SKY KIDS: INVASION.

In the early 1900s, the scientific investigation of extraterrestrial intelligence began shortly after the advent of radio, and focused international efforts have been going on since the 1980s. For hundreds of years, the company has been trying to prove the existence of alien life and prove that we are not alone in the universe.

In November 27th, 1896, edition of 'The Stockton, California' Daily Mail, Colonel H.G. Shaw claimed he and a friend were harassed by three tall, slender humanoids who's bodies were covered with a fine downy hair who tried to kidnap the pair. And suddenly the mystery aliens became an obsession for the public.

Over the years, more and more people had gone missing and turned up somewhere else later on. All of them have shared their stories with the world about being abducted by aliens or seeing UFOs in the sky. Some of them have even written books and done documentaries about their experiences.

In the October, 1953 issue of 'Man To Man Magazine', an article by Leroy Thrope titled "Are the Flying Saucers Kidnapping Humans" asks the question "Are an unlucky few of us, and perhaps not so few at that, being captured with the same ease as we would net butterflies, perhaps for zoological specimens, perhaps for vivisection or some other horrible death designed to reveal to our interplanetary invaders what makes us tick?"

An early alien abduction claim occurred in the mid-1950s with the Brazilian Antonio Villas Boas case, which did not receive much attention until several years later.

Wide-spread publicity was generated by the Betty and Barney Hill abduction case of 1961, culminating in a made-for-television film broadcast in 1975, dramatizing the events. The Hill incident was probably the prototypical abduction case and was perhaps the first in which the claimant described beings that later became wildly known as the Greys and in which the beings were said to explicitly identify an extraterrestrial origin.

Though these two cases are sometimes viewed as the earliest abductions, skeptic Peter Rogerson notes they were only the first "canonical" abduction cases, establishing a template that later abductees and researchers would refine, but rarely deviate from. Additionally, Rogerson notes purported abductions were citied contemporaneously at least as early as 1954, and that "the growth of the abduction stories is a far more tangled affair the 'entirely un-predisposed' official history would have us believe".

Over the years, more and more people have gone missing and turned up somewhere else later on. All of them have shared their stories with the world about being abducted by aliens, as well as seeing UFOs in the sky. Some of them have even written books and made documentaries about their experiences. However, as Hollywood began to do movies and TV-shows about aliens, and authors began writing books about them, the world's belief of extraterrestrial life slowly became science fiction.

And even though no solid, concrete evidence of their existence has ever been found...it's still possible that aliens-REAL aliens-are out there somewhere in the universe...waiting for the right moment to invade Earth.

And maybe...just maybe...it's closer than we think.

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Okay, everyone, this has been the prologue of "SKY KIDS: INVASION", the second addition of the kids version of "SKYLINE". I hope you enjoyed the opening of this new installment.

See you in Chapter 1.

Please review.