249 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
249 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
From ~The Unexplained~ #11.
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Orbis Publishing, Great Britain.
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THE FISHERMAN'S TALE
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The account of a close encounter that follows is one of the
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classics of UFO literature - and deservedly so, if the story
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told by the witnesses is true. But is it? The case is typical
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of many UFO reports: there were few witnesses, the bulk of the
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information coming from one man, as the second witness lost
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conciousness at the beginning of the incident. In such
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circumstances, even when sophisticated techniques, such as lie
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detector tests, are used, only the personal integrity of the
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witnesses can substantiate their story.
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The six-month period from October 1973 to March 1974 was a
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remarkable one for UFO sightings, particularly in the United
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States, north-west Europe, Italy and Spain. One of the most
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outstanding reports in the USA came from Pascagoula, county town
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of Jackson County, in the state of Mississippi. This town, with
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a population of just under 30,000 at the time, is situated at
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the south [mouth?] of the Pascagoula River on the coast of the
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Gulf of Mexico, about 100 miles (160 kilometres) to the east of
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New Orleans.
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There were two witnesses, both of whom worked locally at the
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Walker Shipyard: Charles E. Hickson aged 45, a foreman, and
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Calvin R. Parker Jr, 18, who alleged that, on 11 October 1973,
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they experienced a close encounter with a UFO and its
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occupants, and subsequent abduction, while fishing from the
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pier of the Shaupeter shipyard on the Pascagoula River.
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It was about 9 p.m. when Hickson turned to get fresh bait.
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He says it was then that he heard a 'zipping' noise. Looking
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up, he saw an elongated, oval, bluish-grey craft, which in a
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later interview he was to refer to as 'a spacecraft'. It had
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very bright, flashing, 'blue-looking' lights. This object was
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hovering some 2 feet (60 centimetres) off the ground; and when
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the next move came, the witness was a trifle puzzled, for he
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said: 'it seemed to open up, but really there wasn't a door
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there at all ... and three creatures came FLOATING OUT towards
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us. I was so scared, I couldn't believe it was happening'.
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The creatures were said to be pale, 'ghost-like', and about
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5 feet (1.5 metres) tall. Their skin seemed to be wrinkled, and
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was a greyish colour, while in place of hands they had
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'crab-like claws' or pincers. According to the witness's first
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report, these entities may have had slits for eyes, but he did
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not see them. They did have two small cone-shaped ears and a
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small pointed nose, with a hole below in the place of a mouth.
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They approached the two flabbergasted fishermen and floated
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just off the ground without moving their legs. A buzzing noise
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was heard from one of them and , said Hickson, 'they were on
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us before we knew it'. The older man was paralysed with fear,
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and Parker passed out when, apparently, he was touched by one
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of the creatures.
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Meanwhile, two of the entities lifted Hickson from the
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ground, and they glided motionless into the craft. Hickson
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claims he had lost all sensation of feeling and weight. He was
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taken into a very brighly lit room which, however, had no
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visible light fixtures. His friend was led into another room by
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the third entity. Hickson says he was placed in a reclining
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position and suspended in such a way that he did not touch any
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part of the craft. His limbs were completely paralysed; only
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his eyes were free to move. An instrument that looked like a
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big eye floated freely backards and forwards about 9 inches (25
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centimetres) above his body, and the creatures turned him so
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that all parts of his body came under the instrument's
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scrutiny. After some time, Hickson was guided back outside the
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craft and was 'floated', together with Parker, back to his
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position on the pier, landing upright on his feet. He says he
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was so weak-kneed that he fell over.
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Calvin Parker was unconscious throughout the incident, so
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all the evidence comes from Charlie Hickson. In his first
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interview, he said the UFO was about 10 feet (3 metres) wide,
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and something like 8 feet (2.5 metres) high. When it left, he
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said, it disappeared from sight in less than a second. The
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occupants were like robots; they 'acted like they had a
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specific thing to do, and they did it. They didn't try to
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communicate with us... I know now that they didn't intend to
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hurt us physically, but I feared they were going to take us
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away. I would like to emphasise that they didn't mean us any
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harm'.
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That statement was made in an interview with the Mississippi
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Press a week after the incident. On the day of the encounter,
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Hickson and Parker had called at the paper's offices, and found
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them closed. They then went to the sheriff's office, at 11
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p.m., to make a report. Richard W. Heiden gave details of what
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took place in a report to Flying Saucer Review. Sheriff Fred
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Diamond and Captain Glen Ryder interrogated the witnesses,
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doing everything they could to break the stories, but to no
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avail. Ryder commented: 'If they were lying to me, they should
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be in Hollywood'. The interviews were taped. Then the two
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officers left the witnesses alone and unaware that the recorder
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was still running. They spoke agitatedly about their
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experience, and Calvin Parker was so emotionally overcome that
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he started praying when Hickson left the room. The sheriff was
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convinced the two fishermen were telling the truth.
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Next morning - Friday 12 October - detective Tom Huntley
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from the sheriff's office drove Hickson and Parker to Keesler
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Air Force Base at Biloxi, Mississippi, where they were checked
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for radiation. There was no evidence of contamination. While
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there, they gave details of their experience to the head of
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intelligence at the base, who 'acted as though he'd heard it
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all before!' [I find this statement very interesting, as
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similar comments pop up time after time in UFO sightings that
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are reported to Air Force personnel. MW.]
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On Sunday, 14 October, the witnesses were interviewed by Dr
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J. Allen Hynek of Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois,
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former civil scientific consultant on UFO reports to the US Air
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Force, and Dr James Harder of the University of California,
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Berkeley. Dr Harder hypnotised the men individually, regressing
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them to the time of the experience. They each relived the
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terror of the occasion to such an extent that Dr Harder said:
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'The experience they underwent was indeed a real one. A very
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strong feeling of terror is practically impossible to fake
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under hypnosis'. Dr Hynek was more reserved: 'There is no
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question in my mind that these men have had a very terrifying
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experience'.
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On 30 October, Hickson - but not Parker who was apparently
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suffering from a nervous breakdown - underwent a polygraph
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examination (lie detector test) at the Pendleton Detective
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Agency in New Orleans. It was reported that the polygraph
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operator, Scott Glasgow, was forced to admit after 2-1/2 hours
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of exhaustive tests that Hickson was telling the truth.
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If this is true, it was a very strange remark for a
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polygraph operator to make. Polygraph tests are not sufficient
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to establish that a subject is lying; and any polygraph
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operator would have been well aware of this. In his book UFOs
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Explained, Philip J. Klass claims that his own investigations
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have shown that Scott Glasgow was not, in fact, qualified as a
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polygraph operator. So it seems that, in spite of the newspaper
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publicity given to the fact that Hickson's story stood up to
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the lie detector test, it must remain inconclusive.
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Hickson's experiences brought him considerable publicity; he
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appeared on television shows and even wrote a book. But
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unfortunately, his story often changed in the telling.
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Originally, for instance, he claimed that the UFO was some 10
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feet (3 metres) long; but in subsequent interviews, he said it
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was 20 or 30 feet (7 or 10 metres) long - quite a difference.
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Hickson's descriptions of the alien creatures also varied on
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different occasions. In his original account, Hickson claimed
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they had two small, cone-like ears, possibly slits where the
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eyes should have been, and a small sharp nose with a hole below
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it. Later, again on a television show, he said there were no
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eyes and that the hole below the nose was a slit. And more than
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a month after the incident, he disclosed for the first time
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that the light inside the spacecraft had been so bright that he
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had suffered severe eye injury, which had persisted for about
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three days.
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These discrepancies, of course, tend to cast doubt upon the
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entire story - although they do not disprove it. But there are
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reports that possibly corroborate the evidence. Although no one
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but Hickson and Parker saw the UFO - despite the fact that the
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incident happened close to Highway 90, a busy road - many
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owners of television sets in the Pascagoula area reported
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interference.
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On the same day, 11 October, 450 miles (700 kilometres) away
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near Hartwell, Georgia, a former Methodist minister was
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driving along when he saw a UFO land on the road in front of
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him. He also saw silver-suited, white-haired occupants.
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On the same night, too, Police Chief Greenshaw of Falkville,
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Alabama, was telephoned by a woman who claimed that a
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'spaceship' had landed in a field near her house. He raced to
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the location, armed with a Polaroid camera. There was nothing
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at the alleged site, but Greenshaw said he was confronted by a
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silver-suited creature on a side road. he took four Polaroid
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shots - which indeed show a silvery creature, obligingly
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turning to face the camera. The entity bolted, and Greenshaw
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gave chase in his patrol car, but failed to catch up with it -
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an inconclusive end to intriguing series of events.
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****End****
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Here's the entry on the same case taken from 'The UFO
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Encyclopedia', compiled and edited by John Spencer;
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PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI
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October of 1973 saw an extraordinary wave of UFO sightings
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across America but none so incredible as that of the abduction
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of shipyard workers Charles Hickson and Calvin Parker.
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It was seven o'clock in the evening of 12 October [Hmmm..]
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when the pair were fishing from a pier at the Shaupeter
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shipyard. Suddenly they realised that there was something
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behind them - a machine making a buzzing noise. They saw an
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oval-shaped object with a blue light on it just behind them.
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The witnesses watched as a hatchway opened in the object and
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three bizarre entities floated out.
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As Hickson described it: 'They didn't have clothes. But they
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had feet shape ... it was more or less a round like thing on a
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leg, if you'd call it a leg ... I was scared to death. And me
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with the spinning reel out there - it's all I had. I couldn't,
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well, I was so scared, well, you can't imagine. Calvin done
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went hysterical on me.'
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The entities were described as ghostlike and pale with
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wrinkled skin, and conical projections where nose and ears
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would normally be.
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Using crab-like pincers they apparently floated Hickson into
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the UFO. Parker had fainted. (Though there is some suggestion
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that in fact he, too, was conscious when they abducted him, his
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hypnotic recall is unclear on the point.) Inside the craft
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Hickson could not move though he believes he remained
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conscious. Hickson does not clearly remember leaving the craft
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but eventually found himself on the dock with Parker who was
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looking very agitated.
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The UFO is described as something around eight feet tall and
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oblong, with an opening in one end and a blue light outside.
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Inside it was bright but with no obvious source of lighting.
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While inside the object, Hickson was examined by a 'roving eye'
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type of machine.
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I spoke to Hickson in July 1990 and he confirmed that there
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had been many other strange occurrences to himself and his
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family in the years since and that he was assisting
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investigators with research to help make sense of the data.
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In 1987 he stated: 'I was offered all kinds of money to let
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them do a movie. I declined. I am still declining. Making money
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is not what this experience is all about.'
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Witness credibility is very important in such cases; when I
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met and spoke to Hickson and his son in 1990, I was instantly
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impressed by their obvious sincerity and honesty.
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****End****
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It is interesting to note that Hynek doesn't include this
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incident in his book - 'The UFO Experience - A Scientific
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Inquiry', choosing instead - and rightly so - to include cases
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with a higher 'credibility rating'. (meaning more witnesses)
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M.
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