With "input from the Scientific Coalition for UFOlogy,"
Newsweek's Callum Paton has evaluated 25 UFO cases. Some will dispute some of the lowest-ratings, as did Kevin Randle for the Levelland close encounters, while a few cases seem a trifle overrated. But the article is noteworthy both for coming from a mainstream media source and for showing some of the variety of UFO reports. But what causes those reports that resist explanation? In
The God Copout Michael Prescott rather takes himself to task for having resorted to one big
"Unknown--the "collective unconscious"--to explain a whole raft of "unknown" paranormal phenomena, not merely UFOs. Well, one gentleman was clear that
some UFOs were real nuts-and-bolts craft that crashed and could be "reverse-engineered." Nick Redfern writes of this in
The Roswell UFO: The Corso Claims. But Nick's not out to defend technological history from the late Col. Philip J. Corso. Instead, Nick calls to our attention Corso's assertions about the supposed Roswell crash victims. Nick also notes some ufologists suspected Corso of spreading UFO disinformation, which takes us in yet another direction, one whose tour guide is Jack Brewer. Brewer's
UFOs as Espionage Tools touches upon the passably-known Boyd Bushman mystery, then turns to the much lesser-known case of the late Vincente DePaula. Brewer lists 41 hours of government interrogation of this individual on where DePaula got the information behind his drawing of an alien head. And
that mystery seems to deepen. (WM)
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