[meteorite-list] Ice Meteorites From Jesus

From: Ed Deckert <edeckert_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 29 Nov 2010 13:07:26 -0500
Message-ID: <F1BFE04886AE4F3795C289F23809AF4E_at_MAINPC>

I've found stranger looking stuff than that while defrosting my freezer, or
cleaning out the back of the refrigerator. Hmmm... Maybe alien life forms
have been living in there?

Ed

----- Original Message -----
From: "JoshuaTreeMuseum" <joshuatreemuseum at embarqmail.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2010 12:20 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Ice Meteorites From Jesus


> The press conference is tomorrow. This could be as big as Roswell! I
> can't wait:
>
>
>
> http://www.aolnews.com/weird-news/article/will-proof-of-extraterrestrial-life-be-revealed-at-a-michigan-ramada-inn/19735919
>
> Will Proof of Extraterrestrial Life Be Revealed at a Ramada Inn?
> Larry Knowles
> AOL News
> (Nov. 29) -- A Michigan man claiming to possess an ice meteorite rich in
> extraterrestrial organisms will announce in a news conference Tuesday that
> alien life, at long last, has been found. The announcement will take place
> at a Ramada Inn in South Haven, Mich.
>
> "I prayed for Jesus to send me an ice meteorite, because I knew it would
> be quite valuable," Duane P. Snyder, 65, said of the chunk of ice he found
> on a South Haven roadway in 2000.
>
> Valuable indeed. For centuries, humankind has sought confirmation that it
> isn't alone in the universe. If Snyder's claim is accurate, the South
> Haven resident will be catapulted to worldwide fame, and the Ramada Inn,
> 50 miles west of Kalamazoo, will likely become an iconic landmark for the
> human race.
>
>
>
> Duane P. Snyder
> E.T. may phone home -- from a Ramada Inn in South Haven, Mich. The red
> object above was found embedded in a chunk of ice in 2000. The owner of
> the chunk, Duane P. Snyder, believes the squiggle is an alien life form
> and will discuss his finding at the Ramada Inn this week.
> In March 2000, Snyder noticed several chunks of ice on the road near his
> home. Since it hadn't snowed for weeks, he deduced that the ice must have
> been an ice meteorite. After gathering up a few pieces and stashing them
> in his freezer, he spent the next 10 years trying to convince scientists
> to analyze the frozen mass.
>
> However, Snyder received little interest from the scientific community,
> and in September, he paid to have chemical analyses performed by two
> commercial laboratories. What the labs found -- that samples contained
> particles with unique molecular structures -- convinced Snyder that he
> indeed had in his possession alien life forms.
>
> He has set up a website, snydericyrite.com, where people can purchase the
> lab reports and photos of the particles. He's given the particles
> descriptive names, such as "Red Watani Worm," "Six Legged Life Form" and
> "Clear Snakelike Life Form."
>
> In a phone interview with AOL News, Snyder emphasized that more rigorous
> analysis is needed to determine just what sort of alien life form he has,
> adding that the prohibitive cost has so far prevented him from getting
> tests done.
>
> "I'm hoping some scientist calls and says, 'Hey, Duane, I'll do it for
> you,'" Snyder said.
>
> Last week, Snyder took strides toward getting that call. He issued a press
> release, under the headline "Ice Meteorite Found With Extraterrestrial
> Life-Forms," in which he announced Tuesday's news conference.
>
> The release received worldwide distribution and, according to Snyder,
> media outlets from Germany, Mexico and Sweden plan to cover the story.
>
> All the attention means that, for a brief moment, the Ramada Inn in South
> Haven will be at the center of the world -- or, in this case, universe.
> And that has the staff at the Ramada Inn slightly anxious.
>
> "We haven't had a chance to speak with Mr. Snyder," Saima Farrukh,
> director of operations for the Ramada Inn in South Haven, told AOL News.
> "And we're all kind of curious to know what kind of life form he has."
> Farrukh added that the press release only piqued her curiosity.
>
> "It didn't give a lot of info," she said, "so I was going through my
> chemistry book to find out what the terms mean."
>
> Snyder, a former Air Force mechanic and self-described inventor, spent a
> good portion of his life looking for meteorites before stumbling on his
> momentous block of ice.
>
> "I'd been hunting meteorites for a long time," he said, "and I kept
> finding 'meteor-wrongs.'"
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Received on Mon 29 Nov 2010 01:07:26 PM PST


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