343 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
343 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
SUBJECT: True Believers Pursue Search for UFOs, Aliens FILE: UFO2861
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By Billy Cox,
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FLORIDA TODAY
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Sunday, January 1, 1995
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Moments after shuttle Columbia's solid rocket boosters disengaged on the
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clear blue morning of Oct. 18, 1993, video cameras caught a bright, white
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image that appeared to wheel diagonally, in the opposite direction from the
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orbiter's path.
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Replaying the brief sequence on their evening news, WFTV-Channel 9 anchors
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in Orlando said some people thought it was a UFO, but NASA wrote it off as a
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reflection of Earth. "How the Earth got in the camera shot, I don't know,"
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joked Bob Opsahl.
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Joe Jordan of Merritt Island studies that taped broadcast from a meeting
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room in the Cocoa library. He jabs the VCR pause button.
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"Now, I've gotta be careful about this next part," Jordan says. "I've got
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a buddy out there -- who shall remain anonymous -- who works with the camera
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crew at Lockheed. When this blip went across the screen over NASA Select,
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he said that calls started coming in from officials wanting to know about
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this intruder in restricted air space.
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"He knew they had something I'd be interested in, so he made a copy and
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got it to me within hours."
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The next segment -- same sequence, slightly enlarged, slowed down then
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reversed--shows an elliptical object, perhaps even domed, racing from the
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southeast to the northwest portion of the monitor.
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Jordan, a field investigator for the Mutual UFO Network (MUFON), the
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nation's largest UFO research group, sent the tape to headquarters in
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Seguin, Texas, for analysis. Results were inconclusive, but they indicated
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the image was three-dimensional, as opposed to a lens flare.
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"I've talked to three eyewitnesses who recall seeing the thing before SRB
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separation," Jordan says. "They told me it appeared metallic, that it was
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reflecting the sunlight.
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"So I think we've got a problem. It's one thing to have saucers flying
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hover a cow pasture. But over Kennedy Space Center? Now I've got a security
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situation. And who wants to talk about that?"
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Greg Katnik, KSC's lead film analyst, doesn't recall the event. In 11 years
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of analyzing launch and landing footage, Katnik insists he never has seen any
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shuttle-related images that couldn't be explained. Nor has he ever been told
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to suppress information.
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"We've seen things, over the years, that were unusual from an optical
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standpoint, but nothing we couldn't figure out," Katnik says. "In this
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instance, it sounds like it could've been a seagull that got caught In the
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frame. When your camera is trying hard to focus on a shuttle that's on the
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brink of hyper-infinity, near-foreground objects can get easily distorted."
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Still, distrusting Americans -- such as the grass-roots gathering that
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meets the third Sunday of each month at the Central Brevard Library in
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Cocoa--are mobilizing behind growing suspicions that the UFO phenomenon is
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the government's best kept secret.
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And interest is accelerating.
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Beginning of a revolution
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Sixty-two-year-old Jenna Bartlett of Edgewater founded UFO Forum of Florida
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in March 1993. Today, she says, anywhere from 40 to 90 curiosity-seekers
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attend admission-free public meetings across central Florida for lectures
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and videos.
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Bartlett no longer fears ridicule. The bumper sticker on her camper
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van ("UFOs Are Real -- Ask NASA") is an open provocation.
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The whole purpose of these meetings is to get the word out, to 'open people
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up to the possibility that extra terrestrials aren't out there anymore --
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they're here. And they're not going away," she says.
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They were supposed to have gone away in December 1969. That's when the U.S.
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Air Force terminated Project Blue Book, its 22-year official study of UFOs.
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After logging 12,618 reports, the Air Force listed 701 as legitimate "un-
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explaineds."
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Even so, whatever they were 'Blue Book concluded their mystery did not
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represent advanced or unconventional technology, nor did they pose a national
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security threat.
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But 1994 -- exactly a quarter century later--was a watershed season. UFOs
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were everywhere.
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They were on CBS, NBC, CNN, Omni magazine, Popular Mechanics. They lit up
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the entire electronic spectrum, from global Internet chatter to FAA radar
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screens in Michigan. They hovered and streaked and darted like phantoms
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across home videos aired by the likes of "Encounters," "Unsolved Mysteries,"
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and "Sightings." They excited activists to picket the Pentagon and the
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offices of political leaders.
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And from the media overload cluttered with half-truths and shadows emerged
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television's cult hit of the season, "The X-Files," whose laconic messages
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-- The Truth Is Out There, Trust No One, Deny Everything -- merely echoed
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the erosion of public faith in the status quo.
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"What we're talking about is a revolution," says Michael Corbin, owner and
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director of Paranet, the nation's oldest and largest UFO related computer
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bulletin network "We're in the beginning of a revolution."
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The Official Word
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The first bomb went off in January 1994. It was a delayed-fuse device, 47
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years long, coiling backward into the ghost winds of a New Mexico desert,
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where the flying saucer era began.
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In July 1947, the Army Air Force base at Roswell, N.M., announced it had
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recovered a "flying disc" that crashed in the desolate outback. Within hours,
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the Eighth Air Force headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas, revised that claim,
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saying it was only a weather balloon.
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But on-site investigators described weird debris that couldn't be burnt or
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broken, foil-like material that tlattened itself out after being crumpled,
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lightweight I-beams inscribed with heiroglyphics. There were whispers of
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tiny extraterrestrial corpses.
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Rural neighbors were alarmed by military security checkpoints in the middle
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of nowhere. And years later, retired Air Force Gen. Thomas DuBose went on
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record -- wreckage scraps were flown to Washington, D.C., and the weather
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balloon story was a hoax he perpetrated to neutralize the media.
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Following the popularization of the story in the 1980s and early '90s,
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uneasy New Mexicans began pressing U.S. Rep. Steven Schiff, R-N.M, to resolve
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the issue.
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Schiffs inability to acquire relevant Air Force documents led him to appeal
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to the General Accounting Office.
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The GAO launched its investigation last January.
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In September, the Air Force issued an unsolicited response "intended to
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serve as the final report related to the Roswell matter." Known as the Weaver
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Report, for its author, the 25 page paper said what really happened in '47
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was the held retrieval of classified science called Project Mogul. Mogul was
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a top-secret, balloon-launched train of sensors designed to sample high
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altitudes for evidence of Soviet nuclear testing.
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Although many major newspapers accepted the Weaver Report uncritically
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("Saucer Debris Was of This Earth"-- The New York Times, "1947 UFO Finally
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Identified"--USA Today, a careful read reveals egregious contradictions and
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selective omissions.
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The GAO was unconvinced. Its investigation continues, and the debate rages
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on.
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The Media Investigation
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In its ongoing series on UFOs -- called Project Open Book -- Omni magazine
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invited readers to sign the Roswell Declaration, a petition demanding an
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executive order to declassify ET-related secrets.
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Omni editor Keith Ferrell says signed petltions have arrived by the box
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load into the magazine's Greensboro, N.C., offlce. He suspects the tally may
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surpass l0,000 when the counting begins this year.
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The magazine intends to formally present the petitions to the White House.
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"Our initiative is simply to open the books," Ferrell says. "We're not
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taking an editorial stance one way or the other, but we do want to get a
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lot of the superstition and myth and foolishness out of the way. So we've
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decided to put our journalistic credibility and prestige on the line,
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and we're taking a rational look at what's there."
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In the information vacuum of classified military operations -- called
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"black projects"--rumors nourish like weeds. The most controversial
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speculation contends tne military is attempting to engineer recovered UFO
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technology into its arsenal at the hyper-secretive Groom Lake Test Facility
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in southern Nevada.
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The March issue of Popular Science profiled the paranoia blooming around
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the complex -- variously known as Area 51 and Dreamland -- and its bid to
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acquire an additional 4,000 acres on a distant mountain range during this
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post-Cold War era of military down-sizing. The December edition of Popular
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Mechanics addressed the military's flying saucer prototypes and other black
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technologies emanating from Groom Lake.
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"What struck us most," Popular Mechanics opined, "is how much Air Force
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secrecy -- both at Area 51 and at Roswell -- has done to undercut its own
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denials. 'They lied about the first balloon,' goes the word around Roswell.
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'Why believe them this time?' "
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In October, CNN sent talk show host Larry King for a two-hour live remote
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broadcast from outside Dreamland. Among those King interviewed were former
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Republican Sen. Barry Goldwater from Arizona, the patriarch of American
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conservatism.
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Goldwater told how the late Gen. Curtis LeMay, then chairman of the Joint
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Chiefs of Staff, tlew into a pique when Goldwater asked for access to a
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chamber at Ohio's Wright-Patterson AFB's Foreign Technology Division, rumored
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to have been a depot for the early Roswell debris. Goldwater never asked
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again.
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But if, in fact, a lid of high-level secrecy is nailed tight atop the UFO
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mystery, videotaped sightings continue to press against the wall of denial.
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Bob Kiviat, coordinating producer of "Encounters" on the Fox Network, calls
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ratings of his fledgling, limited-run show "very good," despite its suicide
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slot opposite "60 Minutes" on Sunday night. A majority of the format is
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devoted to UFOs, and much of that is fueled by hand-held cam corders.
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"With the proliferation of video cameras, more and more UFO footage is
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starting to come out. And what we're documenting is a world-wide phenomenon,"
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Kivat says. "We are a news magazine and we take this subject seriously. We
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consult with photo experts who take this seriously as well, some of whom are
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affiliated with NASA."
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In fact, the most chilling UFO revelation of 1994 was featured on ABC's
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"Prime Time Live" in November.
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When ABC peered into UFO secrets inside the former Soviet Union, it
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discovered, among other things, a narrowly avoided nuclear incident in the
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Ukrainian town of Usovo in 1983.
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Hundreds of residents reported seeing a 900-foot disc that spent two
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hours or so gliding above the city. Lt. Col. Vladimir Katunoff described how
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the object hovered over the ICBM missile silo he commanded. For 15 seconds,
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Soviet technicians lost control of the post; the display panels lit up and
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indicated the nuclear warheads were preparing to launch. The red-alert
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status receded as soon as the UFO disappeared. A damage-control in-
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vestigation detected no equipment failure.
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"We're going to see more and more of these reports coming out of Russia,
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because they're so broke they're actually selling formerly declassified UFO
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military documents," says Don Ecker, research director for UFO -magazine in
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Sunland, Calif.
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"We've already got one of their top SDI scientists on record admitting
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they've been observing objects entering and leaving Earth's atmosphere for
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the past 30, 40 years. We haven't heard the end of it."
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The Information Gap
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Just as information technology -- fax machines, satellite dishes --
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contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union, Denver's Michael Corbin
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sees the same forces assaulting the domestic containment web surrounding the
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UFO phenomenon.
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In 1986, Corbin founded PARANet, the first computer bulletin board to
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discuss UFOs. ln 1990, what began as a 6 personal computer link up plugged
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into Internet, the global telecommunications giant.
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"I think it's safe to say that we're now in every country in the world,"
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Corbin says. "I'd say, conservatively, more than 100,000 PC users have
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access to PARANet."
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Corbin says PARANet gives ordinary citizens access to scientific and
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academic discussions on UFOs, plus an information-exchange forum offering
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investigators immediate data on incidents across the world.
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"In 1947, the government acted quickly to contain the crash at Roswell,"
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Corbin said. "But unlike '47, when the authorities were able to censor the
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wire services, there's less of an ability to conceal data and information in
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the event of another incident like that. They'd have to shut the whole thing
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down. But we're too big, we have no geographical boundaries anymore."
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If the surge in PC-UFO chatter reflects mass cynicism in government, it
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also may suggest a loss of faith in the conventional media's ability to cover
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this complex subject. Pete Theer, who runs MUFON's bulletin board, MUFONet,
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says computer networking may render traditional news outlets obsolete.
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"TV, radio, and newspaper coverage is critical, no doubt about it,"
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Theer said. "But their coverage tends to be superficial, and there's
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often a significant time-delay involved. The appeal of PCs is that the
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information you can get is virtually instantaneous.
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"Somebody in Scotland, for instance, uploads an article about a local
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sighting wave there, and you can download it virtually the next day in the
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States. That's information American wire services probably wouldn't carry,
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anyway."
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In 1991, Ed Komarek of Thomasville, Ga., co-founded Operation Right To
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Know. Since then, he and several hundred activists have picketed the White
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House in an effort to force the government to open its UFO files, and provoke
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media scrutiny of the issue. In 1994 ORTK's pickets marched outside the
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Pentagon, as well as the offices of Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and Sen. Barbara
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Boxer, D-Calif.
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"It's going to lake the kind of media coverage we're seeing in the O.J.
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Simpson case to do the job, where you follow every minute detail back to its
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original source," Komarek said. "This is a political problem. But the
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politicians are going to be the last ones on board. Only the mass media has
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that power to break it open."
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Science and UFOs
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But 1994 indicated the phenomenon may involve another problem, as well.
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Pulitzer Prize winning Harvard psychiatrist John Mack put his professional
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neck on the line with Abduction: Human Encounters With Aliens.
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From the subjective and densely complicated depths of hypnotic regression,
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Mack plumbed the minds of "experiencers," patients who claim to have been
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pirated aboard UFOs and prodded like lab rats by aliens. He took their
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stories at face value, and interpreted them as a constructive entree into
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meta-physics.
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Blasted by critics for a susceptibility to "false memory syndrome,"
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Mack's work nevertheless does have a sympathetic audience.
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In 1992, 150 mental health professionals from across the world attended a
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closed-door symposium at Massachusetts Institute of Technology to discuss the
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emergence of the alien-abduction syndrome.
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Findings from that conference are scheduled to be made public this
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year, according to Richard Boylan.
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Boylan, a clinical psychologist in Sacramento, Calif., recently rounded
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the non-profit and non-funded Academy of Clinical Close Encounter Therapists.
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The new network counts 60 members, and ACCET's first seminars are scheduled
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for the western United States this year.
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In May, Boylan says ACCET will participate in a three-day, international
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conference in Washington D.C., titled "When Cosmic Cultures Meet." The idea,
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Boylan says, is to discuss principles of conduct between Earthlings and
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aliens when the UFO reality is acknowledged by the government.
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"Lest you think this is some snake-oil event, we've invited people like the
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Clintons, Billy Graham, the Dalai Lama," Boylan says. "And the whole thing is
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put together by the Human Potential Foundation, which is financed by
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Laurance Rockefeller."
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Millionaire and conservationist Rockefeller, according to Boylan, has
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attempted to get the Clinton administration to examine the UFO situation and
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lift the security veil.
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"If you thought 1994 was a busy year," Boylan says, "wait 'til '95.-
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You ain't seen nothing yet."
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--- END OF FILE ---
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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