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2579 lines
228 KiB
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1
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Jan. 7, 1947 Portland, OR. _Los Angeles Examiner_. **SKY OBJECT A MYSTERY ROCKET?** A laboratory analysis of the cylindrical object which fell in Portland
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yesterday from a clear sky established the presence of aluminum,
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titanium, magnesium, calcium, chrome, and zircon. Dr. John E. Allen,
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chief geologist of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, said it gives a reasonable basis for the hypothesis that it
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could have been used in rocket construction. The largest portion of the
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object has been taken over by an Army investigator for examination.
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The object was found when a mysterious ice shower occurred Saturday, confined
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to a fifteen-foot square area of Hill Military Academy.
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2
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Jul. 8, 1947 Abadan, Iran. **IRAN REPORTS BORDER EXPLOSIONS.** Strong, starlike bodies were seen at this point and also at
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Shosef and Saebishheh, near the Afghan frontier. After cavorting
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about the sky, the objects exploded loudly, leaving only a cloud
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of smoke.
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3
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Jul. 9, 1947 Boise, Idaho. **THEY MOVE INTO IDAHO.** Dave Johnson, aviation director of the _Idaho Stateman_, while flying at
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14,000 feet, west of Boise, saw a circular object bank in front of
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a cloud formation for 45 seconds. It rose sharply and jerkily
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toward the top of a towering bank of clouds, then turned its edge
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toward him, appearing as a straight black line, and shot straight
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up. It moved fast, and was very large. Three Idaho National Guardsmen
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had seen a similar object in the same area as Johnson.
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4
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Jul. 9, 1947 Phoenix, Arizona. _The Arizona Republic_. **ARIZONA PHOTOGRAPHS THEM.** The first clearly recorded photograph of what is believed to be a
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flying disk was taken today by an amateur Phoenix photographer,
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William Rhodes, as it circled north of the city. Rhodes shot the
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picture as the slow-flying object was approaching him. As it
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banked to make a right turn, he obtained this picture, showing clearly
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the shape of the disk. Rhodes said the object then shot away at high speed.
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5
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Jul. 10, 1947 Morristown, New Jersey. **THEY TRY NEW JERSEY NEXT.** John H. Janssen, driving to Morristown Airport at 10 am, saw
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10:00 four objects in the sky and got out of his car to photograph them.
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They seemed to be about 10,000 feet in the air, flying rapidly in
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formation toward New York City. Three of the saucers were silvery
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white and the fourth was a dull, metallic color. As they disappeared,
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they put on a burst of speed far in excess of any jet plane Janssen
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had ever seen. Censorship the next day kept his photo out of most
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of the nation's dailies.
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6
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Aug., 1947 Burbank, California. **COLLINS WON'T REPORT HIS TO PRESS.** Tom Collins, of Port Chester, N.Y., saw flying saucers over Burbank,
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California, where he was visiting his wife in the hospital having
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their third child. He told his wife about the sighting, but never
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reported seeing them because the press was making such saucer-sighters
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look ridiculous.
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7.
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Aug. 6, 1947 Robert Lee, Texas. **TEXAS SEES ONE CHANGE IN SHAPE?** Mr. and Mrs. Jim Reid, Owen Fletcher, Dock Mennington and Bob
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Patterson saw an object in the sky at about 10 p.m. in the shape
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of an luminous disk. It was larger and faster than a plane. It
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maneuvered in the sky for twenty minutes and then took off in the
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direction of San Angelo. In fifteen minutes it returned, this
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time in the shape of a long log. The sky was clear with no clouds.
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The nearest searchlight was 100 miles away. It continued its capers
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for more than half an hour. Finally, it took off on the shape of a long
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cigar with a thin smokey trail and vanished in the distance.
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8
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Aug. 8, 1947 Upton, Wyoming. **WOMAN WATCHES ONE DISAPPEAR AND REAPPEAR.** Mrs. Jay Engel saw a flying disk at sundown. She saw a flash
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darting across the sky, then another flash. It disappeared for
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a few seconds, then reappeared further away. It was traveling at
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a great rate of speed and was not particularly bright, appearing
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to be an orange-colored glow.
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9
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Aug. 12, 1947 Boise, ID. **SHANGLES' PHOTO SHOWS LITTLE.** Charles Shangle - likely Charles W. Shangle Jr. - was watching the sky when he saw a luminous object
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traveling slowly through the air at great height. He photographed
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it. It is visible in the upper left-hand corner of the
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photo as a faint gray dot surrounded by a slight halo effect.
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The reproduction is poor, showing almost nothing but the truck in
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the foreground.
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10
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Sep. 13, 1947 Bellingham, Washington. **SAUCER SHINES LIKE DISHPAN.** E. L. Lynn, 1040 Knox Ave., saw a large black object the size of
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the moon. It turned from very black to light yellow, then a pale
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pink. Finally, it began to shine like a very bright tin pan. It
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was about 20 miles distant and two miles high, was in view for
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five or six seconds and traveled about five times as fast as an
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ordinary airplane.
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11
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Sep. 14, 1947 Toronto, CA. _Toronto Globe_. **CANADA TRIED PHOTOGRAPHING THEM.**
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A photo of a supposed flying saucer is given front-page coverage
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on the _Globe_, taken by Raymond Johnson of Toronto. Disk was yellow
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with a tail, the time of passage was fifteen seconds. An extremely
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poor reproduction shows a ship in the foreground with a saucer
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resembling a faint comet in the background.
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12
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Oct. 25, 1947 Hymers, Canada. **50 WITNESSES SEE ONE IN CANADA.** More than 50 townspeople saw a strange object swoop into sight from
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the south, remain stationary for fifteen minutes, then flash back
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in the direction from which it had come. It was described as a
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long streak of fire with heat waves emanating from it and something
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that looked like an electric light waves.
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13
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Nov. 5, 1947 Persian Gulf. **FOUR SEE ONE ABOVE PERSIAN GULF.** Richard Carruthers, Jr., aboard the tanker _Chipola_, saw eight round
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objects flying in a group, pass within half a mile of the ship, make
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a climbing turn in echelon formation, and pass out of sight. Four
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persons saw the light, but opinions varied as to whether they were
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white or blue.
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14
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Feb. 20, 1948 Boise, Idaho. _The Emmet Messenger_. **THEODOLITE MEASURES ONE NEAR BOISE.** E.G. Hall of Boise made a theodolite observation of a flying saucer,
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estimating its size as that of a small plane. Along its back edge
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was no trail, but there was a fuzziness there. The craft was
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silent, even when coming closer than 2000 feet to the ground. This
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is the first known theodolite-measured and gauged reported viewing.
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15
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Feb. 21, 1948 West Beach, Florida. **ONE SEEN BY PALM BEACH EDITOR.** Charles Francis Coe, editor of the _Palm Beach Times_, saw a ray or
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blob of lights sweeping in from the southwest over West Palm
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Beach at 2 PM. It curved over the Atlantic and headed northeast,
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in a wide arc, as though following the curve of the earth.
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16
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May. 17, 1948 Seattle, Washington. **AIRFIELD TECHNICIAN SPOTS ONE.** Fred Granger, aircraft communicator stationed at the Seattle-Tacoma
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Airfield spotted what appeared to be four stars or lights with
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red and green flashes, approximately 25 degrees above the horizon.
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17
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May. 26, 1948 VALLEY CITY, NORTH DAKOTA. **CLERGYMAN AND EDITOR BOTH REPORT DAKOTA SIGHTING.** Rev. L.S. Eberly and his wife noticed a bright light which turned
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out to be a spheroid, dark in the center and radiating light rays
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near the outer rings. It was observed for an hour. On the following
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morning, a similar object appeared and Rev. Eberly called
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Robert Downs of the _Times-Record_ who also observed the phenomenon.
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18
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Jul. 27, 1948 Mobile, Alabama. **TWELVE REPORT ONE IN ALABAMA AT 900 MPH.** At 9:15 p.m. at least twelve persons saw a oval ball of fire,
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21:15 followed by about 400 feet of bluish-white flame. It seemed to be
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about half as big as the moon and some observers saw it as a
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cigar-shaped object with a red flame flaring into white at the
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tail. A Brookley Air Force base pilot estimated its speed as
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between 800 and 900 mph.
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19
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Summer, 1948 Newton, Connecticut. **BILLY ROSE REPORTS ONE FROM BROADWAY.** Billy Rose, newspaper columnist, visiting playwright Paul Osbourne
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22:00 in Newton, Connecticut, with Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Logan and Mr. and Mrs.
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John Hersey, noticed three searchlights poking into the air around
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10:00 p.m. A few minutes later three objects appeared, about 200 ft.
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in diameter and flying at an altitude of 3,000 to 5,000 feet. The
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mysterious craft gave off a ghostly glow, dull bluish-white.
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20
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Sep. 23, 1948 Boise, Idaho. **IDAHO REPORTS ONE HIDING BETWEEN CLOUDS.** Mr. and Mrs A.F. Kaus, of Carolina Beach, NC saw a huge ball
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of intense white light while traveling from Mountain Home to Boise,
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Idaho. The object was between two layers of clouds at approximately
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2,000 ft. It flared twice, held steady for a few seconds, then
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disappeared. The light was round in shape with jagged edges.
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21
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Oct. 9, 1948 Osage, Wyoming. **WYOMING SEES ONE DIVIDE IN TWO.** Larry Griffin and Homer Grey of Osage, saw a huge shining object,
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luminous and shaped like a disk. It remained in view for two seconds,
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then divided into two parts and disappeared.
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22
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Feb. 1, 1949 Tucson, AZ. _Tucson Daily Citizen_. **B-29 FAILS TO CATCH FLYING SAUCER OVER TUCSON.** Cannonballing through the sky some 30,000 feet above the earth,
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a fiery object shot westward so fast it was impossible to gain
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any clear impression of its shape or size. It hovered over the city
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for a few moments and then shot off again with tremendous velocity.
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First Lt. Roy L. Jones gave chase in a B-29, but soon left
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behind as the craft sped toward California. Dr. Edwin F. Carpenter,
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head of the University of Arizona's department of astronomy, said he
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was certain the object was not a meteor or other natural phenomenon.
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23
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Feb. 22, 1949 Boca Chica Naval Air Station, Key West, Fla. **RADAR PICKS UP SAUCER ABOVE KEY WEST.**
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Two glowing objects were seen above the Naval Air Station, flying
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at great height. One plane was sent up to investigate, but was
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hopelessly outdistanced. Radarmen tracked the objects as they
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hovered for a moment above Key West. After a few seconds, the
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objects accelerated at high speed and streaked off.
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24
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Feb. 29, 1949 Chicago, Illinois. **ILLINOIS SEES ONE DISINTEGRATE.** Ben Cole, Jr. of Northbrook, Illinois saw a flaming object hurtle
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06:11 out of the east at 6:11 a.m. and disintegrate in a fiery shower
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south of Chicago. At the same time, 40 miles away, Ed Maher of
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Chicago, saw a rocket half a block long speeding from east east to
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south. The front was shaped like a rocket, the tail seemed to
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fall to pieces as it dived into a large cloud. The craft made no noise.
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25
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Mar. 25, 1949 Bend, Oregon. **COMBAT PILOT COMPARES SIZE TO WASHTUBS.** Residents of Bend saw two flying saucers reflecting the rays of
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the sun as they dipped through the clouds. Traffic was blocked
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by observers. World War II flyer, Vernon Leverett, estimated their
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height as over 10,000 feet and their size about that of a large
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washtub.
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26
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Apr. 14, 1949 Branch County, Mich. **MICHIGAN SEES ORANGE-COLORED SAUCER.** Clifford Cline, farmer in Branch County reported seeing a disk-shaped
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object with an orange center and a lighter outer edge.
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27
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Apr. 11, 1949 White Sands Proving Grounds. **WHITE SANDS SEES ONE WHILE CHECKING WEATHER BALLOON.** Scientists, reported by Commander Robert B. McLaughlin, USN, were
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tracking a balloon 57 miles northwest of the grounds, A
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strange object crossed above the balloon and was tracked with a
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theodolite. It was saucer-shaped, 105 feet in diameter and flying
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50 miles above the earth at around 5 miles per second. Suddenly,
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it swerved, shooting upward at an angle of five degrees, climbing
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an additional 25 miles in almost 10 seconds. No exhaust trail, no lights, no sound.
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28
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Apr. 11, 1949 Portland, OR. **Project Saucer**/**Project Sign**: **PROSPECTOR SPOTS FIVE IN OREGON.** Fred M. Johnson, Portland prospector, told authorities he noticed a
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strange reflection in the sky and saw five or six discs about 30 ft.
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in diameter. He watched them through a telescope for about 30 seconds
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as they banked in the sun. He described them as being round with
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tails making no noise.
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29
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Aug. 1947 Bethell, Ala. From the Air Material Command, Wright Field's **Project Saucer**/**Project Sign** Report: Two pilots for a Bethel, Ala.
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flying service told investigators they spotted a
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huge black object, bigger than a C-54, silhouetted
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against the brilliant evening sky. In order to
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avoid collision, they said they pulled up to 1,200
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feet and watched the object cross their path at
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right angles. The two pilots told of swinging in
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behind the object and following it to 170 mph
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until it outdistanced them and disappeared four
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minutes later. It was described as having no motors,
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wings, or visible means of propulsion, being
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smooth-surfaced and streamlined.
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30
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Aug. 1947 Fort Richardson, Alaska. From the Air Material Command, Wright Field's **Project Saucer**/**Project Sign** Report:
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Two officers told of seeing a spherical object about 10
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feet in diameter flying through the air at tremendous
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speed, leaving no vapor trail.
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31
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Jan. 7, 1948 Oklahoma City, OK. From the Air Material Command, Wright Field's **Project Saucer**/**Project Sign** Report:
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An Oklahoma City man reported
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spotting a saucer "seeming to be the bulk of six
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B-29's." The observer, who holds a private pilot's
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license, spotted the objects from the ground. It was
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perfectly round and flat with no protrusions. He
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reported the speed of the soundless craft as "probably
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three times that of a jet."
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32
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Jan. 7, 1948 Lockbourne Air Force Base, Columbus, Ohio. From the Air Material Command, Wright Field's **Project Saucer**/**Project Sign** Report:
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Several observers reported a sky phenomenon
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described as "round or oval, larger than a C-47, and
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traveling in level flight faster than 500 mph."
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33
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Apr. 28, 1949 Gary, Indiana. **INDIANA SEES ONE DEFY PERSPECTIVE LAW.**
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Leon Faber of Sandwich, Ill., sighted a bright shining object
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moving east while he was flying up at an elevation of 6,000 feet over
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the Gary-Michigan City area. It seemed to be about 10,000 feet
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away and about the size of a basketball. It suddenly disappeared
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without getting any smaller.
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34
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May. 7, 1949 Oakland, California. **CALIFORNIA SEES THEM AS 'SQUARES'.**
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Benjamin F. Smith of Oakland saw two rows of square objects flying
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in the regular airliner levels traveling from north to south,
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moving soundlessly at tremendous speed.
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35
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May. 1949 White Sands Proving Grounds. **COMMANDER CONFIRMS SIGHTING.**
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Commander Robert B. McLaughlin, USN, in a further report said that
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an object, white in color, proceeding slowly westward was sighted.
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It picked up speed, passed overhead and disappeared over the Organ
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Mountains. When first sighted, the object had been going at about
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one mile per second at a height of 25 miles, but when it accelerated
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it did so at a rate far beyond the capabilities of any present-day
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rocket. Passing within 5 degrees of the sun, it remained visible,
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showing no discernible method of propulsion.
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36
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Jun. 1949 Union City, Michigan. **KLINE CATCHES A LITTLE ONE.**
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Clifford M. Kline, Union City, was just leaving his barn on a clear
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evening at 7:40 when approximately 200 feet away, and nearly 6 feet off
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the ground, an oval object about 5ft by 4ft sped from northeast to
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southwest in a perfectly straight line with no noise and disappeared
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behind a fence row of shrubbery nearly a quarter of a mile away.
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The object was reddish-brown and fringed with white. Kline's
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observation was similar to a procession of hat-crown-shaped objects
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observed soaring over Skening, Sweden, May 1818, which were
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described as brown and caused the sun to turn brick-red.
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37
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Jun. 17, 1949 Battle Creek Michigan. **MICHIGAN PHOTOGRAPHS TRIANGLES.**
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Lloyd Sanders, Rt 1, Took a photo of a strange triangular object
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which was going at a tremendous rate of speed and glowed like the
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sun. There was a high-pitched, whining sound.
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38
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Jun. 18, 1949 Kent, England. **ENGLANG SEES THEM AS 'BLOBS'.**
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Two farmers reported they saw tailess blobs of light spinning
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across the heavens.
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39
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Jul. 9, 1949 Alexandria, Virgina. **VIRGINIA SEES SAUCER DOING THE REFLECTING.**
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C.S. Dupree saw a light reflected on the sidewalk, and on looking
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up saw a fast-moving, saucer-shaped object. It was not bright, but
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easily visible. Other sightings in the same vicinity were reported.
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40
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Jul. 10, 1949 Tacony, Pennsylvania. **NINE WHIZ OVER PENNSYLVANIA.**
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Mr. and Mrs. George C. Wunsch of Tacony, Pennsylvania, and Mr. and Mrs.
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Barry McGuigan of West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, saw nine strange disks
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with a dull illumination visible beneath the evening's cloud cover.
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They moved faster than an airliner but were clearly visible.
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41
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Jul. 24, 1949 Montgomery, AL. _Los Angeles Herald Express_. **HUGE MYSTERY PLANE OVER U.S.**
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Two Eastern Airline pilots, Capt. Cas Childs and Co-pilot J.B.
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Whitted, said they met a wingless two-deck plane early today southwest
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of Montgomery, Alabama. They said the strange ship with a
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blue glow underneath the fuselage and shooting red flames passed
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the EAL ship at 5,000 feet and headed towards New Orleans.
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42
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Jul. 24, 1949 Boise, Idaho. **V-SHAPED OBJECTS OVER IDAHO.** A Boise aviator saw seven V-shaped objects flying within 1,500 or
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2,000 feet of his plane. The objects, estimated to be about the
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size of fighter planes, flew at a tremendous rate of speed in a
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tight, but unfamiliar formation. They were in the shape of a 'V'
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with a solid, circular body under the nose of the 'V'. There was
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no evidence of any means of propulsion. They were observed for
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about two minutes.
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43
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Jul. 26, 1949 Mitchell, Nebraska. **THEY FLY UPSIDE DOWN IN NEBRASKA.**
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Dr. H.G. Lauback saw a saucer flying on a southwesterly course at
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3:10 p.m., resembling an upside-down saucer whirling as it moved
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through the sky, occasionally tipping sideways at an altitude of
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between 5,000 and 7,000 feet. It was estimated to be about 25 feet
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in diameter and traveled about 25 ground miles in three minutes.
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44
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Aug. 15, 1949 Deer Lodge, Montana. **MONTANA NOTES THEIR SILENCE.**
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Edgar Thompson saw a bright silver disk-shaped object heading
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towards Butte at a terrific speed. It traveled noiselessly in a
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straight line.
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45
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Nov. 7, 1949 Osborne, Kansas. **KANSAS OBSERVES THEIR 'FLIP'.**
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Delmar Remick and Erwin Legg of Osborne, saw a flying saucer in
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the air, a mile up and moving northwest, rapidly takin six or
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seven seconds to get out of sight. It moved with a little flip
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every half second.
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46
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Jan. 12, 1950 Kvalleposten, Malmo, Sweden. **MAJORITY BELIEVE IN FLYING SAUCERS.**
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More than 61 percent of Americans believe in flying saucers,
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according to a poll of opinion taken by Galaxy, the science-fiction
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magazine. Another 17 percent didn't believe they exist, while
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32 percent were uncertain. The younger age group was more inclined
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to believe in saucers than older people.
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47
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Jan. 21, 1950 New England. _The New York Times_. **BOSTON PITCHES FOR MORE INVESTIGATION.**
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The Aero Club of New England, a 49-year-old organization dating back
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to the ballooning days, has asked the Air Force to reopen its investigation
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into "flying saucers" and other unknown aircraft. A letter
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to Thomas K. Finletter, Air Force Secretary, made public today, termed
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the discontinuance of the "saucer" investigation as "premature and regrettable."
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48
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Feb. 1, 1950 St. John's, Newfoundland} **TELEPHONE TROUBLESHOOTER SEES ONE OFF CANADIAN COAST.**. Pat
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Walsh, telephone company electrician and Navy veteran, reported
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seeing a tear-shaped object, bright as a fluorescent light, for
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twelve seconds before it headed out to sea in an arch-like flight at
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incredible speed.
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49
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Feb. 1950 Korea. _Fate Magazine_. **NAVY DOES NOT SWALLOW OWN LINE.**
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A few months before the Navy spokesman, Dr. Brener Liddell issued his
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report that flying saucers were all balloons. _Naval Aviation News_,
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an official Navy magazine, reported the sighting of two mysterious
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smoke-trailing objects by an American airship off Korea. The
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incident occurred in December of 1949, and personnel aboard the
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seaplane tender _Gardiners Bay_ reported that the two objects struck
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the water at tremendous speed off the ship's port bow while it was
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steaming up the channel from Inchon. Under the title "Sighting
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Flying Disks Again?", the Navy magazine reported: "Two huge
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columns of smoke rose to about 100 feet in height at the point of contact.
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No aircraft could be sighted by radar, or visually overhead, although
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the ceiling was unlimited. Identification remains a great mystery."
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50
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Feb. 23, 1950 Santiago, Chile. **CHILE STILL HOARDS ITS PIX.**. Commander Augusto Vars Orrego, head of the Chilean Antarctic Base
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of Arthur Prat, saw, on several occasions during the Antarctic night,
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flying saucers, one above the other, turning at tremendous speeds.
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Photographs were taken.
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51
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Feb. 1950 US. _Air Force Magazine_. **CALLING HERR GENERAL FREUD.**
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"It is concluded," the most recent official Air Force report
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states, "that there are sufficient psychological explanations
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for the reports of unidentified flying objects to provide
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plausible explanations not otherwise explainable. These errors
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in identifying real stimuli result chiefly from the inability to
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estimate speed, distance, and size."
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52
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Mar. 2, 1950 Mexico City. **MEXICAN OBSERVATORY PHOTOGRAPHS ONE.**
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Luis Enrique Erro, head of the Tonantzintla Observatory near Puebla,
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reports an object flew through space and crossed the field of his
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Schmidt telescope. Luis Munch, fellow astronomer, photographed
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the object, which showed as a broad white streak diagonally across
|
|
a jet black field. The craft appeared to be about the diameter of
|
|
the moon and at least as bright.
|
|
53
|
|
Mar. 10, 1950 Edmonton, Alberta. **WEST CANADA CATCHES SIGHT OF THREE.**
|
|
F. Arnold Richards, civic employee, saw objects with a bluish-white
|
|
flame shooting out of the wide end. He reported three in all.
|
|
54
|
|
Mar. 11, 1950 Juarez, Mexico. **THREE MEXICAN OFFICIALS SEE ONE.**
|
|
Robert Antorena, Amilcar Lopez Sousa and Manuel Espejo, customs
|
|
and border officials, saw a top-like disk traveling high in the
|
|
sky and headed towards El Paso.
|
|
55
|
|
Mar. 11, 1950 Juarez, Mexico. **NEW AND OLD MEXICO REPORT SIGHTINGS THE SAME DAY.**
|
|
Luis Herrera, travel agency owner, saw a strange, disk-shaped
|
|
object over the city for fifteen minutes. At the same time, John
|
|
E. Baird of El Paso saw an object shaped like a globe, near
|
|
Deming, New Mexico.
|
|
56
|
|
Mar. 13, 1950 Mexico City, D.F.} **AIRPORT WEATHER EXPERT SEES FOUR IN MEXICO.**
|
|
Santiago Smith, chief weather observer for the Mexico City Airport
|
|
trained a telescope at an object shaped like a half-moon, one of
|
|
four flying bodies crossing the airport at 35,000 to 45,000 feet.
|
|
57
|
|
Mar. 13, 1950 Monterey, Mexico. **MONTEREY SEES ONE MAKE QUICK TURNS.**
|
|
Francisco Martinez Soto, government airport inspector, saw an
|
|
object moving in a straight line and changing its altitude by
|
|
one and a half degrees in three minutes.
|
|
58
|
|
Mar. 16, 1950 Delhi, Ontario. **ONTARIO REPORTS ONE PLAYING TAG.**
|
|
Paul Repai, Mr. and Mrs. Andre Hertal and Steve Fodor saw a
|
|
flying saucer at 4 am moving in jerks as if controlled, faster
|
|
than a jet. It seemed bigger and duller when moving, smaller
|
|
and brighter when still. It swished from side to side and hovered
|
|
up and down, then it suddenly rose sharply and disappeared.
|
|
59
|
|
Mar. 16, 1950 Miraflores, Peru. **SWISS IN PERU REPORTS ONE TAKE 5-MINUTE REST.**
|
|
Julian Guardiola, Swiss Engineer, saw a disk flying from the south
|
|
giving off a red and yellow glow. It stopped directly above them
|
|
at about 4500 feet and remained for about five minutes. It then
|
|
flew southward at tremendous velocity.
|
|
60
|
|
Mar. 16, 1950 San Jose Purua, Mexico. **LANSING M.D. FILMS ONE ONE IN MEXICO.**
|
|
Dr. W.C. Behen, of Lansing, Michigan, made both photographs and
|
|
movies of a double truncated cone, silver in color, and eight or
|
|
nine thousand feet in the air. The object disappeared from time
|
|
to time, but would reappear to hover over one area for several
|
|
minutes.
|
|
61
|
|
Mar. 18, 1950 Altoona, Pennsylvania. **PENNSY M.D. SKETCHES HOW HIS OPERATED.**
|
|
UP -- Dr. Craig Hunter, 47 of Berkeley Springs, WV, made a rough
|
|
sketch of a flying saucer he saw at dusk Wednesday in the hope that
|
|
it might help clear up the mysterious phenomena. The object appeared
|
|
to be about 50 to 100 feet in diameter and was about 25 to 30
|
|
feet thick in the center. A streamer about 200 feet long and 10
|
|
inches wide trailed. The disk seemed to be constructed in three
|
|
concentric partitions. The outer edge, which was 10 feet wide,
|
|
appeared to be stationary and had slits covering about one-third of
|
|
the area visible to him. Immediately in from the leading edge
|
|
were two apertures about 4 and a half feet square. The second circle
|
|
seemed to be the only part of the thing moving and it rotated with
|
|
a great hissing whistle. Inner and largest part of the disk was
|
|
also stationary. It was a dirty metallic color and definitely
|
|
not an airplane.
|
|
62
|
|
Mar. 23, 1950 Laguna Beach, California. **8 FLYING SAUCERS SPOTTED OVER LAGUNA.**
|
|
UP -- Flying saucers have been spotted again, this time along
|
|
the California coast by Dudley Gourley, 26, an Army aircraft
|
|
observer for nearly three years. He said he saw the saucers
|
|
moving slowly out to sea as he drove past El Moro on the coast
|
|
highway.
|
|
63
|
|
Mar. 25, 1950 Minnesota. **PICARD FORMS LIDDEL OF BALLOONATIC FRINGE.**
|
|
Dr. Jean Picard, University of Minnesota scientist and pioneer in
|
|
balloon ascent work, suggested in an interview with United Press
|
|
that some "flying saucers" may be experimental balloons being
|
|
sent up into the stratosphere by General Mills in cooperation with
|
|
several universities and under contract with the Navy.
|
|
64
|
|
Mar. 27, 1950 Washington, D.C.} **FLYING SAUCER NEAR PENTAGON.**
|
|
UP -- A flying saucer has been reported almost in the backyard
|
|
of the Air Force, the service that says the mysterious disks don't
|
|
exist. Bertram A. Totten, a veteran private pilot, said he sighted
|
|
an aluminum-colored disk about 40 feet in diameter and 10 feet
|
|
thick while he was flying over Fairfax County, Virginia, on the
|
|
outskirts of Washington.
|
|
65
|
|
Mar. 27, 1950 Tulsa, Oklahoma. **TULSA CHECKS IN WITH 25.**
|
|
C.W. Hughes, 1338 N. Boston Place, Tulsa, sighted at 6:16 am,
|
|
25 flying saucers. The objects were silver-colored and flying at
|
|
an elevation of 1000 feet.
|
|
66
|
|
Mar. 31, 1950 Little Rock, Arkansas. **VETERAN PILOTS RATE THEM SUPERSONIC.**
|
|
Capt. Jack Adams, and co-pilot G.W. Anderson, Jr., veterans of
|
|
7000 and 6000 flying hours for the Chicago and Southern Air Lines,
|
|
en route in their DC-3 from Memphis to Little Rock were within
|
|
forty miles of Little Rock at 2,000 feet, they saw a lighted,
|
|
fast-moving object about 1,000 feet above the DC-3 half a mile away
|
|
and moving at a terrific speed: 700 to 1,000 m.p.h. They saw no
|
|
reflection, exhaust, or vapor trail. It traveled in an arc, flashing
|
|
a strong blue-white light.
|
|
67
|
|
Mar. 25, 1950 Rome, Italy. **HITLER STILL FLYING AROUND IN ONE?**
|
|
Professor Giuseppe Belluzzo, a 73-year-old Italian turbine engineer,
|
|
said today that designs for flying saucers were prepared for Hitler
|
|
and Mussolini in 1942. Belluzzo said: "It has crossed my mind that
|
|
some great power is experimenting with flying disks—without explosives
|
|
or atomic bombs. There is nothing supernatural or Martian about flying
|
|
disks. It's just the most rational use of recently-evolved techniques."
|
|
Belluzzo personally drafted plans for a "flying disk" 32 feet in
|
|
diameter, but claimed they disappeared with Benito Mussolini when he
|
|
fled to northern Italy in 1943.
|
|
68
|
|
Mar. 31, 1950 Jalapa, Mexico, El Universal. **MEXICO SEES THEM SET AT SUNDOWN.**
|
|
300 flying disks were reported flying above the city. They began
|
|
to disappear about sundown.
|
|
69
|
|
Apr. 7, 1950 Grenoble and Chambéry, France. **FRANCE SIGHTS SAUCERS, TOO.**
|
|
Flying saucers were reported to have been seen in two localities
|
|
of France. Residents of Grenoble reported a metallic object
|
|
which appeared to remain stationary high in the sky. Inhabitants
|
|
of Chambéry reported a saucer-like object which left a stream
|
|
of vapor.
|
|
70
|
|
Apr. 19, 1950 St. Paul, Minnesota} _St. Paul's Dispatch_. **AIRMAN SEES BANANAS WITH SAUCERS.**
|
|
Fort Worth AP: Ira Maxey, a veteran of 3,600 flying hours in the
|
|
United States Air Force, said he saw six flying "bananas" plus a
|
|
flying saucer. They were moving slowly and appeared to be six or
|
|
seven miles away. He described the air objects as without tails
|
|
or noses, not like a saucer but more like a banana. The pictures
|
|
Maxey took showed they left vapor trails.
|
|
71
|
|
Apr. 27, 1950 South Bend, Indiana. **TWA PILOTS SEE ONE GO BY ON EXPRESS LANE.**
|
|
Capt. Robert Adickes and First Officer Robert Manning, TWA pilots,
|
|
saw a round glowing mass in the air as they flew over South Bend.
|
|
The object was in sight for six or seven minutes as it overtook
|
|
their plane at 2,000 feet. It was round with no irregular features
|
|
and about one-tenth as thick as it was round. They gave chase
|
|
but were soon outdistanced.
|
|
72
|
|
Apr. 30, 1950 Mount Joy, Illinois. **IOWA REPORTS ONE EXPLODING.**
|
|
Louis and Wilfred Wedemyer of Mount Joy saw a round flat saucer-shaped
|
|
object spinning across the sky. Suddenly it exploded in
|
|
the air like a firework display. It seemed to disintegrate.
|
|
No noise for a few seconds, then a low rumble that lasted half a
|
|
minute. The same phenomenon was observed in Burlington and Muscatibe, Iowa.
|
|
73
|
|
Apr. 3, 1950 Mount Diabo, CA. _Bay Area Aviation News_, San Francisco.
|
|
**COL FLYNN BELIEVE THEY ARE OURS.**
|
|
A U.S. Air Force Reserve Colonel, Frank A. Flynn, talked in detail
|
|
today of his encounter with a flight of more than a dozen "flying
|
|
saucers". He said he is convinced that the objects he saw near
|
|
Mount Diablo while flying his own plane from San Francisco to
|
|
Sacramento in April of 1948, were controlled, experimental,
|
|
American aircraft.
|
|
74
|
|
May. 7, 1950 Colonna, Rome. _Los Angeles Examiner_. **WHEN IN ROME THEY FLY AS ROMANS.**
|
|
Hundreds of persons on their way to work stopped to watch two
|
|
flashing objects high over Rome's central piazza, Colonna. The
|
|
two objects seemed to be a mile or more high and moved slowly.
|
|
They appeared to be revolving on an axis and flashing at regular
|
|
intervals, like smaller air beacons.
|
|
75
|
|
May. 11, 1950 McMinnville, Oregon. **OREGONIAN GETS TWO ON FILM.**
|
|
Paul Trent, Route 3, McMinnville, captured two photos of flying
|
|
saucers in the backyard of his farm. The two pictures were taken
|
|
about 50 seconds apart.
|
|
76
|
|
May. 24, 1950 Montrose, Colorado. **FIFTEEN WITNESSES CONFIRM MRS. SEEVERS' SIGHTING.**
|
|
Mrs. Clyde Seevers, one of sixteen Montrose ranchers who saw two
|
|
sky objects as broad as large airplane's wings, said the craft
|
|
was absolutely round and smooth without windows, motors, or tail
|
|
assembly. They flew soundlessly and seemed to float along, then
|
|
suddenly soared up swiftly and disappeared. Her report was corroborated
|
|
by fifteen other ranchers in the vicinity.
|
|
77
|
|
Jun. 7, 1950 London, England. **RAF PILOT REPORTS SIGHTING, RADAR A 'BLIP'.**
|
|
An RAF pilot radioed his base: "Strange object seen. Looks like
|
|
a flying saucer." Radar operators at the base picked up a strong
|
|
"blip" on their screens. The air ministry withheld all information.
|
|
78
|
|
Jun. 20, 1950 Oakland, California. _The Oakland Tribune_. **THIS ONE DUSTS AIR FORCE BASE.**
|
|
The UP said a "disk-shaped object" roaring at an estimated speed
|
|
of 1000 to 1500 mph. made five passes near Hamilton Air Force
|
|
Base today.
|
|
79
|
|
Jun. 25, 1950 Baker, New Mexico. **UNITED AIRLINES CREW SEES ONE 4 MILES UP.**
|
|
Captain E. L. Remlin, First Officer David Stewart, and Observer Sam
|
|
B. Wiper noticed a mysterious object while flying their UAL Main-liner
|
|
at 14,000 feet between Las Vegas and Silver Lake about
|
|
eight miles north of Baker, New Mexico. The craft had a bluish
|
|
center with a bright orange tint and was flying horizontally at
|
|
about 20,000 feet, faster than the plane, and about 20 miles away.
|
|
80
|
|
Jun. 29, 1950 Fort Collins, Colorado. **POSTMAN SPOTS ONE WITH SATERN RING.**
|
|
Hubert Hutt, a post office worker at Fort Collins, saw an object
|
|
in the sky at 9:40 a.m. which appeared simultaneously with an
|
|
airliner at about 3,000 feet elevation. It was at about 4,500 feet,
|
|
traveling northwest, and resembled a silver snowball, circled
|
|
by some kind of a ring. It was extremely maneuverable.
|
|
81
|
|
Jul. 29, 1950 Springfield, Illinois. **CHIEF PILOT COLLIDES WITH ONE, UNHURT.**
|
|
Jim Graham, chief pilot for Capital Aviation Co. of Springfield
|
|
reported his plane was struck by a mysterious object resembling
|
|
a blue streak with a tail of red flames. It was soundless and
|
|
did not damage his plane."
|
|
82
|
|
Aug. 8, 1950 North of Orange County, CA. _Los Angeles Daily News_. **FOUR COUNTIES POLLED ON THIS ONE.**
|
|
A strange, green light the center of which seemed to be just north
|
|
of Orange County in California, was seen over four counties: Los
|
|
Angeles, San Bernardino, San Diego, and Riverside. Its light
|
|
covered the greater part of Southern California south of the city
|
|
of Los Angeles and north as far as Santa Monica Bay. Observers
|
|
at San Diego reported that the whole sky was alight like a giant
|
|
flash bulb. There was no sound.
|
|
83
|
|
Aug. 10, 1950 Pacific Coast, US. **NORTHWEST JOINS SOUTHWEST ON SIGHTING.**
|
|
Another huge silent slow lit up the Pacific Coast from Salem,
|
|
Oregon to Seattle, Washington today.
|
|
84
|
|
Aug. 12, 1950 Denver, Colorado. **YUMA SIGHTING QUITS AT SIGHT OF DRUGSTORE.**
|
|
William Schocke, Yuma, saw, along with dozens of others, a dark,
|
|
disk-shaped object with a dim glow around its rim. When it reached
|
|
a point just above a drugstore, it abruptly ceased lateral flight
|
|
and slices straight upwards, disappearing behind low-hanging
|
|
clouds.
|
|
85
|
|
Sep. 10, 1950 Mitchell Field, New York. **TW JET PILOTS LOSE in 30 MILE CHASE.**
|
|
Lt. Wilbert S. Rogers and Capt. Edward Ballard, Mitchell Field
|
|
Air Force jet pilots, chased a mysterious round flying object
|
|
for thirty miles and couldn't catch it. They estimated its speed
|
|
at 900 mph. They sighted the object over Sandy Hook, New Jersey,
|
|
while on a routine flight. It was silvery-white and about the size
|
|
of a fighter plane traveling at 20,000 feet.
|
|
86
|
|
Sep. 1950 Venice, California. **BOY ASTRONOMER PHOTOGRAPHS ONE BY ACCIDENT.**
|
|
Ivan Courtright, 14-year-old amateur astronomer set his camera at
|
|
a six-hour exposure to photograph sky trails and accidentally
|
|
obtained two photos. One of a saucer, when he clicked the shutter
|
|
too soon, and the other a saucer trail taken on a longer exposure.
|
|
The photo of the saucer coming right at the camera shows clearly
|
|
the illuminated cloud surrounding it.
|
|
87
|
|
Sep. 1950 Saw Bill Bay, Minnesota. **SAWBILLIES WATCH ONE LAND ON BAY.**
|
|
F. A. Halstead of Duluth, Minn., and Ben Eyton, Editor of the
|
|
_Steep Rocket Echo_, Ontario, reported the experience of a miner living
|
|
in Antikokan who saw a flying saucer and a live crew in a cove of
|
|
Sawbill Bay. They gave full details and told that they went back
|
|
later with a camera and after a few days caught another saucer
|
|
which spotted them and took off in a flash of green. There was
|
|
There was a terrific high-pitched whine almost a blast, they explained, and
|
|
then it was gone. One little figure that had been near the water's
|
|
edge was only about halfway back when it took off. "Our impression
|
|
was that something fell off when the saucer was about halfway
|
|
down the bay. For some reason, our motor took a fit of not wanting
|
|
to start. After we did get it going, it began to run hot,
|
|
which ruined our chances of pursuing the object."
|
|
88
|
|
Sep. 21, 1950 Hollywood, California. _Citizens-News_. **MYSTERY SHIPS OVER COLORADO.**
|
|
Hundreds of witnesses reported strange objects which hurtled
|
|
across Colorado last night just east of the Rocky Mountains.
|
|
Astronomy students and Air Force officials said they were not
|
|
meteorites. All reports said the objects moved horizontally,
|
|
unlike meteorites, and most trained observers placed their
|
|
altitude at 3,000 feet. The CAA control tower at Peublo estimated
|
|
their speed at about 1,000 mph. The speed of the objects was
|
|
so fast that reports along the 200 mile path were almost simultaneous.
|
|
89
|
|
Oct. 7, 1950 Denver, Col. **'SAUCER' OVER ATOM CENTER.**
|
|
UP - A Los Angeles construction worker has reported
|
|
that a strange "blinking object" soared over a highly
|
|
restricted area of the big atomic energy center last month. The
|
|
object, which appeared to be at an altitude of 20,000 feet,
|
|
flashed alternately bright and then black at intervals of two
|
|
seconds. It was visible for three minutes and forty seconds.
|
|
90
|
|
Oct. 23, 1950 North of Hancock Field. _Syracuse Post-Standard_. **TWO SIGHT SAUCER AT AIRPORT.**
|
|
Allen Snyder and a companion, a city operations employee,
|
|
who declined the use of his name, reported sighting a flying saucer
|
|
three or four miles north of Hancock Field at an altitude of
|
|
2,500 feet. Snyder, a veteran airplane observer and employee of
|
|
Northwest Airlines, said it seemed larger than a conventional
|
|
plane and was traveling at a good rate. It was colorless, but
|
|
the shape was not discernible. No flame or exhaust was
|
|
observed.
|
|
91
|
|
Nov. 1950 Miami, FL. _Syracuse Herald-Journal_. **LIFE INDICATED ON OTHER PLANETS.**
|
|
AP - Dr. Harold C. Urey, internationally known physicist
|
|
and Nobel Prize winner in chemistry who helped develop the
|
|
Atom bomb, told science students at the University of Miami
|
|
that his study of the universe "leaves little doubt that life
|
|
has occurred on other planets." He said he doubted that the
|
|
human race was the most intelligent form of life.
|
|
92
|
|
Nov. 5, 1950 Heathrow, England. **ENGLAND REPORTS ONE, SPEED 1000 MPH.**
|
|
Four Pan-American Airways employees saw a brilliantly lighted
|
|
object flying east to west in a straight line. Its speed was
|
|
estimated at 1,000 mph, and the object was described as a bright
|
|
white light, metallic colored, elongated, but as it went out of sight, spherical.
|
|
93
|
|
Nov. 12, 1950 Barrow-in-Furness, England. **CIGAR-SHAPED OBJECT LOAFS OVER ENGLISH TOWN.**
|
|
Edward Leslie Docker, wholesale fruit dealer in Hindpool-Road,
|
|
saw a huge disc-shaped object from the window of his office.
|
|
aluminum in color, flying at about 4,000 feet and around 80 mph.
|
|
It seemed to be at least 100 feet long.
|
|
94
|
|
Nov. 12, 1950 Didsbury, Manchester, England. **C.E. SPOTS ONE OVER MANCHESTER TOWN?**
|
|
P.D. Bell, a civil engineer saw a strange circular aircraft fly
|
|
overhead at great speed. It was noiseless with a bright light
|
|
on the underside.
|
|
95
|
|
Nov. 21, 1950 Rasco, Washington. **SCRIBES SEE CIGAR-SHAPOED ONE OVER WASHINGTON.**
|
|
Perry Torbergson and Jack Anderson, both on the editorial staff
|
|
of the _Columbia Basin News_, watched an object in the sky for
|
|
eight minutes. It was shining, cigar-shaped, and glistened
|
|
brightly. It stopped and hung in the air over the Hanford
|
|
atomic plant and then disappeared on a southwesterly course.
|
|
96
|
|
Dec. 2, 1950 Fairbanks, Alaska. **ALASKAN PILOT OBSERVES ONE BLOW UP.**
|
|
G.C. Kelly, Reeves Airway pilot, approaching an airfield eight
|
|
miles southwest of Anchorage, Alaska, saw an object overhead
|
|
traveling at 100 miles per hour, so bright it was impossible
|
|
to look at. Then there was an explosion and the object vanished.
|
|
97
|
|
Nov. 8, 1950 Jarrow in Burgess, Britain. _The New York Times_. **FLYING SAUCER OVER HUNGRY BRITAIN.**
|
|
A mysterious "flying sausage" was reported over Jarrow-in-Burgess
|
|
Tuesday. Two men, one a reputable businessman, described the object
|
|
as a "flying sausage with a dark outline and a transparent
|
|
center." The object was traveling north at a fair speed both declared,
|
|
and agreed there was no sound of motors.
|
|
98
|
|
Nov. 10, 1950 Pacific Ocean off Southern CA. _San Diego Union_. **NAVY DESTROYER CHASES MYSTERIOUS OBJECT.**
|
|
The United States destroyer, _Blue_, searched the Pacific Ocean off
|
|
Southern California trying to track down a mysterious "unidentified
|
|
object." A Navy report said the _Blue_ picked up the object on its
|
|
radar screen and was trying to close in on it to identify it. No
|
|
mention was made of what, when, how, or where the contact was made.
|
|
99
|
|
Dec. 7, 1950 Rangely, Colorado. **OIL WORKERS WATCH ONE OVER RANGELY.**
|
|
A shining aluminum-colored object hovered for more than a minute
|
|
over the Rangely Oil Basin, then moved rapidly eastward. It was
|
|
flat, disc-like in appearance, with a dome-like structure on top.
|
|
It seemed to rotate as it hovered, emitting a flash of light at
|
|
regular intervals. Its altitude was approximately 2,000 feet.
|
|
100
|
|
Dec. 23, 1950 Amory, Mississippi. **MISSISSIPPI WATCHES ONE TURN OTHER CHEEK.**
|
|
James Q. Tate of 2629 Avenue North, Birmingham, Ala., saw a red
|
|
ball in the bright clear sky over Armory, Miss. He described it
|
|
as being deeper red in the center than at the perimeter. On
|
|
second look he saw that the red ball had turned over and appeared
|
|
to be flat. The red color might have been because of the sun's
|
|
reflection. It was one to one and a half miles above the town,
|
|
approximately thirty feet in diameter, and moving at a terrific
|
|
speed before it disappeared towards the northwest. Tate was
|
|
about three miles away driving into town.
|
|
101
|
|
Jan. 1951 Belgian Congo, Africa. **TWO LOOK FOR URANIUM IN AFRICA.**
|
|
Two disks were sighted hanging over the Uranium mining pits and
|
|
were pursued by planes. The object flew in a peculiar zig-zag
|
|
course. A Spitfire came close enough to see a whirling rim on
|
|
one of the saucers, but was easily and quickly outdistanced.
|
|
102
|
|
Jan. 1951 Washington, DC. **OLSON GUESSES THEIR SPEED AT 10,000 MPH.**
|
|
Robert Olson, 3708 35th St., NW, Washington, D.C., took a picture
|
|
of seven or eight saucers flying over Washington in early January.
|
|
A shot was taken from someone's back porch, and a double exposure
|
|
resulted when the silvery saucers were sighted. Olson says: "I
|
|
assure you, noting on that porch, not even the lighting cord
|
|
that you can see hanging down is responsible for the images of the
|
|
bright circles. Calculate how fast the object would have to
|
|
be going to make such long streak in 1/50 of a second, assuming
|
|
the saucers are 36 feet in diameter. I'd say between 2,000 and
|
|
10,000 mph."
|
|
103
|
|
Jan. 16, 1951 Kansas City, Mo. **AIR FORCE IMITATION DOESN'T FOOL THESE GIRLS.**
|
|
Betty McCarty and Judy Royles of Kansas City sighted a huge red
|
|
light with a green flickering light in the center. It appeared
|
|
and disappeared several times. Betty and Judy, and Betty's
|
|
husband, drove up onto the Cliff drive, and saw it hanging in the
|
|
air over North Kansas City. It soared slowly around, down over
|
|
Fairfax Airport, and searchlights were turned on it. It disappeared
|
|
again but came back ten minutes later, appearing to be a green
|
|
ball of light with a red trail. It was now very high in the sky
|
|
and the only shape recognizable was that of a green sphere. The
|
|
next day, the Air Force rigged up a plane with green lights and
|
|
flew it around the city. The Air Force plane had a recognizable
|
|
shape and a loud droning motor besides.
|
|
104
|
|
Jan. 20, 1951 US. **TWO PILOTS DENY THIS ONE AS KNOWN AIRCRAFT.**
|
|
Capt. Larry M. Vinther and co-pilot James R. Bachmeier, flying
|
|
a Mid-Continent Airline plane, saw a straight-sided object, with
|
|
no exhaust glow, jet pods, or engines. It performed maneuvers and
|
|
turns at speeds impossible to known aircraft, according to
|
|
Vinther.
|
|
105
|
|
Feb. 14, 1951 Dayton, Ohio. **TWO CAPTAINS CAN'T GO ALONG WITH LIDDEL'S BALLOON THEORY.**
|
|
Capr. J.E. Cocker and Capt. E. W. Spradley of Wright-Patterson Air
|
|
Force Base, while tracking a large weather balloon, saw an
|
|
object hovering at 50 to 60 thousand feet. Flat milky color
|
|
made it resemble a dime. It gave three brilliant flashes and
|
|
then disappeared from sight.
|
|
106
|
|
Feb. 19, 1951 Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa. **THIS ONE POSES 17 MINUTES FOR PHOTOGRAPHS.**
|
|
Two pilots and nine passengers of a regular plane flight from
|
|
Nairobi to Mombasi, Africa, saw a huge cigar-shaped vessel, at
|
|
first quite stationary over the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro, then
|
|
as the plane drew near, rising rapidly at an estimated 100 mph
|
|
and disappearing at 44,000 feet. The vessel was judged to be 200
|
|
feet long, brilliantly polished except for four duller bars which
|
|
ran vertically down its body. It had a huge fin or paddle-rudder
|
|
at the stern, no exhaust. It remained in view for 17 minutes,
|
|
long enough for three passengers to obtain photographs of the
|
|
object.
|
|
107
|
|
Feb. 19, 1951 San Diego Union. **MYSTERIOUS MISSILE ATTACKS NAVY SHIP.**
|
|
The Navy reported today that one of its ships was attacked recently
|
|
off the western shore of Korea by a powerful "mysterious" missile that
|
|
kicked up a 100-foot column of water. According to the report appearing
|
|
in the _Naval Aviation News_, the _USS Gardiner's Bay_ was steaming
|
|
through the channel off Inchon when two "mysterious missiles, trailing
|
|
long, white smoke plumes", plunged from the sky and landed off the
|
|
ship's port bow. "No aircraft could be sighted by radar or visually
|
|
overhead," the article added, "although the ceiling was unlimited."
|
|
Identification of the missile remains a great mystery.
|
|
108
|
|
Feb. 26, 1951 US. _Newsweek Magazine_. **"SAUCERS? NO! SKYHOOKS!" SAYS BALLOONATIC FRINGE.**
|
|
Ever since the summer of 1947, when an Idaho businessman spotted the
|
|
first flying saucer, excited people all over the country reported
|
|
seeing the flat shiny disks flashing across the sky. Three pilots
|
|
died pursuing the strange objects. So fantastic did the rumors and
|
|
the resulting legend become that "little men from Mars" were said to
|
|
have landed in the Mexican Desert in a spaceship, provoking the best
|
|
seller _Behind The Flying Saucers_ by Frank Scully. Air Force officials
|
|
were understandably annoyed last week to find the Navy making front-page
|
|
headlines with a story long since buried in their files. Dr.
|
|
Urner Liddel, chief of nuclear-physics at the Office of Naval Research
|
|
told _Look Magazine_ that the saucers were actually huge plastic balloons
|
|
carrying delicate instruments to study cosmic rays. Scully when asked
|
|
for comment consigned Dr. Liddel "to the balloonatic fringe."
|
|
109
|
|
Jan. 27, 1951 Carnoustle, Forfarshire. _London Weekly Overseas Mail_. **FIVE TRADESMEN TRADE EXPERIENCES.**
|
|
live tradesmen in Carnoustle, Forfarshire, claim to have seen a flying
|
|
saucer. It was glowing with a bright light "Just like a huge
|
|
electric-light bowl," said Edward Thompson. The five men were working
|
|
on a roof on Queen-Street when just after 2 p.m. they sighted the
|
|
saucer moving through a cloudy patch. All watched the object for
|
|
about 30 minutes. Occasionally a bright spark fell from it, as it
|
|
moved through the sky. It was estimated as being "enormous".
|
|
110
|
|
Feb. 26, 1951 Chicago, IL. _Chicago Daily News_. **SAUCERS MORE THAN JUST BALLOONS, SCIENTIST SAYS.**
|
|
Dr. Anthony O. Mirachi, a former Air Force Scientist, brushed
|
|
aside the idea that flying saucers are just balloons and urged
|
|
a full-scale investigation. He said that as an assistant chief
|
|
of a branch of the geophysical research organization, he conducted
|
|
an investigation and recommended a considerable appropriation to
|
|
press for the study of the strange phenomena. When asked to comment
|
|
an Air Force spokesman said "In over 500 investigations, we have
|
|
yet to find one concrete bit of evidence to back up these flying
|
|
saucers."
|
|
111
|
|
Feb. 26, 1951 Maquoketa, Iowa. _Syracuse Post-Standard_ **COPS, BOTH ON AND OFF DUTY, SEE THIS ONE.**
|
|
A flying saucer was seen west-northwest of Maquoketa, Iowa, dropping
|
|
toward the horizon. Chief operator at the state police radio station,
|
|
off duty, and the man on duty, Jim Wheeler, both saw it plainly.
|
|
It hovered and seemed to be orange or dull red. Then a second one,
|
|
very bright white, came from the north, slightly lower, and on
|
|
nearing the first, came up to its altitude. Both disappeared soon
|
|
afterward.
|
|
112
|
|
May. 20, 1951 International Falls, Minnesota. **STRANGE OBJECT SEEN IN MINNESOTA SKY.**
|
|
UP -- A strange object that looked like a crystal ball darted
|
|
about the sky over Rainy Lake "just like a hummingbird," residents
|
|
of the area reported today. Witnesses said the object streaked
|
|
across the eastern end of the lake with a tremendous burst of
|
|
speed, stopped suddenly, and hung apparently motionless in the
|
|
sky for several minutes.
|
|
113
|
|
Mar. 18, 1951 New Delhi, India. **INDIA PILOT SEES CIGAR-SHAPED SAUCER.**
|
|
AP -- O.B. Varma, a pilot in the Delhi Flying Club, told of seeing
|
|
a cigar-shaped saucer 100 feet long skimming overhead "at the terrible
|
|
speed of nearly 2,000 mph." "It was nearly 5,000 feet up," Varma
|
|
said, "and made no sound." Varma mentioned 20 fellow Indian pilots also
|
|
noticed the sudden appearance of a white streak approaching from the
|
|
north headed by a cigar-shaped projectile. The object went in a straight
|
|
line, he said, then began making loops and disappeared in a southwesterly
|
|
direction.
|
|
114
|
|
May. 19, 1951 Maquoketa, Iowa. **IOWA HAS A FIELD DAY.**
|
|
Rev. Milton Nothdurft, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Maquoketa,
|
|
Iowa, reported that two saucers were seen this day from 10:20 to
|
|
10:45 p.m. The next night, an operator of the state police radio reported
|
|
another saucer in approximately the same area. Station WMT at
|
|
Cedar Rapids reported that two saucers took off in a blinding flash on
|
|
May 22 in broad daylight near Coggin.
|
|
115
|
|
May. 20, 1951 Maquoketa, Iowa. **SWEETER, NEW TO SAUCERS, DUMMIES UP.**
|
|
Officer Sweeter, on duty at the state police radio station, saw
|
|
a moving light, west-northwest, but being a newcomer among saucer
|
|
enthusiasts, hesitated to say anything more.
|
|
116
|
|
May. 22, 1951 Maquoketa, Iowa. **STUDENTS SPOT ONE TAKE OFF.**
|
|
High school students reported seeing a saucer "take off" in
|
|
a blinding flash of speed near Coggan, Iowa, north of Cedar
|
|
Rapids, and west-northwest of Maquoketa.
|
|
117
|
|
May. 23, 1951 South of Dodge City, US. _Kansas City Times_, Missouri.
|
|
**PILOT SEES 'STAR' GO THROUGH GYRATIONS.**
|
|
AP - An American Airlines pilot said today he saw what
|
|
appeared to be a bluish-white star moving back and forth at
|
|
high speed in the Southwest today. Captain W.R. Hunt said he
|
|
saw the object about 100 miles south of Dodge City. The object
|
|
traveled at speeds from 500 to 1000 m.p.h. and after playing tag with
|
|
the airplane, descended to four or three thousand feet.
|
|
118
|
|
May. 23, 1951 Maquoketa, Iowa. **RADIO COMMENTATOR CHECKS SIGHTINGS IN IOWA.**
|
|
A letter brought Bill Roberta of WMT, Cedar Rapids, new bureau,
|
|
on a 60-mile drive on the 23rd to investigate sightings at
|
|
Maquoketa. He had kept a record of the stories since 1947. He
|
|
mentioned that the mysterious phenomena had been seen by quite
|
|
a few people on a lake near International Falls, Minnesota, and that
|
|
a pilot in Kansas City had also reported a strange moving light.
|
|
119
|
|
May. 31, 1951 Galesburg, Illinois. **GALESBURG COPS LOSE TRAIL.**
|
|
City police south of Galesburg heard on short wave from Monmouth
|
|
Ill., police talking about a strange moving light traveling toward
|
|
the northwest. They were trying to get the others to see if it
|
|
was observed from there, but evidently it was not.
|
|
120
|
|
Jun. 6, 1951 Lynchburg, Virginia. **HIS HOBBY IS THOSE FLYING OOOOOOOOS.**
|
|
George Fawcett, a Mount Airy, NC senior at Lunchburg College
|
|
has been a collector of information on flying saucers since
|
|
1947. He was crossing the campus on the morning of June 5, when
|
|
he saw an orange-colored disk high in the sky. He reports the
|
|
disk zig-zagged, then settled down to a straight course and
|
|
moved off to the west.
|
|
Also see: https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/local/article275097716.html
|
|
121
|
|
May. 31, 1951 Kentucky. _Lexington Herald_. **MAGNETIC SCIENTIST EXPOSES "BALLOONATIC FRINGE".**
|
|
US Navy Electronics Engineer Milan Rafayko - 1916-2000, formerly Milan Rafajko - took issue with the
|
|
Lexington Herald for playing up Dr. Urner Liddel's explanation that flying saucers were
|
|
balloons. "If all saucers were balloons at high altitudes," he wrote, "then what were those saucers
|
|
sighted at low altitudes?" He wanted to know how a balloon could outmaneuver an F-51 fighter plane. The
|
|
editor denied his paper was being "used" by the government to further any special theory. Rafayko
|
|
charged it was an obviously fabricated story.
|
|
Also see: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-lexington-herald-milan-rafayko/131986026/
|
|
122
|
|
Jun. 1951 Adelaide, Australia. **AUSSIE CLOCKS ONE IN 7 SECONDS ACROSS SKY.**
|
|
Roger Shinkfield of 49 Magill ROad, St. Peters, Adelaide, sighting a
|
|
white circular object directly over heasd and traveling south. It
|
|
took seven seconds to reach the horizon. He estimated the height
|
|
to be between 20,000 and 30,000 feet. No sound could be heard.
|
|
123
|
|
Jun. 19, 1951 Portland, OR. _The Oregonian_. A glowing object moving across the heavens and late-strolling
|
|
23:00 Portlanders abuzz with curiosity. Several persons who saw the
|
|
thing about 11 pm described it as a long streak of light
|
|
traveling slowly from east to west. Some said it resembled
|
|
a meteor except that it was traveling too slowly. One man
|
|
said it was followed by a trail of white smoke.
|
|
124
|
|
Jul. 19, 1951 Dayton, Ohio. **OHIO REPORTS FIREBALL WITH FLOCK-LIGHTING.**
|
|
A fireball was seen over Dayton, hovering in midair. It seemed
|
|
to have two powerful beams of lights streaming down from the
|
|
underside.
|
|
125
|
|
1947 Buffalo, New York. **BUFFALO MAN REPORTS ONE FOUR YEARS LATER.**
|
|
Jolin S. Sarick of Buffalo, on July 22, 1951, describes a sighting of his in 1947:
|
|
"I saw twin lights coming down and when I saw them they were
|
|
already quite close to the ground. They were steady and the
|
|
color was blue or green. The lights seemed about a mile
|
|
away and in the direction of our airport which is 7 miles away.
|
|
We have never before or since seen any lights from airplanes
|
|
coming down or going up from the airport."
|
|
126
|
|
Jun. 9, 1951 Richmond, VA. _The Kansas City Star_. **TOP SECRET: MAGNETIC STORM CAUSES MASS JET CRASH.**
|
|
Air Force officials were tight-lipped today as they investigated the
|
|
cause of the crash of eight F-84 jet fighters, the largest mass crash
|
|
in jet aviation history. Three pilots of the eight ill-fated jets
|
|
were killed, and two were injured as the planes tumbled out of the sky near
|
|
Richmond yesterday. No one could explain what occurred to cause eight
|
|
planes to crash from a formation of 34 at the same time. The Air Force quickly
|
|
dropped a curtain of secrecy over its investigation, and all personnel
|
|
were ordered "to give out absolutely no information regarding
|
|
the plane crashes."
|
|
127
|
|
Jun. 29, 1951 Los Angeles, CA. **ROWBOATS IN THE SKY.**
|
|
By Matt Weinstock in _LA Times_. A man we know, a skeptic by the way, observed a strange object while
|
|
sitting on the patio of his home near La Brea and Adams, Los Angeles,
|
|
Saturday night (June 29, 1951) at 7:20 p.m. Its estimated height was
|
|
5,000 feet. Several friends were present, one of whom observed it
|
|
through binoculars. It looked like the bottom of a rowboat, except it
|
|
was a perfect ellipse with a ring of red lights around the edges. In
|
|
about five minutes, the object shot up at a tremendous speed and disappeared.
|
|
128
|
|
Jul. 17, 1951 Los Angeles, CA. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
**BALL OF FIRE FLIES ACROSS LA SKIES.**
|
|
Police last night received dozens of telephone calls from persons
|
|
reporting a "ball of red fire" moving across the southwestern
|
|
skies. The object was said to be traveling low on the horizon
|
|
in an erratic fashion and was visible for about 10 minutes.
|
|
Griffith Park Observatory said it had no explanation other than
|
|
that the object may have been an airplane or the planet Venus.
|
|
129
|
|
Aug. 27, 1951 Lubbock, Texas. **PROFESSORS AGREE THEY SAW LUBBOCK LIGHTS.**
|
|
Dr. W. L. Ducker, head of the Texas Technical College Petroleum
|
|
Engineering Department and Dr. A. G. Bert, professor of chemical
|
|
engineering, and Dr. W. I. Robinson, professor of geology, all
|
|
saw two strange formations hurtling through the sky over Lubbock,
|
|
Texas from horizon to horizon in three seconds. No shock waves
|
|
were felt, indicating the craft to be in the stratosphere, 50,000
|
|
feet or higher. Speed was 1,800 mph. if at one mile high,
|
|
18,000 if 50,000 feet high. Shape could not be determined, but
|
|
each object gave off a glow of light.
|
|
130
|
|
Sep. 11, 1951 Mitchell Field, New York. **AIR FORCE PILOTS CLOCKS THEM AS TOO FAST FOR F-86'S.**
|
|
Two Air Force jet pilots reported today that they chased a mysterious
|
|
round flying object at 900mph, for thirty minnutes. Lt. Wilbert
|
|
S. Rogers of Columbia, PA, pilot of the plane said: "We couldn't
|
|
have caught it in an F-86." (The US's fastest jet fighter.)
|
|
131
|
|
Aug. 30, 1951 Lubbock, Texas. **LUBBOCK LIGHTS ON FILM CONFIRMED.**
|
|
Carl Hart Jr. of Lubbock, Texas, took several photographs today of
|
|
18 saucers flying in formation. An Air Force Intelligence team, now admitted
|
|
to be continuing flying saucer investigations, said, "These photos are
|
|
legitimate." In one, a larger mother-ship could be seen off to one
|
|
side, apparently controlling the mass flight of the saucers which
|
|
were in an inverted V formation. Hart released the photographs to
|
|
Acme and the Air Force.
|
|
132
|
|
Sep. 18, 1951 12 miles east of Kansas City, MO. _Kansas City Star_.
|
|
**TWO SAUCER SQUADRONS SHOW MISSOURI.**
|
|
Mrs. Betty McCarty reported seeing two groups of circular objects
|
|
one slightly above the other, about 12 miles east of Kansas
|
|
City. She estimated the lower group of contained at least 150 and
|
|
the upper group about 50. She said that they changed color and
|
|
position with no visible effort and she heard no motor noise.
|
|
133
|
|
Sep. 6, 1951 Matador, Texas. _The Matador Tribune_. **MATADOR GENERATIONS BACK UP LUBBOCK.**
|
|
Three generations of the Tilson family, Mrs. Tilson, her daughter,
|
|
and her granddaughter, all of Matador, saw at close range something
|
|
strange in the sky which might have been a flying saucer.
|
|
They were not mistaken, nor were they excited. The sighting
|
|
over Lubbock occurred the same day.
|
|
134
|
|
Sep. 24, 1951 White Sands, New Mexico. **TWO MORE REFUSE TO JOIN MIDDEL'S BALLOONATIC FRINGE.**
|
|
AP -- J. Gorden Vaeth, US Navy Aeronautical engineer and
|
|
Charles B. Moore, Jr., an aerologist engineer, saw a white object
|
|
which was not their balloon. Moore turned the telescope on it
|
|
and saw an ellipsoid about two and a half times as long as it
|
|
was wide. It was gleaming white, but didn't have any metallic
|
|
shine. It was travelling too fast to get a clear focus in the
|
|
telescope.
|
|
135
|
|
Oct. 3, 1951 St. Regis and Hogansburg, New York} _New York Journal-American_. **FOUR REPORT FANTASIC FLYING BALL.**
|
|
Four northern New York residents claimed today to have seen a
|
|
fantastic flying ball, powered by a motor driven propeller, land
|
|
near St. Regis and Hogansburg, and then take off and vanish
|
|
over Massena. Alex LaFrance, Peter Philips and Francis Arquette
|
|
told police they saw it land in a field near the Canadian border.
|
|
They said the sphere took off with a humming noise at about 25
|
|
mph. Mrs. Angus Cook said the ball landed about 200 yards
|
|
from her home. Also see: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-post-star-report-balloon-lands-soar/132051701/
|
|
136
|
|
Oct. 10, 1951 Kansas City, MO. **BETTY McCARTY REPORTING IN AGAIN.**
|
|
19:15 Mrs. Betty McCarty reported seeing a large bright object flashing
|
|
red, green, and white. It was visible from 7:15 until 11:20.
|
|
While under her observation, the object, unlike a star, moved
|
|
from south to east.
|
|
137
|
|
Oct. 10, 1951 Terre Haute, Indiana. **ZIPPING AGAIN IN THE SKY.**
|
|
Two CAA employees say they saw an oval object fly over Terre Haute
|
|
yesterday at a speed they estimated at 18,000 mph. The object
|
|
appeared at an altitude of about 3,000 feet and disappeared quickly
|
|
in the sunlight cloudless sky.
|
|
138
|
|
Oct. 19, 1951 Los Angeles, CA. **SAUCER SIGHTED OVER FREEWAY.**
|
|
Stanley Parker and Robert Cadaret, industrial art students, report
|
|
seeing a flying saucer over the Hollywood freeway at about 4pm.
|
|
139
|
|
Oct. 15, 1951 11 miles northeast of Grover, Colorado. _The Denver Post_.
|
|
**HUMAN TRIANGULATION MEASURES THIS ONE.**
|
|
The flying saucers, long grounded insofar as Colorado is concerned,
|
|
were aloft again in the lonely skies of Northern Weld County.
|
|
M. G. Foster, operator of a ranch 11 miles northeast of Grover, Colorado,
|
|
reported two members of his family observed a strange object flying low
|
|
in the sky near sunset on September 27. The cigar-shaped object traveled
|
|
in a perpendicular position northward until it disappeared in the
|
|
cloudless skies of Wyoming. The object was also seen by Foster's son,
|
|
who was several miles away, and by an unrelated man in Hereford, Colorado,
|
|
12 miles away.
|
|
140
|
|
Oct. 19, 1951 Duluth, Minnesota. **TWO SAY 'HELLO' TO MINNESOTA'S FALLS.**
|
|
Frank Aalstead of Duluth reported two saucers over International
|
|
Falls, Minnesota.
|
|
141
|
|
Nov. 4, 1951 Los Angeles, CA. _The Examiner_ **SAUCER IN SKY SNAPPED BY TOURISTS.**
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greenwood of Chicago, snapped pictures of
|
|
what seems to be a flying saucer while vacationing in Cody, WY.
|
|
They had noticed nothing unusual in the sky nor had they heard
|
|
the road of any airplane motors. They found the strange object
|
|
in the top top center of the picture only after they returned home
|
|
and had their firm processed.
|
|
142
|
|
Nov. 1951 Chicago, IL. _Chicago Herald-American_.
|
|
**UNDER THE GREENWOOD TREE.**
|
|
Reproduction of photograph taken by the Greenwoods. "It looks
|
|
very mucuh like a fake," said a rival photographer.
|
|
143
|
|
Nov. 7, 1951 Sugarloaf Mountain, Western Arizona. _Kansas City Star_.
|
|
**NOT SURE ABOUT SKY LIGHT.**
|
|
AP -- Authorities were undecided tonight whether the flash
|
|
of light seen over Sugarloaf mountain in Western Arizona this
|
|
morning was a burning plane or a meteorite. Some persons said
|
|
they saw a flaming silver plane crash into the mountain. Others
|
|
reported seeing a flash of light, but said they didn't believe
|
|
it was a plane. A CAA spokesman said no plane had been known to
|
|
be flying in the area at the same of the reported crash.
|
|
144
|
|
Nov. 7, 1951 Oklahoma City, OK. _Kansas City Star_. **A FIRE STREAK IN THE SKY - EARLY.**
|
|
An AP dispatch from Oklahoma City reported a meteorite which sounded
|
|
like "someone running across the porch." It startled Oklahoma
|
|
residents this morning before it apparently disintegrated. Reports
|
|
from surrounding communities told of the ball of fire that flashed
|
|
through the heavens about 7:20 am. Enid residents reported a
|
|
ball of fire that flashed blue, purple, red, and silver. At Waco
|
|
where four people reported seeing the flash, Dr. Walter J. Williams,
|
|
astronomer at Baylow University, said the meteor was apparently
|
|
one of the Leonides which fall about November 19. Today's visitor
|
|
must have been an early one.
|
|
145
|
|
Nov. 9, 1951 Middletown, NY. _Kansas City Star_.
|
|
**FIERY TRAIL IN THE SKY.**
|
|
AP -- Scores of New Yorkers reported seeing
|
|
a strange light streaking across the sky late this afternoon.
|
|
Reports described it as a "ball of fire", a "reddish streak of
|
|
fire", and a "pink streak" high in the sky. It took a few minutes
|
|
to pass from horizon to horizon, moving westward. The phenomenon
|
|
was observed over a 20-mile area from Middletown to Port Jervis,
|
|
where police said an object with a bright head leaving a trail was
|
|
seen for about 3 minutes, vanishing in the direction of
|
|
Scranton, PA. Meteorological and aeronautical sources in New
|
|
York had no explanation.
|
|
146
|
|
Nov. 9, 1951 Albuquerque, NM. _Kansas City Star_. **BAFFLED BY SKY BLAZES.**
|
|
AP -- Twin fireballs blazed across the New
|
|
Mexico sky near the Mexican border yesterday. Ground observers
|
|
and fliers, some blinded momentarily, viewed the phenomena from
|
|
points 350 miles apart. One eyewitness report came from nearly
|
|
100 miles south of the border, in Chihuahua, Mexico. There were
|
|
widely conflicting estimates of where the objects crashed to
|
|
earth. A ranking authority on meteors said recent frequency
|
|
of the fireballs is "without parallel in the whole of recorded
|
|
history."
|
|
147
|
|
Nov. 12, 1951 Syracuse, NY. _The Post-Standard_.
|
|
**STRANGE 'BALLS OF FIRE' REPORTED OVER SYRACUSE.**
|
|
Ralph Richer of Cedarvale Road reported that at exactly 8:42
|
|
something that looked like a low-flying rocket flashed from east
|
|
to west across the sky. He said it had a blue head, a yellow
|
|
tail and was trailed by red sparks. An unidentified Westvale
|
|
woman said she was driving home and stopped at the corner of
|
|
Salisbury and Orchard roads to watch an unusual cloud formation
|
|
when three round white spheres suddenly appeared in the sky,
|
|
two of them traveling at terrific speed while the remaining
|
|
one seemed motionlessly suspended in the air.
|
|
148
|
|
Nov. 16, 1951 Reading, PA. _Philadelphia Inquirer_.
|
|
**SAUCERS SPOTTED NEAR READING, PA.**
|
|
Flying Saucers over Montgomery and Berks near Reading were
|
|
reported tonight by a radio control operator, a housewife, and
|
|
a motorist. All agreed three streaks of light, spinning counter-clockwise,
|
|
passed rapidly through the sky toward Philadelphia.
|
|
149
|
|
Nov. 9, 1951 US. _San Antonio Express_.
|
|
**SPACE TRAVEL AS WAR SURPLUS?**
|
|
At the closing session Friday of the USAF's symposium on physics and
|
|
medicine of the upper atmosphere, Dr. Hans Haber, of the Randolph
|
|
Aviation School of Medicine gave this report: "Our guided missiles
|
|
are going to become ocean-hopping passenger ships. They will be the
|
|
express ships of the air, and bring American and Europe within one
|
|
or two hours of flight."
|
|
150
|
|
Nov. 22, 1951 Riverside, CA. **SAUCER OBLIGES CARPENTER, SECOND TIME 'ROUND'.**
|
|
Guy B. Marquand, Jr., a carpenter, photographed a saucer from a
|
|
mountain highway southeast of Riverside. He said the object
|
|
swept noiselessly by, "moving fast like a jet plane". He got
|
|
his camera, and snapped the picture when the object flew in
|
|
front of it a second time. Two friends were with him at the
|
|
time.
|
|
151
|
|
Nov. 27, 1951 Oakland, CA. **SAUCER HEADS NORTH FROM SANTA BARBARA.**
|
|
17:15 Mrs. L. E. Hewitt and her husband reported seeing a saucer on
|
|
Nov. 24, along the coast road just above Santa Barbara, at
|
|
about 5:15 pm. The object was shaped like a ball and seemed
|
|
to be suspended in air when it suddenly moved rapidly to the North.
|
|
152
|
|
Dec. 7, 1951 Kansas City, MO. **COP SPOTS ONE ABOVE; 'NO BALLOON', HE'S TOLD.**
|
|
A Kansas City policeman sighted a flying saucer directly above
|
|
him. He called the airport and asked if there was a weather
|
|
balloon up. They said no, because the wind was too strong. He
|
|
told them of his sighting. "If this was a balloon it would
|
|
be going about 70 mph due northwest and most certainly
|
|
couldn't be going into such a strong wind", was the airport's
|
|
opinion.
|
|
153
|
|
Dec. 8, 1951 San Francisco, CA. L.W. Clopton and J. Junkurth sighted a strange object, circular
|
|
to elliptical of a brilliance very similar to that of the moon
|
|
which was seen at the same time. The craft was either close at
|
|
hand and moving slowly or distant and fast. The latter seems
|
|
to be true due to color and relative brilliance. A northwest
|
|
wind about 15 or 20 mph was blowing. The saucer traveled in
|
|
an apparent level arc W SW of the Sun.
|
|
154
|
|
Dec. 23, 1951 Tucson, AZ. **GREEN FIREBALL OVER ARIZONA.**
|
|
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Fine, former Air Force Intelligence Major, of
|
|
Hollywood California, saw a brilliant flash with a green tail
|
|
traveling horizontally across the sky. The night was clear and
|
|
brilliantly starlit.
|
|
155
|
|
Jan. 1, 1952 North Bay, Ontario. W. J. Yeo, a master telecommunications superintendent, and Sgt. D.
|
|
V. Crandell, an instrument technician, reported sighting a saucer
|
|
over the air base. The object appeared to be at great height,
|
|
probably outside the earth's atmosphere and moved at supersonic
|
|
speed. It was visible for 8 min. 43 sec. and moved roughly
|
|
parallel to the earth although changing directions slightly at
|
|
times, zig-zagging, climbing and diving. The object was reddish-orange
|
|
in color and Yeo said it definitely was not a meteor,
|
|
balloon or ordinary aircraft.
|
|
156
|
|
Jan. 6, 1952 Watsonville, California. **LIT-UP CIGAR SCARES COPPERS.**
|
|
A cigar-shaped object with a tail resembling a string of lighted beads
|
|
raced across the sky here and looked for a time as if it was going
|
|
to crash in the city, police said today. Sheriff's deputies Al Bolman
|
|
and Jim Mattney, who spotted the thing early yesterday, said they
|
|
thought originally it was a flaming airplane. They stated it threw
|
|
sparks and flame out both ends and cruised along at about 1,000 feet.
|
|
It appeared under control.
|
|
157
|
|
Jan. 25, 1952 Skanska Dagbladet, Malmo Sweden. **FLYING SAUCER OVER NORTHERN SKANE.**
|
|
Capt. Claf Rudbeck of the War Pilot School in Ljungbuhed, spotted
|
|
a clearly lit and unfamilar object flying at great altitude over
|
|
Northern Skane, Thursday night. He chased the object until it
|
|
disappeared over the coast. A pursuit plane from the Skanske
|
|
Air Fleet joined the case but couldn't spot the saucer. No observation balloons
|
|
158
|
|
Jan. 26, 1951 Stockholm. _Expressen_.
|
|
**DEFENSE DEPARTMENT OF SWEDEN DOUBTS SAUCER SIGHTING.**
|
|
The defense department in Stockholm is of the opinion that the
|
|
flying saucer Captain Rudbuck chased over Skane yesterday was
|
|
a meteorological balloon released from the Physical Institute
|
|
at Lund, though Captain Rudbuck insists the object was lit and
|
|
was observed at night, two factors not common to balloons.
|
|
159
|
|
Jan. 29, 1952 Wonsan and Sunchon, Korea. _Army Intelligence Report from Korea_.
|
|
**THEY LOOK OVER KOREA, TOO.**
|
|
Objects, globe or disk-shaped, bright orange in color and emitting
|
|
occasional flashes of blueish light, were seen by crew members of
|
|
two B-29's at widely separated points around midnight, Jan. 29.
|
|
One sighting was over Wonsan, the other over Sunchon. Two crew
|
|
members in each plane made the sighting and confirmed each other's
|
|
observations. The Sunchon disks flew parallel to the B-29 for
|
|
one minute -- The Wonson objects flew alongside for five minutes.
|
|
Both crews believes the objects to be globular.
|
|
160
|
|
Feb. 3, 1952 Amherst, Wisconsin. **PALMER JOINS THE SIGHT-SEERS.**
|
|
Ray Palmer, editor of _Fate Magazine_ and co-author of _The Coming
|
|
of the Saucers_ sighted an object at 10 seconds past 6:00 pm CST,
|
|
from his back window. He saw an orange globe emitting blue
|
|
flames traveling approximately 180 mph, 15 feet off the
|
|
ground and about the size of a basketball.
|
|
161
|
|
Feb. 14, 1952 Fort Knox, Kentucky. **SAUCER SIGHTED OVER NATION'S MONEY BELT.**
|
|
PFC Richard F. McCloskey and Cpl. Conrad E. Horcher report
|
|
seeing a strange red object moving across the sky on Feb. 11.
|
|
They say it zig-zagged across the sky, but continued on a
|
|
definite course.
|
|
162
|
|
Feb. 14, 1952 Aldergrove, BC. **OPTICAL ILLUSION, OR DO THEY CHANGE SHAPE.**
|
|
A resident, who wanted her identity kept secret, saw a white
|
|
streak in the southwest sky. It was about 6 or 7 feet long and
|
|
about a foot wide at the end closest to earth. It did not
|
|
move, then widened to about two feet wide and 12 or 14 feet
|
|
long. It looked like a mass of tiny stars and stayed in the
|
|
same position. Then it closed up to its original size and
|
|
was gone in about three or four minutes. This report can be
|
|
found at the weather office of Lulu Island.
|
|
163
|
|
Feb. 25, 1952 US. _Quick Magazine_. **'QUICK' OKAYS ARMY REPORTS.**
|
|
_Quick_ reviews the Korea sightings over Wonsan and Sunchon as
|
|
stated in the Army Intelligence report.
|
|
164
|
|
Mar. 14, 1952 Hammond, BC. _The Vancouver Sun_. **SHINES LIKE STAR.**
|
|
Four persons observed a star-like, silvery object shortly before
|
|
midnight. It moved toward the observers from the south about
|
|
45 degrees over the horizon, then turned eastward. It looked
|
|
like a huge silvery star except that it shimmered. Observers
|
|
were not able to tell its size, height, or speed, as they had
|
|
nothing to compare it with. It flashed out of sight, and about
|
|
a minute higher. Then it made a sharp right angle turn and
|
|
headed south. Before the object disappeared it seemed to make
|
|
3 sharp jumps up and down. It made no sound and was in sight for
|
|
a total of about four minutes.
|
|
165
|
|
Mar. 30, 1952 Boston, MA. _Boston Traveler_. **EARLY BIRD CATCHES ONE ON GO.**
|
|
Charles T. Earley heard wind in his back yard and saw an object
|
|
shining like chrome stop about 1,500 feet overhead and hover.
|
|
It was a big, whirling ring, about 30 feet across. It shot sky-ward
|
|
and vanished at unbelievable speed.
|
|
166
|
|
Apr. 4, 1952 Benson, AZ. _Los Angeles Times_. **AIR FORCE MEN SIGHT HUGE FLYING SAUCER.**
|
|
Two Air Force pilots said today that they
|
|
watched for an hour a huge, oval-shaped object, five or six times
|
|
the size of a B-29 bomber, which hovered about 55,000 feet
|
|
above them. The object had no wings. Chick Logan, veteran
|
|
flight commander from Marana Air Base, tried to investigate,
|
|
but could go no higher than 14,000 feet because of lack of
|
|
oxygen. The object was bright and shone like polished aluminum.
|
|
Flight instructor Paul Wilkerson said it was too large for a
|
|
weather balloon.
|
|
167
|
|
Apr. 4, 1952 Hammon, BC. _The Vancouver Sun_.
|
|
**HAMMOND STAR-GAZAERS SEE COLORED ONES.**
|
|
The same observers who sighted an object over
|
|
Hammond on March 14 reported a similar sighting. A star-like
|
|
object appeared in the southern sky (the same place where the
|
|
other had occurred) about 10:30 pm. The color was green and
|
|
turned orange-amber as it came closer. It seemed to be closer
|
|
than its predecessor. It made sharp turns, seemed to stop, then
|
|
turned bright red and became ovalish in shape. When it headed
|
|
toward the horizon, it turned back to amber, then faint green
|
|
and silvery white as it disappeared. No sound was heard.
|
|
168
|
|
Apr. 7, 1952 Los Angeles, CA. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**ARE THESE VISITORS FROM MARILYN MONROE?**
|
|
A full-page advertisement by Life magazine raised the question:
|
|
"Are these visitors from space?" featured today's _LA Times_ and other
|
|
metropolitan dailies throughout the country. Beneath a reproduction of Carl
|
|
Hart's "Lubbock Lights", was the simple, declarative statement in bold-faced
|
|
type: "There **is** a case for interplanetary saucers." The ad copy went on to
|
|
declare that the existence of flying saucers was no longer being pooh-poohed by
|
|
the Air Force, that the flying saucers and fireballs, such as those pictured in
|
|
the advertised feature, were no psychological phenomena, not products of U.S.
|
|
research, not Russian developments, and not mirages. A reproduction of Marilyn Monroe as
|
|
seen on the cover of _Life's_ April 7, 1952 issue, was inserted in the lower
|
|
right-hand corner of the ad.
|
|
169
|
|
Apr. 8, 1952 Los Angeles, California. **THEORY ON FLYING SAUCERS EXPLAINED.**
|
|
Spokesmen for the University of Social Research sought to convince
|
|
newsmen that they have solved the flying saucer mystery.
|
|
Substance of the discovery credited to Inventor Townsend
|
|
Brown is that saucers operate in a field of electro-gravity
|
|
that acts like a wave, with the negative pole at the top and
|
|
the positive pole at the bottom. The saucer travels like a
|
|
surfboard on the incline of a wave that is kept moving by
|
|
the saucer's electro-gravitational generator. All three men
|
|
are convinced that flying saucers are real, controlled by an
|
|
intelligence rather than a pilot and capable of speeds up to
|
|
186,000 mps. They say that space travel will be possible in
|
|
10 years. When asked if he had a degree, Bradford Shank replied:
|
|
"No, I'm free of those encumbrances. That's why I
|
|
find it so easy to talk in these new terms."
|
|
170
|
|
Apr. 8, 1952 Los Angeles, CA. _The Canyon Crier_.
|
|
**HILL SCIENTIST AND AND CRIER INVESTIGATE SECRET BEHIND WHIRLING DISKS.**
|
|
Dr. Mason Rose said, "We've held our project a secret for some
|
|
years now, but since _Life_ and _Colliers_ have now given credence
|
|
openly in articles to the theory that saucers are from outer
|
|
space, we feel it is time for the public to know. Electricity
|
|
and magnetism have been coupled, which then creates a magnetic
|
|
field to propel an object with no machinery.
|
|
171
|
|
Apr. 12, 1952 Minnesota and Wisconsin. _Racine Journal-Times_.
|
|
**SAUCERS STILL STIRRING.**
|
|
Strange aerial objects of undetermined origin have been sighted
|
|
whizzing through the skies once again. Pilots and engineers at
|
|
the General Mills balloon experimentation project said the objects--
|
|
neither balloons, airplanes, or stars--were sighted in a spectacular
|
|
series of aerobatics. J. J. Kaliszewski, supervisor of balloon manufacture
|
|
for the Aeronautical Research Laboratories, said he first saw the
|
|
objects on October 10, 1951, while in an experimental balloon aloft.
|
|
This object, showing a "peculiar glow," came toward them in a shallow
|
|
dive, then leveled off and slowed down. It hovered momentarily, made
|
|
a sharp left turn, climbed with tremendous acceleration, and disappeared.
|
|
Also see https://www.nytimes.com/1952/04/12/archives/balloon-project-men-see-strange-aerial-objects.html
|
|
172
|
|
Apr. 11, 1952 Hammond BC. _The Vancouver Sun_. **HAMMOND REVISTED.**
|
|
A green fireball was seen over Hammond BC, the same area
|
|
which reported previous sightings this month. It moved in from
|
|
the south but clouds interfered and further observation was not
|
|
possible. The observer thought that the light operates on a
|
|
steady schedule.
|
|
173
|
|
Apr. 11, 1952 Temiskaming, Ontario, Canada. _North Bay Daily Nugget_.
|
|
**SAUCERS IGHT-SEE OVER CANADIAN TOWN.**
|
|
Villi Lefebvre reported seeing six saucer-shaped objects diving
|
|
up and down over Temiskaming, Ontario. He said they made no
|
|
noise and were not conventional aircraft, although they left
|
|
vapor trails in their wake.
|
|
174
|
|
Apr. 12, 1952 North Bay, Ontario, Canada. _Ottawa Journal_.
|
|
**ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT GOLD BUT COULD BE SAUCER.**
|
|
E. H. Russell, a veteran airman with 13 years in the service
|
|
and Flight Sgt. Reg McRae said they spotted a bright amber disk
|
|
in the sky over the airfield at North Bay, Ontario around 8:30 pm.
|
|
The object came from the southwest, moved across the field, stopped,
|
|
an then took off in the reverse direction. It climbed at
|
|
an angle of 30 degrees at terrific speed and disappeared.
|
|
175
|
|
Apr. 16, 1952 Canada. _Ottawa Evening Journal_.
|
|
**FLYING SAUCERS COULD BE REAL, ADMIT TOP CANADIAN SCIENTISTS.**
|
|
No longer scoffing, RCAF Intelligence and top Canadian scientists
|
|
today went on record as believing that "flying saucers" could
|
|
not be laughed off as optical illusions. Theirs was the complete
|
|
change of attitude from that of three years ago when flying
|
|
saucer, mysterious disks and fireballs speeding through North
|
|
American skies were regarded as something close to a joke. The
|
|
RCAF said its intelligence was investigating as a bona fide
|
|
phenomenon, the case of the flying saucers. Dr. O.M. Solandt,
|
|
Chairman of the Defence Research Board said: "We are as mystified
|
|
as anyone else.. are are keeping an open mind."
|
|
176
|
|
Apr. 16, 1952 Hamilton, Ontario. **SAUCER 'OUT OF THIS WORLD'.**
|
|
45 persons said they saw what appeared to be an unusual form of
|
|
blimp hanging motionless above Milton for about 15 minutes. A
|
|
woman reported the thing with 4 other persons, who were with her
|
|
during the time of the observation, and said that the main body
|
|
looked black, but there was a halo-like fringe of color around it.
|
|
The object looked like something out of this world, she said.
|
|
177
|
|
Apr. 17, 1952 Lake Ontario, Canada. _Toronto Daily Star_. **SAUCER MISHAP?**
|
|
Lifesavers and police searched Lake Ontario for an object reported
|
|
to have plunged in flames more than a mile off Scarborough Bluffs.
|
|
Nothing could be found and there were no aircraft missing. Several
|
|
residents reported seeing an object trailing black smoke
|
|
shoot downward from the sky and then a puff of slow rising smoke
|
|
that lingered in the sky for a considerable time afterward. A
|
|
woman saw a ball of fire with a black tail of smoke.
|
|
178
|
|
Apr. 17, 1952 North Bay, Ontario, Canada. North Bay _North Bay Daily Nugget_.
|
|
**DISK SPEEDS OVER NORTH BAY.**
|
|
A resident of North Bay, Miss Bernice Byers reported a noiseless,
|
|
round object traveling "quite fast and high" over the district
|
|
at 11 a.m. The object passed from west to east leaving a vapor
|
|
trail.
|
|
179
|
|
Apr. 17, 1952 North Bay, Ontario, Canada. _North Bay Daily Nugget_.
|
|
**FIREBALL OVER NORTH BAY.**
|
|
A glowing fireball was observed by at least 15 people in two
|
|
sections of the town. A group of young people and crews in the
|
|
ONR YARDS made the sighting and the two reports were identical.
|
|
It was a multicolored object, swooping and climbing at high
|
|
speed. Both groups spotted the object at about 10:00 p.m.
|
|
It is interesting to note that the Canadian Atomic Research
|
|
Center at Chalk River is only about 130 miles northeast of North Bay,
|
|
where the highest activity of strange objects is reported.
|
|
180
|
|
Apr. 17, 1952 Ottawa, Canada. _Ottawa Evening Journal_. **FLYING SAUCER THEORY STUMPS DEFENSE RESEARCH BOARD.**
|
|
The Defense Research Board this afternoon opened its file on
|
|
investigations made into the mystery of the Flying Saucers. The
|
|
Board disclosed it had 30 different reports of strange objects
|
|
scudding through the upper atmosphere. In the great majority
|
|
of cases, the Board frankly admitted, it was baffled. It
|
|
cautioned that the reports could not simply be dismissed as
|
|
imaginative nonsense. Among the 30 cases the Board was able to
|
|
specifically find the cause or source of a "few" of the phenomena.
|
|
But the rest, the Board openly confessed, cannot be explained.
|
|
181
|
|
Apr. 18, 1952 Montreal. **MANY SEE ONE OVER MONTREAL.**
|
|
A Montreal trainman saw a flying saucer over the city shortly
|
|
after 7 a.m. The object was very shiny, like a mirror with the
|
|
sun on it and the reflection was constant. He could see the
|
|
object for a good 15 to 30 seconds.
|
|
182
|
|
Apr. 19, 1952 Hammond Bay BC. _The Vancouver Sun_. **BLUE SAUCER EXPLORES ALOUETTE RIVER.**
|
|
Hammond BC. -- A bluish object, spherical in shape, was observed
|
|
by Mrs. Walter Ritchie near Alouette River. It was shimmering and
|
|
stood still. Time of observation: 11:30 a.m. Sky, clear and
|
|
cloudless.
|
|
183
|
|
Apr. 20, 1952 Toronto, CA. _Toronto Telegram_. **50 VISIT TORONTO.**
|
|
A Wychwood resident reported seeing a collection of about 50
|
|
lights in V formation moving rapidly from southeast to northwest
|
|
around 10:30 p.m. He said the lights were dim orange in color
|
|
and appeared to be at a great height. He could hear no sound, but
|
|
was able to observe an arc of approximately 30 degrees in the sky
|
|
and the collection of lights appearing and disappearing over the
|
|
distance in approximately 6 seconds. The observer conceded he
|
|
was shaken by the experience.
|
|
Several radio stations broadcasted this report and said that
|
|
the objects were picked up on Canadian and American radar, but
|
|
this never appeared in the newspapers.
|
|
184
|
|
Apr. 21, 1952 Browerville, Minn. **SAUCERIANS JOIN BALL GAME?**
|
|
"It was on a farm 3 miles east of Long Prairie, Minn., about 2:30 in
|
|
the afternoon, April 21, 1952. I was playing 'catch' with my cousin
|
|
when a dirty grayish saucer began hovering above us," reported Ronny
|
|
Gmyrek of Browerville, Minn. "We ran to get my cousin's binoculars,
|
|
and both could see it had a definite hump in the middle with another
|
|
smaller one behind this. It made no sound, except when it left, and
|
|
then only a hum. I have seen many balloons but in the 3 minutes we
|
|
watched this one, I know it couldn't have been a balloon."
|
|
185
|
|
Apr. 21, 1952 London, Ontario, Canada. **MYSTERY CRAFT REPORTED FLYING AT 1,000 MPH.**
|
|
Widely separated reports of an unidentified craft high in the skies,
|
|
leaving a vapor trail and traveling at a speed of more than 1,000 mph,
|
|
were received last night from western Ontario points. Canadian Air
|
|
Force reserve fighters here were ordered to intercept the mysterious
|
|
craft. The pilots reported they could not come anywhere near the source
|
|
of the vapor trail, although they pushed their planes to more than
|
|
450 miles an hour. Air Force Officials said no high-speed, high-flying
|
|
jet aircraft were aloft at the time.
|
|
186
|
|
Apr. 20, 1952 London, ON. _Toronto Daily Star_. **SAUCER OUTDISTANCES MUSTANG.**
|
|
A "mystery plane" was reported over Toronto, London, and other
|
|
places in southern Ontario. The object could not be seen, but
|
|
it left a vapor trail in the sky. Over London, it was chased by
|
|
a Mustang fighter plane (450 mph), and the pilot of this plane
|
|
said it seemed as though he were standing still in comparison
|
|
with the speed of the object. He was positive that it was not
|
|
an ordinary aircraft. In London the speed of the mystery "plane"
|
|
was estimated at 2,000 mph or more. The RCAF explained it
|
|
as the new British Canberra jet bomber (speed about 600 or 700 mph).
|
|
187
|
|
Apr. 21, 1952 Moplson, Man. **MULTICOLORED DISK OVER MOSLON.**
|
|
Several persons reported a whirling object that gave off light.
|
|
The sparkling disk kept changing color as it streaked across
|
|
the sky.
|
|
188
|
|
Apr. 22, 1952 Winnipeg, Canada. _Winnipeg Free Press_. **MYSTERIOUS LIGHTS OVER CITY.**
|
|
Residents reported strange lights and objects over the city,
|
|
between 10 and 11 p.m. The lights changed color from orange
|
|
and red to green and black. Brilliant white lights were also
|
|
reported. The lights or objects make sharp turns and were
|
|
judged to be moving slower and higher than ordinary aircraft.
|
|
They came from the north, stopped, and then went back the same way.
|
|
Traffic control at Stevenson Field reported normal activity.
|
|
189
|
|
Apr. 24, 1952 Vancouver. _The Vancouver Sun_. **SCHOOLBOY SIGHTS SAUCERS.**
|
|
A 12-year-old Vancouver schoolboy, Jonathan Parker reported 8
|
|
objects flying in two V-formations at 7:30 p.m. Five orange-colored
|
|
objects with bluish glow at their rear, formed the first "V."
|
|
Three formed a smaller V inside the first. They came at
|
|
terrific speed from the south and at their northern end of the sweep
|
|
they shot sharply upward and disappeared.
|
|
190
|
|
Apr. 25, 1952 Toronto. _Toronoto Daily Star_. **SASKATCHEWAN SEES DINNER PLATES.**
|
|
Mrs. N. Gataint of Regina, Saskatchewan, said she awakened during the
|
|
night and saw a strange object moving in the sky in a southwesterly
|
|
direction. The object, she reported, stood still for a few
|
|
seconds, then shot out spurts of fire and moved on. It had a
|
|
dark tail like a kite and was shaped like a dinner plate.
|
|
191
|
|
Apr. 26, 1952 North Bay, Ontario. **'FLYING BASEBALL' OVER LAKE WILCOX.**
|
|
Three persons reported a saucer five miles west of Lake Wilcox
|
|
which was bright and hazy, about the size of a baseball. Visible
|
|
for six seconds it flashed across the observers' view from south
|
|
to north. The object hovered for a while and suddenly shot upward
|
|
with tremendous velocity. When it turned on its side, it
|
|
appeared to be flat.
|
|
192
|
|
Apr. 24, 1952 Austin, Texas. **GLOWING OBJECTS IN SKY REPORTED IN TEXAS.**
|
|
Strings of glowing pink objects, all of them moving northward, were
|
|
reported in the skies over Austin Wednesday night. Sightings were
|
|
reported from widely scattered parts of town shortly after 8 p.m.
|
|
However, both the U.S. Weather Bureau and the Airport Control Tower,
|
|
where a 24-hour watch of the skies is maintained, reported no unusual
|
|
phenomena. Reports of the strange glowing objects were also received
|
|
in Fort Worth.
|
|
193
|
|
May. 1, 1952 Ottawa, Ontario. **OTTAWA SPOTS GREEN ONE.**
|
|
A silvery green disk was reported by several persons at 9:22 p.m.
|
|
It was described as huge and traveling at a tremendous speed.
|
|
The object was in view for less than one minute, and the reports
|
|
from different places checked. One observer said, "There appeared
|
|
to be an eerie strange fluorescence of bluish-white tinge or delicate
|
|
green-like halo surrounding it and there was no sound."
|
|
194
|
|
May. 4, 1952. Montreal. _Ottawa Journal_.
|
|
**MOUNT ROYAL OBSERVERS SPOT THREE.**
|
|
Three persons saw a long cigar-shaped form, coming
|
|
down at a terrific rate of speed. The object was silvery in
|
|
color; it paused for a moment and then suddenly whirled over on
|
|
its side, returning in the same direction where it came from.
|
|
The observers said that it was not a jet plane or any other
|
|
man-constructed machine. They were on the top of Mount Royal
|
|
(in the middle of the city) during the observation.
|
|
195
|
|
May. 5, 1952 En route from Pearl Harbor to Guam. _Boston Traveler_.
|
|
**SECRETARY OF NAVY GETS SAUCER ESCORT.**
|
|
Secretary of the Navy Dan Kimball, en route from Pearl Harbor to
|
|
Guam, said the pilot of his ship and his co-pilot came back to
|
|
the cabin and reported a flying saucer had appeared and had
|
|
flown abeam the Secretary's plane for some distance, then
|
|
vanished. A following plane was notified and reported that
|
|
a saucer had flown along his wing also, and then disappeared.
|
|
196
|
|
May. 4, 1952 Sydney, Australia. **SAUCER REPORTED SEEN UP THERE DOWN UNDER.**
|
|
A dozen people reported they saw a flying saucer over the Sydney area
|
|
and at Pearkes, a town 180 miles west of here. The witnesses described
|
|
the object as a cigar-shaped, well-lighted and silent in its
|
|
operations. They reported it flew at an altitude of about 4,000 feet
|
|
and at an estimated speed of 500 miles per hour.
|
|
197
|
|
May. 9, 1952 Rio De Janeiro. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
**PHOTOS OF SLYING SAUCERS SNAPPED AT RIO.**
|
|
Photographers Ed Keffel and Joao Martins shot five pictures of
|
|
a saucer as it came in over the sea, losing altitude as it
|
|
approached. They said it passed several hundred feet over their
|
|
heads and appeared to be rocking like a slowly falling leaf. It
|
|
seemed larger than a commercial airplane and was round and wingless.
|
|
Also see: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-sentinel-tribune-rio-papers-sa/132109928/
|
|
198
|
|
May. 10, 1952 Rio De Janeiro. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
**RIO'S FLYING SAUCERS 'BEST'.**
|
|
The military attache at the United States Embassy in Rio de
|
|
Janeiro examined today negatives of five photographs of a
|
|
flying saucer sighted over Rio Wednesday and called them the
|
|
best he had ever seen of the phenomenon. Col. Jack Werely
|
|
Hughes and several Brazilian Air Force officers visited the
|
|
office of the newspaper _O Cruzeiro_ to study the photographs
|
|
shot by the paper's cameramen, Ed Keffel and Joao Martains.
|
|
Following publication, the pictures will be made available to
|
|
the United States Embassy for study by the American Air Force.
|
|
Also see: https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-sentinel-tribune-rio-papers-sa/132109928/
|
|
199
|
|
May. 12, 1952 Seattle, WA. _Los Angeles Herald & Express_. **SEATTLE SKY EXPLOSION, SAUCER OR METEOR?**
|
|
Responsible observers believed today that a blinding blast which
|
|
rocked the city of 500,000 persons may have been an exploding
|
|
meteor, but talk of flying saucers or guided missiles could be
|
|
heard on any street corner. An intelligence officer at McChord
|
|
Air Base near Tacoma said an official statement may be released
|
|
later today. Residents were awakened at 1:30am yesterday
|
|
by the blast, which "rumbled like a freight train". The eerie
|
|
blue-white light was seen at an estimated elevation of 2,000
|
|
feet and was visible 60 miles away. The explosion occurred over
|
|
North Seattle, and was witnessed by many, including Northwestern
|
|
Airlines pilot Bert Carlson. He sighted the object as he
|
|
prepared to land at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
|
|
"It was at about 7,000 feet when it suddenly shattered into
|
|
eight pieces which looked like chain lightening. Fireballs
|
|
trailed to the earth", he said.
|
|
200
|
|
May. 26, 1952 Georgeville, P.Q. Canada} **FAR HORIZONS SEES ONE NEAR.**
|
|
Mr. Albert Ditman reports a flying saucer over Far Horizons in
|
|
the early morning with such a brilliant light that it lit up
|
|
the mountain range for miles.
|
|
201
|
|
Jun. 14, 1952 Los Angeles, CA. _The Mirror_. **L.A. GETS BATHED IN FIREBALLS.**
|
|
Fireballs in the sky and flashing elliptical bathtubs thought to
|
|
be meteorites, were visible over many parts of the city shortly
|
|
after midnight today. Police switchboards reported numerous
|
|
calls from persons who said the phenomena resembled a greenish-red
|
|
streak of light.
|
|
202
|
|
Jun. 7, 1952 US/Canada. _New York Times_.
|
|
**MENZEL FOLLOWS COMMUNIST LINE.**
|
|
Two Soviet authors and two popular science magazines were taken to
|
|
task for spreading pseudo-scientific theories that the famous Tunguska
|
|
meteorite, which fell in Siberia in 1908, was actually an atomic-powered
|
|
spaceship from Mars. In the Provinces, some teachers and lecturers,
|
|
having absorbed this material uncritically, began presenting it as the
|
|
latest word in science. Editorial offices of papers that reprinted the
|
|
sketches were showered with letters containing questions such as the
|
|
time when one could expect the next arrival of Martians.
|
|
203
|
|
Jun. 26, 1952 US. _The National Guardian_.
|
|
**"TOP SECRET" PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE 50 YEARS.**
|
|
William A. Reuben ridiculed the contention of U.S. Attorney Myles Lane that the
|
|
Rosenbergs had given Soviet Russia some of our top secrets, "including a project
|
|
for a platform 3,000 miles in space." Reuben pointed out that K. Tsiolkovsky
|
|
sketched this in 1903 in "The Rocket In Cosmic Space." So did Hermann Oberth in
|
|
1922 in "The Rocket Into Interplanetary Space," and as late as 1948, Secretary
|
|
of Defense Forrestal referred in his annual report to an "earth satellite
|
|
vehicle program." A New York Times science editor scoffed at Forrestal's project
|
|
being secret, pointing out it was obviously derived from Oberth.
|
|
204
|
|
Jun. 21, 1952 WASHINGTON, DC. **LIGHT TREATMENT FOR LIGHT SUBJECT.**
|
|
A single saucer swooped over the Capitol dome in Washington, D.C.
|
|
today. One motorist who noticed this accidentally ran his car off
|
|
the road and smashed into a tree. Ignoring his car, he proceeded to
|
|
the nearest telephone and called the C.A.A. to report the unidentified
|
|
object. They took his story in a light vein and said that it was most
|
|
probably a light reflection or one of the many low-flying aircraft in
|
|
that area. They thought the car and the tree might be real, though.
|
|
205
|
|
Jun. 18, 1952 Redondo Beach, CA. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
07:00 **SAUCER OFF BEACH SEEN BY EX-PILOT.**
|
|
Dick Robinson, technical writer for the Northrop Aircraft Company
|
|
and former air force pilot, standing on the porch of his apartment,
|
|
at 758 Avenue B, Redondo Beach, shortly before 7 a.m., spotted
|
|
what he believed to be an airplane over the water. It was about
|
|
15 miles out and 5 to 8 degrees above the horizon. "It didn't
|
|
take me long to realize that it wasn't an airplane because it
|
|
would be too small to be visible at that distance."
|
|
206
|
|
Jun. 18, 1952 Pueblo, Colorado. _The Pueblo Chieftain_.
|
|
night **PUEBLO SEES THE LIGHT.**
|
|
A slow-moving white light, described as a "definite object"
|
|
traveled in from the north, hung over midtown Pueblo and then
|
|
moved south over the steel mills. One observer said the craft
|
|
made a figure eight and moved north again. The object, which
|
|
sometimes took on a reddish hue, hovered over the city fifteen
|
|
to twenty minutes before slowly disappearing into the night.
|
|
207
|
|
Jun. 29, 1952 Thuringia, East Germany. _Sunday Graphic and Sunday News_. - London England.
|
|
**IT WAS A FLYING SAUCER TO HIM.**
|
|
A refugee from the Russian occupied zone said today that he saw
|
|
a flying saucer take off from a forest clearing in Thuringia,
|
|
East Germany. Herr Oskar Linke, reported that he came upon the
|
|
flying saucer three miles from the U.S. zone and saw crew members
|
|
of its crew. He said, "My 11-year-old daughter and I glimpsed
|
|
something white through the trees. We crept near and we saw
|
|
a huge oval disk about 25 feet across lying on the ground. It
|
|
looked like an enormous phosphorescent warming pan without a
|
|
handle. We saw two figures wearing metallic overalls. My
|
|
daughter screamed in fright and the two climbed hastily into the
|
|
disk which had circular portholes around the edges. The
|
|
upper works retracted and the saucer began to rise -- slowly at
|
|
first -- into the air. We felt the swish of air it made. It
|
|
hovered at 100 feet and then sped out of sight." Linz is
|
|
an ex-mayor of a East German town, who fled from Communist persecution.
|
|
In London last night, Kenneth Gatland, Fellow of the British
|
|
Interplanetary Society said, "Such a contraption must come
|
|
from outside this earth. Nothing like it is known here."
|
|
208
|
|
Jun. 19, 1952 US. _The Hollywood Citizen-News_. **AIR FORCE LEAVES ESCAPE HATCH OPEN.**
|
|
Armed with a special camera suggested by a Los Angeles scientist,
|
|
the Air Force has launched a study to determine if there really are
|
|
flying saucers and if so, what are they? Using these specially built
|
|
cameras, 200 of which are being distributed at atomic and military
|
|
installations, a picture of a flying saucer might be obtained. The AF feels the
|
|
final solution will be one of the following: 1) Misinterpretation of known objects. 2) Reflected light from the earth.
|
|
3) Man-made vehicles, most possibly Russian. 4) Spaceships or interplanetary missiles.
|
|
209
|
|
Jul. 5, 1952 Hanford Atomic Plant at Richland, WA. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
**FLYING DISK -- FOUR VETERAN PILOTS TELL OF SEEING SKY SAUCER.**
|
|
Capt. John Baldwin of Coral Gables, Capt. George Robertson
|
|
of Miami, D. Shenkel of Miami, and Stephen Summers of Hialeah
|
|
reported sighting a "pancaked flying saucer" flying 20,000
|
|
feet above the Hanford Atomic Plant at Richland. They described
|
|
it as being a "perfectly round disk, white in color, and almost
|
|
transparent with small vapor trails off it like the tentacles of an
|
|
octopus".
|
|
210
|
|
Jul. 6, 1952 London, England. _Sunday Graphic and Sunday News_.
|
|
**VICKERS AIRCRAFT DESIGNER SAYS SAUCER STORY PLAUSIBLE.**
|
|
Mr. George Edwards, Chief Designer for Vickers Aircraft had
|
|
this to say concerning the East Zone Saucer last night: "Believe
|
|
in saucers? I don't know. There is little wrong with the
|
|
idea of a circular wing. Before and during the First World War,
|
|
Britain developed a circular wing aircraft, and it flew. We
|
|
called it the "flying doughnut". There is little to stop us
|
|
developing a flying saucer -- except the money and the need.
|
|
If Herr Linke's description is accurate it may be that the
|
|
machine is designed as a military hover plane. It would appear
|
|
from his comment on its 'glow' that it houses a jet plane
|
|
designed to provide vertical take-off. The cylinder would obviously
|
|
have to retract into the body to prevent resistance. Metallic
|
|
suits are possible, too -- they could be a form of protective
|
|
clothing for use in high altitudes. There is nothing impossible
|
|
about the story, although to believe in the saucers, I would
|
|
have to be shown one myself".
|
|
211
|
|
Jul. 10, 1952 New Mexico. _Hollywood Citizen-News_.
|
|
**SAUCER SPOTTER BACKS DOWN - A LITTLE.**
|
|
Dr. Clyde Tombaugh, who discovered the planet Pluto, has agreed
|
|
that he is the scientist at White Sands, NM who was quoted as
|
|
being certain he saw a saucer. But Tombaugh was not nearly so
|
|
positive about the identity of the object he saw scoot across
|
|
the sky above him as was the British authority on space travel
|
|
who quoted him, Arthur C. Clarke. He added cautiously that
|
|
he had not seen anything like a saucer. The American scholar
|
|
did admit, however, that he saw an object above Las Cruces,
|
|
NM in the summer of 1948. It whizzed silently overhead from
|
|
south to north, too fast for a plane and too slow for a meteor.
|
|
He was careful to point out to reporters that he was not
|
|
prepared to say for certain whether flying saucers were real.
|
|
212
|
|
Jul. 7, 1952 Britain. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**SAUCERS REAL, BRITON BELIEVES.**
|
|
Scientist Arthur C. Clarke, one of England's leading authorities on
|
|
space travel, believes flying saucers are more than mirages or myths.
|
|
Clarke said he based his belief on new data on saucers supplied him by
|
|
scientists at the U.S. Rocket Testing Base at White Sands, NM. He
|
|
was not ready to guarantee the disks are real, but said, "a noted
|
|
American scientist told me at White Sands that he is certain he has seen one."
|
|
213
|
|
Jul. 9, 1952 Miami, Oklahoma. **TEN WATCH HUGE FLYING SAUCER.**
|
|
Ten workmen watched a huge silver object which emitted a haze of smoke from its
|
|
edges as it hovered high over the B.F. Goodrich rubber plant at Miami for 15
|
|
minutes Wednesday before it skimmed away to the south at "terrific speed." The
|
|
object, matching previous flying saucer descriptions, was spotted by R. D.
|
|
McCarthy, an electrician working atop the plant. He summoned other nearby
|
|
workmen who said they observed the strange craft for a quarter-hour.
|
|
214
|
|
Jul. 14, 1952 Pasadena, California. **WAS REED A SPACE MAN?**
|
|
Authorities followed a cold trail Monday in the disappearance of an
|
|
aircraft scientist engaged in government work and his wife expressed
|
|
fears he had met with foul play at the hands of foreign agents. Albert
|
|
Clark Reed, engaged in secret aeronautical research (Project "Vortex") at
|
|
the California Institute of Technology here, disappeared from his home
|
|
last Monday evening. His wife, Florence, told officers he was to meet
|
|
that day with military authorities in connection with his work, "that was
|
|
so secret he wouldn't even discuss it with me."
|
|
215
|
|
Jul. 17, 1952 Washington, DC. **SOUTHERNERS REPORT GIANT SAUCERS.**
|
|
AP -- Two Air Force pilots, W.B. Nash, and W.H. Fortenberry,
|
|
reported in Miami eight objects 100 feet in diameter glowing
|
|
like red hot coals and traveling 1000 mph passed directly
|
|
beneath their plane. The Air Force said it has made a preliminary report to Dayton, Ohio.
|
|
216
|
|
Jul. 17, 1952 Yreka CA, Chicago IL, and Dayton OH. **PACIFIC COAST AND ROCKY MOUNTAIN AREA RESIDENTS REPORT SIGHTING.**
|
|
AP -- Several Yrekans reported seeing seeing a lighted, cigar-shaped
|
|
object colored purple, pink, and green and leaving a vapor trail.
|
|
Residents of Medford, Oregon also reported seeing the object.
|
|
In Chicago, Capt. Paul L. Carpenter, American Airlines pilot,
|
|
sighted strange flying objects in an early morning flight over
|
|
Colorado. The craft had a yellow tinge and were traveling
|
|
about 3000 mph at an altitude of 23,000 to 30,000 feet.
|
|
The Air Force Office in Dayton, Ohio assigned to the investigation
|
|
said he had received about 1000 reports of Flying Saucers and
|
|
15% could not be explained.
|
|
217
|
|
Jul. 22, 1952 Washington DC. _New York Times_.
|
|
**FLYING OBJECTS NEAR WASHINGTON SPOTTED BY PILOTS AND RADAR.**
|
|
Aerial objects over the vicinity of the nation's Capital were
|
|
picked up and recorded by radar. No attempts were made by Air
|
|
Force pilots to intercept the objects. The Air Force said it
|
|
had received only a preliminary report and therefore did not know
|
|
why no attempt at interception had been made.
|
|
218
|
|
Jul. 18, 1952 Dayton, Ohio. **SOMETHING TO FLYING SAUCERS, SAYS AF.**
|
|
The Air Force admitted that people actually see something when they
|
|
report flying saucers and said some of the unexplainable objects
|
|
traveling at speeds up to 2,000 mph have been tracked by radar.
|
|
This statement of Capt. Edward J. Ruppelt, head of Operation Blue Book, the
|
|
AF group studying reports of unidentified objects. Ruppelt said jet
|
|
fighters with the very latest radar have been sent aloft to make
|
|
contact, but all efforts to catch the objects failed. Of 1,000 investigated
|
|
reports, Ruppelt said, 38% were meteors or other heavenly bodies,
|
|
13% were balloons, 22% birds or aircraft, 2% hoaxes, and 25%
|
|
were unexplained.
|
|
219
|
|
Jul. 18, 1952 Yuma, Arizona. **MYSTERY CLOUDS FATE OF DESERT COUPLE.**
|
|
Rains of the past year have wiped out two sets of footprints which
|
|
were left by a young couple who landed their small plane and walked
|
|
away never to be seen again. Klaus Martens, 28, a scientist who had
|
|
worked on phases of the hydrogen bomb project, and Marajune Walker, 23,
|
|
took off from Pasadena, Calif., and landed a few hours later, on the
|
|
desert 35 miles southeast of here on June 15, 1951. The plane was
|
|
found 15 days later in perfect condition with a note left in the cockpit
|
|
saying they were heading west. Their tracks veered occasionally, but
|
|
went towards the Black Head mountain range then turned southward toward
|
|
the Mexican border and disappeared. Officials are puzzled over their
|
|
disappearance because they certainly weren't lost! They crossed two
|
|
highways on the journey before disappearing completely.
|
|
220
|
|
Jul. 18, 1952 Denver, CO. _The New York Times_. **THAT MEANS 150 WERE SAUCERS.**.
|
|
Four flying objects moving at terrific speed over Denver, Colo.,
|
|
were sighted by Captain Paul L. Carpenter of American Airlines and his
|
|
crew. The objects had a yellow tinge. They were traveling at about 3,000
|
|
miles an hour at an altitude of 23,000 to 30,000 feet. An Air Force
|
|
officer at Dayton, Ohio, assigned to the investigation said he had
|
|
received about 1,000 reports of flying saucers, and 15% could not be explained.
|
|
221
|
|
Jul. 19, 1952 Washington DC. _The Ottawa Journal_.
|
|
02:00 **DISKS FOLLOW ORDERS**. At 2:00 a.m., radio engineer Elmer Chambers looked up at the sky.
|
|
Here's what he says he saw: "Six or seven bright orange disks were
|
|
streaking through the sky, in single file. The saucers sped along
|
|
for about five seconds and then each, in turn, veered sharply upward
|
|
and disappeared." Chambers, 41, is chief engineer at the WRC Radio
|
|
Station transmitter in the Washington suburbs.
|
|
222
|
|
Jul. 22, 1952 Washington DC and Martinsburg, WV. _New York Times_.
|
|
02:15 **AIR FORCE SAYS SAUCER SIGHTINGS CLIMB.**
|
|
Seven objects between Washington and Martinsburg, WV were
|
|
reported by Capital Airlines, Flight 807 at 2:15 a.m. Capital
|
|
Airlines, Flight 610 reported a light following it from Herndon
|
|
Ga. to within four miles of National Airport. Citizens of
|
|
Burlington, VT, South Portland, ME, and Staten Island, N.Y.
|
|
reported flying saucers overhead. The Air Force said it was
|
|
receiving flying saucer reports this summer at a rate higher than
|
|
at any time since the initial flood of sightings in 1947, the
|
|
current average being 100 sightings a month.
|
|
223
|
|
Jul. 23, 1952 Tujunga, CA. _Hollywood-Citizen News_.
|
|
19:00 **ARE SAUCERS DODGING U.S. AIR ROUTES?**
|
|
A carpenter, Frank Bartko, of 9644 Aperson Ave., Tujunga told
|
|
police he saw four saucers last night around 7 o'clock. He was
|
|
standing in front of his house when he looked up and saw
|
|
aircraft hovering at a high altitude. He watched them disappear
|
|
in the direction of Lockheed Air Terminal.
|
|
224
|
|
Jul. 24, 1952 San Francisco, California. **DISKS SPIRAL OVER BAY AREA.**
|
|
11:30 Mrs. J. Jungkurth of San Francisco sighted a brilliant metallic
|
|
saucer at approximately 11:30 a.m. The circular-shaped craft
|
|
alternated in flight between several tight circles and straight
|
|
level courses. Circles were accomplished several to the second in
|
|
a tortuous west-to-east level flight.
|
|
225
|
|
Jul. 26, 1952 Mitchell AFB, NY. _The New York Times_.
|
|
**MORE FROM THE BALLOONATIC FRINGE.**
|
|
Air Force officers at Mitchell AFB, N.Y., said yesterday that weather
|
|
balloons released there four times daily might provide the answer to
|
|
local reports of flying saucers over parts of Long Island. Balloons
|
|
are sent up at 5 & 11 p.m. and also 5 & 11 a.m. by the weather detachment.
|
|
Each balloon also carries a small battery-powered light underneath
|
|
its surface that illuminates the balloon in flight so that it may
|
|
be tracked from the ground. At about 100 feet off the ground at night
|
|
the balloon might easily be mistaken for a flying saucer.
|
|
226
|
|
Jul. 27, 1952 Los Angeles, CA. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**SPACE TRAVEL ALREADY HERE, SCIENTISTS SAY.**
|
|
Space travel is here, assert Drs. Konrad J.K. Buettner and Heinz
|
|
Haber, UCLA experts on upper air research. They point out that men in
|
|
"space suits" and "space craft" already have risen to altitudes where
|
|
96% of the earth's atmosphere lies below them. Furthermore, an unmanned
|
|
two-stage rocket has climbed to 255 miles where, for all practical purposes,
|
|
you are in a vacuum. These physicists point out that in these
|
|
regions only three terrestrial factors make such an environment different
|
|
from that of interplanetary space: 1. The bulk of the earth which keeps
|
|
50% of meteors and cosmic ray particles at a distance. 2. The magnetic
|
|
field of the earth that deflects certain cosmic ray particles. 3. The heat
|
|
radiation reflected and emitted by this earth and its atmosphere.
|
|
227
|
|
Jul. 27, 1952 San Pedro, CA. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**NEW MYSTERY IN SOUTHLAND SKY REPORTED.**
|
|
Three San Pedro policemen last night insisted they saw an
|
|
object glowing with a greenish light which seemingly gave
|
|
birth to three little saucerettes, all of which vanished in the
|
|
evening sky, leaving vapor trails behind them.
|
|
228
|
|
Jul. 28, 1952 US. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**ROCKETS MAY FIND KEY TO COSMIC RAYS.**
|
|
Rockets fired from balloons to altitudes of 30 miles may blast
|
|
the wraps from the 30-year-old cosmic ray mystery. Balloon
|
|
authorities mentioned the fact that these "skyhook" balloons
|
|
might easily be mistaken for a flying saucer by laymen.
|
|
229
|
|
Jul. 28, 1952 Montreal. _The Montreal Star_.
|
|
**FLYING SAUCERS.**
|
|
Editorial: Please don't quote us, but we marvel at the conceit
|
|
of some of the these alleged experts who remark that the saucers
|
|
can't possibly be vehicles of inter-planetary travel because
|
|
"the engineering problem is too difficult". Man is certainly a
|
|
stuck-up, self-centered creature. Because he can't figure out
|
|
inter-planetary travel, nobody else could. Because he could
|
|
not breath the air, let us say, of Mars, nobody else could.
|
|
Because he has made a few faltering steps in knowledge, he
|
|
takes it for granted that no one anywhere in space can
|
|
possibly be as smart as he.
|
|
230
|
|
Jul. 28, 1952 Chicago, Illinois.
|
|
**SAUCERS REAL OR GOVERNMENT HOAXES, SCIENTISTS SAY.**
|
|
Several scientists, still stumped for an explanation of flying saucers,
|
|
were convinced Monday that the mysterious objects really exist. "I
|
|
definitely believe the objects sighted over Washington were not a figment
|
|
of someone's imagination," said R.L. Farnsworth, president of
|
|
the U.S. Rocket Society. Dr. J. Allen Hynek, an astronomer at Ohio
|
|
State University, said he was convinced these persons saw something,
|
|
"some type of object or phenomena." But Hynek said it is "highly improbable"
|
|
that the saucers come from another planet. One scientist
|
|
who asked that his name be withheld, speculated that the saucers might
|
|
be experimental aircraft developed by the U.S. "If this be the case,"
|
|
he said, "it's time the government quit playing jokes on the people."
|
|
231
|
|
Jul. 28, 1952 Indianapolis, Ind. _St. Louis Post Dispatch_.
|
|
dawn **HOOSIERS SEE FLYING SAUCERS STAGE DOGFIGHT.**
|
|
Three flying saucers were reported seen by hundreds of Hoosiers,
|
|
including police and military personnel, over south central Indiana
|
|
early today. The objects appeared to have a "dogfight" over Franklin
|
|
and disappeared as dawn approached. Troopers from three state police
|
|
posts—Indianapolis, Seymour, and Connersville—kept a running check
|
|
on the saucers for more than four hours.
|
|
232
|
|
Jul. 28, 1952 Washington DC. _Los Angeles Times_. **JETS CHASE WASHINGTON SKY OBJECTS.**
|
|
20:30 AP -- The Air Force said today jet fighter planes had made an
|
|
effort to intercept unknown objects in the sky over Washington
|
|
last night after CAA radar specialists had spotted between
|
|
four and twelve objects on their radarscopes. At 8:30 P.M.
|
|
the Air Route Traffic Control Center called in jet fighter planes
|
|
from Newcastle, Del., approximately 90 miles away and guided
|
|
them to the mystery objects. The pilots reported nothing
|
|
except an occasional light, once a "steady, white light"
|
|
which disappeared after about one minute.
|
|
233
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Washington DC. **JET PILOTS ORDERED TO SHOOT DOWN SAUCERS.**
|
|
The Air Force revealed today jet pilots
|
|
have been placed on 24-hour nationwide alert against flying
|
|
saucers with orders to shoot them down if they refuse to land.
|
|
It was learned pilots have gone aloft on several occasions in
|
|
an effort to shoot the mysterious objects to the ground, but
|
|
never came close enough to use their guns. The Air Force
|
|
expressed the belief that the unidentified flying objects are
|
|
not a threat to the US and stated also that they are not a
|
|
secret U.S. military development.
|
|
234
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Washington DC. _New York Times_.
|
|
**AIR FORCE EXPLAINS 2-HOUR DELAY IN CHASING OBJECTS OVER CAPITAL.**
|
|
The Air Force said tonight that the current series of flying saucer
|
|
reports had brought no change in its 24-hour-a-day program to
|
|
challenge unidentified and potentially hostile objects in the
|
|
skies over the US. The 2-hour delay in sending up jet interceptors
|
|
after radar watchers reported recent saucer sightings was
|
|
explained by the Air Force. The report was sent by mistake to
|
|
a flight center in Middletown, PA, instead of through the
|
|
Air Force base ar Newcastle, Del.
|
|
235
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Tarrytown, Greenburgh, NY. _New York Times_.
|
|
**OBJECT SEEN OVER TARRYTOWN.**
|
|
Streaks of light, reportedly similar to those spotted over
|
|
Washington were observed in the sky above the Hudson River.
|
|
The sightings were reported to the Defense Force Filter Center
|
|
at White Plains by Post Supervisor Joseph Pulsoni and two
|
|
ground force observers.
|
|
236
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Washington DC. _San Bernadino Sun_.
|
|
**'SAUCERS' REPORTED ON CAPITAL RADAR.**
|
|
The Air Force has been investigating reports
|
|
that several flying saucers have been spotted virtually in
|
|
its own back yard by radar device. Officials could not
|
|
immediately agree whether or not this was the first time that
|
|
radar had picked up such objects.
|
|
237
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Key West, FL. **NAVY CHECKS FIERY STREAK.**
|
|
Navy officials said Tuesday, "we're investigating thoroughly" reports
|
|
of a fiery object that streaked across the sky at 8:45 p.m. Saturday.
|
|
The _U.S.S. Greenwood_, a destroyer escort, was sent to sea, but officers
|
|
would not elaborate. Hundreds of sailors reported seeing the object
|
|
Saturday night while watching an outdoor movie. One witness described
|
|
it as a 40-foot solid white light zooming across the sky from north to
|
|
south, making no sound. A week ago, a Navy man said four persons reported
|
|
seeing a fiery ball in the sky over Key West that stopped and
|
|
started several times before it disappeared.
|
|
238
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Melbourne, Australia. **AUSSIUE PILOT SEES FLYING SAUCER IN TECHNICOLOR HUES.**
|
|
Capt. J. Murray, Constellation pilot, today reported sighting a
|
|
strange, bright green object flashing horizontally, east to west across
|
|
the night sky south of Darwin. Saying it changed in color to red and
|
|
then to gold as it disappeared, he added: "The object I saw Saturday was
|
|
not a shooting star or comet because of its horizontal flight,
|
|
brilliance, and color."
|
|
239
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Cambridge, Massachusetts. **ALL OUT OF STEP, BUT ME, SAYS SHAPLEY.**
|
|
Dr. Harlow Shapley, director of the Harvard Observatory, said
|
|
flying saucers are a lot of complete nonsense and dismissed the
|
|
more than 1000 reports made in the last five years as traceable
|
|
to 1. hallucinations, 2. fireballs or meteorites, 3. high-altitude balloons, and 4. high-flying planes.
|
|
His opponents assigned Dr. Shapley to the balloonatic fringe.
|
|
240
|
|
Jul. 29, 1952 Washington DC. _International News Service_. **FLYING SAUCER TRAP SET BY US.**
|
|
The Air Force today advanced the theory that flying saucers are
|
|
apparently natural phenomena, but at the same time announced
|
|
it was establishing a battery of more than 200 cameras to trap
|
|
the objects on film, according to Darrel Garwood, INS Washington
|
|
correspondent. Maj. Gen. John A. Samford, Chief of Air Intelligence,
|
|
headed a big force of top scientific brains to work on the fantastic
|
|
puzzle. The Air Force is continuing its 24 hour alert for
|
|
all jet pilots to chase and shoot down any such objects which
|
|
ignore orders to land.
|
|
241
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Enid, OK. **SAUCER BUZZES KANSAN.**
|
|
Sid Eubanks, a photographic supply salesman, told police he was
|
|
almost swept off the highway last night by a low flying saucer
|
|
which swooped low at terrific speed. Eubanks said the mystery
|
|
object, appearing as a "yellow-green, then yellow-brown streak
|
|
about 400 feet long, completely reversed its direction over US
|
|
highway 81 and disappeared into the west". He said the tremendous
|
|
pressure nearly threw his car off the road.
|
|
242
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Princeton, New Jersey. _Los Angeles Examiner_.
|
|
Asked for his candid opinion on whether or not flying saucers
|
|
are real, Albert Einstein wrote Rev. Louis A. Gardner of Los
|
|
Angeles: "Those people have seen something. What it is I do
|
|
not know and I am not curious to know."
|
|
243
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Washington DC. _San Bernadine Sun_. **AIR FORCE EXPERTS SAY FLYING 'WHATZITS' APPEAR TO BE MERE LAYERS OF COLD AIR.**
|
|
Maj. Gen. John A. Samford said that the objects being caught on
|
|
radar screens for as long as five hours yesterday appeared to
|
|
be layers of cold air. He discounted any theory that the Washington
|
|
area is being menaced by unknown aerial vehicles from
|
|
abroad or from other worlds. Tuesday was the third time in
|
|
10 days that radar had picked up "whatzits" flying through pre-dawn
|
|
black skies. CAA radar operators said as many as 12 objects
|
|
were picked up at one time Tuesday. (Saucer partisans said
|
|
Gen. Samford apparently doesn't know hot air from cold air. The
|
|
story was supported by a three column picture of the general
|
|
hamming it up for the photographers. -FS)
|
|
244
|
|
Jul. 31, 1952 St. Petersburg, FL and Albuquerque, NM} _San Benadino Sun_. **RESTAURATEUR WELCOMES SAUCERIAN PATRONS.**
|
|
An enterprising St. Petersburg Fla. restaurant proprietor, stirred
|
|
by reports of saucers in the south Florida skies, painted this
|
|
sign on the roof of his establishment - "COFFEEE FREE -- WELCOME SAUCERS!"
|
|
Meanwhile the latest flying saucer report came from
|
|
Albuquerque, NM where Doyle Kline, a newspaperman said he saw
|
|
10 flying saucers "going like a bat out of hell" Tuesday night.
|
|
He said they "made a believer" out of him. The Air Force asked
|
|
him for a report.
|
|
245
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Nacogdoches, Texas. **TEXAS GAL TELLS ONE.**
|
|
Mrs. Lem Arnold, 1125 Hackberry St., Nachodoches, Texas, witnessed
|
|
a flying saucer Tuesday night and described it in detail. "It looked
|
|
to be the shape and size of a dinner plate and was traveling south
|
|
at a terrific speed. The center of it seemed to blink continuously,"
|
|
she said. Mrs. Arnold was in bed when she first saw the flying object
|
|
and believes she watched it for perhaps a minute before it sped out
|
|
of sight.
|
|
246
|
|
Jul. 30, 1952 Chicago, IL. _Chicago Daily News_. **EXPERTS DOUBT RADAR IS FOOLED.**
|
|
The flying saucer saga is ablaze again. The spark that set it off
|
|
is radar. Even the skeptics are taking another look. They had been
|
|
able to scoff at the aberrations of the human eye, but the uncanny
|
|
see-all and tell-all eye of radar is less easily fooled. Chicago
|
|
experts who know radar best say it will only bounce off solid objects.
|
|
Washington wasn't recording clouds, or solidified air, in the opinion
|
|
of Dr. Robert Tobey, Armour Research Foundation. Dr. Harvey Ross,
|
|
microwave researcher at Motorola, supported this statement: "The
|
|
speed and maneuverability of the blips cannot be accounted for by
|
|
slow-moving clouds or other atmospheric conditions."
|
|
247
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Los Angeles, CA. _Los Angeles Herald Express_.
|
|
**FIERY OBJECT SEEN IN SKY.**
|
|
Several persons reported seeing a round luminous object streaking
|
|
eastward at a terrific rate of speed. All agreed that the objects
|
|
resembled pictures they had seen of comets, but without tails.
|
|
They said it was brilliant white and green colored.
|
|
248
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Dayton, OH. _New York Times_.
|
|
**FLYING SAUCER QUERIES HAMPER AIR FORCE WORK.**
|
|
An Air Force spokesman said today that the queries on the flying
|
|
saucers had affected their regular work. So far this year they
|
|
have received 432 written reports on sightings. They said one
|
|
man works full time on the queries and has had to turn over
|
|
many of the questions to the Directorate of Military Intelligence
|
|
for reply. That office has turned to the Air Technical Center at
|
|
Dayton, Ohio, for help.
|
|
249
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Dayton, OH. _San Bernadino Sun_. **TRICKY RADAR HABITS PROVE SAUCER "BLIPS" CAN BE ALMOST ANYTHING.**
|
|
Air Force experts said today it was nothing to be excited about
|
|
that radar has picked up the so-called flying saucers. They said
|
|
it was nothing unusual for radar, "a tricky gadget", to pick
|
|
up rain squalls, birds, water spouts, and even surf spray.
|
|
250
|
|
Jul. 31, 1952 Kutztown, Pennsylvania. **PHOTOGRAPH OF WASHINGTON AIR INVASION.**
|
|
A flying saucer described as looking like "a flying smoke ring"
|
|
is shown with landscape beneath in today's _Middletown Journal_.
|
|
The photograph was taken by a farmer near Kutztown, Pennsylvania.
|
|
No identification or data concerning the picture is given.
|
|
251
|
|
Jul. 31, 1952 Cincinnati, OH. _San Bernardino Sun_.
|
|
**DON'T DESTROY SAUCERS, THEY ARE FROM SPACE.**
|
|
The Air Force received a wire Wednesday from Cincinnati, Ohio,
|
|
urging reconsideration of the order to shoot down flying saucers.
|
|
The sender, whose name was withheld, said that advanced aerodynamics
|
|
indicated the saucers were probably intercelestial in origin.
|
|
252
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Salem, MA. _The Richfield Reporter_.
|
|
**WHOOPS! THERE GOES THE 5:15 TO THE MOON!**
|
|
The _Washington News_ thus headlined the photograph of four saucers
|
|
caught in a "V" formation by Coast Guard photographer Shell R. Alpert
|
|
at Salem, Mass., on July 16 and not released by the Pentagon until
|
|
August 1. See https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-akron-beacon-journal-coast-guard-get/132167616/.
|
|
253
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 US. _New York Herald-Tribune_.
|
|
**SHALLOW PUN OF DEEP THINKER.**
|
|
Sidelight appearing in Hy Gardner's "Early Bird Coast to Coast"
|
|
column. Deep-Thinker Dept: Wonder if those flying saucers are
|
|
Taft and Kefauver buttons?
|
|
254
|
|
Jul. 31, 1952 Washington DC. _Racine (Wis.) Journal Times_.
|
|
**HARDER TO BRUSH OFF 'FLYING SAUCERS' AS SILLY.**
|
|
NEA - For the first time, numerous and simultaneous
|
|
sightings have been confirmed by official radar observers. This
|
|
happened twice under almost identical circumstances on two successive
|
|
Saturday nights. This new chapter in the weird flying saucer story
|
|
was written in the skies over Washington for six hours before dawn
|
|
Sunday, July 20, and again one week later. Airlines Pilot S.C. Pierman
|
|
saw six objects at the same time the C.A.A. radar did.
|
|
255
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 US. _L.A. Ledger_.
|
|
**NOSTRADAMUS GETS IN ACT.**
|
|
Dick Williams, amusement editor, reported that Carey Wilson,
|
|
a Nostradamus authority, believes the seer was prophesying the
|
|
coming of the flying saucers in his 1672 folio edition.
|
|
"Heavenly objects almost without number," he wrote, "will become
|
|
known to the human race. This amazing revelation
|
|
will neither make anyone rich nor do anyone harm."
|
|
256
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Salem, MA. _L.A. Mirror_.
|
|
**'SHUTTERBUG' GRABS PHOTO OF SAUCERS.**
|
|
Under the AP dateline from Washington the Coast Guard released
|
|
a photo taken at 9:35 a.m. on July 16, by Shell R. Alpert, 21,
|
|
an station photographer attached to the Coast Guard at
|
|
Salem, Mass. The photo shows clearly four round objects. Each
|
|
saucer appears to have two identical shafts of light extending
|
|
across its center and protruding at the forward and rear ends.
|
|
257
|
|
Aug. 2, 1952 Muscoy, CA and south San Bernardino, CA. _San Bernadino Sun._
|
|
**FLYING SAUCERS SEEN IN CITY AREA.**
|
|
At least three people reported seeing round or silvery objects
|
|
in the sky over Muscoy and the South part of San Bernardino. One
|
|
report said a large silver object swooped down on him and
|
|
several other witnesses, then shot upward, hovering over them
|
|
for several seconds before disappearing.
|
|
258
|
|
Aug. 1, 1952 Pasadena, California. **SNIPERS TAKE AFTER FLYING SAUCERS.**
|
|
Flying saucers are bad enough, but combine them with a phantom sniper's
|
|
bullet, and you've got something. Jordan M. Reifel and his wife
|
|
were entertaining neighbors last night in their backyard when
|
|
suddenly they heard what sounded like "a .22 caliber rifle shot and
|
|
the whine of a bullet". A few minutes later, the worried Reifels
|
|
said, everybody in the patio observed a formation of white things
|
|
zooming overhead in the sky. All of this would have been discounted
|
|
by Pasadena police, but there were several other reports which mentioned
|
|
saucers and sniper bullets as well.
|
|
259
|
|
Aug. 2, 1952 Palmdale, CA. _Los Angeles Times._ **FLYING DISKS AGAIN IN LOS ANGELES AREA.**
|
|
Two flying saucers flew over Southern California yesterday and reports
|
|
from witnesses flooded various media with accounts. The Lancaster
|
|
Sheriff's substation said it received six calls describing the objects
|
|
which hovered at about 1,000 ft. In Palmdale, C.A.A. operations
|
|
specialists, Don Benson and Ray Hollings, observed two saucers for
|
|
about 30 minutes and reported them to George AFB but no jet interceptors
|
|
were sent aloft. Another report came from Jack Roff, game
|
|
warden, who spotted similar objects over Lake Hughes. And in Burbank,
|
|
a silver, oblong object was observed just meandering over the city
|
|
at about 8:30 a.m. by Mrs. Dick Turpin.
|
|
260
|
|
Aug. 2, 1952 US. _San Bernadino Sun_. **TOM SWIFT MAY BE MAKING SAUCERS IN BID.**
|
|
Hal Boyle, in his _Notebook_ column relieves the flying saucer
|
|
tension with a bit of levity. The question he asks of the
|
|
Air Force seems to cover a lot of ground: "With all the men in
|
|
the sky in the last world war, no flying saucers were reported
|
|
before 1947. Were optical illusions and weather changes
|
|
invented in 1947?"
|
|
261
|
|
Aug. 3, 1952 Pasadena, CA. _Pasadena Sun_. **AIR FORCE SARGE BEGS TO DIFFER.**
|
|
Dan Lundberg on KTTV interviewed interviewed a 21-year-old ex-Air Force
|
|
sergeant who shot a picture of a flying saucer a year ago, which
|
|
was just recently released. He was, too. He's an old hand
|
|
at balloons and says that regardless what his superior say
|
|
this was not a balloon.
|
|
262
|
|
Aug. 3, 1952 Pasadena, California. _San Bernadino Sun_. **BALLOON TURNS OUT TO BE SAUCER.**
|
|
AP - T.L. Fox, a Carlsbad contractor, saw an
|
|
object gliding from the north at about 6:30 in the morning. He
|
|
thought it was a balloon and started for his car to go after it.
|
|
Before he could get to the car the thing had grown to many times
|
|
its size and had leveling off. It then maneuvered and shot
|
|
toward Carlsbad Airport "with a burst of speed which has never
|
|
been equalled by any jet I know of and no plane with wings
|
|
attached could have made that sharp a turn".
|
|
263
|
|
Aug. 2, 1952 Indio, CA. _Los Angeles Times_. **SAUCERS WAVE BOMBER ADIEU.**
|
|
Two flying saucers were observed by a woman supervisor at the Indio
|
|
Ground Observation Post, Col. O.S. Dresher reported yesterday. He
|
|
released a copy of a report made by Mrs. Pauline Watts, who made
|
|
the same report to the USAF. She said she saw the saucers at 2:40
|
|
p.m. on July 14, near two B-36 bombers. "These two round disks were
|
|
stationary in the sky, very metallic and shiny, much brighter than
|
|
any plane I have seen. They looked to be about one-third the size
|
|
of the bombers if seen at the same height. Finally they took off in
|
|
a straight up direction as one bomber approached closer towards them
|
|
and in seconds they were gone."
|
|
See https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-woman-sights-two-o/132214693/.
|
|
264
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 University of Maryland. **PSYCHOLOGY PROFESSOR POOH-POOHS THE FLYING SAUCERS.**
|
|
The flying saucers "just ain't there" said Dr. Jessie Sprowls,
|
|
abnormal professor of abnormal psychology at the University of
|
|
Maryland. Apologizing for his emphasis-aimed lapse in grammar,
|
|
the professor attributed the nationwide deluge of reports on
|
|
strange objects in the upper atmosphere to "primarily to hallucinations."
|
|
In stating: "The American people are victims of mob psychology
|
|
and not one in a thousand is capanle of independent thought",
|
|
Dr. Sprowls slavishly repeats the official Pentagonian party line.
|
|
265
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 Huntington Park, CA. _Los Angeles Examiner_. **L.A. SAUCERS CAVORT IN SKY.**
|
|
Grant C. Hinton of Huntington Park told deputies at the Sheriff's
|
|
station that he and his family and neighbors saw two distinct
|
|
objects in the sky Saturday. He said the disks seemed to change
|
|
color, and remained on the horizon for 15 minutes.
|
|
Merl Clausen of Downey reported he saw an "arrow-like object"
|
|
remain stationary over his home for half an hour and then head
|
|
due east.\nA student from the University of Southern California reported
|
|
from Burbank that he had seen two flying saucers over Universal
|
|
Studios in North Hollywood. He said they were large and blue
|
|
colored, with lights that blinked off and on.
|
|
266
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 New Orleans, LA. **EGG-SHAPED DISC OVER NEW ORLEANS.**
|
|
19:30 A preacher's son, along with the administrative assistant of an
|
|
evangelist, reported seeing an egg-shaped flying saucer streak
|
|
across the New Orleans sky about 7:30 pm Monday. In a telephone
|
|
report the two young men described the object as a white light
|
|
which materialized and then vanished as it hurtled in a southeasterly
|
|
direction, all in the space of about 40 seconds. At first they
|
|
thought it was a falling star but they added, "it couldn't have been
|
|
because it followed a horizontal line of flight."
|
|
267
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 Ent AFB, CO, Japan and Korea. _Racine Journal_. **SAUCERS OBSERVING 'POLICE ACTION'.**
|
|
Imaginary or real, those flying saucers have popped up in Korea
|
|
and in Japan, and are keeping pilots of the Air Defense Command in
|
|
constant alert across the US. Headquarters of the ADC at Ent AFB,
|
|
Colo., said "there has been a flurry of reports on saucers for the
|
|
past two weeks, keeping their pilots busy." In Korea, Commanders of
|
|
the Far East Naval forces and the 5th Air Force disclosed that a
|
|
Canadian destroyer recently recorded two such objects on its radar.
|
|
A Navy report said officers and men aboard the _Crusader_ saw the
|
|
saucer on the night of July 10. Radar placed the objects two miles
|
|
high and seven miles away. A report issued a day or two later dismissed
|
|
the radar find as the planet Jupiter.
|
|
268
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 Pasadena, Huntington Park, Universal City, North Hollywood, and Santa Ana, CA. _Los Angeles Times_.
|
|
**THEY ASKED FOR THEM!**
|
|
Reports continued to roll into Air Force filter-centers at Pasadena
|
|
and Santa Ana yesterday. Descriptions of the objects sighted were
|
|
varying but the Air Force announced it will continue to study them.
|
|
Two sky watchers at Laguna Beach reported seeing an airborne object
|
|
moving past their post at about 11:20 a.m. Tuesday, but the Air Force
|
|
stamped it as secret until yesterday. The disk-shaped thing sparked
|
|
brilliantly in the southwest sky, reversed its direction of travel and
|
|
then disappeared, according to the sky watcher. Other reports came
|
|
in from Pasadena, Huntington Park, Universal City, North Hollywood
|
|
and Los Angeles.
|
|
269
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 Tokyo, Japan and Taiwan. _The Times-Picaqune_.
|
|
**JAPAN, FORMOSA REPORT SAUCERS.**
|
|
The newspaper _Yomiuri_ said Monday it had received more than 150
|
|
letters from persons reporting they saw flying saucers over Japan
|
|
on Friday night. Japanese astronomers, however, unanimously agreed the
|
|
objects were meteors. In Taipeh, Formosa, newspapers quoted a
|
|
Chinese man and wife as saying they saw two shiny circular objects Saturday
|
|
morning streak eastward across the city at 10-minute intervals.
|
|
The couple described them as going faster than a jet but slower than
|
|
a meteor.
|
|
270
|
|
Aug. 5, 1952 Lackland AFB, San Antonio, Texas. **SAUCER PEEKS AT LACKLAND AFB.**
|
|
Seven NCO's from the 3731st and 3732nd Basic Military Training Squadrons,
|
|
Lackland AFB, San Antonio, Texas, sighted an object they all believed
|
|
to be a flying saucer and reported the sighting to S. Sgt. Jerrold E.
|
|
Baker. A/2C Peter D'Angelo, first noticed the silver, saucer-shaped
|
|
object high in the sky and called its attention to other NCOs present.
|
|
Descriptions from all those who witnessing the phenomenon confirmed
|
|
"it was something I never saw before." Subsequently, phone calls were made to the
|
|
weather bureau at Kelly and Randolph AFB and neither had released any
|
|
balloons previous to the sighting. This was the only object all
|
|
agreed it could possibly have been before the calls were made.
|
|
271
|
|
Aug. 4, 1952 Washington DC. _Los Angeles Examiner_. **AIR FORCE DENIES SAUCERS OURS.**
|
|
Major General Roger H. Ramey said today that saucers could not
|
|
be Soviet built because the Russians have no ability to produce
|
|
an object that uses such a tremendous source of power that
|
|
it can't be traced by radar. He further stated that the saucers
|
|
definitely were not our own, the Air Force experts have dismissed
|
|
80 percent of the 1,500 saucer reports as "natural and considers
|
|
the interplanetary origin explanation for the saucers as only a
|
|
possibility."
|
|
See https://www.newspapers.com/article/arizona-republic-top-us-air-force-genera/132215927/.
|
|
272
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 US. **'SPACE-SAUCER' WOULD HAVE LONG FLIGHT.**
|
|
Frank Carey, an AP Science reporter, in a syndicated column says that
|
|
roundtrip travel to the earth from Mars and Venus would involve
|
|
nearly three years for the Martians, just over two years for
|
|
the Venusians. Carey backs up this statement with computations
|
|
dealing with spaceships which travel at a snail-like 25,000 mph.
|
|
However, Carey does concede that Saucerians must have licked the
|
|
interplanetary fuel consumption problem if they can afford to do
|
|
all the nocturnal cruising around the Earth that has been credited
|
|
to them.
|
|
273
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Norton Air Base. _San Bernardino Sun_. **AIR FORCE STILL LOOKING FOR LOST PIECE OF THAT CAPTURED SAUCER.**
|
|
Next spotters of strange aerial craft will be asked to fill out
|
|
an Air Force form which will eventually be processed by the
|
|
27th Air Division intelligence officer at Norton Air Base. The
|
|
Air Force, however, refused to comment on what they will do with
|
|
the forms. The form has 25 questions concerning a description of
|
|
the object, its surroundings and the time it was spotted. There
|
|
is one loaded question, "Did you get any fragments?"
|
|
274
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Springer, NM. _Albuquerque Journal_. **SPRINGER EDITOR NOW A BELIEVER IN SAUCERS.**
|
|
Springer newspaperman Ed Guthman and his wife spotted a flying
|
|
saucer while driving to Los Vegas NM. He got such a good look at
|
|
it that he's converted from a skeptic to a believer in the
|
|
things. Guthman said it looked like it was about a mile away
|
|
and if it was, it had to be around 100 feet in diameter. Just
|
|
ahead of a seeming vane there was a dark spot in the body which
|
|
could have been an observation port.
|
|
275
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Fort Bragg, Hamilton Field. **FORT BRAGG BRIEFS HAMILTON FIELD ON LANDED SAUCER.**
|
|
First Lt. William Clopton of the Air Force reported that in the
|
|
summer of 1950 an article from a Fort Bragg newspaper was posted
|
|
on the Hamilton Field bulletin board, revealing that the minister
|
|
of a church had been permitted by Air Force Intelligence to view
|
|
a saucer, that had crashed with two small men on it, both dead.
|
|
They were described as fair, with blue eyes, beardless with
|
|
beautiful undecayed teeth and wore skin-tight blue uniforms made
|
|
of heavy metallic thread with a broad waste belt. Their provisions
|
|
consisted of very heavy water, large wafers which when analyzed
|
|
contained vitamins and minerals similar to ours. Half of the pilots
|
|
viewed this report scepticism, the other half believed it
|
|
might possibly have occurred. (rg - Is this MO41?)
|
|
276
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Gainesville, Texas. **EVEN MAYORS CAN SEE 'EM.**
|
|
A former Grainesville mayor who is a member of the Board of Education has joined
|
|
the ranks of the "I-saw-a-flying-saucer-society." H.A. Latham accompanied by his
|
|
brother and son spotted the thing in the sky Tuesday night while fishing in a
|
|
lake about 10 miles south of here. "I'd been skeptical up to then of all these
|
|
flying saucers," the former mayor said, "all three of us saw the same object
|
|
at the same time." He described the object as cylindrical in shape, moving in an
|
|
arc, first slowly and then rapidly to the west. Latham said he was sure it was
|
|
not an airplane nor a shooting star or a reflection.
|
|
277
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Hollywood, California. **RANCH MARKET OFFERS NEW COME-ON.**
|
|
Patrons of Hollywood's famous Ranch Market were surprised today
|
|
with a new attraction. A silvery object that looked like a B-29
|
|
without wings hovered over the Vine Street store. The bluish-gray
|
|
cigar-shaped object, sporting four triangular-shaped
|
|
appendages on one side, played hide and seek among the Hollywood
|
|
clouds.
|
|
278
|
|
Aug. 6, 1952 Hollywood, California. **L.A. TIMES HUSH-HUSHES CALIFORNIA SIGHTING.**
|
|
Jean Logan and her daughter, watching a Navy Blimp fly over
|
|
their home, noticed a glittering something in the sky a long way
|
|
up. It was bright red and as it turned and caught the sun, it
|
|
changed to silver and then back to red. They called the police
|
|
who gave them a Sycamore number in Pasadena. This number said
|
|
many calls had come in, and that no weather balloon or any
|
|
other kind known were in the neighborhood except the Navy Blimp
|
|
and they were considering it a flying saucer. The _L.A. Times_
|
|
insisted the next day it was something the Air Force was
|
|
experimenting with.
|
|
279
|
|
Aug. 7, 1952 US. _San Bernardino Sun-Telegram_. **BUCK ROGER'S 25TH CENTURY OUTDATED.**
|
|
The _Sun-Telegram_ runs a daily comic strip called _Twin Earths_.
|
|
It deals with a planet equal in size and composition to Earth and
|
|
equal distance away from the sun. It revolves in the Earth's
|
|
orbit, but on the other side of the sun, this never visible until
|
|
someone perfects a space ship capable of flying around the sun.
|
|
Authors Oskar Lebeck and A. McWilliams keep up with the times
|
|
by having flying disks the main method of transportation on
|
|
the other earth, outdating Buck Rogers' rocketships.
|
|
280
|
|
Aug. 8, 1952 Youngstown, New York. **ONE GOES OVER THE FALLS -- WAY OVER.**
|
|
AP -- An unidentified object was seen last night
|
|
racing through the sky near the mouth of the Niagara River and
|
|
then hovering for some time over the Holland Canal which connects
|
|
Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. The object was described as being
|
|
a brilliant mass of colored lights flashing on and off in various
|
|
combinations.
|
|
281
|
|
Aug. 8, 1952 Washington DC. _The Tidings_.
|
|
**RATIONAL BEINGS COULD EXIST ON OTHER PLANETS, SAYS THEOLOGIAN.**
|
|
Very Rev. Francis J. Connell, Dean of Sacred Theology at Catholic
|
|
University wrote: "Neither revelation, the common teaching of
|
|
the Fathers, tradition, nor the solumn pronouncements of the
|
|
Popes rule out the possibility of life, perhaps similar to ours
|
|
on another planet." He added that if they possessed the
|
|
immortality once enjoyed by Adam and Eve "it would be foolish
|
|
for our superjet or rocket pilots to attempt to shoot them.
|
|
They would be unkillable."
|
|
Also see https://angelusnews.com/local/california/the-tidings-118-years-old-and-cpunting/.
|
|
282
|
|
Aug. 10, 1952 Manhattan, NY. _The New York Times_.
|
|
**FLYING SAUCERS EXPECTED AS METEOR DISPLAY BEGINGS TONIGHT.**
|
|
Robert B. Coles of Hayden Planetarium predicted here that flying
|
|
saucers would be reported in great numbers this week if the
|
|
weather was good. They will just be reports, Mr. Coles hastened
|
|
to add and will be based on sightings of the annual celestial
|
|
display of Perseid meteors which begins tonight. The meteors
|
|
will be visible in the night skies until the next Wednesday night
|
|
as a fiery shower of radiant particles which seem to originate
|
|
in the constellation Perseus. They will reach their peak
|
|
between midnight Tuesday and dawn Wednesday. Mr. Coles suggested
|
|
no explanation for saucer sightings occuring the other 11 months
|
|
of the year.
|
|
283
|
|
Aug. 11, 1952 California. Also Aug. 12, 1952. _Los Angeles Herald Express_.
|
|
**FLYING SAUCER MYSTERY 'SOLVED' BY CALIFORNIA ENGINEERS.**
|
|
In a two-day front-page spread, bylined by Lyle Abbot, rocket
|
|
engineers Roland Gillespie and Winthrop K. Coxe explained
|
|
flying saucers as the result of an electromagnetic vortex in the
|
|
air.
|
|
284
|
|
Aug. 14, 1952 US. **FLYING SAUCERS AN OLD STORY.**
|
|
Hal Boyle, substituting for Bob Considine, devoted a column to
|
|
Charles Fort and his impressive roundup of saucer sightings
|
|
dating back 100 years ago, before the age of airplanes or Skyhook
|
|
balloons. "Were observers subject then, as now to the
|
|
same hallucinations?" asks Byle. (Odds were laid that Considine
|
|
will not invite Boyle back as his guest columnist near year.)
|
|
285
|
|
Aug. 12, 1952 West Texas. _San Antonio Express_.
|
|
**FLYING TURTLE AND WOMAN GO THRU RED LIGHTS.**
|
|
Everybody thinks turtles don't fly -- so what was the thing Mrs.
|
|
Flora Rogers saw paddlying through the air over her West Texas
|
|
ranch? "It was shaped like a turtle," she said. But Mrs. Rogers
|
|
figured the object was really some sort of radar machine taking
|
|
pictures of the land beneath. The turtle emitted a blue flame,
|
|
made no sound, lacked windows and doors, and flew about 20 feet
|
|
high across the road in front of her. The turtle didn't frighten
|
|
her until it zoomed straight up and disappeared in seconds. "I was
|
|
so scared," she said, "that I had to lift my feet into the car. I
|
|
drove the 18 miles to the Sheriff's office and didn't stop for a
|
|
light or anything."
|
|
286
|
|
Aug. 12, 1952 Raleigh, North Carolina. **I WISH I WERE IN DIXIE.**
|
|
Civil Aeronautics officials in Raleigh, North Carolina, reported that
|
|
orange-red objects have been sighted streaking across the skies for the past
|
|
two nights. Included among the list of those who fancy illusions
|
|
was a professor at North Carolina State College (requested his name
|
|
be withheld) claiming to see seven or eight objects traveling at a
|
|
high altitude and a tremendous speed.
|
|
287
|
|
Aug. 13, 1952 Pleasant Ridge, Ohio. _The Cincinnati Reporter_.
|
|
**MRS. ALLENDORE SEES IT THROUGH.**
|
|
Mrs. Lee Allendorf of 6229 Montgomery Rd., Pleasant Ridge, Ohio,
|
|
rebuffed by metropolitan dailies, reported to _The Reporter_ that she
|
|
and her family were awakened last Thursday, August 7, 1952, at dawn
|
|
by a steady, rumbling, whirring noise. They glanced out their second-story
|
|
window to see a large metal object, oval in shape, and looking
|
|
"like the lower half of a dirigible hovering 80-90 feet over the
|
|
Monte Vista Theatre." The noise from the craft was penetrating and
|
|
"seemed to shake the whole house," she said. The three viewers resented
|
|
the fact that the daily papers had treated their report in a
|
|
light vein and hoped something might be done in the way of a thorough
|
|
investigation. All were agreed they saw something which did not come
|
|
under the conventional rocket or aircraft classification. When last
|
|
seen, the saucer was headed in the direction of Norwood. _The Reporter_
|
|
gave the story a full front-page streamer headline.
|
|
288
|
|
Aug. 14, 1952 Dallas, Texas. **CHIEF AIRLINE PILOT BOXES MENZEL'S PSYCHOSIS.**
|
|
Capt. Max M. Jacoby, who has been flying for 16 years, disclosed
|
|
Thursday that he chased a big, orange light, apparently not of earthly
|
|
origin, Wednesday night in a transport plane. The light was of the
|
|
type generally put in the flying saucer category, but Jacoby declined
|
|
to call it more than a "light" for fear he would be ridiculed or
|
|
laughed at. He never did catch the light.
|
|
289
|
|
Aug. 14, 1952 Lake Michigan. _The Racine (Wisconsin) Journal-Times._
|
|
**CHIEF MERCHANT OFFICER GIVES MENZEL THE BRUSH-OFF.**
|
|
Two bright lights sighted in the overcast above Lake Michigan last
|
|
Sunday night have been officially reported to U.S. Coast Guard Headquarters
|
|
in Chicago, it was learned today. The fireballs first sighted
|
|
by Edward Langenfeld Jr. on his father's farm were called to the attention
|
|
of the family and friends. All watched the lights for 30 minutes, one
|
|
above the other. One would disappear for minutes and reappear, then
|
|
the other would repeat the process. This alternating began at 9 p.m.
|
|
and continued until 11:30 p.m. C.W.O. John Needham, from Racine Coast
|
|
Guard station, investigated and said he was satisfied it was not due
|
|
to weather phenomenon or a mirage. He said the information in his
|
|
official report was restricted.
|
|
290
|
|
Aug. 14, 1952 University of Southern California. _The Journal of Philosophy._
|
|
**PHILOSOPHER SUGGESTS BRAINS BETTER ELSEWHERE.**
|
|
B.A.G. Fuller of the University of Southern California read a paper
|
|
on Flying Saucers, advancing the premise that man's belief that he was
|
|
the center of the universe may be a mistaken idea and "that elsewhere
|
|
intelligent life may have occurred equal in some respects and in some,
|
|
perhaps all, superior to his particular brand." The philosopher cited
|
|
Jones, Wells, Hoyle, Scully, Haldane, Heard, Von Fritsch, and Plato to
|
|
support his brief.
|
|
291
|
|
Aug. 20, 1952 US. _The New York Times_. **WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PLANET VENUS EXPLANATION?**
|
|
The Air Force announced details of the conversation between Captain
|
|
Thomas Mantell and the control tower which took place on January
|
|
7, 1948. At about 2:45 p.m., Mantell reported sighting an unidentified
|
|
object "directly ahead and above me and moving half my speed. It
|
|
appears metallic and of tremendous size." A few moments later, Mantell
|
|
reported the object was moving about the same speed--(360 mph) and "it
|
|
was bright and climbing away from me." Captain Mantell then said he
|
|
was going up to 20,000 feet, and if he failed to catch it, he would
|
|
abandon the chase. That was his last message. No identification of
|
|
the object has been announced.
|
|
292
|
|
Aug. 20, 1952 East Germany, Soviet Union. _The Oregonian_. **SAUCER SCARE HITS RUSSIANS.**
|
|
The Russians, too, according to reliable information here, are becoming
|
|
concerned about flying saucers. A German scientist's daughter,
|
|
who lived in the Russian zone and was conscripted for work in a
|
|
Moscow laboratory, escaped to the western zone recently. This girl,
|
|
24, told the high commissioners of officials that the Russians had come
|
|
to the conclusion that flying saucers are not figments of imagination
|
|
but something real. In the beginning, she said, the Russians dismissed
|
|
the heavenly objects as propaganda released by the Western
|
|
world as a scare in the hope of convincing timid persons of the great
|
|
scientific might of the West. This did not bother them. They thought
|
|
the entire program laughable. According to the scientist's daughter,
|
|
the Russians do not believe the mysterious objects are space ships
|
|
from another planet.
|
|
293
|
|
Aug. 18, 1952 US. _Hollywood Citizen-News_. **CMDR LOTT RAPS AF AND FBI.**
|
|
One minute after he retired to inactive duty last midnight Navy
|
|
Commander Dave Lott, former deputy commanding officer of the
|
|
Armed Forces Radio Services, sent telegrams listing his complaints
|
|
against the service to government big wheels and released a
|
|
statement to the press. "The Air Force's handling of the flying saucer
|
|
investigation," Lott said, "was one of the most inept,
|
|
disgraceful, and downright ludicrous displays of inefficiency
|
|
ever displayed in a governmental operation." He flagged a "gag
|
|
rule" which he said prohibits members of the services from
|
|
engaging in political discussions or criticizing the Armed Forces.
|
|
294
|
|
Aug. 21, 1952 Rattlesnake Canyon, CA. _San Bernardino Sun_.
|
|
**'FLYING DISKS' INVADE MINING FIELD IN DESERT.**
|
|
"Flying Disks" is the name of the placer claim staked out by
|
|
J.S. Burbridge at the head of Rattlesnake Canyon in the Morongo
|
|
Mining District. Burbridge, who lives at 1124 W. Third St.,
|
|
had his claim recorded Wednesday.
|
|
295
|
|
May. 14, 1952 San Diego, CA. **MYSTERIOUS S.D. AERIAL VISITOR SEEN HERE.**
|
|
A whatwasit took a quick cruise about San Diego skies last night. Witnessed by
|
|
at least three residents, the mysterious object hurled earthward like a meteor,
|
|
leveled off, circled the city slowly and noiselessly and then disappeared to the
|
|
west. "I think I witnessed the arrival of a space-ship said Donald Carr, of 2408
|
|
East 18th St., National City, a design engineer at Convar. All those witnessing
|
|
the object felt its flight and appearance were proof that flying saucers exist
|
|
and are not from the earth.
|
|
296
|
|
May. 22, 1952 Flagstaff, Arizona. **ONE FOR MYOPIC MENZEL.**
|
|
Seymour L. Hess, astronomer at Lowell Observatory here, said today
|
|
he had seen "a bright object in the sky, a disk visible to the naked
|
|
eye." Hess had been studying atmospheric and weather conditions on
|
|
Mars at Lowell Observatory. "It was definitely not an airplane,"
|
|
Hess said. "The object disappeared a few seconds after passing before
|
|
a cloud. The estimated size of the disk through the binoculars for
|
|
a distance of 6,000 to 12,000 feet is equivalent to an object 3 to
|
|
6 feet in diameter.
|