mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-30 09:46:18 -05:00
124 lines
8.1 KiB
XML
124 lines
8.1 KiB
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
|
|
<xml>
|
|
<div class="article">
|
|
<p>Another mainstream article that would not have been allowed to be
|
|
printed ten years ago.</p>
|
|
<p>ENCOUNTERS WITH MEN IN BLACK</p>
|
|
<p>(Minneapolis Star Tribune) -- They sat quietly, leaning toward the lectern
|
|
in a dark-paneled room near Lake Calhoun as a professor from New York told
|
|
of his encounter with one of the mysterious Men in Black. In the audience
|
|
were people like biophysicist Otto Schmitt, a retired professor of
|
|
electrical engineering at the University of Minnesota, retired aircraft
|
|
developer and physicist Cecil Behringer, physician Steven Zuckerman and
|
|
polymer scientist Arthur Coury, Medtronic's director of venture
|
|
technology.</p>
|
|
<p>Peter Rojcewicz told them there have been hundreds - perhaps thousands -
|
|
of such encounters over the centuries. "The Men in Black are part of the
|
|
extraordinary encounter continuum - fairies, monsters, ETS, energy forms,
|
|
flying saucers, flaming crosses," said Rojcewicz, a 37-year-old professor
|
|
of humanities and folklore at New York's Juilliard School. The modern era
|
|
of Men in Black - visitations by mysterious, black-clad men who seem evil
|
|
and threatening - goes back to at least the early 1950s when a man named
|
|
Albert K. Bender allegedly saw a UFO in Bridgeport, Conn., and was later
|
|
frightened by a visitation from three Men in Black.</p>
|
|
<p>Rojcewicz told the audience that his own MIB (Men in Black) experience
|
|
occurred in 1980. "I have never gone public with this before," he said.
|
|
Most of the modern era MIB encounters have followed sightings of UFOs or
|
|
strange lights. Rojcewicz's encounter involved no sightings. He was just
|
|
sitting in the University of Pennsylvania library, reading a UFO book
|
|
suggested by another professor who thought that Rojcewicz, as a
|
|
folklorist, would be interested in such phenomena. "Then in the corner of
|
|
my vision I noticed a black pants leg and a black shoe, scuffed,"
|
|
Rojcewicz said. The folding chairs in the auditorium of the Bakken Library
|
|
of Electricity in Medicine, 3537 Zenith Av. S., stopped creaking as
|
|
Rojcewicz's audience listened intently. Standing in front of him,
|
|
Rojcewicz said, was a very gaunt, very pale man. He was about 6-1,
|
|
weighed about 140 pounds and wore a black suit, black shoes, black string
|
|
tie and a bright white shirt. "His suit was loose and it looked as though
|
|
he had slept in it for three days," Rojcewicz said.</p>
|
|
<p>Rojcewicz didn't know what to make of the figure. At the time he wasn't
|
|
aware of the Men in Black phenomena which, he subsequently learned, dates
|
|
back to at least Biblical times. "He sat down, like he had dropped from
|
|
the ceiling - all in one movement" - and folded his hands on top of a
|
|
stack of books in front of him, Rojcewicz said. The Man in Black asked
|
|
Rojcewicz what he was doing. Rojcewicz said he was reading about flying
|
|
saucers. "Have you seen a flying saucer?" the Man in Black asked.
|
|
Rojcewicz said he hadn't. "Do you believe in the reality of flying
|
|
saucers?" Rojcewicz said he didn't know much about them and wasn't sure he
|
|
was very interested in the phenomena. The man screamed: "Flying saucers
|
|
are the most important fact of the century and you are not interested?" "I
|
|
tried to calm him," Rojcewicz said. The man got up, once again all in a
|
|
single awkward movement, put his hand on Rojcewicz's shoulder and said:
|
|
"Go well on your purpose" and left.</p>
|
|
<p>Rojcewicz looked out at his audience. "In 10 seconds I was overwhelmed by
|
|
fear. . . . I had a sense that this man was out of the ordinary and that
|
|
idea frightened me. . . . I got up and walked around the stacks toward
|
|
where the reference librarians usually are. The librarians weren't there.
|
|
There were no guards there - there was nobody else in the library. . . . I
|
|
was terrified."</p>
|
|
<p>He went back to the table where he had been reading "to get myself
|
|
together. It took me about an hour. Then I got up and everything was back
|
|
to normal, the people were all there." He didn't talk about his experience
|
|
in public because he was concerned about how people might react to his
|
|
story, he said.</p>
|
|
<p>Was he dreaming? He doesn't think so. He said he suspects he was in an
|
|
"altered state." Rojcewicz said he thinks his experience - and that of
|
|
others who have been exposed to the Men in Black - are somewhere "in the
|
|
crack" between real life and fantasy.</p>
|
|
<p>He has been studying anomalous phenomena such as the Men in Black ever
|
|
since his 1980 experience. He has interviewed many people who have
|
|
reported UFOs, flying saucers and Men in Black experiences. He said the
|
|
Men in Black most frequently appear in threes, but sometimes in twos, ones
|
|
and fours. Some of the MIBs carry brief cases and represent themselves as
|
|
being Air Force UFO investigators, he said. The MIBs warn UFO spotters to
|
|
tell no one of their experiences with aliens from outer space.</p>
|
|
<p>When the MIBs leave, people are fearful, dizzy and, sometimes, nauseous,
|
|
he said. Frequently their lives are changed by the experience. Some become
|
|
more successful in their jobs and marriages and report a joie de vivre.
|
|
Others lose their jobs and marriages. One of his friends quit a good
|
|
academic position and went into hiding, he said. Some become addicted to
|
|
drugs, and many feel they have been victimized, he said.</p>
|
|
<p>He said the reaction varies with a person's culture, religion or openness
|
|
to imaginative ideas. To illustrate the various reactions he cited a case
|
|
of a psychiatrist and her husband, a professor of education, who saw a UFO
|
|
in Maine and subsequently had a MIB encounter. "She has been all right
|
|
since then, but he has not." The professor was left lethargic and troubled
|
|
by the encounter.</p>
|
|
<p>Rojcewicz, who teaches at the C. J. Jung Foundation for Analytical
|
|
Psychology as well as at Juilliard, said he suspects the psychiatrist was
|
|
able to handle the experience better because she is more open to spiritual
|
|
matters while her husband by training and experience is rooted in the
|
|
acceptance of only what seems reasonable.</p>
|
|
<p>In another case, Rojcewicz interviewed a woman named Deborah from
|
|
Burlington, Va., who said she had been visited by a slender, 6-foot, 9-inch Man in Black who was wearing a bowler hat. She said her knees went
|
|
weak when the man was close to her. She said of her experience: "There
|
|
was something wrong - evil about this." When Rojcewicz telephoned Deborah
|
|
to recheck his notes, there was a beeping on the line and they couldn't
|
|
hear each other. He redialed and the line was all right.</p>
|
|
<p>Rojcewicz said there are references to Men in Black going back to Abraham
|
|
in Biblical times, and there have been many similar stories in folklore
|
|
over the years. Often the Men in Black have been considered to be the
|
|
devil or his representatives. Some of the Roman Catholic church's saints
|
|
had Men in Black experiences. The church itself recognizes the
|
|
possibility by endorsing exorcism, Rojcewicz said.</p>
|
|
<p>What is a good defense against the Men in Black? "Laughter," Rojcewicz
|
|
said. "If they ask you why you're laughing, tell them, 'Rojcewicz told me
|
|
to do it.' " He added: "When you confront evil, don't feed them your fear.
|
|
Say you are not worried - ha-ha."</p>
|
|
<p>When his talk was over, several of those attending were asked if they took
|
|
the Men in Black stories seriously. "Maybe there is something there," said
|
|
Dennis Skillings, director of the Archaeus Project, which sponsored the
|
|
meeting. But he said he doubts that there is any way of confirming that
|
|
MIB encounters "really, truly happened."</p>
|
|
<p>Zuckerman, a specialist in internal medicine, said he thought Rojcewicz
|
|
was serious. "I have a friend who knows a fellow who is investigating
|
|
reports that men from space are coming to Earth and taking biopsies of
|
|
people's calf muscles," Zuckerman said. "He says the biopsy sites heal
|
|
right away." Why would people from outer space take biopsies of people's
|
|
calf muscles? "An interesting question," Zuckerman said with a smile.</p>
|
|
<p>The Archaeus Project, which is subsidized by Medtronic founder Earl
|
|
Bakken, regularly brings in researchers in the field of the paranormal and
|
|
so-called alternative science for special lectures.</p>
|
|
</div>
|
|
</xml>
|