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THEY'RE HERE! (Originally Published and Chicago Tribune)
( Or so we'd like to think. )
A purported UFO sighting at O'Hare gives flight to hopes that we're not alone
By Jon Hilkevitch
the Tribune's transportation reporter
Published January 7, 2007
It's rare for a
newspaper story to emerge from the vast and dark unknown
and hit at a primal level, tapping into the fact that
many of us feel so alone and confused about why we
exist, and giving us a chance to hope, to dream.
Admittedly, those big
thoughts were not on my mind when the director of a
UFO-watching group first called to offer an exclusive
Chicago angle on what might be the biggest story of all
humankind--a visit by an alien spaceship.
No, ET had not phoned home. But, said Peter Davenport of
the National UFO Reporting Center, this was "an
excellent, stunning case involving a genuine UFO from
some other part of our galaxy or our universe."
We've all read similar reports--and then put them back
on the shelf--while waiting in the supermarket checkout
line. I recall one tabloid front page announcing that
aliens had abducted Newt Gingrich. Not surprisingly,
they gave Newt back.
Covering UFOs seemed to be stretching the definition of
my job, transportation reporting. I looked at the clock
on the newsroom wall and decided to give Mr. Davenport
two minutes. But he was onto something.
The UFO story, published Monday, became the most-read
piece to appear on chicagotribune.com. It was the top
story on the Tribune Web site for four straight days,
garnering more than 1 million page views from people
around the world.
The reaction is proof that we live in a curious world.
Maybe a curious universe too.
It turns conventional notions about what people want to
read and hear about on their head. And it lays bare the
reality that huge numbers of people explicitly mistrust
the government, the military establishment and the
aerospace industry when it comes to UFO sightings and
research.
In our first of many phone conversations, Davenport
assured me that highly credible individuals spotted a
flying saucerlike object Nov. 7, and that it hovered
over a major site on my Tribune beat: O'Hare
International Airport.
So I interviewed the witnesses and tracked down some
additional observers--pilots, ramp workers, mechanics
and management officials at United Airlines.
They were all dead serious about what they saw, and the
accounts--whether made from the tarmac or from 25 feet
up in the cockpit of a Boeing 777--were consistent.
The unidentified aerial phenomenon was dark gray and
shaped like a disc, it hovered in a fixed position above
Concourse C of the United Airlines terminal, and it
vanished with a burst of energy that cut a hole in the
overcast skies.
The fact that officials at United Airlines and the
Federal Aviation Administration initially denied any
knowledge of the incident--despite evidence I had that
they were well aware of it--made the story even more
appealing.
Little did any of us know.
News organizations from a low-watt radio station in
Delaware to a TV station in Australia phoned me to
request interviews. Jay Leno cracked jokes on the
"Tonight Show" about inebriated workers at O'Hare.
Ufologists contacted me in droves with thanks for
treating the subject in a serious manner and
congratulated the Tribune, as a leading member of the
mainstream media, for publishing a story about an
extraterrestrial sighting.
The reaction is perplexing and somewhat discouraging.
But clearly it speaks to the persistent fascination with
the possibility that we're not alone in the universe,
and there are mysteries of our existence still to be
unraveled.
Dominique Callimanopulos understands why the UFO story
is so seductive.
"When I was doing UFO research, I found that the
sightings hit most people in a very child-wonder place,"
Callimanopulos said. She assisted the late Dr. John
Mack, who became infamous at Harvard Medical School for
researching UFO and alien encounters.
"People think this visit will be some sort of answer or
salvation, that beings from another world will be able
to help us solve the mess we've made on this planet,"
said Callimanopulos, a board member of the John E. Mack
Institute, founded in honor of the Pulitzer
Prize-winning physician.
"Everyone at some deep level does wonder why we are
here. That is why there are so many religions in the
world and conflicting belief systems," she said. "If we
were to find our cosmic friends, we would have a real
family, finally."
It would be nice if physical evidence existed to
substantiate the claims made at O'Hare on Nov. 7.
Airport surveillance cameras are trained on the
airfield, not the heavens, and FAA radar has so far
turned up nothing unusual.
How is it that someone smuggled a camera cell phone into
a Baghdad execution chamber to chronicle the hanging of
former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein last month, but no
one among the thousands of airport workers and travelers
at O'Hare snapped a picture for the cosmic family photo
album?
The answer, along with an explanation about how the
universe works, remains a mystery. We earthlings possess
inquisitive minds, but we are, after all, only human.
----------
jhilkevitch@tribune.com
Copyright © 2007,
Originally Published and Chicago Tribune
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