• WHO ARE THE HUMANOIDS?

    From Rixter@RICKSBBS to all on Sun Jan 26 06:54:10 2025
    From "The Unexplained" #2.
    Orbis Publishing, Great Britain.

    WHO ARE THE HUMANOIDS

    MANY PEOPLE CLAIM TO HAVE MET THE OCCUPANTS OF UFOs; BUT
    ACCOUNTS OF HUMANOIDS' BEHAVIOUR AND APPEARANCE SEEM STRANGELY
    INCONSISTENT

    The sighting of nine unusual flying craft in Washington
    State, USA, by American airman Kenneth Arnold in June 1947,
    marked the advent of modern publicity for the "flying saucer"
    or UFO phenomenon. The frequently reported ultra-high speeds
    and breath-taking manoeuvrability of the objects inevitably led
    to speculation by observers, newsmen and the public alike that
    what was being witnessed were intrusions into our airspace by
    extra-terrestrial visitors - beings from outer space. And, as
    the behaviour of these objects seemed to indicate superior
    technology and its fluent control, the big question was: control
    by whom, or by what?

    The question was not quickly resolved, however, for although
    the phenomenon was so persistent that the US Air Force set up
    an investigatory unit (Project Blue Book), officialdom did not
    appear to want to know the answer. By 1952, many accounts of
    sightings and even landings had been filed with the Project;
    but in his book 'The Report on UFOs', Blue Book's commanding
    officer, Captain Edward Ruppelt, stated he had been plagued by
    reports of landings and that his team had conscientiously
    ignored them.

    There are, however, always those whose sense of wonder
    overcomes official intransigence. Groups of doggedly inquisitive
    civilian researchers drifted together and, the limits of their
    slender resources, they gathered and recorded information from
    all around the world. Among them were people like Aime Michel
    and Jaques Vallee from France (Vallee subsequently lived and
    worked in the USA); Coral and Jim Lorenzen and their Aerial
    Phenomena Research Organisation (APRO) in Arizona; Len
    Stringfield in Ohio; Major Donald Keyhoe's National
    Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) in
    Washington DC (who, like Ruppelt, were at first none too happy
    about the many landing reports) and, in Britain, the supporters
    of the 'Flying Saucer Review'.

    ALIEN PHENOMENON

    From the impressive body of evidence collected by these
    veterans, and others, it is quite obvious now that the
    occupants of UFOs constitute a phenomenon in their own right.
    Indeed, the shapes, sizes, appearance and behaviour of these
    'pilots', as reported by their alleged observers, are often
    quite extraordinary. Out of the thousands of reported
    sightings, no coherent picture emerges of their nature and
    intentions, however, and their actions seldom seem to be
    related to any kind of organised surveillance of our planet.
    Sometimes, sightings of these aliens are even reported without
    the apparent presence of a UFO.

    From 1947 to 1952, while the reality of UFOs and their
    occupants was often the subject of heated debate, allegedly
    man-like creatures had already been observed either close to,
    or actually in, UFOs in widely different parts of the world.

    BRAZILLIAN LANDING

    At Bauru, in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, on 23 July
    1947, for instance, - less than a month after Kenneth Arnold's
    aerial encounter near Mount Rainier - a survey worker named
    Jose Higgins, and several of his fellow workers, saw a large
    metallic disc come to earth and settle down on curved legs.

    Higgins stood his ground while his his colleagues fled, and
    he soon found himself face to face with three 7-foot (2.1
    metres) tall beings, all wearing transparent overalls with
    metal boxes on their backs. One entity pointed a tube at him
    and moved as though to apprehend him. But Higgins dodged the
    creature and observed that it was shy of following him into the
    sunlight.

    The creatures had large bald heads, big round eyes, no
    eyebrows or beards and long legs. They leapt and gambolled,
    picking up and tossing huge boulders about. They also made
    holes in the ground, perhaps trying to indicate what could have
    been the positions of planets around the sun, and pointing
    particularly to the seventh hole from the centre. (Could that
    seventh 'planet' signify Uranus?) The creatures then re-entered
    their craft, which took off with a whistling noise. Higgins
    subsequent account appeared in two Brazillian newspapers.

    Three weeks later, far away in north-eastern Italy, a
    Professor Johannis was on a mountain walk on 14 August 1947,
    near Villa Santina, Carni, in the province of Friuli, when he
    suddenly saw a red metallic disc in a rocky cleft and emerged
    from trees to look at it. He then noticed that two dwarf-like
    creatures were following him, moving with tiny strides, hands
    perfectly motionless at their sides, and heads still. As they
    came nearer, Johannis' strength failed him: he seemed
    paralysed.

    The little beings - less than 3 feet (1 metre) tall - wore
    translucent blue coveralls, with red collars and belts. The
    witness could detect no hair, but he described their facial
    skin colour as 'earthy green'. He also noted straight noses,
    slits for mouths that opened and closed like fishes' mouths,
    and large round, protruding eyes.

    Johannis says he shouted to them on an impulse and waved his
    alpine pick, whereupon one dwarf raised a hand to his belt, the
    centre of which apparently emitted a puff of smoke. The pick
    flew out of Johannis' hand, and he fell flat on his back. One
    entity then retrieved the pick, and the pair retreated to the
    disc, which soon shot up, hovered briefly over the
    panic-stricken professor, and then suddenly seemed to shrink
    and vanish.

    CRASH LANDING

    On 19 August 1949, in Death Valley, California, two
    prospectors saw the apparent crash-landing of a disc. Two small
    beings emerged and were chased by the prospectors until the
    aliens were lost among sand dunes. But when the two men
    returned their site, the disc-shaped object had gone.

    Argentine rancher Wilfredo Arevalo saw one 'aluminium' disc
    land while another hovered over it on 18 March 1950. The object
    that landed was surrounded by a greenish-blue vapour, and in
    its centre was a transparent cabin in which Arevalo saw 'four
    tall, well-shaped men dressed in Cellophane-like clothing'.
    They shone a beam of light at the rancher, the disc glowed a
    brighter blue, flames shot from the base, and it rose from the
    ground. The two objects then disappeared swiftly towards the
    Chilean border.

    Such reports seemed to promise interesting meterial for
    future investigation. but did not appear to indicate a serious
    threat of alien ('take me to your leader') invasion. There was,
    too, an official reluctance even to consider landing reports,
    which were said to be flooding in, due possibly to a fear of
    being swamped with crazy stories of 'little green men', which
    might well have become ready targets for ridicule in the media.
    (Serious researchers eventually coined the term 'humanoids')

    Back in 1953, however, something happened that shocked most
    serious-minded investigators, for it was in that year that a
    certain George Adamski broke in on the UFO scene with a book
    co-authored with Desmond Leslie - 'Flying Saucers Have Landed'.
    In this controversial title, Adamski claimed to have conversed
    with a being from a flying saucer and to have taken
    photographs of the craft. The book rapidly became a bestseller
    and was a boon to those early serious researchers - although
    they would never admit it - in that it brought to thousands of
    casual readers an interest in ufology.

    George Adamski (1891 - 1965) was an amateur astronomer who
    operated Newtonian reflector telescopes from his home at
    Palomar Gardens, California. he developed an obsessive interest
    in flying saucer reports, frequently claimed to have seen the
    objects and to have photographed them telescopically - as on 5
    March 1951, when he captured on film a giant cigar-shaped
    object surrounded by emerging scout craft, and on 1 May 1952,
    when he took a picture of another giant cigar-shaped 'mother
    ship'. Then, on 20 November 1952, with a small party of
    friends, Adamski was driven out to a place just off the road to
    Parker, in Arizona. The purpose of the trip was to look for,
    and then possibly to photograph, UFOs.

    VENUSIAN VISITOR

    A 6-inch (15-centimetre) protable telescope was set up at a
    convenient place and Adamski settled down to wait, while his
    companions retreated to watch from a distance. Before long, he
    said, he was rewarded with the sight of an object landing among
    the hills before him, and he photographed it at long range
    before it disappeared.

    A 'person' then appeared and approached him. The stranger
    was about 5 feet 6 inches (1.7 metres) tall, wore ski-suit type
    clothing and had long hair down to his shoulders. There was an
    aura of friendliness about him, and Adamski said that they were
    able to communicate telepathically about many things, the
    visitor specifically indicating that he came from Venus.

    The stranger's 'scout craft' then turned up and, refusing
    Adamski's request for a ride, the 'Venusian' departed, taking
    one of Adamski's film plate-holders with him. The ufonaut left
    footprints in the sand, and a member of the party produced
    plaster of Paris to make casts of the imprints.

    On 13 December 1952, the Venusian returned to Earth,
    bringing back the plate-holder, and it was then, so Adamski
    claims, that he took close-up pictures of the craft.

    In his second book, 'Inside the Space Ships', Adamski stated
    that he finally made that trip - round the Moon - and that a
    space companion had pointed out the rivers on the unseen far
    side.

    All of this seems to indicate that Adamski was not telling
    the truth, or perhaps that he had been deliberately misled by
    entities that had a vested interest in spreading a little
    confusion on Earth. Then again, perhaps the story Adamski told
    was real enough to him.

    ****End****

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