206 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
206 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
From "The Unexplained" #2.
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Orbis Publishing, Great Britain.
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WHO ARE THE HUMANOIDS
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MANY PEOPLE CLAIM TO HAVE MET THE OCCUPANTS OF UFOs; BUT
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ACCOUNTS OF HUMANOIDS' BEHAVIOUR AND APPEARANCE SEEM STRANGELY
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INCONSISTENT
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The sighting of nine unusual flying craft in Washington
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State, USA, by American airman Kenneth Arnold in June 1947,
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marked the advent of modern publicity for the "flying saucer"
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or UFO phenomenon. The frequently reported ultra-high speeds
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and breath-taking manoeuvrability of the objects inevitably led
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to speculation by observers, newsmen and the public alike that
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what was being witnessed were intrusions into our airspace by
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extra-terrestrial visitors - beings from outer space. And, as
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the behaviour of these objects seemed to indicate superior
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technology and its fluent control, the big question was: control
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by whom, or by what?
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The question was not quickly resolved, however, for although
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the phenomenon was so persistent that the US Air Force set up
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an investigatory unit (Project Blue Book), officialdom did not
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appear to want to know the answer. By 1952, many accounts of
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sightings and even landings had been filed with the Project;
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but in his book 'The Report on UFOs', Blue Book's commanding
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officer, Captain Edward Ruppelt, stated he had been plagued by
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reports of landings and that his team had conscientiously
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ignored them.
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There are, however, always those whose sense of wonder
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overcomes official intransigence. Groups of doggedly inquisitive
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civilian researchers drifted together and, the limits of their
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slender resources, they gathered and recorded information from
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all around the world. Among them were people like Aime Michel
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and Jaques Vallee from France (Vallee subsequently lived and
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worked in the USA); Coral and Jim Lorenzen and their Aerial
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Phenomena Research Organisation (APRO) in Arizona; Len
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Stringfield in Ohio; Major Donald Keyhoe's National
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Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) in
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Washington DC (who, like Ruppelt, were at first none too happy
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about the many landing reports) and, in Britain, the supporters
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of the 'Flying Saucer Review'.
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ALIEN PHENOMENON
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From the impressive body of evidence collected by these
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veterans, and others, it is quite obvious now that the
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occupants of UFOs constitute a phenomenon in their own right.
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Indeed, the shapes, sizes, appearance and behaviour of these
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'pilots', as reported by their alleged observers, are often
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quite extraordinary. Out of the thousands of reported
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sightings, no coherent picture emerges of their nature and
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intentions, however, and their actions seldom seem to be
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related to any kind of organised surveillance of our planet.
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Sometimes, sightings of these aliens are even reported without
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the apparent presence of a UFO.
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From 1947 to 1952, while the reality of UFOs and their
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occupants was often the subject of heated debate, allegedly
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man-like creatures had already been observed either close to,
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or actually in, UFOs in widely different parts of the world.
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BRAZILLIAN LANDING
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At Bauru, in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, on 23 July
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1947, for instance, - less than a month after Kenneth Arnold's
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aerial encounter near Mount Rainier - a survey worker named
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Jose Higgins, and several of his fellow workers, saw a large
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metallic disc come to earth and settle down on curved legs.
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Higgins stood his ground while his his colleagues fled, and
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he soon found himself face to face with three 7-foot (2.1
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metres) tall beings, all wearing transparent overalls with
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metal boxes on their backs. One entity pointed a tube at him
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and moved as though to apprehend him. But Higgins dodged the
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creature and observed that it was shy of following him into the
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sunlight.
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The creatures had large bald heads, big round eyes, no
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eyebrows or beards and long legs. They leapt and gambolled,
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picking up and tossing huge boulders about. They also made
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holes in the ground, perhaps trying to indicate what could have
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been the positions of planets around the sun, and pointing
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particularly to the seventh hole from the centre. (Could that
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seventh 'planet' signify Uranus?) The creatures then re-entered
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their craft, which took off with a whistling noise. Higgins
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subsequent account appeared in two Brazillian newspapers.
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Three weeks later, far away in north-eastern Italy, a
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Professor Johannis was on a mountain walk on 14 August 1947,
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near Villa Santina, Carni, in the province of Friuli, when he
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suddenly saw a red metallic disc in a rocky cleft and emerged
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from trees to look at it. He then noticed that two dwarf-like
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creatures were following him, moving with tiny strides, hands
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perfectly motionless at their sides, and heads still. As they
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came nearer, Johannis' strength failed him: he seemed
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paralysed.
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The little beings - less than 3 feet (1 metre) tall - wore
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translucent blue coveralls, with red collars and belts. The
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witness could detect no hair, but he described their facial
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skin colour as 'earthy green'. He also noted straight noses,
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slits for mouths that opened and closed like fishes' mouths,
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and large round, protruding eyes.
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Johannis says he shouted to them on an impulse and waved his
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alpine pick, whereupon one dwarf raised a hand to his belt, the
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centre of which apparently emitted a puff of smoke. The pick
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flew out of Johannis' hand, and he fell flat on his back. One
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entity then retrieved the pick, and the pair retreated to the
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disc, which soon shot up, hovered briefly over the
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panic-stricken professor, and then suddenly seemed to shrink
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and vanish.
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CRASH LANDING
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On 19 August 1949, in Death Valley, California, two
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prospectors saw the apparent crash-landing of a disc. Two small
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beings emerged and were chased by the prospectors until the
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aliens were lost among sand dunes. But when the two men
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returned their site, the disc-shaped object had gone.
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Argentine rancher Wilfredo Arevalo saw one 'aluminium' disc
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land while another hovered over it on 18 March 1950. The object
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that landed was surrounded by a greenish-blue vapour, and in
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its centre was a transparent cabin in which Arevalo saw 'four
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tall, well-shaped men dressed in Cellophane-like clothing'.
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They shone a beam of light at the rancher, the disc glowed a
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brighter blue, flames shot from the base, and it rose from the
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ground. The two objects then disappeared swiftly towards the
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Chilean border.
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Such reports seemed to promise interesting meterial for
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future investigation. but did not appear to indicate a serious
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threat of alien ('take me to your leader') invasion. There was,
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too, an official reluctance even to consider landing reports,
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which were said to be flooding in, due possibly to a fear of
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being swamped with crazy stories of 'little green men', which
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might well have become ready targets for ridicule in the media.
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(Serious researchers eventually coined the term 'humanoids')
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Back in 1953, however, something happened that shocked most
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serious-minded investigators, for it was in that year that a
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certain George Adamski broke in on the UFO scene with a book
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co-authored with Desmond Leslie - 'Flying Saucers Have Landed'.
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In this controversial title, Adamski claimed to have conversed
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with a being from a flying saucer and to have taken
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photographs of the craft. The book rapidly became a bestseller
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and was a boon to those early serious researchers - although
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they would never admit it - in that it brought to thousands of
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casual readers an interest in ufology.
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George Adamski (1891 - 1965) was an amateur astronomer who
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operated Newtonian reflector telescopes from his home at
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Palomar Gardens, California. he developed an obsessive interest
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in flying saucer reports, frequently claimed to have seen the
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objects and to have photographed them telescopically - as on 5
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March 1951, when he captured on film a giant cigar-shaped
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object surrounded by emerging scout craft, and on 1 May 1952,
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when he took a picture of another giant cigar-shaped 'mother
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ship'. Then, on 20 November 1952, with a small party of
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friends, Adamski was driven out to a place just off the road to
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Parker, in Arizona. The purpose of the trip was to look for,
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and then possibly to photograph, UFOs.
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VENUSIAN VISITOR
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A 6-inch (15-centimetre) protable telescope was set up at a
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convenient place and Adamski settled down to wait, while his
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companions retreated to watch from a distance. Before long, he
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said, he was rewarded with the sight of an object landing among
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the hills before him, and he photographed it at long range
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before it disappeared.
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A 'person' then appeared and approached him. The stranger
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was about 5 feet 6 inches (1.7 metres) tall, wore ski-suit type
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clothing and had long hair down to his shoulders. There was an
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aura of friendliness about him, and Adamski said that they were
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able to communicate telepathically about many things, the
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visitor specifically indicating that he came from Venus.
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The stranger's 'scout craft' then turned up and, refusing
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Adamski's request for a ride, the 'Venusian' departed, taking
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one of Adamski's film plate-holders with him. The ufonaut left
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footprints in the sand, and a member of the party produced
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plaster of Paris to make casts of the imprints.
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On 13 December 1952, the Venusian returned to Earth,
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bringing back the plate-holder, and it was then, so Adamski
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claims, that he took close-up pictures of the craft.
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In his second book, 'Inside the Space Ships', Adamski stated
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that he finally made that trip - round the Moon - and that a
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space companion had pointed out the rivers on the unseen far
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side.
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All of this seems to indicate that Adamski was not telling
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the truth, or perhaps that he had been deliberately misled by
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entities that had a vested interest in spreading a little
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confusion on Earth. Then again, perhaps the story Adamski told
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was real enough to him.
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****End****
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