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- SHOW SENDS HARVARD'S UFO PROF INTO ORBIT 27/02/96
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- Source: Boston Herald
-
- The strange and sordid world of alien abduction may inspire an earthly legal
- battle after a TV show airs tonight purportedly debunking the work of a Harvard
- professor immersed in the culture of the extraterrestrial.
-
- Harvard Medical School psychiatrist John Mack, a longtime believer and
- investigator of alien abduction claims, calls the 8 p.m. "Nova" broadcast on
- WGBH an "unconscionable" and "terribly biased" attempt to examine stories of
- hijacked humans in general and his work in particular.
-
- "The effect of this program is to try to discourage anybody from taking the
- reality of this phenomenon seriously," Mack said yesterday. "They try to
- dismiss it as hallucinations or distorted thinking or people being led by
- hypnotists,and in my view, having worked in this field, that is patently false.
-
- "Alien abduction is not something that yields its secrets to conventional
- explanations."
-
- Particularly galling to Mack - and what might trigger a defamation suit,
- according to his lawyer, Eric MacLeish - is Nova's use of Donna Bassett, a
- free-lance writer who trashes Mack's work in front of Bassett, dismissed by
- Mack and his lawyer as a "wacko" who latches on to a new cause every few years,
- says she went undercover into Mack's alien abduction subculture and paints the
- doctor's methods as fraudulent.
-
- Mack has demanded that Nova cut out a four-minute interview with Bassett, a
- demand that a Nova producer yesterday said had been denied.
-
- Bassett, from her home in North Carolina, last night defended herself against
- Mack's attacks but said she wouldn't let them get under her skin.
-
- "Being called a wacko by the Mackies is like being called a liberal by Pat
- Buchanan," she said.
-
- Denise DiIanni, the producer of the hour-long Nova film, also mounted a
- vigorous defense of tonight's show, calling it a "thoughtful and considerate
- treatment of a complicated subject."
-
- "We felt it was our job, however unpopular, to report whatever science said
- about the alien abduction phenomenon," she said.
-
- And science, at least in the person of acclaimed astronomer and biologist Carl
- Sagan, dismisses alien abduction and the occasional abduction-and-rape scenario
- as hallucination or other scientifically explainable phenomena.
-
- In a seven-page letter to the Boston-based television show, Mack railed against
- such thinking, likening alien abductees and investigators to the early pioneers
- of science.
-
- "We are facing a problem like that faced by the people of the fifteenth
- century," he wrote. "In that day, many people could not believe the world was
- round because common knowledge dictated that people would fall off any round
- object."
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