WILL THE REAL SCOTT JONES PLEASE STAND UP?
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WILL THE REAL SCOTT JONES
The purpose of this monograph is to sing the praises of
the Renaissance Man of the Paranormal, Cecil B. Scott Jones,
Ph.D.
If your field is ufology, you know Scott as a mover,
shaker, organizer and confidante of some of the central
figures in Ut0 research. And if you are a parapsychologist,
you recognize the same face from countless symposia, boards
of directors, and the like. Ufologists and
parapsychologists seldom communicate, and even more rarely
do they attend each other's meetings. So it comes as a
shock to each group to learn that Scott has a foot so firmly
planted in the "other" arena.
His interest in these fields appears to have been
triggered by personal experience. Scott describes his UFO
sighting, which took place when he was a Navy fighter pilot
in the Korean War, thus: "As I rolled into a split-S to
descend to low altitude from around 30,000 feet, I saw a
silver disc directly overhead" (Advanced Aerial Devices
ReQorted During The Korean War, R. F Haines, LDA Press, Los
Altos, CA, 1990, page 54). He also had a
"parapsychological" experience, which he describes in these
vague terms: "When I retired from the Navy, as a result of
something that happened to me, in the Navy, which was
parapsychological in nature, I decided that there would be
interest and there might be a commercial application, if
what I was calling then applied psychic phenomena was
understood, and could be used in certain circumstances"
(Lecture, Society for Psychical Research, England, November
1990).
Scott's "clout" in ufology can perhaps be illustrated
by a brief summary of his activities at the TREAT II
conference in January 1990 at the Blacksburg, Virginia
campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University
(Virginia Tech). For you parapsychologists, TREAT stands
for Treatment and Research of Experienced Anomalous Trauma.
And that is crypto for UFO abduction research. About 70
investigators, including many research psychologists,
clinicians, t4Ds, physicists and assorted intellectuals who
take the abduction phenomenon very seriously met for five
days to share ideas. This was by invitation only, no
publicity desired or allowed.
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Scott chaired a panel, conferred with the university
sponsors, acted as liaison with the Prince of Liechtenstein
who was the major benefactor of the conference, and
conferred on strategic organizational issues with Walter
Andrus, the leader of the Mutual UFO Network (HUFON), a
major ufo research organization in America, and John
Schuesslerl, Andrus' close ufological associate and
second-in-command.
TREAT was organized by Rima Laibow, MD, a psychiatrist
determined to get mainstream attention for the abduction
puzzle. She is the obvious and very visible leader, but
Scott is never far.
Laibow is a very energetic person and the center of
violent controversy in abduction research circles.
Previously a close associate of Budd Hopkins, Laibow is
reported to be an abductee. She is also very well connected
and has an exceptional "network" extending into Europe and
the Soviet Union. If you can get close to Laibow, you are
close to the state-of-the-art in abduction research. Scott
stays close. In the Fall of 1990 they lectured together in
England.2 As late as the summer of 1991 Jones and Laibow
were planning a yachting excursion together with Col. John
Alexander (retired from the U.S. Army) to investigate
anomalies in the Bahamas.
Similarly, Jones was very familiar with Andrus and
Schuessler prior to TREAT, and presumably remains on the
closest terms with them. Andrus is retired and devotes all
his time to running MUFON. Thus Jones is on the inside with
respect to data collected by MUFON. In 1989 MUFON appointed
Jones as a Special Consultant in International Relations,
formalizing the relationship.
A cynic might ask if Scott's activities could suggest
something other than a very active interest in the UFO
mystery. The cynic could point out that he has insinuated
himself into the inner sanctums of UFO research, has the ear
of policy makers, and is in a position to monitor
developments in all critical areas of study. A breakthrough
in civilian ufology, such as the unambiguous identification
of an alien artifact, would come to his attention almost at
once. A policy decision concerning the disposition of the
hypothetical artifact would probably not be taken before
consulting with Scott.
It is interesting to note that Scott is a cipher to the
average UFO researcher or enthusiast. That is, the perhaps
three or four thousand people who follow the subject with
some diligence over a protracted period of time, can easily
recognize the names of probably 50 or so individuals who
have made contributions to ufology or are "important" people
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in the field. But they would be puzzled if asked to
identify C. B. Scott Jones.
Scott rarely puts anything on paper, preferring instead
to work behind the scenes, keeping in touch via telephone or
personal visit. He attends most conferences of note, and
goes to great lengths, in the literal geographical sense, to
meet not only researchers but important witnesses. He has
shown particular interest in spending time with "abductees"
in recent years. But unlike so many others in ufology who
rush to the typewriter to broadcast their opinions, Scott
keeps his own quiet counsel. Thus he provides us all with
an uplifting example of humility.
In a departure from his usual rule against publishing,
Scott presented a paper at the 1991 conference of the Mutual
UFO Network. The title was "Government UFO Connections."
Those who were advised in advance of the title, and who knew
something of Scott's background, thought the paper would
contain a spectacular revelation.
In a sense, it did. But more on that later.
Scott Jones has been a fixture at parapsychology
symposia ranging from the most august academic gatherings to
New Age meetings and those of the human potential movement
at least since the mid-1970s, when he organized a
parapsychology conference in Casper, Wyoming. Among the
conferences he has attended are those of the
Parapsychological Association, the American Society for
Psychical Research, the Society for Scientific Exploration,
the Southeastern Regional Parapsychological Association, the
Association for Research and Enlightenment, the Society for
Psychical Research, the International Forum on New Science,
and the Archaeus Congress, to name a few.
In 1983 a firm called Kaman Tempo, specializing in
"think tank" intelligence analysis for the U.S. Government,
organized a seminar on parapsychological applications. The
seminar was attended by a number of federal employees. A
formal Proceedings of the seminar was published, with Jones
as editor. In his sparse remarks, Jones made clear his very
wide network of federal contacts, and intimated that he was
the organizer of the seminar. This was certainly an
auspicious start for someone who was just beginning to be
noticed by insiders in parapsychology.
Scott. has been on the Board of Trustees of the American
Society for Psychical Research (ASPR) since 1985, and now
serves as its President. The ASPR was founded more than a
century ago, and is the oldest organization in the U.S. to
publish a refereed scientific journal in parapsychology.
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Complaints have been aired about his stewardship of the
ASPR. These include charges that he is attempting to remove
professional researchers from the Board of Trustees,
replacing them with individuals who are more pliant to
Jones' personal agenda for the organization.
As in the field of ufology, one searches in vain for
significant published material from the hand of Scott Jones.
It appears that his only contribution to a parapsychological
journal is a review of John White's Psychic Warfare_ Fact or
Fiction? for the June 1989 issue of the Journal of
Parapsy_chologY.
Scott Jones was born in 1928, and lived at least part
of his childhood between Gulfport and Biloxi, Mississippi.
lie joined the U.S. Navy in about 1946. Following flight
training in the Aviation Midshipman Program, he was
commissioned in 1950. He was a career officer in the U.S.
Navy, serving during the Korean War as a fighter pilot,
which included two combat tours in VF-191, flying the F9F-2
Panther from the USS Princeton. Ile served in Naval
Intelligence for approximately 1'5 years, including
assignments with Carrier Division 14, and as Assistant Naval
Attache, New Delhi, India, and Kathmandu, Nepal in the
1960s. Ile collected intelligence and provided intelligence
support throughout southeast asia, the middle east, and
north Africa.!
Jones has briefed the President's Scientific Advisory
Committee, and has testified before house and Senate
committees on intelligence matters.
Thus he served in naval intelligence for approximately
15 years, retiring around 1976.
Jones received an A.B. in Government from George
Washington University in 1961, an M.A. in Government and
Politics from the University of Maryland in 1963, and a
Ph.D. in International Studies from American University in
1975, with a dissertation entitled "How The Indian Lok Sabha
Handles Defense Matters: An Institutional Study." Ile taught
political science for three years at Casper College, Casper,
Wyoming, and the University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming.
Ile has stated that he worked during the period
following his Navy career for "several" companies, including
R. F. Cross Associates, Ltd., of Alexandria, Virginia, and
Kaman Tempo, "A Division of Kaman Sciences Corporation," in
Alexandria, Virginia. His MUFON biographical sketch states
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that in his post-Navy career he "worked in the private
sector research and development community involved in the
U.S. Government sponsored projects for the Defense Nuclear
Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency [DIA], and U.S. Army
Intelligence and Security Command" (INSCOM).
In 1985 Scott came in from the cold in a big way.
Senator Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island, Chairman of the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee and one of the most
senior politicians on Capitol Hill, appointed him to a
position as Special Assistant. From this very prestigious
vantage Scott continued to do exactly what he had been doing
before, which is to say making the rounds of ufological and
parapsychological meetings. Fie was always available, either
at the Senate office he used in Washington thanks to the
Senator's largesse, or on the road. It is not clear whether
Jones ever did ordinary "aide" work. Rather, it seems that
he devoted himself entirely to the field of paranormal
inquiry.
It is quite an exceptional situation that Jones found,
and one that most of us in anomalies research would envy.
The taxpayers of Rhode Island seem not to have noticed, and
the December 5, 1988 issue of U.S. News &World_Repport,
which devoted a great deal of space to New Age belief in the
Halls of Congress, mentioned Pell and his protege Jones', but
failed to note that Jones was on the government payroll
primarily as a psychic/UFO facilitator.
In March of 1991 there came a parting of the ways, and
Scott left the employ of Senator Pell, but not the field of
the paranormal. He is now at his new organization, the
Human Potential Foundation.5 With his assistant Menelika
McCarthy, Scott continues to do that which he has done so
well for the last decade. His foundation is ensconced in
the resplendent offices of Sandground Barondess and West,
P.C., at what is perhaps the most prestigious address in an
area of fine office buildings on the Washington beltway.
Hark Sandground and Claiborne Pell serve on the board of the
foundation, which is reportedly funded by Laurance
Rockefeller.
Among the organizations with which Scott has been
affiliated at one time or another, and of which there is
some kind of public record, are these:
Center for APP-lied Anomalous Phenomena. 6435 Shady
Lane, Falls Church, VA 22042-2335. Telephone: (703)
534-2423. Scott Jones, Founder. Jones states that
his work is supported by the Center.
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Human Potential Foundation. 8000 Towers Crescent
Drive, Suite 600., Vienna, VA 22182. Telephone:
(703) 761-4281; fax: (703) 761-4249. Scott Jones,
President. Established in 1989. Support comes from
Claiborne Pell and Laurance Rockefeller.
American Society for Psychical Research. 5 West 73rd
Street, New York, NY 10023. Telephone: (212)
799-5050. Jones has been on the Board of Trustees
since 1985; he now serves as President.
Parapsychological Association. P.O. Box 12236,
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709. Telephone: (919)
688-8241. This is the professional association of
parapsychologists. Jones has been an Associate
Member since 1984.
Mutual UFO Network (MUFON). 103 Oldtowne Road,
Seguin, TX 78155-4099. Telephone: (512) 379-9216.
Jones was appointed Consultant in International
Relations in 1989.
Mid-Point. P.O. Box 246, 128 Main Street, So.,
Bridgewater, CT 06752. Telephone: (203) 354-5948.
This is a small organization whose purpose is to do
research with dolphins and apply the findings to
other areas of endeavor. Jones serves on the Board
of Advisors.
R. F. Cross Associates, Ltd. Alexandria, VA.
[Directory assistance now has no listing for that
organization]. Jones served as research director.
Kaman Tempo. 2560 Huntington Avenue, Suite 500,
Alexandria, VA 22303. [Directory assistance now has
no listing for this organization, but lists a Kaman
Jones served
Sciences company in Alexandria, `lA.]?
as a research scientist.
Atlantic University. 67th Street and Atlantic
Avenue, P.O. Box 595, Virginia Beach, VA 23451.
Telephone: (804) 428-3588. This unaccredited
university is affiliated with the Edgar Cayce
Foundation. Jones serves on the Board of Directors.
Quest Institute. P.O. Box 3265, Charlottesville, VA
22903. Telephone: (804) 295-3377. This institute
sponsors educational programs in New Age areas.
Jones serves on the Board of Directors.
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TRAll ELS
Few scientists or academicians have the ability to
travel the way Scott does. There is literally no
significant conference in ufology or parapsychology in any
part of the world that seems beyond the means of Scott Jones
to visit. In addition to trips throughout the United
States, Jones has gone to China, the U.S.S.R., the U.K.,
Continental and Eastern Europe, and South America, all in
connection with paranormal research.
It would probably be rude to inquire about the source
of funds for all this globe trotting (and what Scott's
"funders" expect to gain).
Scott's unique position on the staff of one of the
ranking members of the U.S. Senate (Claiborne Pell) has been
discussed above. The official connection alone is enough to
guarantee easy access to the widest range of government
agencies and private organizations at the executive level.
Beyond that, Senator Pell's personal network, firmly based
on his credentials as an Eastern Establishment aristocrat,
was at the disposal of Jones. It is difficult to imagine
any door that could not be opened by this awesome
combination.
Thus Scott often escorted Prince Hans-Adam of
Liechtenstein, a very wealthy European with a longstanding
interest in the paranormal. Together, they visited
parapsychological laboratories and UFO conferences.
According to the Sunday Times of India for August 4, 1991,
Hans-Adam controls 97% of the voting rights and 85% of the
share capital of the Bank of Liechtenstein, which in turn
controls the 3.3 billion dollar GT Management of London.
The personality magazine Special Report (November
1990-January 1991) described the Prince as "Heir to the last
remnant of the Holy Roman Empire."
Recently, in a bizarre turn of events that was reported
in several outlets including Harper's Magazine (January
1991, page 25), a personal letter from Scott to "Dear Dick"
Cheney, the Secretary of Defense, was published.6 That
Jones should be in a position to write a letter to the
Secretary and address him as "Dick" is illuminating.
One would suppose that all this "clout" would result in
a tangible flow of money into the accounts of laboratories
and individuals engaged in paranormal research. Oddly, this
does not seem to be the case. In the last three years, two
major parapsychological laboratories have closed due to lack
of funds. Scott was well familiar with their work and their
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plight, but was unable to help. Scott enjoys considerable
support, even luxury, in his own pursuit of paranormal
inquiry. Yet the ASPR, of which he is president, is widely
known to be in dire financial straits. The flow of
information and money appears to be to Scott, not from him.
A number of intriguing rumors have been circulated by
Scott watchers:
.*That Jones has approached professional
parapsychological researchers and questioned them
about how best to recruit and utilize psychics for
military intelligence gathering.
?That Jones has visited an enormous number of
psychics for "readings."
?That Jones has taken a number of psychic development
courses.
?That for many years Jones has been involved
with classified research on electronic mind
control.7
*In the Fall of 1988 a television documentary
entitled "UFO Coverup? - Live" was shown throughout
the U.S. The program featured "revelations" from
alleged intelligence agents about aliens enjoying
the hospitality of the government at an unnamed Air
Force base. This program is considered to be a
classic instance of UFO disinformation. Rumor has
it that, two years prior to this, Jones had
approached media representatives about doing a show
about UFOs, and that he had offered to provide
secret information from the government for the
program.
?Among some of the New Agers who have been in Scott's
company, he has acquired a reputation for having an
extraordinary memory. It is said that he can
uncannily repeat, word for word, conversations that
took place long before. This is done without the
benefit of notes or a tape recorder, and is said to
occur in instances where witnesses to the
conversation thought he wasn't even paying
attention. This gift must have been useful to Scott
in his intelligence career.
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DOLPHINS
Jones has conducted his own dolphin telepathy studies
along with Colonel John Alexander and Theodore Rockwell, a
prominent (Who's Who) nuclear engineer who has worked on
naval nuclear propulsion systems and who also serves as vice
president of the U.S. Psychotronics Association.8 Although
Scott has been rather shy when it comes to committing his
ideas to paper, he has, on a few occasions, made informal
presentations at parapsychology conferences. The most
notable of these was his description of his dolphin
telepathy experiments, which he describes as "interspecies
communication." The reception from the general audience was
warm, but some professionals were appalled by what they
perceived as the lack of scientific basis for Scott's
claims.
Scott displayed marvelous creativity when he
enthusiastically urged that dolphins be channeled in order
to locate the remains of crashed flying saucers. In one
bold stroke he thereupon melded the previously disparate
disciplines of ufology and parapsychology.
This is the title of the paper delivered by Scott Jones
to the seven hundred ufologists assembled at the 1991 MUFON
symposium in Chicago. It should also, perhaps, be the sign
on the various doors of Scott Jones' various offices during
the past ten years. Just a bit more paint would tell the
whole story: "Government UFO/Psi Connections -- Walk In."
The MUFON paper trudges through Poly Sci 101, outlining
the tensions that exist between the legislative and the
executive branches of our government. We read every word,
waiting for the bombshell. Scott goes to China, with full
Senate portfolio, and asks about UFO reports.9 Somehow,
the Chinese think he is there to share information! As
Jones tells the story in his 1991 Omega Conference speech,
"They could not believe that someone who was truly a Special
Assistant to a very senior U.S. Senator would ask for an
appointment to talk about UFOs and then pretend not to know
what his government was doing in the field."
When it becomes obvious that Scott is not forthcoming
about what the U.S. Government knows about UFOs, the Chinese
respond in kind and give him pieces of metal that, they
assert (in veiled Oriental fashion), may, or may not, come
from a crashed disc. Next Scott walks us through a detailed
metallurgical analysis that proves the metal to be the
entirely terrestrial debris from an electrical power
transmission tower. Perhaps Scott's presentation could be
construed as a subtle advertisement for his access to high
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tech analysis capabilities. (Message: contact Scott at once
if you have suspected alien material for analysis.)
Worried, but still anticipating, we come to the bottom
line: Scott has to confess to ufologists, Chinese, American
or whatever, that he "...honestly did not know of any
activity of the U.S. government" in the field of UFOs
(page 176).
This statement should be received with amusement by
ufologists.
Two credible books have been written about the massive
documentation that has been uncovered, through the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) and other sources, detailing
covert federal interest in UFO reports and the activities of
UFO researchers and organizations (Clear Intent, Fawcett &
Greenwood, Prentice-iiall,1984, and Revelations, Jacques
Vallee, Ballantine, 1991).10 There is overwhelming
evidence that personnel from the Air Force Office of Special
Investigations (AFOSI), a counter intelligence organization,
have for years been involved in disinformation activities in
the UFO field.
The following are a few well known examples of
"activity of the U.S. Government" in the field of UFOs.
Despite his repeated claims of ignorance, Jones' name has
surfaced in some of these cases.
A ubiquitous character in this continuing saga is one
William L. Moore, a former Minnesota school teacher and
co-author of The Philadelphia Experiment (Berlitz and Moore,
1979) and The Roswell Incident (Berlitz and Moore, 1980).
In fact it was Moore who sparked the intense interest in the
now celebrated Roswell incident. Moore's name is also well
known in relation to Richard Doty, Jaime Shandera, M0-12,
Paul Bennewitz, and Lee Graham, and reports also link him to
our favorite "know-nothing" for some years.
In the June 1989 issue of the MUFON UFO Journal, Robert
Hastings published a blistering attack on the credibility of
William Moore. A few months later, in a speech delivered to
an astonished audience at the 1989 MUFON Symposium, Moore
admitted to a long career as a "controlled informant" to the
U.S. Government. Further, in the same amazing talk, Moore
admitted to having deceived a number of people. The ensuing
uproar has yet to subside, and in a recent interview Moore
admitted to still being a controlled informant (UFO, 1992
Vol. 7, No. 1).
In his 1991 Omega Conference talk, Jones echoed some of
the themes of Moore's 1989 MUFON spectacle. Jones spoke
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discouragingly of the use of the Freedom of Information Act,
and in one of his parenthetical remarks, he spoke of Moore
with approbation. In fact, only two other ufologists,
Professor Michael Swords and conference organizer John
White, were mentioned in the entire speech. Shortly after
his remarks about Moore, Jones again proclaimed that he
"quite honestly... didn't have the vaguest idea of what the
government was doing" in the field of UFOs.
Sergeant Richard Doty
One of Moore's long-time buddies is Sergeant Richard
Doty, with whom he is now advertising a co-authored
forthcoming book. Doty was formerly a special agent with
the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (AFOSI)
assigned to Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque.
Hastings' 1989 paper makes a strong case that Doty was
involved in fabricating a UFO report delivered to the
civilian Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO) in
1980.
Linda M. Howe, a television journalist known for her
work on cattle mutilations, was invited to Kirtland AFB in
1983 by Doty. At the time, she was working on a documentary
on UFOs. During her visit, Doty showed her what he claimed
were briefing documents prepared for the president of the
United States and which discussed crashed saucers and
recovered bodies of ETs (UFO Universe July 1988). Doty
promised movie footage would be provided later. But the
footage never arrived, and Howe's documentary was cancelled,
which Howe now suspects was the intended purpose of
offering her the "bait."
Howe produced a sworn statement describing her meeting
with Doty. He later denied the incident, but in an
apparently unrelated matter, Doty's honesty was questioned
by the military and he flunked a lie detector test, thus
casting further doubt on Doty's integrity (Skeptics UFO
Newsletter, January 1991). There is every reason to believe
Howe's account.
Jacques Vallee (Revelations) reports that Moore now
claims that Doty worked for an officer Hennessey, based at
the Boiling AFB Headquarters of AFOSI (the name "Hennessey"
also arises in the case of Lee Graham, described below).
Captain Robert Collins
But Richard Doty is not the only person on Kirtland AFB
to take part in these shenanigans. In November 1987 Captain
Collins arranged a meeting with Linda Howe, which was also
attended by John Lear, a former employee of a CIA front
called Air America, the son of the famous inventor Bill Lear
(the car radio, the Lear jet), and a candidate for the State
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Legislature in Nevada. Lear has also been a primary source
for stories claiming that there are vast underground bases
in the Southwest populated by aliens carrying out grotesque
biological experiments using humans, all with the approval
and connivance of the U.S. Government. At the meeting,
Collins presented Howe and Lear with documents concerning
MJ-12 and an alien held captive by the government.
According to Howe's affidavit, Collins spoke of having
worked "behind the scenes" for many years with William
Moore.
This is quite extraordinary activity on the part of
Doty and Collins, and much of it took place on government
property over a period of years. Some skeptics have
suggested that the Doty-Collins activities were simply the
private hobby of a couple of renegades. If so, Jones should
certainly be in a position to clear the air on
this. Indeed, even Philip Klass has uncovered government
information on Doty. But despite Jones' "honest" ignorance
of the "activity of the U.S. government" he met with Moore
and Doty while in the employ of Senator Pell (UFO, 1992,
Vol. 7, No. 1). But he has refused to discuss the matter
with credible investigators. Whatever the ultimate reason
for the Doty-Collins activities, the effect has been to
waste an immense amount of the time, energy and money of UFO
researchers. f
Lear has often stated that he obtains his data about
underground bases, etc., from "intelligence sources." ("The
MJ-12 Affair: Facts, Questions, Comments," by Robert
Hastings, MUFON UFO Journal, No. 254, June 1989).
----- --- -------
Jaime Shandera and 2MJ-12
Moore's colleague, Jaime Shandera, a television
producer, claims to have received a roll of undeveloped film
in the mail in mid-December 1984. And Shandera promptly
alerted his colleague. Development showed a document
purporting to describe a crashed saucer recovered by the
U.S. Government in 1947. The material also suggested that
alien bodies were recovered and that a top secret panel of
12 scientists, military leaders, and intelligence officials
(MJ-12) were commissioned to supervise the investigation.
Study of the MJ-12 documents has absorbed an immense amount
of effort which the impoverished UFO research community can
ill afford. It is most unfortunate that Scott Jones, in his
search for UFO-related activity of the U.S. Government, did
not use the power of his position to establish the
provenance of the MJ-12 papers or the motives of the various
government employees engaged in their dissemination.
In October 1990, Shandera contacted an inactive UFO (R)
saying that his "contact" had told him that a high authority
(perhaps in the Pentagon) had determined that Shandera
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should establish and maintain a relationship with R.
Shandera also let it be known that he was in contact with a
scientist in the military involved with remote viewing. R
began having apparently precognitive dreams involving Saddam
Hussein and Iraq, and he reported them to Shandera.
Shandera told R that he passed these along to "authorities."
R later learned that Shandera and Moore were in contact with
Scott Jones, and R called Jones. Jones expressed that
familiarity with the reported dreams and went on to say
he was familiar with Psi Tech but gave little further
information.
Paul Bennewitz
Paul Bennewitz, a physicist and manufacturer of
temperature and humidity measuring devices sold to the
military, claimed to have discovered alien devices and
communications at Kirtland AFB. The military apparently
took Bennewitz seriously, and he was invited to Kirtland to
present his material. Bennewitz eventually was hospitalized
for psychiatric care and has dropped out of UFO research.
It appears that Bennewitz was the object of a program of
psychological destabilization originated by AFOSI at
Kirtland. Documents concerning Bennewitz were signed by
Special Agent Doty. In his published MUFON speech, Moore
claimed that he had no hand in the "dirty tricks," but in
fact tried to protect Bennewitz, although he knewoennnewitz
was being disinformed and becoming progressively more
unbalanced. This is one of the most ominous chapters in the
Moore-Doty-AFOSI litany, and it cries out for investigation
by the legislative branch of the U.S. government.
Unfortunately, Jones, in his Diogenes-like search for
"activity of the U.S. government" has missed this one.
Lee Graham
Before the appearance of the MJ-12 papers, UFO
researcher Lee Graham, a technician with a secret clearance
working for Aerojet Electrosystems, Azusa, California, was
contacted by William Moore. Graham had never met Moore, but
had written to him after the publication of the
Moore-Berlitz book on Roswell. During the next few months
Moore gave to the perplexed Graham a series of documents,
all exhibiting security classification markings. These
papers included the alleged Eisenhower briefing document and
other material relating to UFOs and government involvement
with aliens or alien technology.
Graham, whose livelihood depends on maintaining his
security clearance, eventually took the documents to the
Aerojet official in charge of security, and asked that both
the documents and Moore be investigated by the Defense
Investigative Service (DIS). Ultimately, the documents were
back in Graham's hands, marked "unclassified." Graham,
however, became the object of intense scrutiny by
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Ile repeatedly demanded that Moore be investigated for
distributing documents that appeared to be extremely
sensitive, and for exhibiting an identification card
indistinguishable from those used by the many DIS agents
that Graham had encountered. But to the best of Graham's
knowledge, Moore has never been interviewed by DIS or any
other agency concerning these serious charges. It would be
a simple matter for Pell's office to request an
investigation of Moore on the basis of Graham's charges.
In 1987, Graham was paid an intimidating visit at his
workplace by FBI Special Agent William Hurley, accompanied
by a man in civilian clothes who did not identify himself,
but who was later identified as no less than Major General
Michael Kerby, USAF, at that time the Director of the Air
Force Legislative Liaison office. Kerby's military career
differs from that of most of the uniformed players in this
drama, in that he seems to have had no intelligence
background. Prior to the assignment with congressional
liaison, Kerby appears to have been in command of the
operational aspects of the "stealth" fighter aircraft, as
well as other very sensitive aviation activities at Nellis
AFB.
During the interview with hurley and his companion,
Graha'm was shown a document identifying the then Top Secret
designation of the F-117 "Stealth" fighter, a piece of
information Graham had tirelessly pursued through Freedom of
Information Act requests. He was also given a form to sign,
certifying that he had been given information "for which you
have no need to know." This very unusual action was
followed by a lengthy "pep talk" in which Hurley and Kerby
praised Graham for his work in disseminating the MJ-12
documents! Graham says that the bulk of the one hour
interview concerned the MJ-12 papers.
The news that the man accompanying FBI Agent Hurley was
a two-star general came to Graham from an unexpected and
extraordinary source: C. B. Scott Jones. Graham had never
met Jones, nor did the name mean anything to him when Jones
called and opened the conversation by saying that he and
Graham "had a mutual acquaintance." Jones was referring to
the mystery man who accompanied Special Agent Hurley on the
interview with Graham. During the course of the
conversation, Jones promised to send information that would
help Graham identify the mysterious interviewer.
Shortly thereafter, Graham received a note from Jones,
on U.S. Senate letterhead, together with the official Air
Force biography of Kerby, including his photograph. Graham
recognized the face at once as that of the man who
accompanied the FBI agent, and who spoke so enthusiastically
about the MJ-12 papers.
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Jones was asked to explain this strange episode, and
gave the following account. Jones was in his office at
Pell's Senate suite. Kerby, in the normal course of his
liaison duties, was paying a courtesy call on Senator Pell.
Kerby spotted Jones, and they had a chat. Apparently they
had met before, and chatted before, at some length, because
Jones says, "Kerby knew of my interest in these matters,"
meaning UFOs. Obviously, Kerby had some time on his hands,
and for reasons Jones refuses to elaborate, Kerby told Jones
about his visit to Graham, incognito. Jones has been
pressed about all this with understandable vigor by Graham
and by journalist Don Ecker, but to no avail. Jones, I must
remind the weary reader, is the man who "honestly" does "not
know of any activity of the U.S. government" in the field of
UFOs. (See UFO, Vol. 6, No. 6, 1991, page 12; also multiple
personal communications with Don Ecker, November and
December 1991; multiple personal communications with Lee
Graham, November and December 1991).
During his FOIA requests, Graham asked for files
compiled on himself. When he received them, he learned that
a Colonel Barry Hennessey was involved in monitoring
Graham's activities. Richard Doty is said to have reported
to an "Officer Hennesey" in the AFOSI chain of command.
The hottest topic in ufology today is the account of an
apparent crashed UFO recovery operation near Roswell, New
Mexico in 1947. The principal recent investigators, Randle
and Schmitt, report that they have a dozen retired military
and intelligence officials who are willing to give testimony
on the retrieval, but only if they are relieved from the
strictures of the Espionage Act. This is a very reasonable
request. Immunity from prosecution under various statutes
is now routinely granted by the Congress, and it would be a
simple matter for Jones, through Pell, to make the necessary
arrangements in the case of these pivotal but reluctant
Roswell witneses. Dr. Jones, who focuses his attentions on
minutiae such as the indentity of Lee Graham's mysterious
visitor, has not bothered to contact Randle or Schmitt or
Jerome Clark of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies to
offer his good offices in this specific matter, nor in any
other way to unlock what is universally acknowledged to be a
U.S. government stranglehold (surely a form of "activity")
on Roswell information. (Personal communication, Jerome
Clark, 14 January 1992.) (Personal communication, Kevin
Randle to Vincent Ellis, 11 January 1992.)
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It is important to note that these instances of
"Government - UFO connections" are exceptionally well known
in ufological circles, having been discussed at great length
in a variety of journals and newsletters.
So it is indeed odd that Jones has had a longstanding
relationship with a "ufologist" who claims to be a
government "controlled informant," who has admitted to
deceit in the past, but who claims that his goal is simply
to learn the truth about government-UFO activities. The
anomaly is that Jones seems to avoid similarly close links
to credible researchers studying federal involvement with
the UFO problem. Of course, Scott's services would be of
little use to them because he "honestly" does "not know of
any activity of the U.S. government" in the field of UFOs.
The Fund for UFO Research has concluded that breaking
the federal secrecy about UFOs can only be accomplished
through the legislative branch of the U.S. government. To
this end, the Fund has placed top priority on preparing
video and written briefings for members of Congress and
their aides. A meeting was held in the Fall of 1991 to
gather principal UFO researchers and staff from relevant
congressional committees in order to assess the state of UFO
research. Jones was invited, and one would suppose that the
man who travels so easily to China and the U.S.S.R. would
have no problem attending a meeting of such critical
importance held almost literally in his own back yard. He
did not attend. Nor did the other congressional staff
members who were invited.
(Personal communication,
Whiting, Secretary of the
Fund, 26 December
1991).
GOVERNMENT UFO CONNECTIONS --
II
Fred
In their book Clear Intent, Fawcett and Greenwood
discuss the infiltration of the National Investigations
Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP), a major civilian UFO
organization. They begin their discussion by reciting the
activities of some of the earliest NICAP members such as
Nicholas de Rochefort, employed by the Psychological Warfare
Staff of the CIA, Bernard J.. 0. Carvalho, who was involved
in various secretly owned CIA business enterprises, and Vice
Admiral Roscoe Hillenkoetter, the first Director of the CIA.
Fawcett and Greenwood go on to say:
"Further evidence of CIA influence in NICAP
developed during the period immediately before
NICAP's decline. On December 3, 1969, Donald
Keyhoe was ousted as NICAP's Director during a
Board meeting. Who led the effort to remove
Keyhoe? The Chairman of the Board, Col. Joseph
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Bryan, former Chief of the CIA's Psychological
Warfare Staff (1947-1953). And who replaced
Keyhoe? John Acuff, who was the head of the
Society of Photographic Scientists and
Engineers (SPSE), a frequent target of Russian
spying attempts and.-,a group that had many
members involved in Defense Department
intelligence units, including the CIA. His
management of NICAP was financially 'tight' (in
the cheap sense) and totally inept in a
research sense. Criticism of government UFO
policy was gone, and NICAP merely served as a
sighting collection center. Acuff's management
drove loyal members away and ultimately led to
Acuff's downfall in 1978.
,,Who replaced Acuff? None other than Alan
Hall, a retired CIA employee, who accepted the
position after a number of other CIA employees
were offered the job. Support for Hall came
from Charles Lombard, an aide to Senator Barry
Goldwater and a former CIA covert employee.
"NICAP eventually became so ineffective that
it was disolved." (page 207),
Are there parallels between the demise of NICAP and
Jones' activities at the ASPR?
Scott's friend Colonel John Alexander, has an
intriguing background. Besides being Jones' fellow
researcher on anomalies in the Bahamas, he has displayed a
long term interest in the paranormal. In 1980 he published
an article in Military Review subtitled "Beam Me Up, Spock."
Alexander has actively promoted psychic metal bending among
government personnel using the techniques pioneered by Jack
Houck of McDonnell Douglas. Alexander is a former president
of the International Association for Near Death Studies, and
he worked with Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. 12 Alexander also
served as the military liaison to the National Research
Council's panel evaluating parapsychological applications.
Reportedly, he had access to classified government material
on parapsychology.
Alexander had a 32 year career in the Army, including a
stint as director of the Advanced Systems Concept Office,
U.S. Army Laboratory Command. Alexander also was chief of
the Advanced Human Technology Office of the Intelligence and
Security Command (INSCOM). His colleague, General Albert
Stubblebine, was head of INSCOM. In his MUFON paper, Scott
Jones acknowledged working on a project for INSCOM.
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According to the January/February 1990 issue of
International UFO Reporter, Alexander is manager of
anti-material technology in the Defense Initiative Office at
Los Alamos National Laboratory. Thus he is located in an
area of intense activity -- New Mexico, the Land of
Enchantment.
Alexander recently co-authored a book entitled The
Warrior's Edae (Morrow, New York, 1990) with Major Richard
Grolier and Janet Morris. Grolier served on the staff of
the Directorate of Intelligence, U.S. Forces Command, the
U.S. Army Intelligence School, and the Defense Intelligence
Agency (DIA). Grolier has published an article in Military
Intelli ence titled "Soviet Psychotronics - A State of
Mind "
Morris is affiliated with the National Intelligence
Study Center and worked as long as 19 years ago on the
effect of mind on probability in computer systems.
One wonders about a two-star General (Kerby) showing up
incognito to interview a "UFO buff," (Graham) and who also
spends some of his time with a congressional aide who
specializes in paranormal and New Age topics. But stealth
specialist Kerby is not the only general officer who seems
to be on friendly terms with Scott Jones.
While Kerby seems to devote his energies to the UFO
problem, Major General Albert Stubblebine focuses on
parapsychology. I will quote from Howard Blum's book Out
There (Simon & Schuster, 1990), which is devoted to an
account of U.S. Government activities in the fields of
ufology and parapsychology. Nearly every review of this
book has pointed out the extraordinary number of factual
errors it contains, but the information on Stubblebine
appears to be correct:
"In the early 1980s, Army Intelligence was an
inventive, why-not-give-it-a-try sort of
organization. It was spending millions on
parapsychological experiments. It had contracted
with the Monroe Institute in Faber, Virginia, for
studies to relieve stress through 'advanced states
of consciousness.' It had spent research dollars
on 'hemisphere synchronization,' a process that
uses patterns of sound waves to intensify
consciousness by 'uniting' both hemispheres of the
brain. Marksmen were being taught to concentrate
through paranormal methods (a project so intense
that several officers later claimed they suffered
recurring mental problems as a result.) And the
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Commander of INSCOM, as the Army's Intelligence
and Security Command was known, was Major General
Albert Stubblebine, a man nicknamed 'spoon bender'
because of his rumored belief in psychic powers."
(page 58)
Since he has left the Ar9 , Stubblebine has been quite
involved in paranormal areas. 33 Stubblebine, formerly
Vice President for "Intelligence Systems" of BDM of McClean,
Virginia, is now Chairman of Psi Tech, a group thatlaspires
to provide psychic advice to Fortune 500 companies.
Reportedly, most members of Psi Tech are ex-military
personnel who were trained in a multi-million dollar
parapsychological applications program developed at SRI
International.15 A few months ago, Psi Tech received
national publicity for attempting to "remote view" hidden
biological weapons in Iraq. Recently, Psi Tech personnel
have told a number of people that they believe they have
found a colony of invisible aliens in New Mexico.
Laibow, Stubblebine and ufologist Victoria Lacas (with
Jones in the shadows) are fresh from a tour of Europe and
the Soviet Union, where they have established a prodigious
UFO/Psi network. It subsumes both fields of inquiry
(parapsychology and ufology), and is international in
composition and scope. Scott's goals were stated thus in
his Omega Conference speech: "I assume that the effective
stonewalling position of the U.S. Government may not be the
norm in all countries. The question is, can we identify
countries that may be more open on the subject than the
United States, who would be willing to share with
researchers credible evidence of extraterrestrial
activities, and the knowledge that they have also shared
this evidence with other governments? The second avenue of
activity would be to act as a public broker between
countries in this area."
An organization called the International Association
for New Science, of Fort Collins, Colorado, has announced an
"International Symposium on UFO Research" to be held in
Denver on May 22 through May 25, 1992.16 The first two
days will consist of a "retreat" for "prominent researchers"
and will not be open to the public. Among the goals of the
new organization is "the formulation of synergistic and
cooperative future UFO research strategies." General Albert
Stubblebine, in what appears to be his debut as a public
figure in ufology, will speak on (pun probably not intended)
"General UFO phenomena." Doubtless the General will be in
the audience, nodding in profound agreement, when another
scheduled speaker, C. B. Scott Jones, shares his accumulated
wisdom on the topic of "Abductors/abductees and government.
involvement/cover-up"!
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1. Schuessler is a senior executive with McDonnell
Douglas, a major defense and aerospace firm. The McDonnell
Foundation has been a consistent major source of funding for
psi research. The McDonnell Douglas Huntington Beach,
California facility employs two publicly known anomalies
researchers, Jack Houck and Dr. Robert Wood. Houck has
conducted hundreds of sessions instructing people on how to
bend metal using psychic means (a number of
parapsychologists have found his demonstrations
unconvincing). He has also conducted similar exercises in
remote viewing. Houck has a long list of publications in
the psi field, but his connection with McDonnell Douglas is
virtually never mentioned. Dr. Robert Wood has written on
the UFO phenomenon and is known to have monitored the field
of parapsychology.
2. The Laibow-Jones presentation at the Society for
Psychical Research was promoted by Ralph Noyes, a former
Ministry of Defence official who is involved with UFOs and
Crop Circles.
3. When Scott's busy schedule does not permit his
attendance at a conference, his son or his assistant,
Menelika McCarthy, have sometimes been spotted in the
audience.
4. Jones served an assignment with the Naval Scientific and
Technical Intelligence Center as head of the Missiles,
Ordnance, and Astronautics Division. There he produced
intelligence reports for the Navy and Defense Intelligence
Agency (DIA) at all levels of security classification. He
was chairman of the Naval Missile Group (NIfG), which
supported the Guided Missile and Astronautic Intelligence
Committee. He directed the Navy's Intelligence Anti-Ship
Missile Task Force, which provided intelligence for
anti-missile defence research. Other assignments included
Chief, Targets Development Branch in the Intelligence
Directorate of Headquarters, U.S. European Command, and a
stint at the National Military Command System Support
Center.
5. The Human Potential Foundation logo is shown below:
Human Potential Foundation
C. B. Scott Jones, Ph.D.
President
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6. This incident involved "backward masking." Jones and
his colleagues had played tape recordings backwards of
speeches given by Bush, Baker and Cheney. Jones suggested
that this may have revealed an important code word relevant
to the Gulf crisis. Despite the wide ridicule which greeted
his suggestion, privately Jones continues as a strong
advocate of "reverse speech therapy" even though there seems
to be no scientific support for the notion.
7. According to Larry Collins, author of Maze, the Navy has
had an interest in electronic mind control. He specifically
mentioned a very mysterious character named Dr. Jack Vorona.
(Playboy January 1990).
8. Psychotronics in the U.S. is comprised largely of a
bizarre mix of electronics and occultism. Government
personnel and defense contractors regularly attend
psychotronics conventions.
9. Reports say that Jones's position and charm allowed him
to meet with extremely high level Chinese officials in the
paranormal research field, levels denied to most visiting
scientists.
10. In a recent interview for Green E22, Vallee reported
that "One government informant has even come forward to
reveal that he, in fact, had been recruited to befriend
various UFOlogists and to write psychological profiles of
them. Every UFO organization is monitored by government
informers."
11. This is by no means the first time officials in the
Pentagon have expressed an interest in parapsychological
aspects of UFOs. In 1973, a helicopter crew of the U.S.
Army Reserve encountered a UFO over Ohio. A very detailed
report by Jennie Zeidman was published by the Center for UFO
Studies. Appendix C of that report noted that the crew was
contacted by Pentagon personnel and asked about unusual
dreams.
12. Kubler-Ross has contributed much to the hospice
movement and increased our compassion for the process of
death and dying, though hers is not a rigorous scientific
approach. During her work, she herself reported
encountering entities of deceased persons. One of her
closest associates was Jay Barham, a medium who made sexual
advances during seances. During one seance, the light was
turned on and everyone, including Kubler-Ross, could see
Barham naked. The medium was defended by claiming that an
entity had cloned Barham's body (flew West, July 30, 1979).
Not long after this, John Alexander began his Ph.D. work
under the direction of Kubler-Ross. Dr. Alexander, like Dr.
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Jones, is not known for his scientific contributions to
parapsychology.
13. Well placed sources have reported that Laibow and _
Stubblebine are discussing marriage.
14. Edward A. Dames serves as President of Psi Tech, and
David A. Morehouse is vice Presi-dent. They are based in
Jessup, Maryland, but there are rumors that they are
planning to move to New Mexico.
15. There may have been more than one parapsychology
program at SRI International. Psychologist David Saunders
has been a consultant to SRI parapsychology research.
Saunders was previously known for his UFO research and his
work on the Personality Assessment System, a personality
test used by the CIA. A leader of one SRI program, Edwin
May, is now employed by Science Application International
Corporation (SAIC) and is conducting Psi research. Some of
the personnel involved are still affiliated with SRI
International. Some of the SAIC parapsychology research has
been conducted at Los Alamos, and reportedly involves
magnetoencephalography. SAIC is a large company with many
offices: its board of directors includes such luminaries as
Bobby Ray Inman and Melvin Laird.
16. International Association for New Science, 1304 South
College Avenue, Ft. Collins, CO 80524, telephone: (303)
482-3731.
Alexander, John B., "The New Mental Battlefield." HHilitary
Review, Vol. 60, No. 12, December 1980 [reprinted in Psychic
Warfare: Fact or Fiction?, edited by John White, Aquarian,
-------- ---- -- ---- -
1988]
Alexander, John B., "Defining the Boundaries."
International UFO Reporter, Vol. 15, No. 1, 1990, pp. 15-18.
Alexander, John B., Richard Groller and Janet Morris, The
Warrior's Edqe,
Morrow, New. York, 1990.
Babu, Pranab, "BCCI, narco dollars, Leichenstein (sic), Rita
Sen..." Sunday Times of India, August 4, 1991, pp. 1, 21.
----- ----- -- Blum, Howard. Out There, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1990.
Coleman, Kate. "Elisabeth Kubler-Ross In The Afterworld Of
Entities." New West, July 30, 1979, pp. 43-50.
Collins, Larry. "Mind Control," Playb2X, January 1990, pp.
157-158, 204-208.
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Ecker, Don. "The Whistleblowers: Lee Graham. UFO Buff
Alleges Government 'Sting,'" UFO, Vol. 6, No. 6, 1991, p.
10.
Ecker, Don. "Source Confesses Role As 'Controlled
Informant,'" UFO, Vol. 7, No. 1, 1992, pp. 11, 12.
E[cker]., D[on]. "C. B. Scott Jones, A Man And A Mystery,"
UFO, Vol. 7, No. 1, 1992, p. 12.
Fawcett, Lawrence, and Barry Greenwood. Clear Intent: The
Government Coverup of the UFO Experience, Prentice-Hall,
Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1984.
Groller, Richard. "Soviet Psychotronics - A State Of Mind."
Military Intelligence, Vol. 12, No. 4, October-December
1986, pp. 18-21, 58.
Haines, Richard F. Advanced Aerial Devices Reported During
The Korean War, LDA Press, P.O. Box 880, Los Altos, CA
94023, 1990.
Hastings, Robert. "The MJ-12 Affair: Facts, Questions,
Comments," MUFON UFO Journal, June 1989, pp. 3-11.
Howe, Linda Moulton. "UFO Mutilations, Crashed Saucers &
Aliens In Government Captivity," UFO Universe, Vol. 1, No.
1, July 1988, pp. 16-22, 62.
Jones, Cecil B. "Photographic Satellite Reconnaissance."
Space World, Vol. R-5-209, May 1981, pp. 15-24. [Originally
published in the June 1980 Proceedings of the U.S. Naval
Institute)
Jones, Scott. "Enhancing Human Performance: Responding To A
Flawed Report," Body, Mind & Spirit, April 22, 1988, pp. 16,
80.
Jones, Cecil B., Editor, Proceedings Of A Symposium On
Applications Of Anomalous Phenomena, November 30 - December
1, 1983, Kaman Tempo, Alexandria, VA.
Jones, Cecil B. "Government - UFO Connections," in the
Mufon Symposium Proceedings, 1991, p. 173-184. MUFON, 103
Oldtowne Road, Seguin, TX 78155.
Kaplan, Michael. "Royalty Inc.," Special Report, November
1990-January 1991, pp. 13-16.
Moore, William L. "UFOs And The U.S. Government: I & II,"
MUFON UFO Journal, November 1989, pp. 8-16, 18, December
1989, pp. 8-14.
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24
Randle, Kevin D., and Donald R. Schmitt, UFO Crash At
Roswell, Avon, New York, 1991.
Stewart, Daniel Blair. "Strange Encounters: An Interview
With UFOlogist, Jacques Vallee," Green Egg., Vol. 24, Yule
1991, pp. 16-19,34.
Vallee, Jacques. Revelations: Alien Contact And Human
----- ------- --- -----
DeceRtion, Ballantine Books, New York, 1991.
Zeidman, Jennie. A Helicopter--UFO Encounter Over Ohio,
--- ----
------- -
Center for UFO Studies, Evanston, IL,-1979.
Robert J. Durant
106 Hessian Hill Drive
Pennington, NJ 08534
(609) 737-0696
February 20, 1992
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