Declassified UFO / UAP Document
TASS to Publish 'Mysterious Phenomena' Bulletin
AI-Generated Summary
TASS announced the creation of a new bulletin, 'Anomaliya', dedicated to the study of UFOs and other mysterious phenomena. The publication aims to move beyond dismissing these topics as mere imagination and instead treat them as frequent, observable events.
This document is a press summary transmitted by the Joint Staff in Washington DC on September 14, 1990, relaying a report from the Moscow TASS news agency. The report details the launch of a new bulletin titled 'Anomaliya' (Anomaly), which is intended to provide coverage on various mysterious phenomena, including unidentified flying objects, poltergeists, the Bermuda Triangle, and the snowman. The bulletin is produced by TASS in conjunction with the 'Ecology of the Unknown' association and the scientific production firm 'Compass-S'. Sergey Bulantsev, the bulletin's editor and chief of the TASS press bureau, stated that the publication was created in response to significant public interest. Bulantsev emphasized that these phenomena should not be dismissed by academic science as products of 'inflamed imagination' or 'devilish' occurrences, but rather treated as frequent events that warrant serious study. The term 'anomaly' is used by the editors to reflect the nature of these occurrences.
THE IDEA OF PUBLISHING 'ANOMALY' AROSE WHEN PUBLIC INTEREST IN SEVERAL PHENOMENA, WHICH ACADEMIC SCIENCE DISMISSED AS SOMETHING 'DEVILISH', BORNE OF SOMEBODY'S ENFLAMED IMAGINATION, WAS AT ITS HEIGHT
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Official Assessment
TASS announced the launch of a new bulletin titled 'Anomaliya' to cover topics such as unidentified flying objects, poltergeists, the Bermuda Triangle, and the snowman. The publication is a collaboration between TASS and the 'Ecology of the Unknown' association, with support from the scientific production firm 'Compass-S'. According to editor Sergey Bulantsev, the bulletin aims to address public interest in these phenomena, which he argues should not be dismissed as 'devilish' or mere imagination, but rather studied as frequent occurrences.
Key Persons
- Veronika RomanenkovaTASS correspondent
- Sergey BulantsevBulletin editor, chief of TASS press bureau