A new book by author Malcolm Robinson has shed new light on Scotland"s most enduring UFO mystery, the abduction of Garry Wood and Colin Wright from their car in West Lothian some 17 years ago."A remarkable new book explores the mysteriousworld of UFO sightings in Scotland and tells in full detail the country"s first reported case of alien abduction.
Author and investigator Malcolm Robinson probed the incident which took place as friends Garry Wood and Colin Wright, now 46 and 42, were driving to the village of Tarbrax, West Lothian 17 yearsago."
A figure with a lemon-shaped head told two boys to follow it in an apparent close encounter with aliens in Staffordshire, government files say. The figure told the boys: "We want you, come with us," according to a report from 1995 which has been released by the Ministry of Defence. The boys told police they had seen the figure in a field just before midnight on 4 May in Chasetown. However the farmer who owned the field later told police he had seen nothing.
The boys had run to the police station and asked the officers to come outside and look across the distance at a glowing red saucer-shaped object. The officers thought it was an aircraft. Their report said they boys appeared "agitated and distressed" after gazing at the alleged UFO. They said it had emitted an intense heat before zig-zagging off east to west.
"They stated the object was about four houses high in the sky and about 40ft away from them," said the report. "They then, reluctantly, went on to say that a voice which came from a lemon-like head, which appeared beneath the machine, said 'we want you, come with us'. "Both appeared upset and shocked and as such it was increasingly difficult to obtain detailed information from them."
The police sent the boys home and told them to write up their account.
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It's been nearly half a century since Betty and Barney Hill claimed they were abducted by aliens while driving through the White Mountains on Sept. 19, 1961, but there's still no logical explanation for what happened to them that night. The Hills' story, widely considered to be the first documented and bona fide case of abduction, is the focus of a public forum and new exhibition at the University of New Hampshire beginning Friday. It also examines the interracial couple's contributions to the state's civil rights community.Artists' renderings of the described aliens - or"Greys" as they're also known, thousands of pages of correspondence, documents of additional close encounters, as well as the famous ripped dress Betty Hill allegedly wore aboard the UFO, are all on display."Betty wanted (the dress) to be kept safe somewhere so that when human science caught up with alien science, they could do testing," said David Watters, director of UNH's Center for New England Culture and a friend of Betty before she died in 2004 at age 85.
"The story is fascinating. It's hard to judge what could've happened that night, but there's no question whether they believed it."
The Hills'
version of events - fodder for countless movies, books and media
accounts since the story became public in 1965 - is best summed up like
this: The couple was driving home to Portsmouth along Route 3 after
wordcame that bad weather would soon hit the Seacoast. The sky was
clear and the moon nearly full when their 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air
reached Lancaster about 10 p.m.
Betty said she saw a bright
light in the sky that Barney, a World War II veteran, assumed was an
off-course satellite. When they stopped to let their dachshund, Delsey,
out of the car, Betty took out binoculars to get a closer look at the
erratically moving UFO.
A letter she later wrote to
the National Investigations Committee of Aerial Phenomenon described
"several figures scurrying about" and a figure wearing a shiny black
uniform "observing us from the windows" of the craft.
Barney, who died of a
stroke in 1969, became hysterical and drove away quickly, convinced
they would be captured. The beings appeared before them in the road,
and that's when theirm......
About once a week, Jean-Christophe Terrillon wakes up and senses the presence of a threatening, evil being beside his bed. Terror ripples through him, and he tries to move or call out. But he is paralyzed, unable to raise an arm or make a sound. His ears ring, a weight presses down on his chest, and he has to struggle for breath."I feel an intense pressure in my head, as if it's going to explode," said Mr. Terrillon, a Canadian physicist doing research in Japan. Sometimes he finds himself transported upward and looking down on his body, or else sent hurtling through a long tunnel, and these episodes are terrifying even for a scientist like himwho does not believe that evil spirits go around haunting people.Called sleep paralysis, this disorder -- the result of a disconnect between brain and body as a person is on the fringe of sleep -- is turning out to be increasingly common, affecting nearly half of all people at least once.
Moreover, a growing number of scholars believe that sleep paralysis may help explain many ancient reports of attacks by witches and modern claims of abduction by space aliens.
"I think it
can explain claims of witchcraft and alien abduction," said Kazuhiko
Fukuda, a psychologist at Fukushima University in Japan and a leading
expert on sleep paralysis. Research in Japan has had a headstart
because sleep paralysis is well-known to most Japanese, who call it
kanashibari, while it is little-known and less studied in the West.
witch ......
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