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23 KiB
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412 lines
23 KiB
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CUFON Note: This file contains the text of a release letter and a document
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released 14 March 1994 by the United States Air Force (USAF) Air Intelligence
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Agency to Mr. Dale Goudie, Director of the UFO Reporting and Information
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service and CUFON Information Director. The document is apparently the text
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of a booklet produced by the magazine "Sotsialisticheskaya Industriya":
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---------------
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RELEASABLE ONLY BY CONTROLLING ACTIVITY
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Controlling Activity: Commander
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National Air Intelligence Center
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Wright-Patterson AFB
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Document; AD B073127L
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Title: UFO Identification
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Personal Author; Lynev, R.
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Report Date: 4 Mar 83
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Originating Agency: Foreign Technology Division,
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Wright-Patterson AFB, OH
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---------------
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The document is not actually dated within the text but the National Air
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Intelligence Center document date is 1983. This is 14 years _after_ the USAF
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says it got out of the UFO business when Project Bluebook closed in 1969.
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No information about which agency collected the information or who translated
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it into english is given. It is interesting to note that text of a public
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(in the USSR) magazine article would be classified and remain restricted now,
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11 years later... and be held by Foreign Technology Division, Wright-
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Patterson Air Force base: the former home of Project Blue Book.
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Please note that items in [ ] brackets seem to be translators explantory
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notes. I suspect that the item which reads "[casus]" was intended to be
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"[causes]". There are several mispellings, I have endevored to allow these
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to remain as received.
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- Jim Klotz CUFON SYSOP -
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==========================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE
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AIR INTELLIGENCE AGENCY
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14 March 1994
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Mr. Dale Goudie
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Dear Mr. Goudie
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Attached is the document you requested in your letter dated
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January 13, 1994, to the Defense Technical Information Center
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(DTIC). DTIC forwarded your request to us on 28 Feb 1994, and
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was received by us on 4 March 1994. You requested copies of
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records relating to a subject which has been referred to by
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many terms over the years as shown by the thousands of pages
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of declassified released government documents. The most
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common term is "Unidentified Flying Objects." Others, but not
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all, are: "UFO's," "UFOBs," "unidentified aerial phenomena,"
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"flying disks," "flying saucers," "unauthorized aerial
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objects," "anomalous lights," "uncorrelated targets,"
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"unidentified aircraft," and "fastwalkers."
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DTIC conducted a search and found the attached document. Your
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request was processed in the all others category. Fees were
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waived due to the amount being less than $15.00.
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Sincerely
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/s/
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JAMES E. MILLER, JR., Colonel, USAF
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Commander
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Attachment :
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Releasable Document
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"Freedom Through Vigilance"
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==========================================================================
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UFO IDENTIFICATION
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Answers to the questions of our readers
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Dear editorial staff.
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On the 30 of June of this year your newspaper contained an article under
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the heading "Where Do Flying Saucers Come From." In it the entire problem of
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unidentified flying objects is reduced to a number of amusing incidents. I
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do not share the enthusiastic certainty of those who believe that from time
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to time beings from other planets come in contact with us. However, at the
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same time, I am firmly convinced that a serious and devoted study of UFO's
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can broaden the horizons of our knowledge of nature. What is the opinion of
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scientists on this subject?
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A. Khodyrev, Moscow.
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There will be no sensations - I was convinced of that on my way to a
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meeting with a doctor of chemical sciences, Professor M. Dmitriyev at the
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Institute of general and Communal Hygiene im. A. N. Sysin. However, the
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scientist chose to begin our conversation precisely with the sensation
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pertaining to still the same NLO [UFO's] - unidentified flying objects. he
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reached for a foreign magazine published in Russian language and showed me
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the following report.
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According to the story of a certain farmer, he was travelling through the
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forest in his cart when he saw two individuals walking. They were not over a
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meter and a half in height, dressed in narrow, black, tight-fitting overalls
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resembling astronaut suits, and their faces and hands were green. The
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striking feature of these individuals were their elongated eyes, which were
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somewhat off to the sides of the face, and sharp cheekbones. They jumped
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into the cart and after several dozen meters motioned the farmer to stop not
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too far from a machine suspended
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1
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=======================================================================
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above the ground and ordered him ( again by gestures) to undress. When he
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had done this, they "examined" or "photographed" him with a certain camera,
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which looked like two saucers. After that they motioned to him that he was
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free to go.
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Having returned home, the farmer told his relatives what happened to him,
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but when the villagers arrived at the spot they saw only trampled grass,
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prints of strange footware, and other signs which seemed to support that
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someone was here indeed. At about the same time, at a distance of about 700
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meters from this clearing, a six-year old boy, who was playing in the yard,
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saw, as he told, a strange "airplane" flying very low to the ground with a
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pilot, who had a green face.
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The author of this report is a scientist. He writes that the eyewitnesses
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were examined medically, even a psygalvanometer was used which is the "most
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sensitive part of a lie detector." Conclusions? "... The possibility of
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encounters with UFO's, no matter how strange they may seem, cannot be
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discounted."
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"What do you think about this?", asked the professor.
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I shrugged my shoulders. Undoubtedly the reader would be interested much
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more in what he thinks, a specialist, and not I. But since the question was
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posed to me I replied that I have never considered, and do not consider, the
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problem of "flying saucers" more important than all others. I consider the
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passion shown to this subject and the stir created by the given "lectures" to
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be interesting, first of all, as a purely psychological phenomenon. And, in
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general, it is understandable. In the past people believed in a wood-goblin
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[Russ. myth.], while today it is science fiction - and the scientists
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themselves have conceived such "modern" hypotheses that to compare the fairy
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tales about the wood-goblin is like comparing the hoe to a jet liner.
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This science-fiction boom has left a noticeable mark in the consciousness
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of some people. It is indeed this boom that produced quite a number of
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interesting ideas, expanded the inner world of man, and gave a new meaning to
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the world around us. But, alas, science fiction also has its own letdowns,
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dead-ends, and repetitions. They are not drawn into literature and the
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science does not accept them also. And so they, these myths of the UFO era,
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get trapped in the consciousness instead of the previous wood-goblins. house
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spirits, and saints -"a holy place is never empty" [a literal translation of
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a proverb.
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2
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Some of us let in the "new tenants" more readily, when those who conceived
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them act, shall we say, in the spirit of the age - making their claims in the
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name of science and attempt to interpret to intercept the mysteries, which
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have not ben studied sufficiently yet by science.
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Professor M. Dmitriyev is one of those who has introduced a stream of
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health scepticism into the "saucer" problem. I found out about his theory
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two years ago. the essence of his theory is in the fact that a number of
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unusual phenomena, including ball lightning, "flying saucers," Petrozavodsk
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phenomenon, the riddle of the "Bermuda Triangle," the mystery of the Tunguska
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Explosion, and others, which were caused not by beings from other planets
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visiting the Earth but by natural causes. Substances accumulate in the
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various areas of the atmosphere which are capable of reacting with one
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another; the onset and the course of these reactions can be affected by solar
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rays, hard cosmic radiation, ordinary lightning, and aerosols.
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Depending on the nature of the process taking place in them, these natural
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formations (I would like to call them "reactors") can believe differently -
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they can either hang motionless, or "pursue" an airplane, repeating all its
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motions precisely, or, similar to landmines, perform abrupt jumps. this is
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usually accompanied by the effect that is known to all - luminescence of the
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substances that have entered the reaction
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- chemiluminescence. If the energy in such formations is low, they may go
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unnoticed by a person - only the radar screens will show unexpected flashes.
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But the energy clusters can be enormous, and then this is frought with
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catastrophes of the type that occurred at Tunguska.
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Such is the theory, and it is supported by the experiments and
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calculations in many respects. But still, there you are - another story
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about green beings from other planets. Did the professor decide to play my
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role?
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"No," he said, "to show an example of how people depart from the urgent
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problems to the pseudoproblems, to 'ufology'." (UFO - the initial letters of
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the English equivalent of our NLO).
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"In your opinion, what constitutes the urgency of the problem of
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anomalous atmospheric phenomena?"
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"First, the study of the mechanism of these phenomena is of great
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scientific significance. Second, we the scientists are obligated to
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3
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=======================================================================
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give recommendations concerning the means of protection ...."
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"Protection?"
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"Of course. Several years ago, for example, ball lightning got into
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naphthalene storage at the Makeyevskiy by-product coke plant, resulting in a
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considerable loss. the papers described a case, which was investigated by us
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especially, when a group of mountain climbers was struck by a ball lightning.
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There are known cases of cattle being injured. the usual lightning-
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protection devices are ineffective in this case. Finally, we now have a
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sufficient amount of data to start talking about the practical application of
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this phenomenon in national economy."
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"You don't say?"
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"Yes. Frequently, the energy concentrated in certain anomalous
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formations reaches 10^10 Joules. It can be uses quite efficiently for, let
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us say, digging tunnels through mountains. Another area that shows promise
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is in the obtaining of nitrogen compounds so badly needed for the production
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of valuable fertilizers."
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"In short, the problem is urgent indeed. But what about contacts with
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other worlds? Is it realistic or not?"
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"You see, I am not a supporter of the hypothesis that life on our Earth
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is unique. But contacts with other worlds... Of the ten thousand (!) cases
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studied by us over a period of twenty years, not one of them gave us grounds
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to assert that someone has visited our planet."
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"But how are we to deal with the green-faced beings described in the
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article you gave to read? Even a lie detector was used...."
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"The selection of an instrument depends on what one plans to
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investigate," smiled professor. "Let us recall - haven't there been quite a
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number of cases in the history of religion when the virgin or saints appeared
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to people. I am convinced that anyone who had such a vision would have
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confirmed its validity both by swearing and by a lie detector. We, however,
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examine this material evidence in our laboratory left by the anomalous
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phenomena on soil, water, in the air, and on the negatives. We have a number
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of instruments for such investigations, both those built by us - we have the
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certificates of invention - and other well-known devices; for example,
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scintillating mass-spectrometer. On the basis of color, intensity, and
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nature of luminescence we can determine what substances take part in a
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reaction. We have
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4
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learned to recreate and study certain events in the laboratory, if we cannot
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observe them in nature. We go on the premise that a visit, even if it is just
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by us, from other planets would certainly have given us if only insignificant
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but a material piece of evidence - just a dust particle, just a short radio
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signal. But so far, I repeat, there are no such pieces of evidence, while
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those available to us have a totally different property. It is this evidence
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that we are studying...."
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The professor offered me another article to read. It was his article
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written with other specialists and published in the Journal of Technical
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Physics. It goes on to say:
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"On the 24th of August of 1978, at 2320 hours, in the vicinity of the
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Khasanovskaya Sreet in Khabarovsk, during a heavy downpour... all of a
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sudden, people heard a sharp whistle that sounded like a jet engine that was
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accompanied by loud cracking. It became light as day. Then a ball lightning,
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bright orange in color, appeared over the movie theater "Zarya." It was
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showering sparks. Then the ball began to descend, reached the ground through
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the trees, flashed for an instant above a certain spot and then rose again.
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there was a huge explosion, after which it became dark and quiet. The entire
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process took about one minute. There were many eyewitnesses to this event.
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Electrical wiring was out of commission over a distance of 100 m. Despite
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the large amount of water on the ground and the downpour, the soil was
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charred and melted over an area 1.5 m in diameter and 20-25 cm deep. The
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total volume of the area filled with slag was 0.4 cubic meters...."
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What follows were accurately recorded technical details - description of
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the slag, dimensions of its lumps, their photographs, radiometry data, which
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were verified at the NII of nuclear physics of the NGU [Moscow State
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University]. However that is not all. The article goes on to say that this
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phenomenon was repeated in the laboratory, the energy of the flash was
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calculated, and the temperature estimated -it was hot enough to melt quartz.
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Let us note: there is not a single word about the material details in the
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foreign press concerning the beings from outer space. The assumption of
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UFO's is based wholly on personal stories! And another difference. Even
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though there is a mass of the most fine details in the Khabarovsk version,
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the conclusion based on these details is made
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5
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with much reservation - it is possible to assume that the most probable
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mechanism of ball lightning is connected with a powerful high-frequency
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magnetic radiation in a certain frequency range at a certain wavelength.
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"The discussion of the problem, which is devoid of material evidence,"
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says Dmitriyev, "would resemble a religious gathering, where everything
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revolves around the question 'to believe or not to believe'." Let us offer
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such arguments to the 'ufologists'. One of them, incidentally, reproached me
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openly in the press for my scientific interests being 'earthbound', for my
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disbelief in the meeting that will soon take place between the brothers of
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intellect...."
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Professor sighed - "I am concerned by the approach of some of our other
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scientists to this problem. In the opinion of some, we are studying not
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actual events but who knows what. This is a direct negation of the problem.
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There is also an indirect negation - the attempts to reduce it to separate,
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random, and odd events [casus] like concentration of insects, optical
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illusions, and sounding balloons. Of course such events occur; however, it
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is doubtful that the thousands of cases studied by us can be explained by
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these events alone. And should one keep quite about the well-known facts?
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At one time the Academy of Sciences had placed a ban on any mention of
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meteorites, having declared them to be nonexistent'. But this did not stop
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them from falling down to Earth. On the other hand, hushing up the problem
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in order to reduce the amount of unhealthy speculations around it, usually,
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produces the opposite effect. The people reason - there must be something to
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it for them to keep it from us. Thus, another impetus is created for one to
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get carried away by 'ufology'. It is annoying to see some of our
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publications show such a guarded attitude not only to this problem but also
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to the attempts to rebut it on the basis of scientific and materialistic
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positions.
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The UFO problem is also suffering from another aspect. It originated at
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the junction point of sciences. And how they 'interface' and interact is
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also a question.
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For instance, it is known that along with the theory of
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chemiluminescence, recently another theory was proposed by a professor of the
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Oceanology Institute, G. Barenblat and A. Monin, director of the institute
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while back it was being discussed in the 'Izvestiya'. The crux
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6
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=======================================================================
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of this theory is that the 'saucer-like formations' are unique aerial
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'spinning tops', which can serve as traps for aerosols.
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M. Dmitriyev, who keeps a close watch on everything relative to this
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problem, also knowns about this turbulent theory. Why not surmise that the
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oceanologists are examining not the electrical and chemical aspects, just as
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he, but the aerodynamic aspect of the same phenomenon? How is one to know,
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perhaps this 'aerial top' is that 'pot', where the nature cooks the mixtures
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of the toxic effect that could be the reason for the misfortunes in the
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'Bermuda Triangle'? And perhaps such a top produces the danger of an
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explosion of the type that occurred at Tungaskaya (the result of which, M.
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Dmitriyev is convinced, was the fallout of the biologically active nitrous
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compounds that fertilized the soil and thus caused the 'acceleration' of
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pines)?
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Having prepared these and other questions, I visit the Oceanology
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Institute to see G. Barenblat. And what do I discover? They heard neither of
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Dmitriyev nor his theory. this is very strange, because his work is known,
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and not only in this country. For example, a respectable monograph of D.
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Barri published recently in New York on "Ball and Beaded Lightning' ('On the
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Extreme Effects of the Atmospheric Electricity). The bibliography of this
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work has over one hundred and eighty names. more numerous are the works
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written by Academician P. Kapits and M. Dmitriyev, while there is not a
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single reference made to the work done by the oceanologists. I tell them
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this not all in reproach. Still I would like to ask them - how can one work
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on a problem without first finding out what was done in this area and by whom
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in the past?
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There is another known direction in which investigations are being
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conducted. It is represented in the booklet published by the Space Research
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Institute, AS USSR - 'Observations of Anomalous Atmospheric Phenomena in the
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USSR', conducted by L. Grindilis, D. Men'kov, and I. Petrovskaya. this work
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deals not with the problem itself but rather the approaches to it. It
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presents a statistical analysis of several hundred testimonies given by
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eyewitnesses. Only testimony without any references to material 'evidence'.
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Neither do the authors make any attempts to explain the nature of this
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phenomenon. Consequently, everyone reading this booklet is free to render
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his own interpretation of the material written.
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7
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=======================================================================
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Finally, there is one more point of view of this problem. It can be
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termed philological. It is presented clearly, for example, in one of the
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recent issues of the popular magazine 'Tekhnika - Molodezhi', where the
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opinions of V. Vilinbakhov, candidate of historical sciences, and I.
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Lisevich, doctor of philosophical sciences, are presented along with
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interesting material on ball lightning. Both authors review the myths held
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by the peoples of this world which, in one way or another, deal with the
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strangers from the sky. the articles of these authors do not assert that our
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planet was visited by beings from the outer space but pose a question - what
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was the real basis for the creation of these myths?
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|
In short, different opinions regarding this problem are being developed
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|
independently of one another, without contacts and discussions, which are so
|
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|
necessary for scientific knowledge.
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|
And here is another thing. Letters from all parts of the country arrive
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|
at the Institute of General and Communal Hygiene almost every day. Voluntary
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|
helpers communicate to the scientists as to where, when, and under what
|
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|
circumstances they witnessed the anomalous atmospheric phenomena. I read:
|
||
|
"A glowing hemisphere was travelling fast across the sky to the east at an
|
||
|
altitude of 3.5 thousand meters." "....After the sphere exploded there was a
|
||
|
strong odor of sulphur, as though a whole box of matches was burned."
|
||
|
It can be seen from many letters that its authors are not inclined to
|
||
|
relate what they have seen as the ultimate truth but they hope that their
|
||
|
evidence will help th scientists to find it.
|
||
|
What is 'unhealthy' in this interest? I do not understand.
|
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|
|
||
|
R. Lynev, scientific
|
||
|
reviewer of the
|
||
|
"Sotsialisticheskaya Industriya".
|
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8
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|
=======================================================================
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||
|
=======================================================================
|
||
|
---------------------------
|
||
|
C U F O N
|
||
|
---------------------------
|
||
|
Computer UFO Network
|
||
|
Seattle Washington, USA
|
||
|
|
||
|
(206) 776-0382 8 Data Bits, No Parity, 1 Stop Bit
|
||
|
v.32bis, v.42bis, MNP4, MNP5
|
||
|
|
||
|
SYSOP - Jim Klotz Information Director - Dale Goudie
|
||
|
|
||
|
UFO Reporting and Information Service
|
||
|
Voice Line - (206) 721-5035
|
||
|
P.O.Box 832, Mercer Island, WA 98040, USA
|
||
|
|
||
|
- Please credit CUFON as the source of this material -
|
||
|
|
||
|
============================================================================
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