was announced over the state radio.
Sattar called for the suspension of all individual rights during the indefinite state of emergency and declared a 40-day mourning period.
Zia was assassinated in the midst of a major shake-up of ministers in his cabinet, but regional political observers and diplomats doubted the assassination was planned from inside Zia's government.
Hasina Sheikh, a leading Zia opponent and the daughter of former President Mujibur Rahman, who died in a coup in Aug. 15, 1975, returned to the Bangladesh capital two weeks ago.
She received a tumultuous welcome staged by Zia's chief opposition, the Awami League, and vowed to avenge her father's death and seize control of the Bangladesh government.
"A grave emergency has arisen threatening the security of the country by internal disturbance," a radio announcer repeated between 15-minute stretches of the holy book, on Dacca radio Saturday afternoon.
"There will be no change in the country's foreign policy," Sattar said, his voice choked with emotion. He said that cabinet ministers and the positions of the Election Commission, the communications closed down shortly before noon. Officials locked the gates to the Bangladesh High Commission in New Delhi and closed their offices.
The 45-year-old Ziaur, was swept to power by the army in 1975 following a period of turmoil in the Moslem nation after the assassination of Bangladesh's first leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
He often traveled to Chittagong, a troubled hill district in eastern Bangladesh, to supervise his agricultural and social reforms.
=== Page 5 of 10
nation/world
Iranian commission condemns Bani-Sadr
ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) -- Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr has been found guilty of violating the constitution and the case will be handed over to the public prosecutor, Tehran radio said Monday in a deepening of Iran's power struggle.
Mohammad Yazdi, a representative of hard-line Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai, also said Bani-Sadr's newspaper and several other publications are breaking the law, hinting that Moslem fundamentalists will tighten control of the media.
A special three-man commission of inquiry, established by Ayatollah Khomeini in March to investigate the split between Bani-Sadr's moderates and Rajai's extremists, in a four-hour meeting Sunday concluded the president violated the constitution, the radio said.
In the broadcast monitored in Ankara, Yazdi said the commission "by a majority vote deems it necessary to introduce the offender to the people and to hand in the evidence to the office of the public prosecutor."
In a March 16 decree, Khomeini banned political speeches on the dispute between moderates and extremists and also set up the three-man commission to investigate.
The commission found that "Bani-Sadr in his speech to air force personnel in Shiraz and in his last two newspaper interviews violated the 10-point order issued by the Imam (Khomeini) and acted at variance with the constitution."
Details of Bani-Sadr's remarks were not cited by the radio and the president's office had no immediate reaction.
Yazdi said Bani-Sadr's refusal to approve ministers named by Rajai following a recent vote in the fundamentalist-controlled Parliament was unconstitutional.
PLO's top man in Brussels slain
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI) -- A gunman Monday assassinated Naim Khader, the representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Belgium, police said.
Khader, 41, was hit by five bullets as he left his home at 9 a.m. in the suburb of Ixelles to go to his office. He was dead by the time an ambulance arrived.
Police said the gunman, wearing a raincoat and carrying an umbrella, fled on foot. He was first chased by a postman and then by a young man in a car, but they lost his trail. Police later found the raincoat and the umbrella a block away. Officers with police dogs went to the spot.
Khader was the seventh PLO representative abroad to be killed in the past 10 years. Three PLO representatives were killed in Paris, one in 1972 and two in 1978; others were slain in Nicosia, in 1973, and in London and Kuwait in 1978.
Khader was born at Zabadeh, on the West Bank of the Jordan River. He came to Belgium after the 1967 Middle East war and married a Belgian woman.
He held a law degree from Brussels University and had worked unofficially for the PLO before he was appointed head of the organization's Brussels office when it was set up in 1976. He represented the PLO in the European Community as well as in Belgium.
The PLO office in Brussels issued a statement saying the assassination of Khader "the authors of which are without any doubt the Israeli secret services, is added to the list of the numerous Palestinian victims of Zionist aggression."
It called on "all friends who love democracy and freedom to condemn this aggression and to support the struggle of the Palestinian people."
A spokesman for the Israeli Embassy said: "This type of accusation is not new. It has been the same in the past, notably after the assassination of the PLO representative in Paris, Ezzedine Kalak, Aug. 3, 1978. We know, however, that the different Palestinian movements kill each other."
After the killing of the PLO man and his deputy in Paris in 1978, two Jordanians of Palestinian origin were arrested. They were sentenced last year to 15 years in prison.
A spokesman for the Belgian foreign ministry said: "We condemn all violence from wherever it comes and we deplore that Brussels is no longer free from such attempts like there have been in London and Paris."
Sympathy rebuffed
PEKING (AP) -- Taiwan has refused to accept telegrams of condolence sent from Peking to relatives of Soong Ching-ling, the widow of Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen, China's official Xinhua news agency reported Tuesday.
Mrs. Sun, whose husband led the 1911 revolution that overthrew China's last emperor, died Friday of leukemia at the age of 88. Shortly before her death, she was named honorary president of China.
=== Page 6 of 10
Jeffrey
(When are they going to listen? Ted)
# Fiery jet crash on USS Nimitz kills 14
Note: This is a two billion dollar carrier separate from the 100,000,000 in planes!! Gwen
By MATT BOKOR
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- An electronic warfare jet on a night training mission crashed in flames on the flight deck of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, killing 14 people, injuring 48 and damaging at least 19 other aircraft aboard the world's largest warship, Navy officials said Wednesday.
A Navy helicopter pilot who flew to the 1,092-foot-long carrier after the crash reported seeing "just a big mess of aircraft." The accident occurred shortly before midnight Tuesday 60 miles off the Florida coast.
The dead included all three crewmen aboard the EA-6B Prowler jet, which is used to jam enemy radar and radio signals. The Marine Corps jet is of a type that was temporarily grounded last year because of a history of fatal accidents.
Based on initial reports from the scene, a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified said the jet apparently "landed a little right of the center line, and on a carrier deck there isn't any room for an error like that."
Cindy Williams said her husband, Petty Officer 1st Class Richard Williams, who was injured and evacuated to Jacksonville, told her he thought a bomb had exploded. "He told me he just couldn't get out of the way," she said.
An apprentice hospital corpsman from the Jacksonville Naval Air Station who helped evacuate the injured said the situation on the flight deck was still confused a few hours after the crash.
"People were still running around not knowing what to do," the serviceman said. "The sick bay was filled."
GEORGIA
Atlantic Ocean
Jacksonville
Crash On USS Nimitz
FLORIDA
Tampa
AP
The Navy said the cause of the crash was under investigation, and that results might not be released for six months. Vice Adm. George Kinnear, commander-in-chief of the Naval Air Forces Atlantic, flew to the warship from Norfolk, Va., the Nimitz's home base.
The jet "crashed on impact" at 11:51 p.m., sparking a blaze that spread quickly to other aircraft on deck before ship firefighters extinguished it, said Cmdr. Jim Lois, a spokesman for Naval Air Forces Atlantic. "As far as I know, weather was not a factor," he said.
Lt. Cmdr. Ken Pease, spokesman at the Navy's Norfolk air station, said it took 70 minutes to extinguish the fire.
Pease said about 20 aircraft were destroyed or damaged. Destroyed were the EA-6B and three F-14 aircraft. There was major damage to four A-7 aircraft and one F-14 and minor damage to one F-14, five A-7s, one A-6, three S-3 helicopters and one H-3 helicopter.
Lois said damage to the carrier was confined to the flight deck area. Capt. Larry Hamilton, chief public affairs officer for the Atlantic Fleet, said preliminary information was that the damage "was not extraordinarily heavy."
"The carrier most likely will be able to do a quick turnaround," Hamilton said.
The Navy withheld names of the dead and injured until all relatives were notified.
But Lt. Col. John Haynes, a spokesman at the Cherry Point, N.C., Marine Air Station, where the jet was based, said the dead included the three Marines from his facility on the plane and 11 Navy personnel on the ship.
He said the family of only one of the victims had been notified and that military authorities were unable to reach the families of the others. He said some of the relatives might have gone to Fort Lauderdale, which was to have been the ship's next port of call.
A team of doctors was airlifted from the naval station here to the Nimitz to help treat 27 injured people in the ship's sick bay. Twenty people were flown to the Naval Regional Medical Center at Jacksonville for treatment, and one man was hospitalized in St. Vincent's Hospital in critical condition.
Some 300 Navy personnel, an estimated 60 of them doctors, reported to duty in a recall of medical center personnel.
Most of the injured were being treated for lacerations, second- to third-degree burns, internal injuries or fractures, officials said.
=== Page 7 of 10
May 28, 1981
Scientists and Contacts See my letter to you of May 6, 1981, attached.
Note: Recently I warned most of you that my UFOs (SIs) had communicated and warned that the United States would be dealt a smashing blow, either militarily or politically or both.
The SIs were not making a precognitive prediction. They were going to make it happen... and they did, by causing this terrible accident to U.S.'s largest nuclear warship, the Nimitz.
All the SIs want... is their 5 million dollar Base in the mountains. Until they get it, they will continue to put this sort of negative pressure on the U.S. govt., U.S. scientists, and the "higher ups" of the world (who could easily supply their Base.)
Ted Owens (PK Man)
JET WRECK -- Aerial view of bow of USS Nimitz shows damage done to flight deck. Associated Press Laserphoto
=== Page 8 of 10
May 6, 1981 10:30 P.M.
Called P. Scott Rogo--he didn't pay attention -- said he had company.
Called Dr. Mishlove -- told him the same thing: (1) A terrible political/military blow will be struck against the U.S. with in 30 days. (2) The SI's will destroy the Space Shuttle & NASA if the UFO Base is not soon provided. * Owens
* Somebody must understand that the SI's are not bluffing. Owens
2 Space Shuttle PK --
Oregon Journal, May 6, 1981 (2)
# Fall kills space site technician
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) -- Kennedy Space Center officials are trying to find out why a construction worker fell more than 100 feet to his death while making preparations for the space shuttle's next launch.
Anthony E. Hill, 22, of Rockledge, Fla., struck the concrete apron of Launch Pad 39B and was pronounced dead Tuesday at Jess Parrish Hospital in Titusville. He had been working on the metal framework of the service structure for September's launch of the shuttle Columbia.
Hill was the third technician to be killed at the center while working on the space shuttle program, and the 12th victim directly associated with space activities at Cape Canaveral.
"We have no idea how it happened," said Clifton Reeves, project manager for Wilhoit, a structural steel construction firm based in nearby Titusville.
Hill worked for Wilhoit, which had raised the planned 241-foot service structure to a height of 212 feet when the accident occurred.
On March 19, two technicians for Rockwell International -- the space shuttle builder -- were fatally exposed to nitrogen released into the shuttle's aft engine compartment after a test.
=== Page 9 of 10
# Nimitz returns in disaster's wake
United Press Interna
**DEADLY CARGO** -- The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Nimitz steams to its home port of Norfolk, Va., -- its flight deck littered with aircraft damaged in a night flying exercise mishap that claimed the lives of 14 crewmen and resulted in injuries to 48 others. A burnt portion of the EA-6b aircraft that crashed while trying to land on the flight deck is entangled in two F-14 jets that were damaged in the mishap. Damage is estimated at $100 million. Story on Page 18.
oreg J 5/28/81
# Nimitz steams home to shocked families
oreg J 5/28/81
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -- The nuclear carrier USS Nimitz steamed home Thursday carrying the bodies of 14 crewmen killed when an electronic warfare plane crashed on landing and ignited a deadly ball of fire that swept across the deck and injured 48 others.
Twenty-seven crewmen injured in Tuesday's accident also were aboard the gigantic flattop, said Lt. Cmdr. Tony Hilton. All but four of the injured crewmen on board have returned to duty, he said.
Relatives of crewmen were expected to line Pier 12 at the Norfolk Naval Base, but Hilton said the Navy had not planned a special welcome for the crew, which he said had been numbed by the tragedy off the Florida coast.
A year ago Wednesday, President Carter joined a hero's welcome for the Nimitz on its return from a nine-month deployment in which the carrier served as a staging area for the unsuccessful commando raid to free the Americans held hostage in Iran.
A team of Navy Safety Center investigators will determine why the Marine EA-6B jet missed its landing on the mammoth 92,000-ton carrier late Tuesday, hurtled into 19 parked jets and set fires that caused an estimated $100 million in damages to some of the Navy's most sophisticated warplanes.
Lt. Cmdr. Bill McLoughlin of the Atlantic Fleet Headquarters said the senior official aboard the Nimitz has probably reviewed videotapes of the Prowler's crash-landing during a nighttime "electronic warfare exercise." All landings aboard the carrier are recorded, he said.
The carrier left for its home port Wednesday, it had been bound for the Caribbean before the crash.
Burned pieces of the EA-6B Prowler, an electronic warfare plane that missed its mark in a landing attempt on the Nimitz late Tuesday, had to be separated from two mangled F-14 Tomcat fighters.
Prowlers stationed on the West Coast were taken out of service for two days in February 1980 following a series of crashes, Cmdr. Tony Hilton said Thursday. He said he believed 14 fliers were killed in the crashes.
"But the crashes were all out on the West Coast," he emphasized. "They did not involve planes on the East Coast."
A Navy spokesman Wednesday said the grounding was for "internal maintenance with fuel."
Damage to the carrier, one of the world's two largest warships, and its 4 1/2-acre steel flight deck is described as "minimal."
=== Page 10 of 10
- UFOs warned! -
# Nimitz, injured return to port
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -- Crewmen of the aircraft carrier Nimitz returned to their home port and the arms of 1,000 waiting relatives Thursday, and the ship's commander said a flight deck crash that killed 14 people and injured 48 occurred after a jet "drifted to the right" while landing.
Damage was estimated as high as $100 million, and some of the 20 aircraft that were struck or burned in the crash and ensuing fire could be seen on the flight deck of the 1,092-foot-long, nuclear-powered carrier -- the world's largest warship. Some had their noses bashed in and others their tops cut off and wires hanging out.
Capt. Jack Batzler, commanding officer of the Nimitz, who was on the bridge when the crash occurred just before midnight Tuesday off the northern coast of Florida, said the Marine Corps radar-jamming jet landed "not in the right position."
"The EA-6B started with a fairly standard approach, slightly high ..., and the aircraft drifted to the right, hit three A-7s parked right of the bow line ... impacted with the first F-14," he said.
The landing signal officer had called for more power, telling the pilot he was not in a good position for landing and should fly off for another try, Batzler said.
He didn't do it, and Batzler would not speculate why, pending the official investigation.
"Pilot error would be an obvious thing to jump to, but we don't for certain know if any other factors might have been involved," said Vice Adm. Gus Kinnear, Naval Air Forces Atlantic commander, who visited the ship Wednesday.
Petty Officer 3rd Class Kevin O'Brien, one of the firefighters who helped extinguish the shipboard blazes within 70 to 80 minutes, said the jet "came in and clipped a helicopter and then turned across a tractor and decapitated the person in it,"
"It clipped three A-7s, went broadside into an F-14 and finally flipped over onto the catwalk," he said. "Three people in the crash-and-salvage crew were killed when a missile went off 10 feet away. I was 30 feet away, but it blew in the other direction."
The three men on the Marine electronic warfare plane were killed, along with 11 Nimitz crewmen on the deck.
Several men said they were injured some 60 minutes after the crash in a secondary explosion that scattered shrapnel across the deck just as firefighters thought they had extinguished the blaze.
One of the bodies was not recovered, Batzler said, "and we have not determined whether he remained on the ship or went over the side."
Mrs. Alta Cragun of Orem, Utah, said she had been told her son, 1st Lt. Laurence D. Cragun, the crashed plane's electronics officer, was officially listed as missing at sea and presumed dead.
The wreckage of the EA-6B and three F-14 Tomcats was dumped over the side Wednesday. The planes were too badly damaged to be repaired and posed a danger to the crews working on the deck, Batzler said.
Three F-14s and four A-7s sustained major damage. Nine other planes received minor damage but were repaired within the day, according to Cmdr. Fred Lewis, the Nimitz's air wing commander.
Dale Stewart, 19, with a bandage around his fractured knuckles, stitches up his chin and a piece of a tooth missing, had been on deck, under a plane.
Associated Press Laserphoto
NIMITZ HEADS HOME -- Aircraft carrier USS Nimitz sails toward Navy base at Norfolk, Va., Thursday morning, following fatal crash of jet on flight deck Tuesday off coast of Jacksonville, Fla.
P.S. For those of you who might be interested a new book is out having a description of my work in it: "UFO Encyclopedia" by Margaret Sachs. (Huge paperback.)
June 2, 1981
Scientists and Contacts ...
Dr. Mishlove and D. Scott Rogo have written a true and accurate account of my work.
Their book... has been unfairly blocked from being published. (My UFOs say the matter is invalid, and I believe them.) My UFOs have communicated tonight... that if the Mishlove/Rogo book about my work is not truly bought for publication this summer and published... then they, the UFOs, will destroy the U.S. Stock Market, far worse than in 1929. The UFOs have my permission.
Ted Owens
"PK Man"
=== Page 2 of 10
May 30, 1981
P.S. Interesting note: The SIs have told me that they are also going to attack U.S. scientists who conspire to block them and block me.
Owens
Scientists and Contacts
As you know, from my letter to you of May 6... my UFOs told me that because their Base ($5,000,000) had not been provided (with me, PK Man, as the mainspring), they were going to attack the "higher-ups of government." I even telephoned this fact to Dr. Mishlove in San Francisco. Naturally I assumed this to mean the United States government since I was aware that my UFOs were "at war" with the U.S. govt.
Then followed the shooting of President Reagan. Then the shooting of the Pope... and I began to realize that my UFOs had all humanity in mind. Then President Roldos of Ecuador was killed. Then President Mesa of Bolivia quit. Then President Rahman of Bangladesh was killed. And I realized that my UFOs were going to strike all around the world at "higher-ups in government (not only the U.S.). They are escalating their attack.. I can only hope that their Base is provided soon.
Owens
=== Page 3 of 10
- UFO "Higher Ups" - (Reagan, Pope, Roldos)
# Ecuador president killed
QUITO, Ecuador (UPI) -- President Jaime Roldos of Ecuador was killed in a fiery plane crash in a mountainous border region near where Ecuadorian troops clashed with Peruvian forces in a brief border war earlier this year, the government said.
All nine people aboard the Beechcraft SK-200 were killed in the crash Sunday afternoon, including the president's wife, Marta, and Defense Minister Gen. Marco Subia, a government statement said. The cause of the crash was not immediately known.
Vice President Osvaldo Hurtado immediately assumed the presidency for the remaining three years of Roldos' five-year term. Roldos, 40, was the youngest chief executive in the Western Hemisphere.
The government announcement said the U.S.-built presidential plane crashed and burned near the village of Guanchañama, 30 miles north of the border between Ecuador and Peru. Reports from the crash site said the nine bodies were burned beyond recognition.
Also aboard the plane were Subia's wife, two army colonels and three crew members.
In Washington, President Reagan sent a telegram to Hurtado saying he and the American people were "shocked and saddened" to learn of Roldos' death.
"Please accept our deepest condolences and our sympathy as we join the Ecuadorian people in mourning this terrible loss," Reagan's telegram said.
Roldos was flying to an army outpost on the tense Ecuadorian-Peruvian border, the site of several bloody clashes in January, when the crash took place.
Elected in 1979 as the candidate of the Popular Forces Party, he was swept to power in a landslide victory after nine years of civilian and military dictatorship.
Born Nov. 5, 1940, in the tropical port of Guayaquil, Roldos graduated at the top of his law school class, was elected leader of a national student federation and later taught law and served as an assistant university dean.
He served two years in the national legislature before it was closed by decree in 1970, and was a member of the commission that drew up a new constitution in 1978. Among other changes, the new charter lowered the minimum age for the presidency from 40 to 35, making Roldos' election possible.
Roldos and his wife are survived by two teen-age daughters and a 10-year-old son.
5/25/81
- UFO "Higher Ups" -
# Bolivian president gives up army control, says he'll quit
By TOM FENTON
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -- President Luis Garcia Meza, his authority eroded by two military revolts in as many weeks, stepped down as army commander Tuesday and said he would surrender the presidency Aug. 6.
In a nationwide radio address during a ceremony in which he was replaced as army commander by Gen. Humberto Cayoja, the president pleaded for support, announced two other key army staff changes and called for a meeting of military commanders July 17 to choose his successor. July 17 is the first anniversary of the coup during which he seized power.
Senior military officials said Garcia Meza decided to step down from the army command under strong pressure from district military commanders.
Foreign political analysts based in La Paz saw the move as an effort to ease Garcia Meza out peacefully and avoid a bloody confrontation between units of the armed forces.
Garcia Meza, who ousted a fledgling democratic government, has been unable to get U.S. recognition or international financing needed to restructure Bolivia's $4 billion foreign debt.
"What we asked for was a restructuring in the military high command. He apparently has accepted our suggestions," Col. Felix Villaroel, army 6th Division commander, told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Trinidad, 250 miles northeast of La Paz.
Garcia Meza told military leaders at the ceremony Tuesday at Miraflores army headquarters: "It is my duty to ask you to collaborate with me to designate my successor July 17, so that we can turn over command of the nation next Aug. 6."
The president also said Col. Lucio Anez would replace Gen. Jorge Aguila Teran as army chief of staff and that Col. Faustino Rico Toro would take Anez's job as head of the military academy in La Paz. Garcia Meza had commanded the academy before the coup.
Garcia Meza said his regime was launched "with absolute unanimity," but admitted dissension had been growing.
"I want to tell you we have done everything possible to carry out our mission despite the criticism ... and obstacles," he said. 5/27/81
=== Page 4 of 10
Score: 5 so far, but recently the whole thing got out of hand. (1-7-81)
"For higher ups" - (Rahman, Rafiq, Patu, Abdullah, Pasha, Anis, (2) Rana, Rahman.) {For your}
Oregon Journal, May 30, 1981
# Bangladesh president assassinated
ZIAUR RAHMAN
...slain by army rebels
NEW DELHI, India (UPI) - A disgruntled general leading army rebels and separatist guerrillas assassinated President Ziaur Rahman of Bangladesh and eight aides in the city early Saturday, official Dacca radio reported.
Gen. Manzur Ahmed, commander of the army in eastern Chittagong province, led mutinous troops and leftists agitating for independence in the attack.
Under Zia, 45, commonly called Zia, impoverished Bangladesh had become one of the largest recipients of U.S. aid.
The assassins shot Zia, two aides and six body guards as they slept in the district guest house at 3:30 a.m., the radio said.
Bangladesh army Chief of Staff H.M. Ershad called on Manzur, whom Zia had demoted, according to the radio monitored in India.
Vice President Abdul Sattar declared a national state of emergency, cutting all outside communications and halting all flights to and from Bangladesh, the radio said.
Sattar put all major towns in Bangladesh under indefinite curfew.
A radio announcer interrupted chanting from the Koran, Islam's holy book, to announce intermittently: "A grave emergency has arisen threatening the security of the country by internal disturbance."
A council in Chittagong, where Zia proclaimed Bangladesh's independence from Pakistan in 1971, also took over the provincial radio station and proclaimed a revolutionary council had taken over the nation.
Vice President Abdul Sattar took control of the government from Dacca, Zia's official assassination was announced over the state radio.
Sattar called for the suspension of all individual rights during the indefinite state of emergency and declared a 40-day mourning period.
Zia was assassinated in the midst of a major shake-up of ministers in his cabinet, but regional political observers and diplomats doubted the assassination was planned from inside Zia's government.
Hasina Sheikh, a leading Zia opponent and the daughter of former President Mujibur Rahman, who died in a coup in Aug. 15, 1975, returned to the Bangladesh capital two weeks ago.
She received a tumultuous welcome staged by Zia's chief opposition, the Awami League, and vowed to avenge her father's death and seize control of the Bangladesh government.
"A grave emergency has arisen threatening the security of the country by internal disturbance," a radio announcer repeated between 15-minute stretches of the holy book, on Dacca radio Saturday afternoon.
"There will be no change in the country's foreign policy," Sattar said, his voice choked with emotion. He said that cabinet ministers and the positions of the Election Commission, the communications closed down shortly before noon. Officials locked the gates to the Bangladesh High Commission in New Delhi and closed their offices.
The 45-year-old Ziaur, was swept to power by the army in 1975 following a period of turmoil in the Moslem nation after the assassination of Bangladesh's first leader, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
He often traveled to Chittagong, a troubled hill district in eastern Bangladesh, to supervise his agricultural and social reforms.
=== Page 5 of 10
nation/world
Iranian commission condemns Bani-Sadr
ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) -- Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr has been found guilty of violating the constitution and the case will be handed over to the public prosecutor, Tehran radio said Monday in a deepening of Iran's power struggle.
Mohammad Yazdi, a representative of hard-line Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai, also said Bani-Sadr's newspaper and several other publications are breaking the law, hinting that Moslem fundamentalists will tighten control of the media.
A special three-man commission of inquiry, established by Ayatollah Khomeini in March to investigate the split between Bani-Sadr's moderates and Rajai's extremists, in a four-hour meeting Sunday concluded the president violated the constitution, the radio said.
In the broadcast monitored in Ankara, Yazdi said the commission "by a majority vote deems it necessary to introduce the offender to the people and to hand in the evidence to the office of the public prosecutor."
In a March 16 decree, Khomeini banned political speeches on the dispute between moderates and extremists and also set up the three-man commission to investigate.
The commission found that "Bani-Sadr in his speech to air force personnel in Shiraz and in his last two newspaper interviews violated the 10-point order issued by the Imam (Khomeini) and acted at variance with the constitution."
Details of Bani-Sadr's remarks were not cited by the radio and the president's office had no immediate reaction.
Yazdi said Bani-Sadr's refusal to approve ministers named by Rajai following a recent vote in the fundamentalist-controlled Parliament was unconstitutional.
PLO's top man in Brussels slain
BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI) -- A gunman Monday assassinated Naim Khader, the representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization in Belgium, police said.
Khader, 41, was hit by five bullets as he left his home at 9 a.m. in the suburb of Ixelles to go to his office. He was dead by the time an ambulance arrived.
Police said the gunman, wearing a raincoat and carrying an umbrella, fled on foot. He was first chased by a postman and then by a young man in a car, but they lost his trail. Police later found the raincoat and the umbrella a block away. Officers with police dogs went to the spot.
Khader was the seventh PLO representative abroad to be killed in the past 10 years. Three PLO representatives were killed in Paris, one in 1972 and two in 1978; others were slain in Nicosia, in 1973, and in London and Kuwait in 1978.
Khader was born at Zabadeh, on the West Bank of the Jordan River. He came to Belgium after the 1967 Middle East war and married a Belgian woman.
He held a law degree from Brussels University and had worked unofficially for the PLO before he was appointed head of the organization's Brussels office when it was set up in 1976. He represented the PLO in the European Community as well as in Belgium.
The PLO office in Brussels issued a statement saying the assassination of Khader "the authors of which are without any doubt the Israeli secret services, is added to the list of the numerous Palestinian victims of Zionist aggression."
It called on "all friends who love democracy and freedom to condemn this aggression and to support the struggle of the Palestinian people."
A spokesman for the Israeli Embassy said: "This type of accusation is not new. It has been the same in the past, notably after the assassination of the PLO representative in Paris, Ezzedine Kalak, Aug. 3, 1978. We know, however, that the different Palestinian movements kill each other."
After the killing of the PLO man and his deputy in Paris in 1978, two Jordanians of Palestinian origin were arrested. They were sentenced last year to 15 years in prison.
A spokesman for the Belgian foreign ministry said: "We condemn all violence from wherever it comes and we deplore that Brussels is no longer free from such attempts like there have been in London and Paris."
Sympathy rebuffed
PEKING (AP) -- Taiwan has refused to accept telegrams of condolence sent from Peking to relatives of Soong Ching-ling, the widow of Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen, China's official Xinhua news agency reported Tuesday.
Mrs. Sun, whose husband led the 1911 revolution that overthrew China's last emperor, died Friday of leukemia at the age of 88. Shortly before her death, she was named honorary president of China.
=== Page 6 of 10
Jeffrey
(When are they going to listen? Ted)
# Fiery jet crash on USS Nimitz kills 14
Note: This is a two billion dollar carrier separate from the 100,000,000 in planes!! Gwen
By MATT BOKOR
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -- An electronic warfare jet on a night training mission crashed in flames on the flight deck of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Nimitz, killing 14 people, injuring 48 and damaging at least 19 other aircraft aboard the world's largest warship, Navy officials said Wednesday.
A Navy helicopter pilot who flew to the 1,092-foot-long carrier after the crash reported seeing "just a big mess of aircraft." The accident occurred shortly before midnight Tuesday 60 miles off the Florida coast.
The dead included all three crewmen aboard the EA-6B Prowler jet, which is used to jam enemy radar and radio signals. The Marine Corps jet is of a type that was temporarily grounded last year because of a history of fatal accidents.
Based on initial reports from the scene, a Navy spokesman who asked not to be identified said the jet apparently "landed a little right of the center line, and on a carrier deck there isn't any room for an error like that."
Cindy Williams said her husband, Petty Officer 1st Class Richard Williams, who was injured and evacuated to Jacksonville, told her he thought a bomb had exploded. "He told me he just couldn't get out of the way," she said.
An apprentice hospital corpsman from the Jacksonville Naval Air Station who helped evacuate the injured said the situation on the flight deck was still confused a few hours after the crash.
"People were still running around not knowing what to do," the serviceman said. "The sick bay was filled."
GEORGIA
Atlantic Ocean
Jacksonville
Crash On USS Nimitz
FLORIDA
Tampa
AP
The Navy said the cause of the crash was under investigation, and that results might not be released for six months. Vice Adm. George Kinnear, commander-in-chief of the Naval Air Forces Atlantic, flew to the warship from Norfolk, Va., the Nimitz's home base.
The jet "crashed on impact" at 11:51 p.m., sparking a blaze that spread quickly to other aircraft on deck before ship firefighters extinguished it, said Cmdr. Jim Lois, a spokesman for Naval Air Forces Atlantic. "As far as I know, weather was not a factor," he said.
Lt. Cmdr. Ken Pease, spokesman at the Navy's Norfolk air station, said it took 70 minutes to extinguish the fire.
Pease said about 20 aircraft were destroyed or damaged. Destroyed were the EA-6B and three F-14 aircraft. There was major damage to four A-7 aircraft and one F-14 and minor damage to one F-14, five A-7s, one A-6, three S-3 helicopters and one H-3 helicopter.
Lois said damage to the carrier was confined to the flight deck area. Capt. Larry Hamilton, chief public affairs officer for the Atlantic Fleet, said preliminary information was that the damage "was not extraordinarily heavy."
"The carrier most likely will be able to do a quick turnaround," Hamilton said.
The Navy withheld names of the dead and injured until all relatives were notified.
But Lt. Col. John Haynes, a spokesman at the Cherry Point, N.C., Marine Air Station, where the jet was based, said the dead included the three Marines from his facility on the plane and 11 Navy personnel on the ship.
He said the family of only one of the victims had been notified and that military authorities were unable to reach the families of the others. He said some of the relatives might have gone to Fort Lauderdale, which was to have been the ship's next port of call.
A team of doctors was airlifted from the naval station here to the Nimitz to help treat 27 injured people in the ship's sick bay. Twenty people were flown to the Naval Regional Medical Center at Jacksonville for treatment, and one man was hospitalized in St. Vincent's Hospital in critical condition.
Some 300 Navy personnel, an estimated 60 of them doctors, reported to duty in a recall of medical center personnel.
Most of the injured were being treated for lacerations, second- to third-degree burns, internal injuries or fractures, officials said.
=== Page 7 of 10
May 28, 1981
Scientists and Contacts See my letter to you of May 6, 1981, attached.
Note: Recently I warned most of you that my UFOs (SIs) had communicated and warned that the United States would be dealt a smashing blow, either militarily or politically or both.
The SIs were not making a precognitive prediction. They were going to make it happen... and they did, by causing this terrible accident to U.S.'s largest nuclear warship, the Nimitz.
All the SIs want... is their 5 million dollar Base in the mountains. Until they get it, they will continue to put this sort of negative pressure on the U.S. govt., U.S. scientists, and the "higher ups" of the world (who could easily supply their Base.)
Ted Owens (PK Man)
JET WRECK -- Aerial view of bow of USS Nimitz shows damage done to flight deck. Associated Press Laserphoto
=== Page 8 of 10
May 6, 1981 10:30 P.M.
Called P. Scott Rogo--he didn't pay attention -- said he had company.
Called Dr. Mishlove -- told him the same thing: (1) A terrible political/military blow will be struck against the U.S. with in 30 days. (2) The SI's will destroy the Space Shuttle & NASA if the UFO Base is not soon provided. * Owens
* Somebody must understand that the SI's are not bluffing. Owens
2 Space Shuttle PK --
Oregon Journal, May 6, 1981 (2)
# Fall kills space site technician
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) -- Kennedy Space Center officials are trying to find out why a construction worker fell more than 100 feet to his death while making preparations for the space shuttle's next launch.
Anthony E. Hill, 22, of Rockledge, Fla., struck the concrete apron of Launch Pad 39B and was pronounced dead Tuesday at Jess Parrish Hospital in Titusville. He had been working on the metal framework of the service structure for September's launch of the shuttle Columbia.
Hill was the third technician to be killed at the center while working on the space shuttle program, and the 12th victim directly associated with space activities at Cape Canaveral.
"We have no idea how it happened," said Clifton Reeves, project manager for Wilhoit, a structural steel construction firm based in nearby Titusville.
Hill worked for Wilhoit, which had raised the planned 241-foot service structure to a height of 212 feet when the accident occurred.
On March 19, two technicians for Rockwell International -- the space shuttle builder -- were fatally exposed to nitrogen released into the shuttle's aft engine compartment after a test.
=== Page 9 of 10
# Nimitz returns in disaster's wake
United Press Interna
**DEADLY CARGO** -- The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Nimitz steams to its home port of Norfolk, Va., -- its flight deck littered with aircraft damaged in a night flying exercise mishap that claimed the lives of 14 crewmen and resulted in injuries to 48 others. A burnt portion of the EA-6b aircraft that crashed while trying to land on the flight deck is entangled in two F-14 jets that were damaged in the mishap. Damage is estimated at $100 million. Story on Page 18.
oreg J 5/28/81
# Nimitz steams home to shocked families
oreg J 5/28/81
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI) -- The nuclear carrier USS Nimitz steamed home Thursday carrying the bodies of 14 crewmen killed when an electronic warfare plane crashed on landing and ignited a deadly ball of fire that swept across the deck and injured 48 others.
Twenty-seven crewmen injured in Tuesday's accident also were aboard the gigantic flattop, said Lt. Cmdr. Tony Hilton. All but four of the injured crewmen on board have returned to duty, he said.
Relatives of crewmen were expected to line Pier 12 at the Norfolk Naval Base, but Hilton said the Navy had not planned a special welcome for the crew, which he said had been numbed by the tragedy off the Florida coast.
A year ago Wednesday, President Carter joined a hero's welcome for the Nimitz on its return from a nine-month deployment in which the carrier served as a staging area for the unsuccessful commando raid to free the Americans held hostage in Iran.
A team of Navy Safety Center investigators will determine why the Marine EA-6B jet missed its landing on the mammoth 92,000-ton carrier late Tuesday, hurtled into 19 parked jets and set fires that caused an estimated $100 million in damages to some of the Navy's most sophisticated warplanes.
Lt. Cmdr. Bill McLoughlin of the Atlantic Fleet Headquarters said the senior official aboard the Nimitz has probably reviewed videotapes of the Prowler's crash-landing during a nighttime "electronic warfare exercise." All landings aboard the carrier are recorded, he said.
The carrier left for its home port Wednesday, it had been bound for the Caribbean before the crash.
Burned pieces of the EA-6B Prowler, an electronic warfare plane that missed its mark in a landing attempt on the Nimitz late Tuesday, had to be separated from two mangled F-14 Tomcat fighters.
Prowlers stationed on the West Coast were taken out of service for two days in February 1980 following a series of crashes, Cmdr. Tony Hilton said Thursday. He said he believed 14 fliers were killed in the crashes.
"But the crashes were all out on the West Coast," he emphasized. "They did not involve planes on the East Coast."
A Navy spokesman Wednesday said the grounding was for "internal maintenance with fuel."
Damage to the carrier, one of the world's two largest warships, and its 4 1/2-acre steel flight deck is described as "minimal."
=== Page 10 of 10
- UFOs warned! -
# Nimitz, injured return to port
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -- Crewmen of the aircraft carrier Nimitz returned to their home port and the arms of 1,000 waiting relatives Thursday, and the ship's commander said a flight deck crash that killed 14 people and injured 48 occurred after a jet "drifted to the right" while landing.
Damage was estimated as high as $100 million, and some of the 20 aircraft that were struck or burned in the crash and ensuing fire could be seen on the flight deck of the 1,092-foot-long, nuclear-powered carrier -- the world's largest warship. Some had their noses bashed in and others their tops cut off and wires hanging out.
Capt. Jack Batzler, commanding officer of the Nimitz, who was on the bridge when the crash occurred just before midnight Tuesday off the northern coast of Florida, said the Marine Corps radar-jamming jet landed "not in the right position."
"The EA-6B started with a fairly standard approach, slightly high ..., and the aircraft drifted to the right, hit three A-7s parked right of the bow line ... impacted with the first F-14," he said.
The landing signal officer had called for more power, telling the pilot he was not in a good position for landing and should fly off for another try, Batzler said.
He didn't do it, and Batzler would not speculate why, pending the official investigation.
"Pilot error would be an obvious thing to jump to, but we don't for certain know if any other factors might have been involved," said Vice Adm. Gus Kinnear, Naval Air Forces Atlantic commander, who visited the ship Wednesday.
Petty Officer 3rd Class Kevin O'Brien, one of the firefighters who helped extinguish the shipboard blazes within 70 to 80 minutes, said the jet "came in and clipped a helicopter and then turned across a tractor and decapitated the person in it,"
"It clipped three A-7s, went broadside into an F-14 and finally flipped over onto the catwalk," he said. "Three people in the crash-and-salvage crew were killed when a missile went off 10 feet away. I was 30 feet away, but it blew in the other direction."
The three men on the Marine electronic warfare plane were killed, along with 11 Nimitz crewmen on the deck.
Several men said they were injured some 60 minutes after the crash in a secondary explosion that scattered shrapnel across the deck just as firefighters thought they had extinguished the blaze.
One of the bodies was not recovered, Batzler said, "and we have not determined whether he remained on the ship or went over the side."
Mrs. Alta Cragun of Orem, Utah, said she had been told her son, 1st Lt. Laurence D. Cragun, the crashed plane's electronics officer, was officially listed as missing at sea and presumed dead.
The wreckage of the EA-6B and three F-14 Tomcats was dumped over the side Wednesday. The planes were too badly damaged to be repaired and posed a danger to the crews working on the deck, Batzler said.
Three F-14s and four A-7s sustained major damage. Nine other planes received minor damage but were repaired within the day, according to Cmdr. Fred Lewis, the Nimitz's air wing commander.
Dale Stewart, 19, with a bandage around his fractured knuckles, stitches up his chin and a piece of a tooth missing, had been on deck, under a plane.
Associated Press Laserphoto
NIMITZ HEADS HOME -- Aircraft carrier USS Nimitz sails toward Navy base at Norfolk, Va., Thursday morning, following fatal crash of jet on flight deck Tuesday off coast of Jacksonville, Fla.
Collection
Citation
“8106b,” Archive Home, accessed June 27, 2026, https://www.pkman.org/archive/items/show/709.