AAAS see AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE
ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE AAMT see ASSOC~ON DES AMIS DE MARC THIROUIN ABDUCTION, sometimes referred to as a CLOSE ENCOUNTER OF
THE FOURTH KIND (CE-Iv), the kidnap ping of human beings by UFO occupants.
Although abductees are frequently referred to as CONTACTEES, not all contactees
are abductees. In alleged contact cases, UFONAUTS generally engage in friendly
con versation with earthlings during which they impart messages of a spiritual
or moralistic nature. The con tactee may even be taken on a trip in a flying
saucer, sometimes to the aliens' home planet. In abduction cases, on the other
hand, humans are taken into spacecralt against their will. There they are
subjected to physical examinations before being set free. The most well-known
abduction cases are the Betty and Barney Hill case in NEW HAMPSHIRE, the Charles
Hickson and Calvin Parker case in PASCAGOULA, Mississippi and the ANTONIO
VILLAS-BOAS case in Brazil. Many alleged abduction cases have been revealed only through
the use of HYPNOSIS, the witnesses having lost all conscious memory of the
events. Psychologist R. LEO SPRINKLE has interviewed and hypnotically re gressed
numerous individuals who apparently were victims of abduction by UFOnauts within
amnesic or time loss periods during UFO encounters. However, experiences related
during hypnosis cannot be consid ered unequivocally factual. In experiments
conducted at the Anaheim Memorial Hospital in Anaheim, Califor nia, in 1977, by
clinical hypnotist William C. McCall, technical writer JOHN DEHERRERA and
English pro fessor ALVIN LAwSON, imaginary UFO abductions were induced hypnotically in a group of subjects who had never seen
UFOs and were uninformed on the subject. The imaginary events described by the
control subjects showed no substantive differences from those related by "real"
abductees. Some researchers believe that reports of DISAPPEAR ANCES of
people and objects represent another type of UFO abduction case. Writers have
hypothesized that such abductees may be used for food, slavery, experi
mentation, zoos, museums or some other unknown purpose. The most notorious area
where such disap pearances are reputed to occur is known as the BERMUDA TRIANGLE.
Close Encounters of a Fourth Kind (New York: Berkley
Publishing Corporation, 1977). ABOMINABLE SNOWMAN see BIGFOOT ABOMINABLE
WOODMAN see BIGFOOT ACOS see CENTRE FOR UFO STUDIES-AUS TRALIAN
CO-ORDINATION SECTION ACOS BULLETIN, publication of the CENTRE FOR UFO STUDIE~AUsTRALIAN CO-ORDINATION SE~ON (AC OS) ACUFF, JOHN L. (address: 5012 Del Ray Avenue, Washington, D.C. 20014; telephone number: 301- 654-8091), Chairman of the Board and President of the NATIONAL INvESTIG~ON5 COMMITTEE ON AERIAL PHENOMENA (NICAP). Acuff adheres to no specific theories regarding the identity of
UFOs. Acuff graduated from American University in Wash- ington, D.C., with a B.S. in Biology and minors in Mathematics,
Psychology and Chemistry. From 1963 to 1965, Acuff worked for Technology, Inc., where he
held a management position and was primarily responsible for Biomedical
Engineering re search sales. He was Director of Marketing for Flow Laboratories,
Inc., from 1965 to 1967, Executive Direc tor of Photographic Scientists and
Engineers from 1967 to 1970, and since 1970 has been President of his own firm,
Acuff Associates, Inc., a management services organization. He is also President
and Omer of Cen tennial Corporation, Executive Director and Advisor to the Board
of the American Cardiology Technologists Association, Executive Director and
Advisor to the Board of the Associated Dental Laboratories, Executive Director
and Advisor to the Board of the National Society of Cardiopulmonary
Technologists, a charter member and consultant of the Society of Association
Managers, a member of the American Society of Asso ciation Executives and a
member of the International Plaiform Association. Acuff has been the Chairman of the Board and President of NICAP
since 1970. He has lectured widely on UFOs and other subjects and has been a
guest on more than one hundred international television and radio shows. ADAMSKI, GEORGE (b. April 17, 1891; Poland; d. April 23,
1965; near Washington, D.C.), one of the first and most famous CONTACTEES. Adamslti was two years old when his parents moved to Dunkirk,
New York, where he grew up. In 1913, he enlisted in the army and served in the
13th Cavalry on the Mexican border. He received an honorable dis charge in 1~9.
He was almost forty when he settled in Laguna Beach, California. A self-styled
professor of oriental mystical philosophy, he founded a cult called the Royal
Order of Tibet. In 1940, he moved with his followers to the Valley Center, where
they set up a small farming project. In 1944, he moved to the southern slope of
Mount Palomar, whose peak is the site of a famous observatory. There Adamsl::i
worked as a handyman at a hamburger stand. During the late 1940s, Adamski wrote a novel, entitled
Pioneers of Space, about an imaginary trip to the moon, Venus and Mars.
He listed the book with the Library of Congress for copyright purposes as a work
of fiction. In 1953, Adamski co-authored Flying Saucers Have Landed (New
York: The British Book Centre) with British author Desmond Leslie. The book,
which was highly successful, tells of Adamski's first alleged contact with SPACE
PEOPLE. According to Adamski's and Leslie's account, on November 20, 1952,
Adamski went into the desert accom~am'ed by anthropologist George Hunt Wifliamson, his wife Betty Williamson, also an
anthropologist and chemist, Mr. and Mrs. Al Bailey, Lucy McGinnis and Alice K.
Wells. After spotting a CIGAR-SHAPED UFO, the others waited by the car while
Adamski went into a small canyon. There he purpor tedly met with a Venusian with
whom he communicated telepathically and by means of sign language. The Venusian
told Adamski he had come to Earth to stop atomic testing because the radiation
from fallout was dangerous to the other planets in the solar system. After the
spacecraft had left, Adamski noticed that the Venu sian had left deep footprints
in the sand. Within the outline of the footprints were strange hieroglyphics.
The group happened to have brought along some plaster of Paris with which George
Hunt Williamson was able to make a cast of the footprint. Adamski's second book, Inside the Spaceships (London:
Abelard-Schuman, 1955), dealt with his al leged journeys aboard flying saucers.
He claimed to have flown behind the moon where he had seen cities, forests,
lakes and snow-capped mountains. He had even observed people strolling along the
sidewalks. When Russian photographs of the moon's far side revealed a barren
surface, Adamski retorted that the Russians had retouched the pictures in order
to deceive the United States. Adamski published several photographs of flying saucers. His
best-known picture shows a bell-shaped object with portholes around the upper
part and three balls underneath which are supposed to be landing gear. After
several years of research, author FRANK EDWARDS came to the conclusion that
Adamski's space ship was in reality the top of a cannister-type vacuum cleaner
made in 1937. Astronomer DONALD MENZEL, on the other hand, claimed that the
object in Adamski's photograph is clearly identifiable as a well-known type of
chicken brooder with three infrared bulbs under neath it. Other researchers have
identified the object as a tobacco humidor top with a baby nipple on top and three
ping-pong balls at the base. In 1959, Adamski went on a world tour. His self- endowed title
of professor and his Palomar address had misled some foreign journalists into
thinking he was an astronomer at the observatory. He was received by Queen
Juliana of the Netherlands at her palace and was then received in audience at
the Vatican by Pope John who presented him with a medallion. Adamski's third book was published under the title Flying
Saucers Farewell (London. Abelard-Sehuman) in 1961 and under the title
Behind the Flying Saucer Mystery (New York: Warner Paperback Library) in
1967. He died at the age of seventy-four. At the time of his death, he was
offering to teach people how to use self-hypnosis to visit Venus and Mars for a
fee of fifty dollars. His first coauthor, Desmond Leslie, wrote that Adamski, if
reborn on another planet, would attempt to visit Earth. Allegedly, the day alter
his death, an elderly man walking toward Scoriton Down on the edge of Daitmoor
in England encountered three flying saucer occupants. One of them, speaking with
an American accent, stated that he was "Yamski" from Venus. He referred to "Des
Les," which some of Adamski's fol lowers presume to mean "Desmond Leslie." Several of the witnesses to Adamsloi's famous first encounter
in the desert later recanted their stories. Chemical Engineer LEON DAVIDSON,
publisher of Flying Saucers: An Analysis of the Air Force Project Blue Book
Special Report No.14, believes that Adam ski was the naive and trusting
victim of a colossal HOAX perpetrated by government agents. He holds that the
spaceships in which Adamski claimed to have traveled were actually man-made
structures whose windows were viewing screens showing filmed vistas of space. He
points out that Adamski claimed to have been encour aged in his search for
flying saucers by four U.S. government scientists. Computer scientist JACQUES
VALLEE has suggested that Adamski's experiences were part of a conspiracy to
unite the nations of the world by creating a false extraterrestrial threat. He
notes that Adamski's major supporter abroad was a former intel ligence officer
with the British Army, and a Cambridge engineering graduate. Moreover, points
out Vallee, according to the host of his Australian tour, Adamski was traveling
with a passport bearing special privileges. Following Adamski's death, Alice K. Wells founded the GEORGE ADAMSKI FOUND~ON. The organization boasts several
thousand members worldwide. ADAMSKI CORRESPONDENT GROUP, former name of NEW ZEALAND SCIE~FIC APPROACH TO Cos MIC UNDERSTANDING
(NZSATCU OR SATCU). AD ASTRA, magazine established in 1978 with a
circulation of 15,000. Published six times a year, it is available at newsstands
and by subscription. The maga zine presents articles on space research and the
cosmos as well as science fiction stories and unbiased coverage of mysteries,
including UFOs. Material is written by staff and freelance writers. Articles
between 1,000 and 3,000 words in length should be submitted with a
self-addressed, stamped envelope, and payment is made upon publication at a rate
often pounds sterling per 1,000 words. Rights to all features remain with
authors. There is usually no payment for photographs. The publishers require
that writers be knowledgeable about their subject, and approach it from a
serious, objective viewpoint, avoid ing technical jargon as far as possible. James Manning is Editor. Ad Astra is published by
Rowlot, Ltd., 22 Offerton Road, London S.W.4, En- gland. ADEPS see ASSOCIATION POUR LA DETEC TION ET
L'ETUDE DES PHENOMENES SPATIAUX ADMIRALTY BAY, ANTARCTICA, location of a UFO sighting by Brazilian meteorologist Rubens J.
Villela and five other witnesses aboard the U.S. S. Glacier at about
6:15 on March 16, 1961, Villela was taking part in the United States Navy's
Operation Deep Freeze. The sharply-defined, egg-shaped UFO traveled slowly from
the northeast to the southwest at about fifty degrees above the horizon on a
straight, horizontal trajectory. Villela had the impression that its size was
that of a small airplane. Straight, multicolored rays extended backward in a
V-formation from the front of the object. The colors changed continually but
were predominantly green, red and blue. The object itself was reddish. It left
behind it an orange trail which resembled a straight, hollow tube similar to a
neon light. Suddenly, the front and rear of the UFO split apart, forming two
separate objects, each one identical in every way to the one original object
they had been. As the objects changed from red to blue-and-white, they increased
in brightness. Abruptly, they vanished. PHILIP KLASS cites this UFO as a good example of a case which
can be explained in terms of PLASMA. The late meteorologist JAMES MCDONALD,
however, argued that the highly structured nature of the object and the low
cloud overcast present at about 1,500 feet were not compatible with Klass's
hypothesis. Bibliography: U.S. Congress, House, Committee on Science and
Astronautics, Symposium on Unidentified Flying Objects, Hearings, Ninetieth
Congress, Second Session, July 29, 1968 (Washington, D.C,: U.S, Gov ernment
Printing Office, 1968). ADRUP see ASSOCIATION DIJONNMSE DE RECHERCHES UFOLOGIQUES ET PARA PSYCHOLOGIQUES ADVERTISING PLANES, aircraft, usually Cessnas or
helicopters, which carry electronic signs with lights that flash in sequence.
Usually airborne between dusk and midnight, they are most frequently observed be
tween 8:00 and 10:00 P,M. Because the advertising plane's message is clear and
legible only when the craft is directly above the observer, it is frequently the
source of mistaken UFO reports. Many witnesses, seeing the lights flashing from
right to left, assume that the lights continue around the craft in a loop. Thus
they conclude, falsely, that the craft is disk-shaped and possibly rotating.
When the message is completed and the last light goes out, the illusion is
created that the entire craft has vanished. Flight schedules of advertising planes can be checked by
telephoning the individual aerial advertising com panies listed in the telephone
directory. However, in the United States, some advertising planes fly over
several states and the witness or investigator may not be able to trace them
through local advertising companies. AERIAL PHENOMENA GROUP, formal name given by the UNITED STATES AIR FORCE to the UFO investigative
organization whose code name was PROJ ECT BLUE BOOK. AERIAL PHENOMENA INVESTIGATION COMMITTEE (APIC), presided over by Paul J. Blake, this organization became defunct in 1976. AERIAL PHENOMENA INVESTIGATION OR GANIZATION (APIO),
former name of the GREEN vILLE UFO STUDY GROUP. AERIAL PHENOMENA RESEARCH OBGANI- ZATION (APRO), 3910 E.
Kleindale Road, Tucson, Arizona 85712; telephone number: 602-323-1825. The oldest organization in the field, APRO accepts the
possibility that UFOs might be extraterrestrial spacecraft from another solar
system engaged in a methodical study of Earth. The group's purpose is to gather,
study and store UFO reports. APRO originated the field investigator system in
1968 and currently has a network of 500 investigators in the United States and
fifty foreign countries. Almost fifty consultants, most of whom possess
doctorates, make up advisory panels on biological sciences, medical science, physical sciences and
social sciences. This nonprofit organization is one of the world's major UFO
groups. Now possessing a membership of approx imately 3,000, APRO was founded in
1952 by CORAL E. LORENZEN and LESLIE JAMEs "JIM" LORENZEN, who have authored
numerous books on UFOs. The staff consists of International Director Jim
Lorenzen, Direc tor of Research JAMES A. HARDER, Public Relations Officer Hal
Starr, Secretary~Treasurer Coral Lorenzen, Membership Secretary Madeleine H.
Cooper, Staff Librarian Allen Benz and Office Manager Sheila Kudrle. The Board
of Directors consists of Jim Lorenzen, Coral Lorenzen, Richard Gerdes, Walter W.
Walker and Louis Dougherty. Coral Lorenzen is Editor of the APRO BULL~N, which
was published bimonthly until 1978 and is now published monthly. APRO has representatives in Argentina, Australia, Belgium,
Bolivia, Brazil, Ceylon, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Czechoslovakia,
Denmark, Domin ican Republic, Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, Greece,
Guatemala, Holland, Honduras, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Lebanon, Malta, Mexico, New
Guinea, New Zealand, Norway, Peru, Puerto Rico, Philippine Re public, Rumania,
Sierra Leone, Singapore, South Af rica, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan,
Tasmania, Trinidad, Turkey, United Kingdom, Venezuela and Yugoslavia. AERIAL PHENOMENON CLIPPING AND IN FORMATION CENTER (APCIC),
P.O. Box 9073, Cleveland, Ohio 44137; telephone number: 216475- 1711. Founded in 1974 by H.R. Cohen, Ron Smotek and Scott
MacWilliams, this newsclipping service provides international coverage on a monthly basis of current information on UFO sightings from around the world. The APCIC
NEWS BULL~N consists of a minimum of sixty pages and includes a section on other
mysteries, such as BICFOOT. H.R. Cohen is Editor. Scott Mac- Williams is
Assistant Editor. Ron Smotek handles photo analysis. AESV see ASSOCIATION D'ETUDE SUR LES SOUCOUPES
VOLANTES AETHERIUS SOCIE'TY, 6202 Afton Place, Hol lywood, California
90028; telephone number: 213- 465-9652. European headquarters: 757 Fulham Road, London 5W6
5UU, England. Derived from the Greek, Aetherius refers to one who travels
through the ether, the upper regions of space, and is the pseudonym given by
this international CONTACTEE society to an alleged cosmic master of ¡Ô_ _ AFFA/ AFTERIMAGE 5 Venus. The group believes that UFOs are craft from Venus, Mars
and other supposedly Utopian planets in Earth's solar system. Their aim is to
promote the teachings of these cosmic intelligences and to prepare Earth's
inhabitants for the coming of the next great master. One of their primary
missions is Operation Prayer Power, in which spiritual energy created by prayer
is supposedly stored in a physical container and released in condensed form to
avert or reduce the effects of disasters such as earthquakes, wars and
famine. Members participate in spiritual services and attend classes
and lectures. Available for purchase are a large number of books and cassette
tapes. Also on sale are rocks from mountains that have been spiritually charged
by the cosmic masters. This nonprofit organization was incorporated in 1956 in the
United Kingdom and in 1960 in the United States. GEORGE KING is the President
and founder. U.S. Founding Directors are Monique King, Erain Noppe and Charles
Abrahamson. The Secretary and Assistant Secretary of European Headquarters are
Ray Nielsen and Alan Moseley, respectively. Membership stands at about 1,000.
The Aetherius Society Spiritual Healing Bulletin and the Aetherius
Society Newsletter are published bimonthly. U.S. branches: Edna Sophia Spencer, 16547 Grand River Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48227; Lillian E. Berndt, Box 212, Beach Lane, Huron Beach, Ocqueoc, Michigan 49763; Virginia Roberts, Canterbury Court Apartments, Apt. 608, 1220 North State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois 60610. Foreign branches: Paul White, 350 Sheffield Road, Birdwell, Barnsley, South Yorkshire 570 STU, England; Natu Patel, 15 Breedon Hill Road, Derby DE3 6TH, England; Stephen Gibson, 183 Sten ley Hill,
Amersham, Bucks, England; Jay Greatrex, Witheridge Garden Flat, 8 Oxlea Road, Torquay, De von T21 2HF,
England; Jean Berry, 21 Avon Way, Stoke Bishop, Bristol B59 1SJ, England; Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Henderson, 1 Antony Road, Warrington, Cheshire WA4 6DD, England; Dorothy Holt, 3 Leith Road, Pennant Hills 2120, New South Wales, Australia; Jochen Peters, P.O. Box 5932, Accra, Ghana, West Africa; S. C. 0. Adeyemi, P.O. Box 8420, Lagos, Ni
geria. AFFA, alleged extraterrestrial being from the PLANET Uranus who supposedly communicates with Frances Swann of SOUTH BERWICK, MAINE. AFO see ALIEN FLYING OBJECT AFR 8~17 see MR FORCE REGULATION 8~l7 AFRICA, The world's earliest UFO report comes from Egypt
where the pharaoh THUTMOSE III observed fiery disks in the
fifteenth century B.C. During the MODERN ERA, there have been numerous
reports of UFOs in Africa, particularly in Rhodesia and South Africa. There were
WAVES of sightings in North Africa in 1950 and 1954, and in Central
Africa in 1966. A 1972 wave in South Africa was highlighted by a farmer's
encounter with a fiery globe in FORT BEAUFORT. Another wave followed in Rhodesia
in 1975. In 1976, a cylindrical UFO was spotted from widely separate locations
in Morocco over a one-hour period. In answer to a confidential communique from
Ambassador Robert An derson, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said "It is
difficult to offer any definitive explanation as to the cause or origin of the
UFOs sighted in the Moroccan area. There are several UFO and CONTACTEE organizations in Africa.
The majority of them are located in South Africa and Rhodesia. Noted
personalities in these two countries are UFO investigator CYNTHIA HIND and
CONTACTEE ELIZABETH KLARER, who claims to have given birth to an
extraterrestrial's child on another PLANET. AFR 2O(~5 see MR FORCE REGULATION 2O~5 AFR 2O(~2 see AIR FORCE REGULATION 2O~2 AFSCA see AMALGAMATED FLYING SAU CER CLUBS OF
AMERICA AFSCA WORLD REPORT, newsletter published by the AMALGAMATED FLYING SAUCER CLUBS OF AMER ICA (AFSCA) from
1959 to 1961, replacing the semi- religious magazine THY KINGDOM COME and in
turn replaced by UFO INTERN~ONAL. AFTERIMAGE, visual illusion which occurs when retinal
impressions remain after removal of the stim ulus. The original image persists
momentarily, then is replaced by a negative image in which the color and
luminosity of the original are reversed. For example, a dull green object may
produce a bright red afterimage. The late astronomer DONALD MENZEL has proposed
that afterimages might explain numerous UFO reports, including those made by
airline pilots. Since the human eye rarely remains stationary, afterimages
moving with the eye give an impression of independently controlled motion.
Menzel has cited the sun as one of the most common causes of such an effect,
commenting that when the sun is low on the horizon or partly
obscured
Bibliography: Lorenzen, Coral and Jim, Abducted:
2
ADAMSKI,GEORGE
MASIACUFF
1
ADAMSKI, CORRESPONDENT I ADMIRALTY BAY
3