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- Item: New York Times, Science Times Section, June 16, 1986
-
- 'Urge to Investigate and Believe'
- Sparks New Interest in U.F.O.'s
-
- By William J. Broad
- The aliens are here again, at least in terms of popular culture, if not in
- fact.
-
- Three books about alien visits are selling briskly; one of them has topped
- the nonfiction best seller list for weeks. clubs, newsletters, movies and
- lectures about unidentified flying objects are generating revenues at a
- pace exceeded only in the 1950's, during the first wave of U.F.O.
- sightings.
-
- Enthusiasts are now even charging that for 40 years the Federal Government
- has harbored physical evidence of an earthly encounter with
- extraterrestrial creatures, including their lifeless bodies and damaged
- spacecraft. That startling report, dismissed by skeptics and Government
- officials as a laughable hoax, is contained in what purport to be
- top-secret Government papers from the Eisenhower era.
-
- Why the fascination with aliens, despite repeated failures over the decades
- to document their earthly arrival?
-
- In interviews, psychologists, historians, philosophers and writers of
- science fiction said belief in alien encounters was rooted in such things
- as the need for secular messiahs and the search for explanations for
- terrestrial troubles.
-
- "The urge to investigate and believe in the stuff is almost religious,"
- said Ben Bova, former editor of Omni magazine and a writer of science
- fiction. "We used to have gods. Now we want to feel we're not alone,
- watched over by protective forces far beyond us."
-
- But others, often sober, respectable scientists who have studied U.F.O.
- reports for years, said the skeptics were missing the biggest story of the
- age.
-
- "People who haven't been paying attention to this stuff are in for shock,"
- said Dr. Bruce Maccabee, a full-time Navy physicist in Washington, D.C.,
- and a part-time U.F.O. researcher. "Some sort of things have been flying
- around for decades, and they aren't ours."
-
- The current U.F.O. flurry is led by new books: "Communion" by Whitley
- Streiber (Morrow), "Intruders" by Budd Hopkins (Random House), and "Light
- Years" by Gary Kinder (Atlantic Monthly Press). "Communion" has been on
- the New York Times best seller list for 16 weeks.
-
- All three tell of personal encounters with aliens. In this they differ
- from the last great period of U.F.O. enthusiasm, in the 1950's, said David
- M. Jacobs, author of "The U.F.O. Controversy in America," and a historian
- at Temple University in Philadelph ia. In the 1950's U.F.O. sightings
- were in vogue. Now, he said, we are in a "new era" in which aliens are
- taken as fact and attention had turned to "people's experiences" with them.
-
- Indeed, the hottest topic among U.F.O. enthusiasts is what they describe
- as the Federal Government's experience with aliens, especially the "Roswell
- Incident," one of the oldest U.F.O. episodes on the books. Timothy Good,
- a British U.F.O. researcher, and a group of U.F.O. investigators in the
- United States say they have documentary evidence that the Government hid
- its knowledge that a "flying saucer" crashed in 1947 near Roswell, N.M.,
- killing its crew of extraterrestrial creatures. The charges are contained
- in Mr. Good's book "Above Top Secret: The Worldwide U.F.O. Cover-Up," to
- be published in Britain in July. The Roswell Incident The Government's
- position is that the 1947 incident was nothing more than the sighting of a
- weather balloon. But the U.F.O. researchers cite a newly discovered
- document, dated Nov. 18, 1952, purportedly a top-secret briefing paper for
- President-elect Dwi ght D. Eisenhower. It discusses a secret Federal team
- known as Majestic-12, or MJ-12, established by President Truman on Sept.
- 24, 1947 to investigate the of the spacecraft and its crew [sic].
-
- "It appears to be genuine," said William L. Moore, who wrote a book about
- the incident and who investigated the document for more than two years
- after a colleague received it anonymously in the mail. But he said there
- is nothing in the records "that show s it's a fraud."
-
- "Nonsense," replied Philip J. Klass, a leading U.F.O. debunker and
- chairman of the U.F.O. subcommittee of the committee for the Scientific
- Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal, a respected group of scientists.
- Mr. Klass said he had seen the document and considered it "an outright
- hoax."
-
- The document purportedly recounts a secret briefing to President-elect
- Eisenhower by Read Adm. Roscoe H. Hillenkoetter, the first director of
- the Central Intelligence Agency, who is now dead. According to the
- document, Admiral Hillenkoetter was a member of Majestic-12. It begins
- with a chronology of crash near Roswell [sic].
-
- "On 07 July 1947," it says, "a secret operation was begun to assure
- recovery of the wreckage of this object for scientific study. During the
- course of this operation, aerial reconnaissance discovered that four small
- human-like beings had apparently eject ed from the craft at some point
- before it exploded. These had fallen to earth about two miles east of the
- wreckage site. all four were dead and badly decomposed due to action
- predators and exposure to the elements during the approximately one week
- time period which had elapsed before their discovery."
-
- "A special scientific team took charge of removing these bodies for study.
- The wreckage of the craft was also removed to several different locations.
- Civilian and military witnesses in the area were debriefed, and news
- reporters were given the effective cover story that the object had been a
- misguided weather research balloon."
-
- By November 1947, the briefing continued, a Federal team of scientists had
- concluded "that although these creatures are human-like in appearance, the
- biological and evolutionary processes responsible for their development has
- been quite different from tho se observed or postulated in homo-sapiens."
-
- Stanton T. Friedman, a nuclear physicist in Frederickton, New Brunswick,
- Canada, who is investigating the document with Mr. Moore and who lectures
- widely on U.F.O.'s, acknowledged that interest it generated would raise
- lecture fees but said their goal was to get at the truth.
-
- "We're dealing with something of extraordinary importance," he said. "What
- this means is that we humans are not the big shots we think we are." He
- said the landing was concealed because "no Government wants people to have
- their allegiance to the planet rather than themselves."
-
- Reflecting on the scope and intensity of the current flurry of interest,
- Jerome Clark, vice president of the J. Allen Hynek Center for U.F.O.
- Studies in Chicago and editor of "International U.F.O. Reporter," said:
- "What's interesting is that all this is happening in the absence of a
- sighting wave. There hasn't really been anything sighted since the 1970's.
- If I were paranoid, I'd say it's quiet, too quiet."
-
- Frederik Pohl, a science fiction writer, said belief in U.F.O.'s is
- flourishing now because the nation's political leaders are seen as
- floundering. "We're told by our leadership to be resolute against
- terrorism, yet they make deals," he said. "We're tol d 'Star Wars' is the
- future, but no one other than Ronald Reagan believes it. People have lost
- trust in reality and they're looking for something else."
-
- Michael Wertheimer, a psychologist at the University of Colorado who has
- participated in studies that debunked U.F.O. reports, agreed that feelings
- of helplessness tended to reinforce the urge to believe in the
- extraterrestrial.
-
- Paul Kurtz, a philosopher at the State University of New York at Buffalo
- and chairman of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of
- the Paranormal, said the current U.F.O. wave was "part of a bizarre trend
- in where there is no sense of standards of evidence."
-
- Dr. Maccabee, the Navy physicist, conceded that skeptics often made valid
- points. "But the simple fact is that there are unexplained sightings," he
- added. "Over the past 40 years there have been 100,000 sightings with 10
- to 20 percent that are hard to explain."
-
- In the case of the purposed [sic] Eisenhower documents, he said, "maybe
- somebody's been clever, but I think there's a good chance they are
- authentic."