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    Excellere Ezine 99Casa Juillet .

    Excellere Ezine 99Casa Juillet . Chile.15:02 16-05-2011

    In English .

    Content of the Ezine:1. The 1948 UFO wave and the 16 aliens ..................... by Doctor Farthom Climbor

    2. List of Ufologists................................................Nick Decker3. Enlaces . Links................ por Seat Allday

    4. The Vault..... by Doctor Farthom Climbor.5. Message to the wind...... by Seat Allday

    6. Z. Sitchin and the Anunnaki......... by Liebe Gundlich7. Acronym context of use.............by Nick Decker

    8. Whale evolution.........................Creacionista Charles.

    ..........................

    1. The 1948 UFO wave and the 16 aliens ..................... by Doctor Farthom Climbor.

    On 25 March 1948, an Unidentified Flying Object was detected and picked up on their scopes by three separate and

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    strategically locatedRADAR units in the southwestern part of the Unites States. It seems that [the beam from one of the radars] had some

    kind of effect on the centralcontrol system of the flying object, for immediately it seemed to go out of control. The following is an in-depth

    overview of the crash andsubsequent recovery of a UFO and sixteen humanoid occupants near Aztec, New Mexico.

    On 25 March 1948, an Unidentified Flying Object was detected and picked up on their scopes by three separate and

    strategically located

    RADAR units in the southwestern part of the Unites States. One of the radars was a very high-powered experimentalinstallation situated high on

    a mountain top in the four comers area (an area where Utah, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado inset). It seems thatthe beam emanated from

    his unit had some kind of effect on the central control system of the flying object, for immediately it seemed to go outof control. It fluttered and

    wobbled frcm side to side, and appeared to be taking a trajectory towards the ground.

    Contact with the object was attempted by radio, with no response. Immediately the Air Defense Command (ADC)was notified and local military

    units were activated. Through previous experience with this sort of bogy image, the director of the high-powered

    radar site wired a specialmessage to General George C. Marshall, Secretary of State, telling him that an unidentified flying object was about tocrash somewhere in the

    four comers area. Marshall immediately called an impromptu meeting with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the NationalSecurity Council, and the

    President. They were connected up to a direct voice-to-voice communication with that top-secret radar station.

    Marshall ordered ADC and their associated military units to stay on standby status; but not to take action unlessspecifically told to do so by

    himself. Hs then contacted the MJ-12 group, later to become known as "The Committee of 12" and/or "The SpecialGroup" (see chapter II for

    details). tfe then placed the special unit of Army Counterintel-ligence, the Interplanetary Phenomenon Unit (IPU) ofthe Scientific and TechnicalBranch, on Red-Alert. This unit was established shortly after the Rosewell and Magdalena debris residues were

    collected and discovered to beof strange material of unknown origin. The IPU operated out of Camp Hale, Colorado, with the unigue purpose of

    collecting and deliveringcrashed and/or disabled Flying Saucers to designated secret points-

    By means of triangulation, based upon information frcm the three separate radar units, the proposed area of impactwas calculated to be in the

    vicinity of Aztec, New Mexico. This information was irrtnediately radioed to General Marshall, who in turn relayed it

    to the IPU Comnan-der atCamp Hale. A scout team was immediately dispatched by helicopter from Camp Bale to the Aztec area.

    Within a few hours, the IPU Scout Team sighted the object on top of a rocky plateau in a very rugged area about 12

    miles northeast of Aztec. Theobject appeared to be circular in shape, dented on top, and roughly 100 feet in diameter. The Scout Commander

    radioed back to IPUHeadquarters at Camp Hale, "We have a Flying Saucer on the ground about 12 miles northeast of Aztec." Ha gave

    the exact map coordinates.The IPU Commander relayed the message to General Marshall.

    At that instant all ccrnmunication was cut off with the radar station facilities, and only remained open between IPUand Marshall. General Marshallhen ordered the Air Defense Command to "de-activate" (go off alert) and all local military units were told to go about

    their usual business, and

    the Radar Stations were, told that there had been a false alarm, and to go off standby. (See Exhibit 3)

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    Marshall then ordered the commander of IPU to organize a recovery team. This unit knew exactly what to do. Theyhad been practicing for

    something like this for almost a year. As this commando-type unit was heading south towards Aztec, Marshallcontacted Dr. Vannevar Bush,

    briefing him on the situation, He told Dr. Bush to organize an impromptu scientific team to accompany the IPU team

    to the crash-site.

    Dr. Vannevar Bush was the Director of The Research and Development Board (R&DB), the peace time version ofthe wartime Office of Scientific

    Research and Development, under whose leadership was developed the atonic bomb, RADAR, the proximity fuse,magnetic anti-submarime

    warfare, and many other such devices. Bush had the reputation of being both a creative scientist and an organizerwith creditable leadership

    abilities. His reputation was well known throughout the entire Scientific community; and he could easily persuade anyscientist, no matter who he

    was or what position he held, to drop what he was doing and join the cause at hand. That is exactly how he puttogether C6R&D during the

    wartime emergency situation.

    Bush organized a team including such names as Dr. John Von Neumann, the physicist-mathematician from Princetonwho established the basic

    fundamentals for our modern day hand held calculators and computers; Dr. J. Robert Cppenheimer, the individualistfree-thinking physicist who

    headed up the atomic bomb development project at los Alamos, New Mexico; Dr. Detlev Wulf Bronk, a physiologistand biophysicist of

    international repute, chairman of the National Research Council, member of the-Medical Advisory Board of theAtonic Energy Commission,

    member of the Scientific Advisory Committee of the Brookhaven National laboratory until 1946, Coordinator ofResearch at the Air Surgeon's

    Office (Army Air Fbrce), and Director of the Institute of tfeurology, among other things; Dr. Lloyd V. Berkner,Geophysicist and Electrical

    Engineer, a member of the staff of the Department of Terrestrial Mag-netism at the Cbmegie Institute of Washington,Executive Secretary of the

    Research and Development Board under Bush, ard Bead of the Department of Exploratory Geophysics of the UpperAtmosphere at the

    Carnegie Institute; Dr. Carl August Beiland, geophysicist and magnetic sciences expert, Bead of the GeophysicsDepartment of the Colorado

    School of Mines; Dr. Horace Buele Van Valkenburgh, inorganic chemist associated with the University of Colorado,in Boulder; and Dr. Jerome

    C. Hunsakeer, Head of the Department of Aeronautical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MPT); and several othersimilar specialists.

    These scientists were called and were told by Bush to meet at Durango Airfield on the outskirts of Durango, Coloradoas quickly as possible. He

    informed them that this mission was extremely important and of the utmost secrecy. They would be briefed on thedetails upon arrival at the

    airfield. Bush, himself, was to be ccmpletely in charge of the scientific segment of the operation, reporting directly toGeneral Marshall.

    In the meantime the IPU Scout Team circled over the crash-landed disc, radioing back to the main recovery team adetailed route over a networkof unimproved dirt roads to the crash site from Durango Airfield, 35 miles to the north. The main recovery team was

    imformed that the disc was at

    least 100 feet in diameter, and they would need at least three heavy equipment hauling trucks and trailers, and plenty

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    of dismantling equipment

    The Scout Team also watched for any evidence of Civilian personnel in the immediate area. They moticed a ranchhouse within a half mile of the

    crash, informing the main team members of the exact location. This crash-site was a plateau overlooking a deep andsecluded canyon, marked

    on the survey maps as Hart Canyon. After some immediate checking the main team commander was informed that

    this crash-site was located

    on a cattle ranch cwned by a Mr. H.D. (still living); and that the ranch house was being occupied by him and hisfamily.

    The convoy of IPU team members reached the crash-site, virtually unnoticed by civilians living in the area, by takinggreat care to not arouse

    interest, and by taking maximum advantage of the ridges and ravines of the rugged plateaus along the Hart Canyonwalls.

    No military press agent was available to make the same mistake that Colonel Blanchard and lieutenant Haut made on8 July 1947, at Rosewell

    Army Air force Ease. The brass learned a lesson from that recovery operation. The Rjsewell recovery set a precident

    as how NOT to handle sucha situation, if the chance ever came again. Procedure was developed through the mistakes made during that incident.This entire operation was

    to be carried out under a shroud of utmost secrecy. No one was to knew about this recovery operation outside thehandful of men involved, and

    they were sworn to an ABOVE TOP-SECRET OATH, which carried dire consequences if broken!!

    General Marshall called the Secretary of Interior asking him to transfer the piece of property on which the crash-sitewas located, from the

    ownership of H.D. to Federal Status!! tfershall accomplished this in such a way as not to arouse suspicions concerningthe real reason, and

    carried it off successfully.

    Upon arrival at the crash-site, the IPU recovery team went into immediate action. Road blocks were set up atstrategic locations on all access

    roads within 2 miles of the crash scene (these road blocks could not be seen from the highway). Guards were postedat all roadblocks, with

    explicit orders to turn away all persons who did not have the proper pass-cards. The owner of the ranch and his familywere held incccnnunicado

    within their cwn ranch house. They were told that a top-secret military operation was in progress, and it was theirpatriotic duty to stay inside. They

    were also told in a very emphatic manner/ not to tell anyone what had occurred on their ranch. Needless to say, H.D.

    refuses to answer anyquestions petaining to this strange incident to this very day. He has been properly intimidated.

    The equipment hauling trucks were camouglaged to appear as oil drilling rigs, just in case anyone got past the

    roadblocks or happened to seethe activity from a distance. Every aspect of the operation was covered in its minutest detail in order to divert any

    possible notice away from it.

    The scientific team arrived on scene shortly after the IPU team got there. They went into immediate action, firstchecking for any possible

    radioactivity. The ground and the disc-shaped machine were both gone over very carefully with Geiger counters. The

    rancher's water supply andlivestock were placed under quarantine until they were proven fit for human consumption.

    Immediately after all the preliminaries were taken care of, the ship itself became the main object of attention, theredidn't seem to be any way of

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    access into the saucer's interior. The entire surface was smoothe and appeared to bo one continuous piece, with noseams, breaks in contour,

    fasteners, or any other evidence of joining of metals. There were what appeared to be "windows" or "ports" thatseemed to be metallic, but were

    actually transparent when seen up very close (kind of like our one way mirrors or the solarized glass that we nowhave).

    These scientists were completely stricken with awe as they examined the exterior of this amazing aeroform of

    unknown origen. Some just steedback to take in the entire scene, while others crawled under and around it feeling its texture and shape. Finally, to

    break the heavy silence, Bushtold the men to get to work, for this entire project must be over with as scon as possible, leaving not a trace of

    evidence behind.

    The first thing that had to be done was to gain entry into the interior of the craft. The ship was gone over verycarefully, but they could not find

    anything that remotely resembled any door or natch. Finally, one of the scientists, after closely looking through each"porthole", noticed what

    happened to be a double-pushbutton type (a knob-shaped protrusion with a button in the middle) affair on one of the

    cabin's walls. Efe motionedthe others over to look for themselves. Qie of the scientists picked up a hammer and beat the "porthole" "glass" out.Another scientist found a

    long pole which he then poked through the hole made in the "port", barely reaching the pushbutton affair. The buttonwas finally pushed, and to

    their surprise, a door opened, downward from the cabin's side, down through the disc's rim flange.

    Immediately, one by one, the scientists scrambled up the ramp, into the cabin chamber. There, slumped over theinstrument panel were two

    human-like beings, about four feet in height and charred to a deep chocolate brown color, through some mishapknown only to them.

    The instrument panel contained several push-buttons and control levers labeled in a heiroglyphic type symbol-formunknown to any of the

    scientists in the team. Cppenheimer, who knew Sanscrit, made a remark that the symbols did resemble Sanscrit tosome degree. Also on the

    instrument panel were blinking lights and more symbols lit up on small display screens (sort of like our modern digitalreadout on watches,

    calculators, etc. There was also a beeping sound emanating from something that remotely resembled our ncdem dayhand held portable

    transistor radios. These scientists were once again amazed by these technologically very advanced devices that noneof them had seen

    anyplace before.

    Examining the ship, they found another chamber within the cabin that must have been seme sort of sleeping quarters.There were retractable

    beds that pulled out of the walls. There also were 12 more charred bodies sprawled around on the floor, they carriedthese little bodies outside

    and layed them in even rows on the ground beside the craft.

    Immediately, Dr. Cetlev Malf Bronk began to examine the bodies with extreme care. These little creatures were eitherdwarfs piloting a very highly

    advanced aircraft from some country on this Earth, or they were aliens of extraterrestrial origin. His thoughts quickly

    went to preservation. Heasked Dr. Bush if they could obtain seme cryogenic equipment with which to preserve these bodies for furtherexamination and study. Bush's

    mind went to Dr. Paul A. Scherer, who worked with him very closely as the Director of the Transition Division ofCGR&D (Cffice of Scientific

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    Research and Development) during the war, and was now with Bush on the Board of Directors of the CarnegieInstitute in Washington, D.C.

    Scherer's specialty was cryogenics, and he had plenty of connections all over the U.S. concerning cryogenicequipment, materials and

    techniques.

    Dr. Bush immediately radioed Dr. Scherer, briefing him on the situation. Scherer told Bush to get some dry ice for

    temporary preservation of the

    bodies, while he made some quick contacts in the southwestern part of the country.

    While Bush was conferring vjith Scherer, another group of scientists and military personnel were examining the craftvery thoroughly for any way to

    disassemble it. They first tried cutting torches, without success. Ihe torches didn't even phase the metal, which had abrushed aluminum type

    appearance. Then they tried diamond drills and diamond cutting saws. One bit and blade after another dulled veryquickly. The material just could

    not be penetrated. Finally, one scientist, after a very thorough examination, found a place on the inside where therewas some sort of interlocking

    key device. When he pulled on the device, a seam opened up on the ship, at that particular location, from top to

    bottom. Be continued around theship and found several of these devices at equally spaced intervals. Here was the key to the disassembly problem theyhad been looking for.

    While the ship was being disassembled, Dr. Von Neumann and Dr. Bush became very interested in the control panel,they found that the panel

    had drawers that rolled out, but no wixeing was seen. These drawers seemed to be sections of the "electrical" circuitryfrcm which the controls

    received their power (kind of like the modern day electronic devices with integrated circuits). They were amazed athow this entire control panel,

    which no doubt operated on a computer type principle, could be compacted into such a small space. Dr. Von

    Neumann and Dr. Bush haddeveloped the first computers during the war, but those took entire rooms full of electronic equipment, wireing, etc.,to operate them. Each one of

    these pull-out "drawers" contained thousands of microscopic pull-out "chips". What kind of technology were theydealing with? Where did this

    ship come from? Many questions to answer.

    die scientist found what appeared to be a book composed of parchment-like pages having the texture of plastic. Itcontained more examples of

    the same "Sanscrit-like" symbols that labeled the instrument panels, and which shewed up on the tiny illuminateddisplay screens. I-fcfcody could

    read the script. The book was passed on to General George Marshall, who turned it over to this nations two topmostexperts in cryptology,William F. Friedman and Lambros C.P. Callihamos. A sample of this type of scriptform is presented here for your

    information.

    Once the saucer was disassembled, three big tracks were maneuvered into place and the pieces were carefully loadedup. Canvas tarps were

    snugly tied down over the loads and signs designating "EXPLOSIVES" were plastered all over each truck. Anyonewho happened to see the

    trucks on their way to Los Alamos would be easily deceived.

    After three full days of extensive activity, the convoy of three trucks and two automobiles left the crash scene bynight. Ihe route they took followeda network of dirt and gravel roads and some off road travel out the east end of Hart Canyon. This was found to be the

    least populated and most

    inconspicuous route towards Ids Alamos, which was to be a temporary storage site until an underground compound

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    could be constructed.Travelling was done late at night through least pop-ulated areas and over roads with least traffic or simply

    crosscountry when necessary.

    Immediately after the convoy of vehicles left the plateau-top crash scene, the clean up crew went into action. Theyburied all evidence of military

    activity there, such as trash, worn out tooling, bracing, disturbances on the ground, etc. A barbed wire fence was thenerected around the entire

    top of the crash-recovery site on the plateau, which new belonged to the Federal Government. Cne mistakeoverlooked was that seme of the

    bracing materials which were thought too big for the burial excavation at the time were left on top to be hauled away.Otherwise only some

    charred rocks and broken down cedar pine trees remained as evidence for some future field investigator to discover.

    The convoy reached a pre-determined secluded portion of the Ids Alamos atcmic testing area, after a week oflaborious travel over the primitive

    roads and country, moving mostly by the light of the MDon. Hare the saucer was unloaded piece by piece andreassembled for a very thorough

    and extensive examination. Ifere the saucer was stored for over a year, until it was moved to a more permanent site

    prepared for it and othersuch residue.

    A little over a year and a half after the recovery; actually it was about in November of 1949, Dr. Eric Efenry Wang, aconsultant to the Wright Air

    Development Center on Aerodynamic Matallurgical Design for the Structures Division, who was on the staff pf theUniversity of Cincinnatti (see

    Chapter IX), was called in on the project. Dr. Wang had a friend by the name of Nicholas Von Poppen, aphotographer, who had perfected the art

    of metallurgical close-up photography as it was applied in the aerospace sciences field.

    Von Poppen, an Estonian refugee of royal blood, who carried, the title of Baron, had fled Estonia by the "skin of histeeth" during the Soviet"annexation" of 1941. Efe enjoyed various scientific and technological interests, among which was photography. Ffe

    had perfected the art ofclose-up metallurgical photography for technical applications, using a combination of camera and microscope

    techniques. Be was in demandthroughout the aerospace industry.

    Dr. Wang called Von Poppen in on this project in order to get some better microphotographs to include in the finalreport of the recovery

    operation. But Dr. Wang didn't call Von Poppen direct; things had to be done according to the protocol of the

    security system. Two members ofthe intelligence agencies went to his home in Hollywood, California, telling him of the highly classified photographicjob that was expected of him.

    Both Von Poppen and the two Intelligence officers flew to a landing field within the Ids Alamos Complex. From

    there they boarded a bus withblacked-out windows, which then took them to a top-secret location within the Complex. Von Poppen was amazed

    at what he saw - a hugedisc-shaped object of a shiny brushed-aluminum finish, sitting on the ground with military brass, intelligence guards

    and officers, and scientificpersonnel all around it. It had an almost Circus-like atmosphere about it in the form of small and large tents, tables full

    of scientific instruments,

    and vehicles of all shapes and sizes scattered all around the area.

    Von Poppen was issued the finest and most advanced photographic equipment that money could buy. If he werelacking anything, all he had to

    do was ask for it; and a plane would fly in the very next day with the exact piece of equipment that he requisitioned.

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    Ife spent two days taking over200 photographs of the ship from all different angles and views, close-up and distant, and some of them literally

    within inches to show the textureof the metal, tfe also made microscopic photographs using his special technique. Efe was allowed to photograph every

    part of the craft, insideand out, except for one mechanism which seemed to be a central power supply.

    Von Poppen was enthralled by the highly advanced technology clearly indicated, "which," as he stated, "showed me

    that these people have longago passed the stage of technological development we find ourselves now in, and they were again tending toward the

    simplification of life, thuseliminating the complicated intricacies which tend to obscure the natural laws of being." Ifere, as Von Poppen did,

    one tends to philosophize onthe issues.

    Von Poppen went on to describe what he thought might be various components that made up the "cosmic spacemotor", as he put it. "First of all

    there were 15 little machines, beautifully welded to the floor, that appeared something like typewriters (possibly

    computers). Then there were

    heavy copper-like cables coiled around the outer walls of the chime (within the disc portion), and that mechanism Iwas forbidden to photograph,"Von Poppen said. Von Poppen described the ship as seme sort of computerized electro-magnetically driven flying

    saucer!! Many others whohave touched on this subject involving these flying objects1 mode of operation have provided a similar basic

    description.

    Von Poppen also described the little bodies which he was allowed to see and to photograph with the officialequipment, He states, "The largest,

    who seemed to be the Captain, was four feet nine inches tall and weighed about 35 pounds (very thin). The smallestand obviously (to Von

    Poppen) the youngest, was 23 inches tall and weighed about 22 pounds. They were white men, with very pale skin(where not discolored) as ifthey had come from a cold world with little air. Their faces were intellectual and refined in appearance. I have never

    seen anything like them here

    on Earth." Here in 1949, Von Poppen was describing what recent sources have been revealing to Len Stringfield,W.L. Moore, Larry Bryant, and

    others.

    Von Poppen should never have revealed this experience to Dr. George C. Tyler on that rainy day in November 1949.That was the beginning of

    the end for both individuals. Both Von Poppen and Tyler were under close intelligence surveillance until both died

    under mysteriouscircumstances (Tyler first, on 13 Cctober 1954, and then Von Poppen on 13 March 1976). Both individual'sapartments were thoroughly

    ransacked by very unusual persons immediately after their deaths!!

    A telex was sent to Headquarters, Assistant Chief of Staff, G-2 {Army Intelligence) in Vfeshington D.C. from CampHale, Cblorado, describing

    the craft and the recovery operation. A copy was transmitted to Cbunterintelligence Special Headquarters at Kpe AirFbrce Ease, within the Fort

    Bragg Complex in North Carolina. Captain Virgil A. Postlethwait, with the Cbunterintelligence V-Oorps along withhis Air Fbrce Counterpart,

    Captain Donald A. Broadus (A-2) handled this TWX, which went as follows:

    "FLYING C8JECT CF UNKNOWN ORIGIN RECOVERED NEAR AZTEC, NEW MEXICO. .CRAFTAPPROXIMATELY 100 FEET DIAMETER,

    30 FEET HEIGHT, CNE WINDOW PORT BLOWN, BODIES ON BOARD. ALL OCCUPANTS DEAD, 4

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    FEET HEIGHT, CVERSIZED HEADS.CRAFT HAS METALLIC SKIN, THIN AS NEVBPAPER, BUT TOO TCUGH TO PENETRATE BY

    CCNVENTIONAL TOOLS. PRIVATEPROPERTY WAS PURCHASED FROM LOCALS IN ORDER TO FACILITATE TRANSPORTING THE

    CRAFT TO BASE." Captain Postlethwaitstated that this TWX left a lasting impression on his mind. He never saw the craft, but he did handle this evidence of

    its existence.

    THE BODIES

    As stated before, Dr. Vannevar Bush asked Dr. Paul A Scherer to have some preservation containers made for thebodies. Dr. Scherer acted

    very promptly. Hs had the chambers ready within a few weeks. One of manufacturing companies that contributed themajor part to these special

    chambers was Air-Research Corporation. They supplied the liquidr-nitrogen pump, circulatory system, andrefrigeration units, without having the

    slightest idea what for!

    Dr. Scherer was the director of Research and Development for the Air-Fesearch Corporation from 1940 until 1944,

    when he joined Dr. Bush atCER&D. ffe had everyone in that corporation very loyal to him, allowing him to have a very persuasive influence overthem.

    The containers, which resembled a cross between glass covered funeral caskets and deep-freeze units, were tailormade to suit the primary

    purpose - preserve these unique bodies for study. These containers operated on the principles of a cryogenic"deep-freeze" unit, utilizing liquid

    nitrogen to keep the temperature at extreme sub-zero cold levels. The special cases were prepared for the betterpreserved more intact bodies.

    Selected specimens were preserved in these units which had been made with transparent covers and were vented and

    exhausted in such a waythat it was possible to view the bodies without opening the special display case. Other specimens were prepared forordinary cryogenic storage

    in the wrappings and stored in cylinders for possible future need. In this way these very unusual and unique bodies ofunknown origin could be

    preserved indefinitely.

    Some of the bodies were not frozen, but autopsied and parted out for more detailed study, from which exhaustivereports were made. Doctor

    Detlev Waif Bronk, as stated, was initially in charge of the physical examination of these bodies frcm this craft. Hshad the responsibility of trying

    o give a full report covering every phase of this strange life-form's physiological, anatomical and biophysical make-up.He organized anddirected a team made up of biophysicists, histochemists, patholegists, etc. The results were accumulated and

    organized into a summary report,

    a copy of which was included, in part, in the later "Project Sign Report Nd. 13". [This may be a confusion withunfounded reports of a "Project

    Grudge Report #13", mentioned in the appendices to this work. Vfe must remember that the current name of the AirForce UFO project at the

    time mentioned here was then "Project Sign".]

    The alien body report described them briefly as follows:

    "The bodies were all small, averaging 42 inches in length. The facial features strongly resembled mongoloid orientalsin appearance, with large

    heads, large "slant" eyes, small noses and mouths. The average weight was around 40 pounds. They had very thinnecks. Their torso was very

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    small and thin. They had long and slender arms reaching the knees, with hands containing long and slender fingerswith webbing between them.

    There didn't seem to be any reproductive organs. (One scientist suggested that these "aliens" might be manufacturedor constructed)

    Instead of blood, as we know it, they had a colorless liquid prevalent in the body, with no red cells. This liquid had a

    kind of ozone smell about it.They had no digestive system or GI tract, no alimentary or intestinal canal and no rectal point.

    As the one scientist stated, "I got the inipression that these alien beings were "constructed". These humanoid beings

    may have been clonesproduced through some very highly advanced genetic technology!"

    Even now our own genetic technology has just scratched the surface compared to the technological wonders found inthat flying machine near

    Aztec, New Mexico. Dr. Bronk and his team were fasc inated with what they had found. A whole new world openedup to them. But the questions

    remained; who were the advanced "alien" scientists who had built this flying object, manufactured these life-forms, if

    they did, and where do they

    come from?

    Notes: A few observations with respect to the material offered in this first chapter may be in order here.

    From the foregoing it may be seen that the parts and residue from the Aztec UFO crash were first taken to LosAlamos Complex for a number of

    very good reasons. That was home ground to Drs. Bush and also Oppenheimer who headed this recovery team andeffort, and also because

    they already had the necessary security systems in place, a secure facility to store the recovered material in and towork in, and all the

    technicians and special equipment they would need to carry out their more extensive examinations. A further plan,

    early on, was to construct aproper, suitably secured, adequately equipped underground facility to house the recovered remains and material for thelong-term project

    visualized. After all, this was not the first recovery, and they did not know how many more there would be.

    The Navy Auxiliary Airfield in the AEC area (described in Appendix 4) was the ideal site for the proposedunderground facility to be needed for

    this storage and research, because it too was already secured, has housing, hospital and support facilities, including itsown water and power

    supply, and a railroad spur right into the installation. It also was familiar ground to Bush and Oppenheimer, then incharge of this project, who

    were also supervising other projects in this AEC area.

    This also explains why Dr. Vannevar Bush was the American Scientist who frequently visited Alice Springs and PineGap in Australia, a location

    of one of the later de-centralized UFO research sites when the U.S. and some of its partners began trying to constructsuch a craft.

    We can see also how Mr. Leo Gebauer, who was associated with Doctor Carl A. Heiland in some magnetics research,came into his knowledge

    of the Aztec crash and some of the details. Gebauer was the unintended "leak" outside of the group of scientistssworn to secrecy, who really had

    all Gebauer said they had and much, much more. Gebauer picked his information up from Dr. Heiland, staff andassociates who were working onmagnetics aspects of the problem at hand, hence the heavy emphasis on a magnetics aspect to the phenomenon.

    Gebauer carried the

    information out as "scuttlebutt", with a little of the residue he was able to get hold of. Dr. Heiland was now

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    "confiding" in Gebauer, not SilasNewton, and probably thought little of a "leak" until Scully published the story. Then there was a lot of back-tracking

    to repair the damage done.Heiland was eventually separated from the main research project because of this, and still, because of security

    corn-par tmentizat ion, did notknow all the details you are reading here. Dr. Heiland, we must emphasize, was not guilty of any betrayal of our

    secrets, and he never violated his

    security oaths.

    Gebauer, the real "leak" has passed-on as well as Silas Newton and Frank Scully, the ones who published the story.The real secrets are still

    safe and the research work goes on at a number of decentralized sites even today.

    The Dr. "G" identification used by Newton and Scully as their source was actually a cnver for all of Gebauer'sconnections, through which they got

    the little information they had.

    As a further note, we may observe that somebody who contributed to the making of the movie Hangar 18 seems to

    have known something about

    the written script form found an this ship, because certain of the symbols shown in that movie are very similar to thereal ones found in the craft.Also some of the display screens on the movie version of the crashed UFO are remarkably similar to some of those

    seen aboard the crashedcraft.

    2. List of Ufologists............................................. by Nick Decker

    List of UfologistsThe following is a worldwide list of Ufologists (UFO researchers).

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    Asia

    IndonesiaJ. Salatun, pioneer of UFO research in Indonesia.Europe

    FinlandRauni-Leena Luukanen-Kilde, (1939 - ), has spoken openly about the hiding of UFO evidence. Rauni-LeenaLuukanen-KildeFrom

    Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, searchRauni-Leena Luukanen-Kilde

    Born 15 November 1939 (1939-11-15) (age 71)Vrtsil, FinlandOccupation AuthorRauni-Leena Luukanen-Kilde (born Vrtsil, 15 November 1939) is a Finnish physician who has been an author andecturer on parapsychology,

    ufology and mind control since 1982. She now lives in Norway.

    Luukanen-Kilde had to flee with her family in infancy during the Second World War and was raised in Helsinki.[1]

    She studied medicine at the

    universities of Oulu and Turku, graduating in 1967. She was at one point the only medical practitioner at the hospitaln Pelkosenniemi,performing dental and veterinary work as well.[2] In March 1975, she became a provincial medical officer in

    Rovaniemi, Lapland;[1] she becamechief medical officer for Lapland.[2][3]

    In 1982, as Rauni-Leena Luukonen, she published Kuolemaa ei ole (There Is No Death).[4] She has been interested inhe paranormal since she

    was a teenager, but her interest in UFOs may date to a 1985 car accident which led to her retirement. She has sincebeen a featured speaker atUFO conferences, helped organize the first international conference on extraterrestrials in Finland[5] and authored

    books about UFOs, alienabductions, mind control and conspiracy theories. Luukanen-Kilde has claimed to have been "rescued" from danger byextraterrestrials, and to

    have esoteric skills and knowledge as a result of her relationship with them. She maintains that there is a secretexchange program betweenhumans and aliens that is being deliberately suppressed by "powerful Western governments", particularly the US.[1]Luukanen-Kilde also claimshere are secret military and intelligence agencies practising mind control technology on the world population using

    cell phones andsupercomputers and that a plot to kill most of the Earth's population using the swine flu vaccine is being carried outby the WHO, Henry Kissinger,

    and the Bilderberg Group.[6] Her article on cybernetic implants as a means of control is widely circulated.[7] Sheappears in the 1999 filmRevelations: The End Times, Volume 2.

    Luukonen-Kilde has lived in Norway since 1992;[8] she married a Norwegian diplomat in 1987.[1]

    Juhan af Grann, (1948 - ), is a Finnish film director and producer known of his UFO documentaries.FranceMarcel Griaule ( 18981956 )

    ItalyMonsignor Corrado Balducci, (19232008), is a Roman Catholic theologian of the Vatican Curia, a close friendof the pope, long timeexorcist for the Archdiocese of Rome.RomniaIon HobanaDoru Davidovici

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    SpainJuan Jos Ben tez is a Spanish journalist and Ufologist, who became famous in Spanish-speaking countries andn Brazil, so far without

    an English translation. He wrote Caballo de Troya.Iker Jimnez Elizari (January 10, 1973) is a journalist born in the Basque city of Vitoria. He's licensed in Sciences ofhe Information by the

    Complutensian University of Madrid and the European University of Madrid. His wife, Carmen Porter, is also aournalist and investigator on

    paranormal activity; both work together in the show Cuarto Milenio, in the TV network Cuatro, and its radio version

    Milenio 3 in Cadena SER,about paranormal activity, Ufology and other mysteries.[5][6]

    SwitzerlandErich von Dniken, (1935 - ), is a controversial Swiss author best known for his books which examinepossible evidence forextraterrestrial influences on early human culture.[7]United KingdomGeorgina Bruni, (19472008) Investigative journalist, Rendlesham UFO incident researcher.W. Raymond Drake, (19131989), published nine books on the ancient astronaut theme. W. Raymond DrakeFromWikipedia, the freeencyclopediaJump to: navigation, search

    W. Raymond Drake

    Born 1913Died 1989 (aged 7576)Occupation Ufologist

    W. Raymond Drake (19131989), a British disciple of Charles Fort, published nine books on the ancient astronautheme, the first four years

    earlier than Erich Von Dniken's bestseller Chariots of the Gods. Many writers on flying saucers in the mid-1950s,such as Desmond Leslie,George Hunt Williamson, Daniel Fry and Morris K. Jessup also developed ancient astronaut themes, including"proofs" that many ancientcivilizations were colonies of extraterrestrials who eventually lost their technological secrets and becamendistinguishable from humans, and/or

    hat many other ancient civilizations were the result of human contact with aliens.

    Drake's books include Gods or Spacemen? (1964), Gods and Spacemen in the Ancient East (1968), Gods and

    Spacemen in the Ancient West(1974), Gods and Spacemen in the Ancient Past (1975), Gods and Spacemen Throughout History (1975), Gods andSpacemen in Greece andRome (1976), Gods and Spacemen in Ancient Israel (1976), Messengers from the Stars (1977) and CosmicContinents (1986). Like his majornfluence, Charles Fort, Drake spent many years digging through huge archives of material, looking in his case for

    supposed anomalies thatcould support his scenarios of space aliens impacting human history. As Drake himself said, "I aspired to collect as

    many facts as possible fromancient literature to chronicle for the past what Charles Fort has so brilliantly done for the present century." A slightlyearlier British authorsomewhat comparable to Drake was Harold T. Wilkins.

    Paperback editions of the first few of Drake's books were available in the US during the 1970s and became modestbest-sellers in that format,often being displayed on news-stands next to the works of von Dniken.

    Bruce Barrymore Halpenny, military historian and author of Ghost Stations, which have UFO cases.George King, (19191997) regarded himself as "Primary Terrestrial Mental Channel" for great and evolvedextraterrestrial Intelligences.[8]

    Elizabeth Klarer, (19101984), South African contactee and UFO photographer.[9]

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    Nick Pope, Former head of the UFO desk, Ministry of Defence; author of Operation Thunder Child.[10]Jenny Randles, (1951 - ), is a British author and former director of investigations with the British UFO ResearchAssociation (BUFORA).[11]Nick Redfern, writer of UFO cases and author of Cosmic CrashesBrinsley Le Poer Trench, (19111995), a Ufologist and a firm believer in flying saucers, and in particular, the HollowEarth theory.[12]

    Nigel Watson author of Portraits of Alien Encounters and regular contributor to UFO publicationsNorth America

    CanadaDan Aykroyd, (1952-), Ufologist, creator of Ghostbusters movie, the most famous UFO was a documentary

    called Dan AykroydUnplugged on UFOs.Paul Hellyer, (1923-) a Canadian politician. Officially inaugurated a UFO landing pad in St. Paul, Alberta; the first inhe world.[13]

    Wilbert Brockhouse Smith ( 19101962 ) was a Canadian electrical engineer, radio engineer, ufologist andcontactee.[14]Jason LaFace (1974-), Ufologist, Owner of Omerta Records, has studied computers, ancient history, ancient worldreligions and now researches

    UFO's and strange phenomenons in Canada.

    MexicoJaime Maussan, (1953 - ), is a Mexican journalist and ufologist.[15]United StatesGeorge Adamski ( April 17, 1891 - April 23, 1965 ) - Controversial UFO contactee of the 1950s, wroteseveral bestselling books

    about his encounters with friendly "space brothers" from other planets.[16]Carlos Miguel Allende ( birth name: Carl Merh Allen ) ( May 31, 1925 - March 5, 1994 )Orfeo Angelucci (aka Orville Angelucci) ( June 25, 1912 - July 24, 1993 ) - One of the most unusual of the mid-1950sUFO contactees.[17] OrfeoMatthew Angelucci (Orville Angelucci) (June 25, 1912 July 24, 1993) was one of the most unusual of themid-1950s contactees who claimed tobe in contact with extraterrestrials.[1]

    Angelucci claimed that he suffered from poor health and extreme nervousness for most of his life, and eventuallymoved for health-relatedreasons from Trenton, New Jersey to California in 1948, where he got a job on the assembly line at the Lockheed

    aircraft plant in Burbank.Fellow contactee George Van Tassel was also employed for a time at this plant.

    In his books, Angelucci says he was particularly terrified of thunderstorms and was attracted to California because heheard thunderstorms werevery rare there. Angelucci wrote the first version of his pseudoscientific account of matter, energy and life, The Natureof Infinite Entities in 1952,based on "research" done earlier in Trenton, including the launching of a giant cluster of weather balloons.

    Beginning in the summer of 1952, according to Angelucci in his book The Secret of the Saucers (1955), he began toencounter flying saucersand their friendly human-appearing pilots during his drives home from the aircraft plant. These superhuman space

    people were handsome, oftenransparent and highly spiritual. Eventually Angelucci was taken in an unmanned saucer to earth orbit, where he saw a

    giant "mother ship" driftpast a porthole. He also described having experienced a "missing time" episode and eventually remembered living fora week in the body of"space brother" Neptune, in a more evolved society on "the largest asteroid," the remains of a destroyed planet, whilehis usual body wandered

    around the aircraft plant in a daze.

    In his later book, The Son of the Sun, Angelucci related an account that he claimed had been told him by a medicaldoctor calling himself Adam,

    whose experiences were similar to Angelucci's. He also published several pamphlets on space-brotherly themes, such

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    as "Million YearProphecy" (1959), "Concrete Evidence" (1959) and "Again We Exist" (1960).

    Thomas E. Bearden ( Dec. 17, 1930 - ) - Retired Lieutenant Colonel ( U.S. Army ) who is active in the study of scalar

    electromagnetics,

    advanced electrodynamics, unified field theory, and overunity systems[18]Art Bell ( birth name: Arthur William Bell, III ) ( June 17, 1945 - ) - U. S. radio broadcaster and author, known

    primarily as the founder and longtimehost of the paranormal-themed radio program Coast to Coast AM.[19] Art BellFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Paul Bennewitz ( Sept. 29, 1927 - June 23, 2003 ) - U. S. businessman who played a major role in shaping thedevelopment of UFO conspiracyheories since the 1980s.[20] From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search

    This article's factual accuracy is disputed. Please help to ensure that disputed facts are reliably sourced. See therelevant discussion on the talkpage. (March 2010)

    Paul Bennewitz (died 2005) was an American businessman who played a major role in shaping the development ofUFO Conspiracies since the1980s.[1] After uncovering secret U.S. Air Force intelligence projects, Bennewitz interpreted the evidence as proof ofextraterrestrial life on Earthand a cover up of unidentified flying object evidence, and became the subject of an extended disinformation campaignby Air Force intelligenceofficers. Much of the disinformation submitted to Bennewitz has since filtered into broader conspiracy theory.[citation

    needed]Bennewitz had stopped his schooling when he had nearly received a Ph.D. in physics. Instead, he focused his energiesowards Thunder

    Scientific Corporation, a company which manufactured high-altitude testing equipment mostly for use at Kirtland Air

    Force Base.

    For many years, Bennewitz had been interested in UFOs, and had conducted his own investigations into the subject.He became convinced thathe so-called Cattle mutilations were due to aliens after he met Myrna Hansen, who was hypnotized by University of

    Wyoming psychologist R. LeoSprinkle. Under hypnosis, Hansen offered a detailed account of being kidnapped by aliens and taken to an

    underground base in what shehought was New Mexico. There, Hansen says, she saw many liquid-filled vats containing portions of cattle andhuman remains. (Bennewitz wouldater accuse Sprinkle of being a CIA agent, and have nothing more to do with him).[citation needed]

    Based on this and other evidence, Bennewitz claimed to have uncovered the fact that aliens were controlling humanshrough electromagnetic

    devices, and furthermore claimed that UFOs were regularly flying near Kirtland and the nearby Manzano NuclearWeapons Storage Facility andCoyote Canyon Test Area. He provided photos of an alleged UFO flying near Coyote Canyon at Kirtland Air ForceBase.[citation needed]

    After concluding that aliens were in fact active on Earth, Bennewitz detailed his assertions to the Aerial PhenomenaResearch Organization, whoregarded him as a deluded paranoid.[citation needed] He then wrote to Air Force Sergeant Richard C. Doty inOctober 1980 and reported his

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    various claims. Realising that Bennewitz had, as James Mosely writes, "grossly misinterpreted" the information fromsome "supposedly securecommunications systems," Kirtland AFB authorities sent Doty to investigate. [1]

    A few days after receiving his letter, Doty and Air Force scientist Jerry Miller interviewed Bennewitz at his home. Heshowed them his elaborateequipment setup designed to photograph, film and otherwise monitor the supposed UFOs.

    One of the curiosities of the case is that Bennewitz seems to have photographed some genuinely unexplained aerialphenomena: Clark cites an

    Air Force memorandum released via the Freedom of Information Act, which reports, "after analyzing the datacollected by Dr. BENNEWITZ, Mr.MILLER related the evidence clearly shows some type of unidentified aerial objects were caught on film; however, noconclusion could be madewhether these objects pose a threat to the Manzano/Coyote Canyon areas." (Clark 1998, 146)

    Bennewitz was invited to Kirtland AFB on November 10, 1980, to present his findings to a small conference of AirForce officers and scientists.

    One week later, writes Clark, Air Force officials told Bennewitz they would not be investigating his evidence any

    further.[citation needed]

    For most of the 1980s, Doty and/or ufologist William Moore would relate mostly spurious information to Bennewitz

    as part of a disinformationcampaign designed to distract him from secret military projects at Kirtland. The result was that, over the years,Bennewitz grew ever moreparanoid, and his health deteriorated so badly that he had a nervous breakdown.[citation needed]

    Bennewitz's stories were later absorbed into the conspiracy investigated by Danny Casolaro; the alleged Dulce Basewould later find a life of itsown in conspiracy lore. Bennewitz provided aerial photographs of what he claimed was an alien aircraft that crashed

    near the alleged DulceBase which fueled the lore. An alien craft was never found at the suspected crash site. Investigators did find evidencehat something did crash in

    he area but they were never able to confirm the story by Bennewitz claiming that it was an alien craft. The photosaken by Bennewitz have notes

    attached to them written by Bennewitz claiming that certain objects and alien beings are in the photos. These photosare difficult to view and theydo not provide enough detail to verify or deny the story. This has fueled the lore of the alleged Dulce Base.

    Disinformation claimsThe Mutual UFO Network held their 1989 annual convention in Las Vegas, Nevada, on July 1,1989.

    Ufologist William Moore was scheduled as the main speaker, and he generated controversy even before hisappearance: He refused to submithis paper for review prior to the convention, and also announced that he would not answer any follow-up questions as

    was common practice.Unlike most of the convention's attendees, Moore did not stay at the same hotel that was hosting the convention.

    When he spoke, Moore said that he and others had been part of an elaborate, long-term disinformation campaignbegun primarily to discreditPaul Bennewitz: "My role in the affair ... was primarily that of a freelancer providing information on Paul's(Bennewitz) current thinking and

    activities." (Clark, 1998, 163) Air Force Sergeant Richard C. Doty was also involved, said Moore, though Moorehought Doty was "simply apawn in a much larger game, as was I." (Clark, 1998, 163) One of their goals, Moore said, was to disseminatenformation and watch as it was

    passed from person to person in order to study how information was circulated in UFO enthusiast subcultures. Moore

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    further reported that "heplayed a part in having Bennewitz involuntarily committed to the New Mexico State Mental Hospital on threeseparate occasions."[2]

    Moore said that he "was in a rather unique position" in the disinformation campaign: "judging by the positions of thepeople I knew to be directlynvolved in it, [the disinformation] definitely had something to do with national security. There was no way I was

    going to allow the opportunity to

    pass me by ... I would play the disinformation game, get my hands dirty just often enough to lead those directing theprocess into believing I was

    doing what they wanted me to do, and all the while continuing to burrow my way into the matrix so as to learn asmuch as possible about who wasdirecting it and why."(Clark, 1998, 164)

    Once he finished the speech, Moore immediately left the hotel. He left Las Vegas that same night.

    Moore's claims sent shock waves through the small, tight-knit UFO community, which remains divided as to thereliability of his assertions.

    References

    Greg Bishop - Author of Project Beta and co-founder of the magazine The Excluded Middle. Also, hosts a weekly

    radio program, RadioMisterioso, and co-writes the blog UFO Mystic with Nick Redfern.[21]Jerome Clark ( Nov. 27, 1946 - ) - UFO historian, author of the authoritative UFO Encyclopedia[22] JeromeClarkFrom Wikipedia, the freeencyclopediaJump to: navigation, searchFor the US Congressman Jerome Bayard Clark, see J. Bayard Clark.Jerome Clark (born November 27, 1946) is an American researcher and writer, specializing in unidentified flying

    objects and other anomalousphenomena; he is also a songwriter of some note.

    Clark is one of the most prominent UFO historians and researchers active today. Although Clark's works havesometimes generated spiriteddebate, he is widely regarded as one of the most reputable writers in the field, and he has earned the praise of manyskeptics. Clark's workshave been cited in multiple articles in the debunking-oriented Skeptical Inquirer.[1] Despite the fact that mostcontributors to the British periodicalMagonia disagree with Clark's endorsement of the extraterrestrial hypothesis, they have nonetheless consulted hisbooks for their articles, and

    have described his works as "invaluable"[2] and described him as one of "ufology's finest"[3] and as"highly-respected."[4] The skepticalRRGroup[5] describes Clark as a rare "Bona fide UFO researcher." In his Saucer Smear, longtime ufologist James W.Moseley writes that Clark

    "is acknowledged ... as the UFO Field's leading historian.".[6]

    Clark is also a prominently featured talking head on made-for-television UFO documentaries, most notably the 2005prime-time U.S. televisionspecial Peter Jennings Reporting: UFOs Seeing Is Believing, discussing the early history of the U.S. Military'sUFO investigations (see alsoProject Sign and Project Grudge.) In addition to the Peter Jennings special, Clark has also appeared on episodes of

    NBC's Unsolved Mysterieselevision series and on the syndicated television series Sightings. In 1997 he was prominently featured on the A&ENetwork's documentary"Where Are All the UFOs?", which examined the history of the UFO phenomenon.

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    BiographyClark was born in Canby, Minnesota. He attended South Dakota State University and Moorhead StateUniversity in Moorhead,Minnesota, studying history and political science. He became interested in the UFO phenomenon in the 1960s, whilehe was still in his teenyears. He has served as a writer, reporter, and editor for a number of magazines which cover UFOs and other

    paranormal subjects. Clark is aboard member of the Center for UFO Studies, (CUFOS), one of the few civilian UFO research groups with credible

    scientific support.

    After living for many years in the Chicago area, where CUFOS is headquartered, Clark returned to his hometown ofCanby, Minnesota, where hecurrently lives and works. His wife is an editor for Omnigraphics, a publishing company.

    Embracing then rejecting paranormal explanationsIn the 1970s, Clark embraced some paranormal ideas to explainUFOs and other unusualphenomena. He was influenced by the "ultraterrestrials" theory of John Keel, and the so-called interdimensionalhypothesis (which had been

    championed by Dr. Jacques Valle). Clark even co-wrote a book on the subject with longtime friend Loren Coleman.

    Eventually, however, Clarkcame to reject the paranormal explanations: he thought them unscientific and judged many of their promoters prone toreaching unsupported

    conclusions and making grand pronouncements without evidence.

    Clark wrote his "position statement" for The Encyclopedia of UFOs (Story, 1980, p. 75, emphasis in original):

    In the past two or three years I have become an agnostic about all UFO theories. I have discovered, as one who is noess guilty of it than anyone

    else, that one can "prove" just about anything by focusing on certain data and ignoring others. I happen to sympathizewith the impulse to theorize

    about UFOs; after all, theories are how we make sense of things. But we ought not under any circumstances to takeour theories too seriously,and we must never give them greater primacy than we give the observed facts In my darker moments I have come

    o suspect that UFOs mayrepresent something so far beyond us that our attempts to understand them may be comparable to an ant's efforts tocomprehend the principlesof nuclear physics.

    In the years since, Clark has championed a sort of open-ended agnosticism, choosing to focus on phenomena that arepurported to have somedegree of documentable supportwhether physical evidence, or reliably reported events. He has argued very

    cautiously in favor of theextraterrestrial hypothesis, not as proven fact but as a working hypothesis, choosing to focus on the UFO cases heregards as the mostpromising: multiple witness and/or UFO cases which are said to leave physical evidence.

    In 1983, Clark described himself as a "sceptical Fortean", writing, "Charles Fort was sceptical of establishmenthumbuggery and so are those ofus who follow in his footsteps. That hasn't changed and I hope it never will. But now it's time that we train asceptical eye on our own humbuggeryas well."[7]

    Professional accomplishmentsFrom 1976 to 1989 he was the editor of Fate magazine.

    Since 1985 Clark has served as the editor of the International UFO Reporter, the official journal of CUFOS. He hasalso been the editor of the

    Journal of UFO Studies, the only peer reviewed publication in Ufology.

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    The UFO EncyclopediaPerhaps Clark's greatest accomplishment in the field of UFO studies came in the 1990s withhe publication of his

    massive, award-winning UFO Encyclopedia.

    The UFO Encyclopedia was first published by respected academic and reference books specialists Omnigraphics as ahree-volume hardcover

    set in the 1990s. In 1997, Visible Ink published an abridged, mass-market trade paperback version under the title The

    UFO Book, and anupdated two-volume hardcover edition of the Encyclopedia was published in 1998. Clark wrote all the hundreds of

    entries, with a few exceptions,ncluding an essay by biochemist Michael D. Swords about the extraterrestrial hypothesis, one article by folklorist

    Thomas E. Bullard about theabduction phenomenon, several articles by ufologist Michael Chalker about some Australian UFO incidents, andcontributions by UFOresearcher Brad Sparks.

    Backed by detailed research and extensive bibliographies, Clark's encyclopedia is widely regarded by most UFO

    researchers, and even many

    skeptics, as one of the best-researched and most credible publications on the often-controversial subject of UFOs; theAssociation of Collegeand Research Libraries described the book as "the definitive work on the [UFO] subject for many years to come"[8]

    while Library Journal noteshat one of the judges for Clark's Benjamin Franklin Award declared the UFO Book (a condensed, mass-market

    version of the UFOEncyclopedia) "an exhaustive, non-judgmental look at the history of unidentified flying objects ... the writing is topnotch and clear."[9] CriticDouglas Chapman praises the Encyclopedia as "a treasure for anyone interested in UFOs. The only people unlikely tobe pleased by it aredogmatics of any stripe, for multiple points of view are represented."[10] Psychologist Stuart Appelle praises

    "[Clark's] attempt to maintainobjectivity ... in no case is the reader given less than a clear statement of the facts and opinions at hand, and ampleopportunity to reach aconclusion on his or her own";[11] in the Skeptic Files, Chris A. Rutkowski wrote that despite "a definitely 'pro'

    [UFO] standpoint, [Clark] is wise tonclude reactions and explanations of major UFO cases by debunkers such as Philip Klass and Donald Menzel. In

    Clark's telling of the tales, hepoints out major boners and silly comments by debunkers AS WELL AS overboard proponents, although the formergroup won't be thrilled by theportrayals ... Otherwise, the UFO ENCYCLOPEDIA is an excellent reference work, and should be added to anyibrary of Fortean material.

    Readers new to the field should peruse the book to get a 'proper schooling' in the subject"[12] (in a follow-up,Rutkowski stressed "I want to makea special effort to emphasize that my review [of] Clark's UFO Encyclopedia was meant to be very positive, and notnegative as some had

    nterpreted)".[13]

    Songwriting and musicIn addition to his duties as a writer, researcher, and editor, Clark has also written songs whichhave been recorded orperformed by musicians such as Emmylou Harris, Mary Chapin Carpenter, and Tom T. Hall. He has oftencollaborated with Robin and LindaWilliams[14]

    Clark has also written numerous reviews of American folk music albums and CDs for Rambles magazine.[15]

    Awards and honorsAn abridged version of the UFO Encyclopedia, entitled The UFO Book, won the 1998 BenjaminFranklin Award in the

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    Science/Environment category from the Independent Book Publishers Association.

    Clark is also the 1992 recipient of the Isabel Davis Award (given by the Fund for UFO Research) for promotingrationality in the study of UFOs.He is an active participant in debates and discussions on the "UFO Updates" message boards and website.

    Books by Jerome ClarkEncyclopedia of Strange and Unexplained Physical Phenomena, 1993, Thomson Gale Press,

    ISBN 0-8103-8843-X

    The UFO Book: Encyclopedia of the Extraterrestrial, 1997, Visible Ink Press, ISBN 1-57859-029-9The UFO Encyclopedia: The Phenomenon From The Beginning (2-Volume Set), 1998, Omnigraphics Books, ISBN

    0-7808-0097-4Strange Skies: Pilot Encounters with UFOs, 2003, Citadel Books, ISBN 0-8065-2299-2Unexplained: Strange Sightings, Incredible Occurrences, and Puzzling Physical Phenomena, second edition, 2003,Visible Ink Press, ISBN0-7808-0715-4Unnatural Phenomena: A Guide to the Bizarre Wonders of North America, 2005, ABC-Clio Books, ISBN1-57607-430-7Hidden Realms, Lost Civilizations, and Beings from Other Worlds, 2010, Visible Ink Press, ISBN 1578591759

    Sources

    Edward Condon ( March 2, 1902 - March 26, 1974 )Philip J. Corso ( 19151998) - Army Intel officer, wrote highly-disputed book on Roswell UFO incident.[23]

    Robert Dean ( 1929 - ) - Ufologist, reportedly read a document called An Assessment ( 1964 ), a NATO report onUFOs prompted by an incidenton February 2, 1961 during which 50 UFOs allegedly appeared over Europe.[24]Glenn Dennis ( 1925 - ) - A founder of the International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, NewMexico, which opened in September1991. Dennis is a self-professed witness to the Roswell UFO incident ( 1947 ).[25] Glenn Dennis (born circa 1925) isa founder of theInternational UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, New Mexico which opened in September 1991 and

    self-professed witness to the1947 Roswell UFO incident.[1]

    BiographyDennis began working as a part time assistant in the Ballard Funeral Home in 1940 while still attendingRoswell High School. Aftergraduation, Dennis was excused from wartime military service because of poor hearing, and commenced anapprenticeship as an embalmer atBallard. He graduated from the San Francisco College of Mortuary Science on 22 December 1946 and was put incharge of Ballard's militarycontract, which included ambulance and mortuary services for the nearby Roswell Army Air Field (RAAF).[2]

    Dennis came to the attention of UFO researchers in 1989 when he called the hotline after an episode of UnsolvedMysteries featured the RoswellUFO incident. He was the first witness to place alien bodies at the Roswell base itself.

    Affidavit describing aliens at Roswell baseIn 1991, Dennis signed an affidavit[3] which reads in part:

    "In July 1947, I was a mortician, working for the Ballard Funeral Home in Roswell, which had a contract to providemortuary services for theRoswell Army Air Field. One afternoon, around 1:15 or 1:30, I received a call from the base mortuary officer whoasked what was the smallestsize hermetically sealed casket that we had in stock. He said, 'We need to know this in case something comes up in

    he future.' He asked howong it would take to get one, and I assured him I could get one for him the following day. He said he would call backf they needed one.

    "About 45 minutes to an hour later, he called back and asked me to describe the preparation for bodies that had been

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    ying out on the desert fora period of time. Before I could answer, he said he specifically wanted to know what effect the preparationprocedures would have on the body'schemical compounds, blood and tissues... I offered to come out to the base to assist with any problem he might have,but he reiterated that thenformation was for future use...

    "Approximately an hour or an hour and 15 minutes later, I got a call to transport a serviceman who had a laceration on

    his head and perhaps afractured nose. I gave him first aid and drove him out to the base. I got there around 5:00 PM.

    "Although I was a civilian, I usually had free access on the base because they knew me. I drove the ambulance aroundo the back of the basenfirmary and parked it next to another ambulance. The door was open and inside I saw some wreckage. There were

    several pieces whichooked like the bottom of a canoe, about three feet in length. It resembled stainless steel with a purple hue, as if it had

    been exposed to highemperature. There was some strange-looking writing on the material resembling Egyptian hieroglyphics. Also there

    were two MPs present.

    "I checked the airman in and went to the staff lounge to have a Coke. I intended to look for a nurse, a 2nd Lieutenant,who had been

    commissioned about three months earlier right out of college. She was 23 years of age at the time (I was 22). I sawher coming out of one of theexamining rooms with a cloth over her mouth. She said, 'My gosh, get out of here or you're going to be in a lot ofrouble.' She went into another

    door where a Captain stood. He asked me who I was and what I was doing here. I told him, and he instructed me tostay there. I said, 'It looks likeyou've got a crash; would you like me to get ready?' He told me to stay right there. Then two MPs came up and begano escort me out of the

    nfirmary. They said they had orders to follow me out to the funeral home.

    "We got about 10 or 15 feet when I heard a voice say, 'We're not through with that SOB. Bring him back.' There was

    another Captain, a redheadwith the meanest-looking eyes I had ever seen, who said, 'You did not see anything, there was no crash here, and ifyou say anything you couldget into a lot of trouble.' I said, 'Hey look mister, I'm a civilian and you can't do a damn thing to me.' He said, 'Yes wecan; somebody will bepicking your bones out of the sand.' There was a black Sergeant with a pad in his hand who said, 'He would makegood dog food for our dogs.'The Captain said, 'Get the SOB out.' The MPs followed me back to the funeral home.

    "The next day, I tried to call the nurse to see what was going on. About 11:00 AM, she called the funeral home andsaid, 'I need to talk to you.' Weagreed to meet at the officers club. She was very upset. She said, 'Before I talk to you, you have to give me a sacred

    oath that you will nevermention my name, because I could get into a lot of trouble.' I agreed.

    "She said she had gone to get supplies in a room where two doctors were performing a preliminarily autopsy. Thedoctors said they needed hero take notes during the procedure. She said she had never smelled anything so horrible in her life, and the sight washe most gruesome she had

    ever seen. She said, 'This was something no one has ever seen.' As she spoke, I was concerned that she might go intoshock.

    "She drew me a diagram of the bodies, including an arm with a hand that had only four fingers; the doctors noted that

    on the end of the fingers

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    were little pads resembling suction cups. She said the head was disproportionately large for the body; the eyes weredeeply set; the skulls wereflexible; the nose was concave with only two orifices; the mouth was a fine slit, and the doctors said there was heavycartilage instead of teeth.The ears were only small orifices with flaps. They had no hair, and the skin was blackperhaps due to exposure inhe sun. She gave me the

    drawings.

    "There were three bodies; two were very mangled and dismembered, as if destroyed by predators; one was fairlyntact. They were

    hree-and-a-half to four feet tall. She told me the doctors said: 'This isn't anything we've ever see before; there'snothing in the medical textbooksike this.' She said she and the doctors became ill. They had to turn off the air conditioning and were afraid the smell

    would go through thehospital. They had to move the operation to an airplane hangar.

    "I drove her back to the officers' barracks. The next day I called the hospital to see how she was, and they said shewasn't available. I tried to get

    her for several days, and finally got one of the nurses who said the Lieutenant had been transferred out with some

    other personnel. About 10 dayso two weeks later, I got a letter from her with an APO number. She indicated we could discuss the incident by lettern the future. I wrote back to

    her and about two weeks later the letter came back marked 'Return to SenderDECEASED.' Later, one of thenurses at the base said therumor was that she and five other nurses had been on a training mission and had been killed in a plane crash.

    "Sheriff George Wilcox and my father were very close friends. The Sheriff went to my folks' house the morning afterhe events at the base and

    said to my father, 'I don't know what kind of trouble Glenn's in, but you tell your son that he doesn't know anything

    and hasn't seen anything at the

    base.' He added, 'They want you and your wife's name, and they want your and your children's addresses.' My fathermmediately drove to thefuneral home and asked me what kind of trouble I was in. He related the conversation with Sheriff Wilcox, and so I

    old him about the events of theprevious day. He is the only person to whom I have told this story until recently.

    "I had filed away the sketches the nurse gave me that day. Recently, at the request of a researcher, I tried to locate mypersonal files at the funeralhome, but they had all been destroyed."

    Controversy over Dennis accountsDennis accounts featured prominently in Crash at Corona published in 1992 and

    The Truth About the UFOCrash at Roswell, published in 1994, as well other pro-UFO books, but serious doubts about his story were soonraised. For some, like KarlPflock and Kevin Randle (see below), these inconsistencies were great enough to discount Dennis credibility entirely.

    Researchers who investigated Dennis claims found a number of inconsistencies:

    The missing nurseWhen Dennis first came forward with his account in 1989, he supplied the name of the nurse whohe said witnessed the alienautopsies to four researchers: Stanton Friedman, Kevin Randle, Don Schmitt and Mark Wolf. The first threendividuals are well-known UFO

    researchers, the latter person a documentary film-maker. Dennis identified the nurse as Naomi Self.

    Researchers could find no record of this individual or anyone with a similar name who was at Roswell at the time inquestion, raising doubts as to

    her existence. Then, in November 1992, Dennis told Karl Pflock that the other researchers had her name wrong it

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    was Selff, not Self, and hermiddle name was Maria.

    Further doubts were raised when no plane crash which Self/Selff died in could be located. Dennis by mid-1993 wassaying that he surmised thathis may have been a cover story told to him to keep him from attempting to contact her. He also said that he

    supposed that instead of dying in a

    plane crash, she had joined a convent.

    Doubts that some had were countered when Friedman found someone who said he remembered Naomi Selff. David

    Wagnon, who was aechnician at the Roswell AAF hospital in 1947, signed an affidavit saying in part: I do remember an Army nurse

    named Naomi Self, who wasassigned to the base hospital.

    Exhaustive searches were done through military records and other sources, and one researcher even did genealogicalresearch in Minnesota,where Dennis claimed she was born. No individual with even a similar name was found. In late 1995, Dennis was

    confronted by researcher Victor

    Golubic who told him that as far as he could determine, Naomi Selff never seemed to have existed. He then toldGolubic that that name was nothis friend's real name at all. He refused to offer Golubic anything more than the first letter of the nurse's name.[4] (p.

    133) Around the same time, anew name was claimed for the nurse: Naomi Sipes.

    In 1997, the Air Force issued their "Case Closed" report which supplied their explanations for the claimed presence ofaliens at Roswell. In it,hey identified a nurse who seemed to match many of the details Dennis had supplied: Eileen Fanton. Since deceased,

    Fanton, likeSelf/Selff/Sipes, was a Lieutenant, a nurse at the Roswell hospital in July 1947, matched Dennis physical description,

    and was of Italian descentand schooled at Catholic institutions. Fanton was also the only one of five nurses stationed at the base at the timewho later served a tour of dutyn England, one of the details supplied by Dennis, and Fanton abruptly left the base on September 4, 1947 on account

    of a medical condition, adetail recalled by Wagnon who mentioned rumours of a D & C performed on her. The report suggests that if Dennisnquired about her

    whereabouts, the staff was simply protecting her privacy since he was not a family member. She retired in 1955 onaccount of a medicalcondition diagnosed in 1946.

    In 2008, News of the Force (NOTF) (newsoftheforce.org) in Tampa, Fla., began trying to locate the missing nurse,Naomi Marie Self. Threemilitary officers in the Pentagon searched for records of the nurse, and all said there was no record of her there. Onesaid there was no record of

    her in the archives of the military Women's Memorial at Arlington. However, a search of a military records site foundby NOTF showed two listingsfor Naomi Marie Self. One listed her as being in the U.S. Army Air Forces, having joined the service in 1939. Theother listed her as being amember of the U.S. Air Force, beginning in 1947. (The U.S. Army Air Force became the U.S. Air Force in September1947 - just two monthsafter the "Roswell Incident" occurred.) It is likely, therefore, that this nurse/officer transferred to the USAF when it

    was formed. The first entry (forhe USAAF) listed her as being about 87 years old (about the right age for having been at Roswell) and showed heriving somewhere in

    Alabama. The second (the USAF) listing, showed her age as 101 and listed her as living somewhere in Georgia.(Research of the last name,

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    Pflock checked newspaper files for June 1987 where sketches by artist Vincent DePaula depicted what "the alienswho crashed near Coronamight have looked like." These drawings, said Pflock, were "remarkably similar" to the Dennis-Henn reconstructionsof nurse Selff's drawings.Further research led Pflock to conclude that those 1987 images were likely created at the behest of Friedman whowould show these very

    mages to Dennis when they first met in 1989. (p. 136-7) It would appear two key Roswell witnesses [the otherbeing Frank Kaufmann] fed bogus

    nformation back to ufologists, one of whom indirectly put the idea in their heads in the first place, said Pflock.(138-9)

    Air Force report links Dennis accounts to later military incidentsIn 1997, the Air Force, in response to Congressionalnquiries, issued the

    second of two reports which they asserted accounted for the reports of aliens recovered at Roswell in 1947. Thereport, entitled The RoswellReport: Case Closed[6] had a section which specifically dealt with the Dennis claims. While identifying a possiblematch to the nurse Dennis hadsaid was a witness (see above), the report additionally linked descriptions of bodies and high security to several

    known and documented

    ncidents, albeit ones which occurred years after 1947. As evidence that the event Dennis described containedelements from much later realevents, the report cited the presence of a black sergeant paired with a white officer, a pairing it described as unlikely

    as the Army Air Force wasracially segregated in 1947, and Dennis' use of the term "airman," a term not employed until 1952.[6](p. 86)

    A June 26, 1956 aircraft accident supplied many of the elements of Dennis account, said the report. On that day, 11crew members were killedwhen a propeller blade punctured the planes fuel tank, creating an inferno. The charred and mangled remains of thecrew were taken to WalkerAir Force Base (the former Roswell base) and identification specialist George Schwader arrived from

    Wright-Patterson AFB. He said in annterview that he was frequently mistaken for a pathologist because of his working garb.

    The corpses had to be moved to a refrigerated part of the base, owing to the overpowering odor of the bodies. Threeof the victims wereautopsied by Dr. Alfred Blauw, a local physician, and the autopsies were performed at the Ballard Funeral Home,where Dennis was employed.

    A second incident accounts for the description of the "canoe-like" object Dennis said he saw in the back of a vehicle,and some of thehigh-handed treatment he received from officers at the base, including from a tall red-headed captain. A May 1959

    accident of a low-altitudeballoon, part of the Excelsior program, saw the three injured crewmen flown to Walker AFB. The mere fact of theaccident caused consternationfor the crewmen as the project was controversial and there was a very real prospect that word of the accident might

    ead to the programscancellation. The controversy surrounded the wisdom of parachuting attempts from balloons some 100,000 feet in theatmosphere. Accordingly,much secrecy surrounded the project, as can be corroborated by a 1961 book written by a participant, Captain JosephKittinger, The LongLonely Leap.[6](p. 109) Kittinger, redheaded and six foot one, likely was the red-headed captain Dennis referred towho Dennis claimed said

    You did not see anything. There was no crash here. You dont go into town making any rumors that you sawanything or that there was any crash.The report asserts that Dennis was in fact witnessing the arrival of the three injured crewman and was subsequentlywarned to be quiet, but so as

    o preserve the Excelsior program.[6](p. 110) Kittinger would go on to make those high-altitude leaps, one at 102,800

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    feet in 1960 still stands ashe all-time record.

    The three-man Excelsior crew had been escorted by ambulances, and descriptions by Dennis closely match whatwould have been present thatday. He reported what he thought was wreckage in the back of one ambulance which was kinda like the bottom of acanoe like stainless

    steel with a kind-of bluish-purplish tinge to it. This description, the report notes, accurately describes two steel

    panels painted Air Force blueon a converted ambulance for this mission.[6](p. 113) Other descriptions such as wreckage all over the floor looking

    ike broken glasscorresponds to the clear plastic polyethylene balloon recovered from the mission.

    The heightened state of security Dennis described sounds very much like the extra security which occurred upon thearrival of the Excelsior team.The very presence of the balloon crew, who had arrived unannounced, likely led many base personnel to believe theymay have posed a securityhreat or were a team from Strategic Air Command testing the nuclear-armed facilitys alertness. Either way, the

    base's personnel would have

    been far more vigilant that day, and this may account for the heavy-handedness reported by Dennis. The balloon crewhemselves were greetedby machine-gun-armed personnel upon their arrival.

    One of the reports mentioned an alien with an enlarged head, which could have been a mistaken identification of oneof the crews injurieswhereby his head swelled so much that his nose barely protruded. This crew member, Capt. Dan Fulgham, was flowno Wright-Patterson AFB

    on a C-131 hospital aircraft. He was led away by Kittinger, having to be escorted as the swelling blocked his vision.Fulghams wife was thereand asked Kittinger where her husband was. I told her, Maam, this is your husband and I presented her this blob

    hat I was leading down theramp. And she let out a scream you could hear a mile away.

    The report was not generous towards Dennis. While not mentioning him by name, the report said: "[D]escriptions,

    particularly those believed tobe thinly veiled references to deceased or injured Air Force members, are difficult to view as nave misunderstandings.Any attempt tomisrepresent or capitalize on tragic incidents in which Air Force members died or were injured in the service of theircountry significantly alterswhat would otherwise be viewed as simple misinterpretations or honest mistakes.

    While many UFO researchers dismissed the report's conclusions as implausible, particularly because of the later datesof the incidents it links toRoswell, researcher Karl Pflock was convinced. As I read [the report] I found myself in amazed agreement thathis had to be the source of

    Dennis recollections, said Pflock. Pflock recalled showing the Dennis-Henn sketches to an aircraft accidentnvestigator who immediately

    responded, before Plock mentioned Roswell, What aircraft crash is this from?

    Corroboration for Dennis' storyDennis' account is repeated in Witness to Roswell: Unmasking the 60-Year Cover-Upby Thomas Carey andDonald Schmitt, published in 2007. Regarding Dennis providing researchers with a false name, they write, "His

    surprising and disappointingresponse was, ...'I gave you a phony name, because I promised her that I would never reveal it to anyone'." Theauthors then comment that"Dennis was found to have knowingly provided false information to investigators, and must technically standmpeached as a witness." However,

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    he book also notes that other witnesses "have told us that Dennis had told them about the phone calls for child-sizedcaskets way back when ithappened" and that "Dennis had told them about his run-in at the base hospital long before Roswell became ahousehold word." [7]

    richard M. Dolan ( 1962 - ) - Author of UFOs and the National Security State, Vol. I: Chronology of a Cover-Up1941-1973, and a frequent

    speaker at UFO conferences. Also, a co-host of the television series Sci-Fi Investigates.[26] Richard M. DolanFrom

    Wikipedia, the freeencyclopedia

    ---

    Richard Michael DolanNorthAmerican author and television personality, History and Ufology.

    Education Dolan attended Alfred University and Oxford University prior to finishing graduate work in history at the

    University of Rochester. At the

    atter, Dolan was a finalist for a Rhodes scholarship.

    Written works Dolan's first book, UFO's and the National Security State: Chronology of a Cover-up 1941-1973 was

    first published in 2000 byKeyhole Publishing Company and republished by Hampton Roads Publishing Company in 2002. The book has acover endorsement by U.S.Apollo 14 astronaut Dr. Edgar Mitchell ("... a thorough and monumental undertaking.")

    The forward is written by noted scientist and author Jacques Vallee, Ph.D. Vallee's forward begins: "The importantbook you are about to read ishe first comprehensive study of the U.S. government's response to the intrusion of UFO phenomena in American

    skies over the last fifty years."Other endorsements include best-selling author Whitley Strieber.

    A follow-up to Dolan's book, titled UFOs and the National Security State: The Cover-Up Exposed, 1973-1991 waspublished in August, 2009. [2]

    Television appearancesThe 2006 Sci-Fi Channel television show Sci Fi Investigates featured Dolan as part of a teamhat looked into various

    paranormal and unusual events, including the alleged crash of a UFO in Roswell, New Mexico. Dolan has alsoappeared in other paranormaldocumentaries, including Sci-Fi Channel's UFO Invasion at Rendlesham.

    James Forrestal ( Feb. 15, 1892 - May 22, 1949 )Raymond E. Fowler (1934 - ) long-time UFO investigator, details one of the best multiple witness alien abduction

    cases on record, author of TheAndreasson Affair and The Allagash Abductions.[27][28]Daniel Fry ( July 19, 1908 - Dec. 20, 1992 ) was an American contactee who claimed he had multiple contacts withan alien and took a ride in aremotely piloted alien spacecraft on July 4, 1949.[29]Allen H. Greenfield ( 1946 - ), is an American occultist, UFOlogist, writer, or.[30]Steven M. Greer ( 1955 - ), is an American physician known as a proponent of openness in government, media and

    corporations when it comeso advanced technologies that he and others believe to have been shelved and hidden from public awareness forreasons of profit andnfluence.[31]

    Bernard Haisch, physicist with an interest in ufology.[32]

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    Richard H. Hall ( Dec. 25, 1930 - July 17, 2009 ), former assistant director of NICAP in the 1960s, former director ofhe Fund for UFO R