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- ==============Inside UfologyMay 1988==============GULF BREEZE FEUD HEATS UPParaNet Alpha 05/06 -- As predicted, the Gulf Breeze case has in
- cited the strongest of emotions on both sides, and even the same side, of the ufological fence. The Hynek Center for UFO Studies recently re
- leased a Special Bulletin condemning the case as a "probable hoax" and taking rival MUFON to task for "shoddy investigative techniques." But
- MUFON's Walt Andrus was quick to call ParaNet and warn us, "Don't you believe it!" In a brief interview with Dr. Bruce Maccabee, who spe
- nt a week in the Florida Panhandle looking over the photos and chatting with "Mr. Ed," it was learned that the CUFOS article was based at le
- ast partly on the work of Ray Stanford of Project Starlight International, who objected to the apparent motion of the clouds in one sequence
- of photos. Stanford's data told him the clouds should be moving in a different direction if the photos were taken sequentially. Stanford ha
- s since retracted that claim, however, since finding that his weather data was faulty. But the divisiveness continues. Robert Boyd, o
- f both CUFOS and MUFON, wrote a lengthy letter outlining some of his other objections to the case. They include: o The "chumminess" fact
- or -- the major corroborating witnesses are the mother and father-in-law of Duane Cook, the editor of the local paper. o The "Hokiness"
- factor -- The object just looks too much like a cartoon representation of a flying saucer - and a bad one at that. o The "Practical Joki
- ness" factor -- Mr. Ed, who involves himself with the local youth, was said by one teenager to be plotting "The Ultimate Prank." Dr. Maccabe
- e counters that the prank was to be played on the high school bandleader, and not the world at large. o The "Flaw" factor -- there seems
- to be a prominent chink in the bottom rim of the object. The CUFOS article suggests several ways in which the photos might have been fa
- ked, including the rather interesting possibility that a household object was suspended in front of a window, in order to reflect and be sup
- erimposed onto an outdoor scene. But this fails to explain the videotaped image, says Maccabee, as well as the enigmatic "road" picture, whe
- re the object is seen hovering a few inches over the highway, its bright bottom light reflecting off the blacktop. Most speculation cente
- rs around whether or not the photos are double-exposures. When the possibility of Mr. Ed having fashioned an actual backyard "flying saucer"
- was broached, Maccabee dismissed it out of hand. "Nothing we've seen would indicate that he had that level of skill." A major factor in
- Mr. Ed's defense is his character, according to his supporters. Both Maccabee and Budd Hopkins, who also spent a week in the Panhandle, say
- that, if he's lying, he deserves an Oscar -- and so do many of his friends and family members. "The `Hoax Hypothesis' is unfalsifiable," say
- s Maccabee. "Any evidence we bring out in his favor is countered with, `Well, that just shows that he's all the more clever a practical joke
- r.' Conceivably we could go around and around with it, and hence it could never be shown that its NOT a hoax." One interesting tid-bit br
- ought out in our conversation with Maccabee was the fact that Mr. Ed does have a history of photographic playfulness. At a Halloween party a
- few years back, he handily double-exposed some Polaroids to convince the partiers that ghosts were sitting next to them, a la Disneyland's
- Haunted House. But Maccabee eschews the anecdote, insisting that the UFO photos would require greater skill by far. Don Schmitt, a CUFOS
- investigator in Wisconsin, agreed the Special Bulletin may have been premature. He admitted that the Center was "concerned about the amount
- of positive hype the case is getting in advance of definitive analysis," citing as an example Walt Andrus' statement that Gulf Breeze "may
- turn out to be the most significant case" in UFO history. When pressed, Schmitt also agreed that the Center was afraid of CSICOP jumping out
- of the bushes to yell "Gotcha!" Indeed, the air has been rife with rumors of The Amazing Randi pulling off another "sting" similar to his e
- xposures of faith-healers and ESP laboratories. But Schmitt's, and the Center's, main concern was the apparent all-out endorsement of the ca
- se by abduction researcher Budd Hopkins, whose very involvement Schmitt questioned. "What's he doing there? Why is he endorsing photographs?
- This isn't even his territory," said Schmitt. CUFOS wanted to cool the fires a bit by getting Hopkins and other investigators to back off a
- nd wait for the analysis. There's no doubt CUFOS is right about the seeming lack of scientific objectivity displayed by the Gulf Breeze p
- rotagonists. But its a bit ironic to hear such outright, premature criticism from a group that is still calling for a full hearing on the MJ
- -12 evidence, in light of the work already done by Barry Greenwood and Phil Klass, which shows it to be an almost certain hoax. And in on
- e respect, Walt Andrus' prediction that Gulf Breeze may prove to be "the most significant case in UFO history" is well on its way to coming
- true. --Jim Speiserlain the videotaped image, says Maccabee, as well as the enigmatic "road" picture, where the object is seen hovering a
- few inch