FUFOR Publications, Fall 2005

FUFOR Publications, Fall 2005

Grass Roots UFOs:  Case Reports From the Timmerman Files by Michael D. Swords.  For the more than 12 years from 1980 to 1992, John Timmerman of the Center for UFO Studies journeyed across the U.S. and several other countries to present a UFO photo exhibit in almost 100 malls, universities, and other venues.  The photo exhibit was eye-catching, and many people came up to John to relate their own, mostly undocumented, UFO encounters.  He audiotaped each of the almost 1200 interviews, and this volume presents perhaps 400 of the best cases—all as delightfully summarized by Dr. Swords.  The vast repertoire of the UFO phenomenon is represented here, from simple fly-bys to radar cases, close encounters, crashed saucers, and high strangeness events.  In addition, Dr. Swords has illustrated many of the cases with his own well-executed line drawings.  The result is a fascinating volume that revives the excitement and awe of the UFO phenomenon.  Perfectbound, 251 pages, illustrated.       $22.00, postpaid

 

UFO Sightings in the New Millennium by Richard Hall.  In case you’re wondering whether UFO sightings still are occurring now that a new century has begun, the answer is yes! and the author presents a representative sampling of dozens of cases reported since January 1 of 2000.  Although most of these sightings have not been formally investigated, Mr. Hall instituted a rigid filtering process and selected only those reports exhibiting “typical” UFO behavior—such as right-angle turns and hovering—and/or shapes that avoided mundane categorization as airplanes, balloons, stars, or meteors.  Center-stapled, 30-plus pages. $9.00, postpaid

 

A Search for Meaning in the Ramey Document From the Roswell UFO Case by James Houran.  A famous photograph of Gen. Roger Ramey taken during the time period of the alleged 1947 UFO crash near Roswell, New Mexico, shows him clutching a document in his hand.  The words on the document are almost legible; could they relate to the supposed UFO crash in the desert?  Numerous UFO researchers have tried numerous techniques to enhance the text to readability; however, consensus on the wording has been elusive.  This technical report summarizes the approaches taken to date by previous researchers to resolve the document’s content as well as—more importantly—the results of new research initiatives undertaken by several independent photoanalysts who examined the photograph.  Center-stapled, 70 pages, illustrated.         $12.00, postpaid

 

UFOs Exposed:  The Classic Photographs by Rob Swiatek.  Relatively few good photographs of UFOs have been taken over the decades; these few have been reproduced widely in many publications over the years, but oftentimes with little accompanying commentary as to their origins or the results of any photoanalysis done upon them.  Rob Swiatek has attempted to rectify this oversight with a volume containing full-page reproductions of many classic UFO photographs (some in color) alongside concise narratives detailing the circumstances surrounding the taking of the photos and the subsequent photoanalytic investigations of them.  Center-stapled, 32 pages, glossy, illustrated.                     $23.50, postpaid

 

Alien Invasion or Human Fantasy?  The 1966-67 UFO Wave by Richard H. Hall.  In retrospect, it turns out the 1966-1967 UFO wave was one of the largest of all time, “the mother of all UFO waves,” as Richard Hall puts it in this comprehensive report on the sightings of that time.  It began in earnest in March of ’66, and when it ended, the University of Colorado UFO Study—the so-called Condon Committee—was in full swing investigating the phenomenon.  The repercussions from that wave continue to this day.  Dick Hall here presents case summaries of hundreds of sightings from the wave, statistics regarding types of objects seen, drawings, and maps illustrating the geographic distribution of the wave.  Perfectbound, 140-plus pages, illustrated (some color). $28.00, postpaid

 

 

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