mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
85 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
85 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
Date: 20-Jun-87 20:31 MST
|
||
From: Executive News Svc. [76374,303]
|
||
Subj: APfl 06/20 1301 UFO Investigations
|
||
|
||
By BILL KACZOR Associated Press Writer
|
||
FORT WALTON BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- A retired Air Force pilot says he
|
||
suspects, contrary to official denials, an unknown federal agency is
|
||
investigating reports of unidentified flying objects and other close
|
||
encounters with extraterrestrial beings.
|
||
Donald M. Ware, Florida state director of the Mutual UFO Network Inc., a
|
||
private "ufology" organization, says he doesn't have any direct knowledge but
|
||
nearly a lifetime of study leads him to believe probes are secretly being
|
||
conducted by some national intelligence agency.
|
||
"That idea doesn't bother me. I don't mind being an unequal partner," Ware
|
||
said in a recent interview. "I support the policy of secrecy."
|
||
He said secrecy would be necessary because, official statements
|
||
notwithstanding, he is convinced the subject involves national security in the
|
||
form of advanced alien technology.
|
||
Ware said he intends to take that message to the Annual MUFON UFO Symposium
|
||
June 26-28 at American University in Washington, D.C., where he is to be part
|
||
of a panel discussion on UFOs and the government.
|
||
His position is unlikely to be shared by many UFO investigators, Ware
|
||
admitted. A common complaint of ufologists is the government's professed lack
|
||
of interest and its failure to cooperate with private UFO studies.
|
||
"I'm so bold as to suggest there is a possibility of cooperation with some
|
||
unknown government agency if we show a little more tolerance of their policy
|
||
of secrecy," Ware said.
|
||
"As long as we publicly take such an antagonistic attitude, as long as we
|
||
place the government in an adversarial relationship," Ware said, "we are not
|
||
going to get much cooperation from them whoever they are."
|
||
The Air Force closed its Project Blue Book investigation of more than
|
||
12,000 UFOs in 1969 after a panel of scientists found no evidence of visitors
|
||
from outer space. Most sightings were found to be such things as planets,
|
||
stars, meteors, weather balloons, satellites, false radar echoes, marsh gas,
|
||
clouds, aircraft or optical illusions, but a few have remained unexplained.
|
||
The official word ever since has been that the government has nothing to do
|
||
with UFO investigations and whatever they might be they pose no threat to
|
||
national security.
|
||
Ware, 51, joined the service in 1957. He said he was uninvolved in the Air
|
||
Force's UFO activities during his 26-year military career as a teacher, staff
|
||
scientist and fighter pilot, including two combat tours in Vietnam.
|
||
"That's one reason I can speak so freely," he said. "I have no information
|
||
from the Air Force."
|
||
His interest began as a teen-ager in 1952 when he saw star-like objects
|
||
streaking through the sky while walking near his home in the nation's capital.
|
||
Similar sightings, including radar returns, had been reported a week earlier
|
||
and Ware said they remain unexplained.
|
||
He began reading everything about UFOs he could get his hands on, including
|
||
books in the library at Duke University where he received a mechanical
|
||
engineering degree. He later earned a master's degree in nuclear engineering
|
||
from the Air Force Institute of Technology.
|
||
Ware kept up his interest in UFOs, building up a personal library on the
|
||
subject and questioning other pilots.
|
||
"I had no qualms about saying, `Anybody seen a UFO?' " Ware said. The
|
||
answer, he said, usually was "yes."
|
||
However, until March of 1970, military personnel were ordered not to talk
|
||
about UFOs, Ware said.
|
||
"I think that in the late '40s and early '50s the U.S. government really
|
||
wanted the public to tell them what they saw and that those people primarily
|
||
responsible for investigating UFOs were not listed in the phone book," Ware
|
||
said. "The U.S. Air Force was chosen as Uncle Sam's public relations agent
|
||
because they were listed in the phone book."
|
||
No one thing has convinced him of government involvement, Ware said. "Two
|
||
years of study after I saw the UFOs in 1952 convinced me that somebody is
|
||
watching us," he said. "Ten more years of study caused me to think somebody
|
||
in our government has known that as a fact at least since 1947."
|
||
Ware said his goals in becoming state director of MUFON, an international
|
||
scientific organization based in Seguin, Texas, were to improve relations
|
||
between "ufologists" and the government and to learn all he could about alien
|
||
technology from abductees and other witnesses of close encounters.
|
||
Ware said he hasn't seen any more UFOs since 1952 and doesn't expect to.
|
||
"I haven't been selected," he said. He still scans the skies, but not for
|
||
UFOs. When he's not investigating UFO reports or giving talks about the
|
||
subject to civic groups, he is bird watching. He is treasurer of and runs an
|
||
annual bird count for the Choctawhatchee Audubon Society and does surveys for
|
||
the Florida Breeding Bird Atlas project.
|
||
Ware said his two avocations are unrelated. "Lots of people have accused
|
||
me of getting a lot of satisfaction from identifying feathered objects," he
|
||
said, grinning. "No, I'm just a nature boy."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Copyright 1987 by the Associated Press. All rights reserved.
|
||
|
||
|