We found You KidSpace....
At long last........WE FOUND KIDSPACE ! 
Armchair Astronomer Finds 'Evidence' of Life on Mars - FoxNews.com
This is, interesting.

Armchair Astronomer Finds 'Evidence' of Life on Mars - FoxNews.com
This is, interesting.
At long last........WE FOUND KIDSPACE ! 
Armchair Astronomer Finds 'Evidence' of Life on Mars - FoxNews.com
This is, interesting.

Armchair Astronomer Finds 'Evidence' of Life on Mars - FoxNews.com
This is, interesting.


Oh `No, they know I'm here


LOL, Thanks Richard for informing the World that we exist and have already arrived on Planet `Earth...
We come in Peace, and to ascertain as many Monte Carlo's as we can to take back 2 our Planet
Thanks for the link (Very Informative 4-Sure: ) I shall keep a open mind & always explore the possibilitities
that "we are not alone" : )
Thanks for your many post & contributions to the MCF & for filling in some Empty Space


I honestly believe that we are not alone in our universe 4-Sure.

Last edited by Space; Jun 7, 2011 at 08:16 AM.
Just received the below information..
Breaking News
Cue the conspiracies: Australia UFO X-Files 'lost'
Sydney newspaper requested the files, but military says they can't be found
msnbc.com staff and news service reports msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated <ABBR style="DISPLAY: inline" class="dtstamp updated" title=2011-06-07T10:07:42>6/7/2011 6:07:42 AM ET</ABBR>2011-06-07T10:07:42
Australia's military has lost its X-Files, detailing sightings of Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFOs, across the country, a newspaper report said Tuesday.
After a two-month search in response to a newspaper Freedom of Information (FOI) request, which forces government officials to release documents of public interest, Australia's Department of Defense had been unable to locate the files, the Sydney Morning Herald said.
What
What happened to them 
Where are they ? Why don't they want us to know ?
"The files could not be located and Headquarters Air Command formally advised that this file is deemed lost," the department's FOI assistant director, Natalie Carpenter, told the paper. Defense officials could not be contacted by Reuters.
The only file Defense had been able to locate was a folder called: "Report on UFOs/Strange Occurrences and Phenomena in Woomera," a military weapons testing range in the center of Australia's vast outback, Carpenter said.
All other files had been lost or destroyed, which the Herald said could fuel conspiracy theories about their disappearance.
The single remaining file detailed a sketchy series of sightings from around the country and overseas, including people living in towns near Woomera, in South Australia state.
Object sighting
The newspaper report said only some old press clippings and some formal government correspondence remain. Among the papers, it was revealed that the Australian UFO Research Association located some now-missing files six years ago, and the organization's summary of the files "is one of the few complete items left in the remaining dossier."
Included in that summary is the report of an October 1952 Woomera incident in which a military officer reported seeing an object's flight path, which he was able to track for 24 minutes using radar equipment. The report said the officer was not, however, able to see the object using a normal telescope.
The officer later concluded that what he saw was in fact a snow cloud, the report said.
X Files, named after a popular U.S. television science fiction program, refer to supposed government records detailing paranormal mysteries, usually involving fictitious alien species.
Australia's military had decided to stop taking UFO sighting reports in late 2000, the Herald said, asking members of the public to report incidents to police instead.
The newspaper said it submitted the request after the British government released thousands of pages of documents detailing 800 encounters reported during the 1980s and 1990s last year.
Breaking News

Cue the conspiracies: Australia UFO X-Files 'lost'
Sydney newspaper requested the files, but military says they can't be found
msnbc.com staff and news service reports msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated <ABBR style="DISPLAY: inline" class="dtstamp updated" title=2011-06-07T10:07:42>6/7/2011 6:07:42 AM ET</ABBR>2011-06-07T10:07:42
Australia's military has lost its X-Files, detailing sightings of Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFOs, across the country, a newspaper report said Tuesday.
After a two-month search in response to a newspaper Freedom of Information (FOI) request, which forces government officials to release documents of public interest, Australia's Department of Defense had been unable to locate the files, the Sydney Morning Herald said.
What
What happened to them 
Where are they ? Why don't they want us to know ?

"The files could not be located and Headquarters Air Command formally advised that this file is deemed lost," the department's FOI assistant director, Natalie Carpenter, told the paper. Defense officials could not be contacted by Reuters.
The only file Defense had been able to locate was a folder called: "Report on UFOs/Strange Occurrences and Phenomena in Woomera," a military weapons testing range in the center of Australia's vast outback, Carpenter said.
All other files had been lost or destroyed, which the Herald said could fuel conspiracy theories about their disappearance.
The single remaining file detailed a sketchy series of sightings from around the country and overseas, including people living in towns near Woomera, in South Australia state.
Object sighting
The newspaper report said only some old press clippings and some formal government correspondence remain. Among the papers, it was revealed that the Australian UFO Research Association located some now-missing files six years ago, and the organization's summary of the files "is one of the few complete items left in the remaining dossier."
Included in that summary is the report of an October 1952 Woomera incident in which a military officer reported seeing an object's flight path, which he was able to track for 24 minutes using radar equipment. The report said the officer was not, however, able to see the object using a normal telescope.
The officer later concluded that what he saw was in fact a snow cloud, the report said.
X Files, named after a popular U.S. television science fiction program, refer to supposed government records detailing paranormal mysteries, usually involving fictitious alien species.
Australia's military had decided to stop taking UFO sighting reports in late 2000, the Herald said, asking members of the public to report incidents to police instead.
The newspaper said it submitted the request after the British government released thousands of pages of documents detailing 800 encounters reported during the 1980s and 1990s last year.


Oh `No, they know I'm here


LOL, Thanks Richard for informing the World that we exist and have already arrived on Planet `Earth...
We come in Peace, and to ascertain as many Monte Carlo's as we can to take back 2 our Planet
Thanks for the link (Very Informative 4-Sure: ) I shall keep a open mind & always explore the possibilitities
that "we are not alone" : )
Thanks for your many post & contributions to the MCF & for filling in some Empty Space


I honestly believe that we are not alone in our universe 4-Sure.


Okay. I'm not trying to be rude, but what's with the space alien persona you give off? Seriously?
I've wondered that ever since I joined here.
Your not trying hard enough.
there is no "persona" to space...he is HIGH on life why must you be a buzzkill?

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BlackRainSS
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Aug 9, 2011 10:16 PM














