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Title: Alien Contact?


UFOHARRY - July 16, 2007 06:27 PM (GMT)
HIYA GROUP, I WAS SENT THIS TODAY.

Alien contact came in ?52, author says
By Mannix Porterfield
Register-Herald reporter

Sci-fi buffs flocked to a fantasy film in 1984 bearing a title
prediction that 2010 would be the year earthlings make contact with
aliens.

Actually, contact has come, and it was less than friendly, says one
UFO researcher.

Three decades earlier, in fact, back in 1952, just five years after
the famed Roswell incident, the American military engaged a convoy of
alien aircraft with orders to destroy them in a pitched air battle
right off the Atlantic Coast, says Frank Feschino, author of ?The
Flatwoods Monster,? a phenomenon that rocked a tiny West Virginia
hamlet that year.

An illustrator and writer, Feschino has produced a follow-up book,
this one titled ?Shoot Them Down,? an effort produced after years of
painstaking research of the U.S. Air Force?s once-classified files on
unidentified flying saucers and digesting countless magazine articles
on the matter.

His years of exhaustive study have convinced Feschino that American
jet fighters did indeed make contact ? at the point of their guns.

?Shoot Them Down? draws its name from orders Feschino says President
Truman gave military commanders while an American public was growing
increasingly jittery over coast-to-coast UFO sightings.

Two years earlier, Truman had remarked at a news conference, ?I can
assure you that flying saucers, given that they exist, are not
constructed by any power on earth.?

?There are tons of documents right there, intelligence reports,
talking about pilots chasing these things, going after them,? Feschino
said, citing the once-hidden reports on the Air Force?s so-called
Project Blue Book.

?That?s when it hit the fan, and the government stepped up. That is
when they had to simmer the whole country down. The whole country was
in an uproar. Everybody was panicking. The job of the government is to
keep things under control, and they couldn?t let the country panic.?

UFOs were buzzing the entire country that year, ?and a good chunk of
them were over military installations, and power plants, like Oak
Ridge,? the author says.

Feschino pulls his theory largely from the writings of Air Force Capt.
Edward Ruppelt, a decorated World War II veteran, recalled to duty
when hostilities erupted in Korea.

Roswell might stand out as the mother of all UFO stories, but 1952 was
the most prolific year by far for aircraft sightings ? by one account,
some 30,000 alone in the United States, many of them reported in local
newspapers around the country.

Craft ranged from discs to round balls to elongated, cigar-shaped
ships, the Port Orange, Fla., resident said.

?Capt. Ruppelt was dropping clues throughout his book,? Feschino said.
?And that?s the premise of my book. During that time of 1952 we had
the highest amount of sightings.?

In a book he wrote, Ruppelt said ?other assorted historians have
pointed out that normally the UFOs are peaceful,? but he alluded to a
chase in which one of two pilots engaging unidentified aircraft
perished.

?They just weren?t ready to be observed closely,? he wrote.

?If the Air Force hadn?t slapped down the security lid, these writers
might not have reached this conclusion (about peaceful aliens). There
have been other and more lurid duels of death. That?s what everybody
missed.?

Feschino flatly says the Air Force took on alien aircraft just off the
coast with orders to destroy them in a move to pacify a public growing
ever restless over bizarre sightings. In the battle, apparently one
craft hobbled back inland, resting on a knoll in a West Virginia
community known as Flatwoods. And it was there on Sept. 12 a group of
boys, accompanied by some adults, scampered up the hillside and saw a
metallic, 12-foot object emitting a sulfuric odor. Locals dubbed it
?the Flatwoods Monster.?

?I have no idea who they were,? Feschino said.

Based on his interviews with some 200 denizens of Flatwoods, however,
the author believes the aliens remain interested in rural West Virginia.

?There are people in West Virginia who have been seeing UFOs for the
past 50 years, and there are key locations where they are being seen ?
Wheeling, Huntington, and quite a few south of Charleston, around
Cabin Creek, even down in the Beckley area,? he said.

Feschino is a headliner for a Sept. 7-8 UFO summit in Charleston,
organized by promoter Larry Bailey. Joining him will be Freddie May, a
witness to the Flatwoods incident, and nuclear physicist Stanton
Friedman, considered the leading UFO researcher in the world. Friedman
has appeared on numerous cable TV shows with his belief that
extraterrestrials are frequent flyers to planet Earth.

At the two-day gathering, Feschino plans to sell his new book,
featuring a special, limited edition cover for West Virginia consumers.

At a book-signing in Tamarack, the author was approached by an aging
woman after the crowd of buyers began to disperse.

?She tugged on my shirt and leaned up to my ear and said, ?We?re still
seeing those things up here all the time,?? the author said.
CHEERS
UFOHARRY




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