The diversity of UFO history shines in these articles. John Greenewald presents and comments upon his attempt to learn the identity of an unidentified NSA employee who reported on a 1978 MUFON International Symposium. This reader knows the outstanding person suspected of being the report’s author and has no idea either way. John complains that some government UFO documents “are ‘lost’ and unable to be reviewed for further release.” Nick Redfern discusses this last matter in Interplanetary Intrigue: A U.S. Government UFO Program That Hardly Anyone Has Heard Of. Here it’s the Interplanetary Phenomenon Unit whose shadowy former existence is acknowledged but whose operations are mysteriously unavailable. Curt Collins’ UFO Religion: The Cosmic Circle of Fellowship is another fascinating expose of a “Saucer Swindler” whose amalgam of UFOs, hokey medical machines, and “New-Age Christianity” likely helped the Air Force combat the perceived seriousness of UFOs in the earlier days of the field. And watch Farmer Edwin Fuhr on Witnessing 5 Landed UFOs in His Field in Langenburg, Canada, September 1, 1974. Context to this remarkable account comes from the Regina Leader-Post’s more recent The Farmer Who Saw and the Mountie Who Believed: Sask.’s Most Famous UFO Sighting. Mark Melnychuk shows why many take this CEII very seriously. (WM)
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