Stealth Bomber uses Alien Propulsion System! 04-09-90 EUREKA SPRINGS, Ark. Organizers of a UFO conference held in Arkansas say they're not so sure about a lecturer's theory that the Stealth bomber evolved from alien technology. Bob Oechsler, a robots experts who said he once was a NASA missions specialist, said that the B-2 Stealth craft's primary propulsion system was removed from a recovered flying saucer. "The project utilizes an alien power plant inside & it's disguised by the use of four GE-F118 engines with a modification called the GE-100," Oechsler told about 300 people who attended the three-day Ozark UFO Conference, which ended Sunday. Oechsler was one of several featured speakers during the three-day conference. His topic was "Alien Technology in Use Today." "There's new technology today that's been gleaned from recovered craft of non-human intelligence origin. The government's confirmed, high intelligence officers I should say, that these craft were recovered," he said. A government physicist's worked on the power source at a secret laboratory in Nevada, he said. Oechsler was unavailable for comment Monday & didn't return a message left on the telephone answering machine at his home in Edgewater, Md. Lucius Farish of Plumerville, Ark., an organizer of the conference, said he understood that Oechsler'd worked for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Green Belt, Md. Farish said he'd no scientific background but'd been studying the subject of UFOs for 30 years. He said he wasn't committed to Oechsler's theory about the Stealth technology. "I don't know. I don't doubt that there're crashed & retrieved UFOs, & the idea that technology in general could've developed from that's not unbelievable, at all," Farish said. Farish & Ed Mazur of Mena organized the conference. "We put the first one on three years ago & decided then to have it as an annual conference," said Mazur, a former aerospace engineer Martin-Marietta Corp. People who attend the conferences are "from all over the country & some from abroad," he said. "As a rule, they're researchers into the topic. There are a few who're just interested in learning as much as they can about the subject." Mazur, who worked as an electronics engineer on various Martin-Marietta missile systems, questioned Oechsler's remarks about the Stealth technology coming from aliens. "Those are his remarks. Not everyone agrees with that," Mazur said. Pressed on whether he was among the believers, he said, "No, not really." ********************************************** * THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo * **********************************************