UFO history is replete with sightings, records, fantastic claims, opinions, political maneuvering, and downright skullduggery. It's hard to categorize the case of Gary McKinnon. Was McKinnon guilty of "the 'biggest military computer hack of all time,'" as Henry Holloway describes? John Greenewald gives us something easier to identify in a case from
Project Blue Book: Crittenden, Virginia -- 17 January 1969. The file makes for absorbing reading. Bill Chalker moves us forward in time with a question:
Did Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke Facilitate a Meeting in March 1984 to Allow a Viewing of UFO Films by Business Man James Kibel? Bill's search regarding the possible granting of "one favor" to someone who'd just turned down a governmental appointment has
much larger implications than merely political workings. And Kevin Randle ranges from 1949 to the present with
UAP, UFO History and Current Sightings. A comment about terminology, a Vicente-Juan Ballester Olmos request for assistance, and some recent reports and explanations are included. How has all this history affected present-day beliefs? William Westhoven offers
Do You Believe? Poll Says Third of Americans Think Roswell UFO Landing 'Plausible'. And the statistics indicate that age and political affiliation—traditional dividing lines for many questions—don't seem important here. (WM)
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