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General description of the collection: The Jack V.C. Brewer papers include a completed World War II Veterans Survey questionnaire which traces Brewer's military service and postwar activities and comments on various aspects of military life. He thought American weapons were good, but that Germans had better. Most equipment was reliable and the clothing good. Rations were adequate. Supply Services were stretched thin. Leadership was generally good. Recreation in rest areas consisted of sports, card games, movies and reading. Stars and Stripes and Yank were terrific and good for morale. Military/civilian relations were good in England, Belgium, and Luxembourg. French were not as friendly. He n...
"The Greys Have Been Framed: Exploitation in the UFO Community" explores the ways deception, sensationalism and questionable ethics characterize the UFO genre and distort public perception of the UFO phenomenon. Activities of credulous investigators of alleged alien abduction are considered, as are the roles of intelligence agencies in the theatrics, including thought provocative relationships and similarities between the UFO and intelligence communities. With interviews and insights from James Carrion, Leah Haley, Dr. Tyler Kokjohn, Simone Mendez, Carol Rainey, Emma Woods and others, "The Greys Have Been Framed" takes readers through the exploitation of ufology as perpetrated by charlatans, intelligence officials and researchers harboring unclear motives. The circumstances, existing from the very outset of the modern day UFO phenomenon, prove relevant no matter what personal opinion one may hold on the mystery of UFOs and their alleged occupants.
The adventure of the little drip.
We killed the demon. We fell in love. But we woke something up. And it wants to kill everything.
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I once thought I was normal. Not anymore.I see the future.I see us.Me and him.Too bad his demonic boyfriend is in the way.
What if the CIA didn't destroy NICAP? What if it started it? In 1956 a Washington, D.C. flying saucer club inspired the launch of the National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena. The founders quickly assembled impressive boards consisting of community leaders and career intelligence officers. Over the next 13 years NICAP mounted a public relations campaign that amassed some 14,000 members. It pushed for and obtained Congressional hearings resulting in an Air Force-sponsored scientific UFO study. Why did key personnel leave the Committee over the next year, and was it related to a former CIA officer on the Board of Governors? Did the CIA destroy the organization, or is the NICAP sto...