199 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
199 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
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[From the Daily Record, Morristown, NJ -- Sunday, Nov. 20, 1988. The
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Hudson Valley UFO -- a.k.a. "Big Bertha" -- is reputed not to be confined
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to New York's Hudson Valley, thus the interest in Western New Jersey and
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Pennsylvania, where very similar sightings have occurred around the
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Delaware River and the Picatinny Arsenal. This article says more about the
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local interest in N.J. than it does about the in-depth reporting and
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editing skills of the A.P., unfortunately. Also, the tone is rather arch.
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Any comments from Mssrs. Imbrogno, Gersten, Conti, Toscano, et al?
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-- Submitted by Clark Matthews.]
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UFO Watchers Scan Rural Skies ... and Wait.
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By David Bauder
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A.P.
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PINE BUSH, N.Y. -- Clouds quickly fill the night sky, obscuring a nearly
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full moon. It's not a good night to find Whatever's Out There.
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Still, a half-dozen people who've parked their cars on the shoulder of a
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country in New York's Hudson Valley crane their necks to scan the sky.
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This is supposedly a prime area for spotting UFO activity, but the only
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things visible on the cool autumn evening are airplanes banking into nearby
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airports.
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Peter Gersten waits suspiciously. The silver-bearded lawyer believes 99
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percent of supposed UFO sightings are easily explainable, despite the
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vanity license plates on his Porsche that read UFOSREAL. He's devoted
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hundreds of hours to wresting UFO documents from the government in court.
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Most UFO watchers are more patient than the federal government. The U.S.
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Air Force canceled its surveillance program, Project Blue Book, on Dec. 17,
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1969, almost five months after the Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon.
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Dr. Edward U. Condon of the University of Colorado recommended that the
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program come to an end after years of unconvincing research. But UFO
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searchers persist. Victoria Lacas waits expectantly. She's mad because
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most people abducted by aliens are unwilling victims, and she'd be more
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than happy to submit herself to experiments.
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Linda Doern waits calmly. Linda and her husband, Peter, both real estate
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appraisers, admit to being fascinated by psychic and other unexplained
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phenomena. An evening in Pine Bush, she jokes, "beats watching
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television."
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Ellen Crystall waits excitedly. The self-described UFO photographer is the
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guardian of the field, where she claims to have seen aliens and dozens of
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unexplained lights. She's driven to this field from her New Jersey home
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hundreds of times since 1981 in the hope of making contact again.
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"You missed it, Ellen," Gersten tells Crystall when her car pulls up a
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half-hour later than expected. "The mother ship was here. There used to
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be several more of us waiting."
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Crystall dismissed the joke and checks the sky. It doesn't bode well. The
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aliens, whom she suspects are building an underground base in the Hudson
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Valley, don't seem to like clouds or rain, she says.
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Whatever the reason, strange sightings seem commonplace in the Hudson
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Valley. Hundreds of people -- not just those who go out looking for them
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-- have seen things in the sky that can't be explained, says Philip
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Imbrogno, author of "Night Siege: The Hudson Valley UFO Sightings."
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These sightings caused a sensation in 1983 and 1984 in this area of New
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York City suburbs and farmland, stretching into western Connecticut.
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Reports have been less frequent since then, but still steady, Imbrogno
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says.
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Most, if not all, can be easily explained, says Jeff Lehman, spokesman for
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the nearby Stewart International Airport. He says a group of pilots, whose
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identities are not known, enjoy fooling UFO fanatics by flying in close
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formation many evenings. It's not illegal, but it's annoying, he says.
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"I don't see scaring people with aircraft as a game," he says.
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Crystall believes. She says she saw something unusual at the cornfield off
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Searsville Road, 20 miles from Middletown, soon after she was first taken
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there by a magazine writer.
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Gazing over a distant treeline while alone at the field one night, she
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spotted what appeared to be a craft drifting slowly to the ground. After
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seeing something flutter, almost like a moth, she shined a spotlight into a
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wooded area. She says she saw a 3-1/2-foot-tall creature with a beige body
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and huge yellow eyes staring back at her.
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"This thing had a worried look on its face and it totally threw me off,"
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Crystall says. "I was panic-stricken. I could not utter a sound."
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The blonde music student claims to have taken 800 photographs of UFOs. She
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says she holds no grudges against people who don't share her beliefs but
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confides, "I try to avoid them."
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At a restaurant 20 minutes from Searsville Road, Crystall's friends passed
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the time waiting for dusk to turn to darkness. Ignoring quizzical looks
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from a waitress, they discussed landmarks in UFO history with the sort of
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insider's lingo that renders the conversation meaningless to anyone else.
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Gersten, who has set up a hotline telephone number for UFO fanatics to keep
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up on the gossip, says he enjoys the mystery and glamour of UFOs.
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"It seems like we're prisoners on this planet and we've lost the ability to
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explore," says Gersten, who fixes companions with a penetrating stare.
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Most people accept that UFOs exist, he says, "because we simply can't be
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the only people in the universe."
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But he dismisses most reports of unexplained lights in the Hudson Valley.
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Most sightings are probably conventional airplanes, he says, adding that he
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has offered a reward for the mysterious group of pilots to come forward and
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identify themselves.
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Gersten belongs to the "government conspiracy" camp of UFO followers,
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believing that secret military technology is being tested in the skies.
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"Imagine a civilization 10,000 years more advanced than us," says the New
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York City lawyer. "Do you think they'd come here in spaceships?"
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Yes, opines Lacas, because they want to investigate the inhabitants of
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Earth. The legal assistant and flower-child holdover is fascinated by the
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current UFO furor over abductions, during which people are supposedly
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"beamed up" by aliens for a quick examination.
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For the Doerns, all aspects of the paranormal are fascinating. There's a
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lot more going on in the world than meets the naked eye, Linda says, but
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she understands why most people look at UFOs and psychic phenomena with
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abundant skepticism.
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"There are a lot of strange people involved in it," she says. "I think it
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discredits it for a lot of people. It turns a lot of people off. I think
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you have to look beyond them and not let it deter you."
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With the airport and a unit of the Air National Guard nearby, Crawford
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police are used to getting calls about strange things in the sky. Police
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have never seen any hard evidence of UFOs, but they don't always have an
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easy explanation for what people insist they see, McCann says [sic -- I
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assume a local cop -- sloppy editing, I'd say -- C.M.]
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