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