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him if he was scared by them, and he said, "Hell no, they looked nice, almost as though they would be friendly if they were alive." The descriptions of bodies are not merely highly consistent, but agree in most respects with those given by persons sus- pected of having been "abducted" by presumed aliens. More- over, the same general descriptions of aliens can be found in most reports from people claiming to have seen them near their landed UFOs, in what has come to be known as "Close Encounters of the Third Kind." The total of aliens recovered from the two crashes may be as high as eight: three dead and perhaps one live one from the Foster Ranch crash, and three dead and one live from the Plains of San Agustin crash. Regardless of the total, there had to be sufficient body parts to keep a crew of top medical people busy for a very long time dissecting, analyzing, theorizing, and then writing about the most momentous event in the history of the biological sciences. Keeping such information secret from the scientific commu- nity might be considered an act of unconscionable malfea- sance, as it is quite possible that the widespread dissemination of this information could have led to major advances in medi- cal and other sciences. Moreover, if even one alien remained alive long enough for even the simplest of communication to be established, the increase in general knowledge could have been amazing. Unfortunately, the government's insistence on absolute secrecy has prevented the world from participating in a rare opportunity for increased knowledge. RETRIEVALAND SHIPMENT 129