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- 'UFO TOWN' FINALLY BEGINS TO HAVE SOME FUN... 25/02/96
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- Source: Los Angeles Times
-
- 'UFO Town' Finally Begins to Have Some Fun With Mystery Crash in 1947
-
- New Mexico: Roswell plans second annual festival for this summer. But some
- still wonder what really fell to Earth on that long-ago night.
-
- By SUE ANNE PRESSLEY, WASHINGTON POST
-
- ROSWELL, N.M.--Something crashed out here nearly 50 years ago, out where the
- town gives way to the empty hills and the bright stars.
-
- Maybe it was "a flying saucer," as the Army first said. Or just a weather
- balloon, as the Army said the next day. Or a listening device for spying on the
- Soviets, as the federal government announced only last year. But there are
- old-timers here who will always look at the big, clear sky with the slightest
- shiver and wonder what really happened.
-
- Nobody knew it then, but on that evening in early July 1947, the fate, and the
- very identity, of this unassuming town was forever sealed. The theories about
- forces beyond our ken, the dark whispers of governmental cover-ups, the hopes
- of believers everywhere in alien journeys and visitors in silvery suits, have
- come together in this far-flung spot: Roswell, the UFO Town.
-
- "People didn't want to have fun with this for a long time," said Stan Crosby,
- 45, a lifelong resident who is organizing the town's second annual UFO festival
- for this summer. "This was a military town. People kept their mouths shut.
- There are still tender feelings about this. And some people felt like Roswell
- didn't need to be known as a kook city."
-
- Were it not for the mystery of 1947, Roswell, population 45,000, might have
- been nothing more glamorous than the cheese capital of southeastern New Mexico,
- a city of overachieving retirees in a rolling but not terribly picturesque
- landscape of artesian wells and dairy farms.
-
- But in the town square on Main Street sits the two-year-old International UFO
- Museum and Research Center, a flying saucer proudly launched from its roof.
- Within, volunteers such as Hugh Barker speak knowledgeably about aliens
- emerging from "the mother ship."
-
- "My interest is the interest of believers everywhere," said Barker, who retired
- here a dozen years ago from Chicago.
-
- Nearly 80,000 people a year, from all the states and 60 countries, come to
- Roswell and this museum, looking for something.
-
- There are differing degrees of belief in the UFO Town. Mayor Thomas Jennings
- tries to sell the area's agricultural strengths, but the official Roswell pin
- is still shaped like a flying saucer beaming down rays of otherworldly light.
-
- The tongue-in-cheek return address for the festival committee is Roswell, N.M.,
- USA, Earth, Milky Way Galaxy. Out beyond the town limits 25 miles, at Eden
- Valley Farm, owner Hub Corn directs guided tours of the cracked earth where the
- glittering wreckage was strewn, for $15 a person; last time Japanese visitors
- were here, they rented helicopters. The town's embarrassment has gradually
- turned into cheerful enterprise.
-
- This land has been part of a shadowy outpost of government activity situated
- among the talismans of the Atomic Age: Los Alamos, White Sands, the Trinity
- site. In the 1930s Robert Goddard did his early experiments with rocketry in
- Roswell; the 509th Bomb Group, still stationed at Roswell Air Field in 1947,
- was trained to deliver the Big One.
-
- With that kind of background, believers venture, the town would have been an
- obvious curiosity to any unearthly forces wanting to look things over.
-
- It was only about 10 years ago, with the first books claiming to rip the lid
- off the Roswell secret, that curious and long-withheld facts began to emerge.
- Then, as interest in the otherworldly began to steamroll, with television hits
- such as "X-Files," the stigma of believing in a world beyond began to dissolve.
- People in Roswell began to talk.
-
- The events of early July 1947 are preserved on the front pages of the Roswell
- Daily Record. First came this startling headline on July 8: "RAAF [Roswell Army
- Air Field] Captures Flying Saucer on Ranch in Roswell Region," with the
- information that a respected hardware store owner and his wife had watched from
- their front porch several evenings earlier as a glowing object zoomed through
- the skies and disappeared over the treetops.
-
- The Army offered few details, except to say that the disk was flown "to higher
- headquarters."
-
- But the next day, July 9, the newspaper reported a "never-mind" attitude from
- top brass at the airfield. Brig. Gen. Roger M. Ramey coolly announced,
- according to the article, that the "mysterious objects found on a lonely New
- Mexico ranch was a harmless, high-altitude weather balloon--not a grounded
- flying disk."
-
- In a separate story, rancher W. W. Brazel, then 46, on whose property the
- remnants were found, said he was sorry that he had ever mentioned the wreckage.
-
- "If I find anything else besides a bomb, they are going to have a hard time
- getting me to say anything about it," Brazel, now deceased, was reported as
- saying.
-
- The mystery and the madness of those first days are vivid memories to Walter
- Haut, then a young first lieutenant who worked as press officer at the
- airfield. Instructed by his superior, who was supposedly acting on orders from
- Washington, Haut wrote the initial press release reporting the flying saucer.
- But, curiously, he said, after the weather-balloon report c ame out, no one at
- the base ever mentioned the episode again. It was taboo.
-
- Haut, 74 and a founder of the nonprofit UFO museum, is not sure if he believes
- in alien craft--"although we are darn foolish if we think we are the only
- ones"--but he does believe that there was a government cover-up of something.
-
- "As time goes by, the story changes. More witnesses have come forward," Haut
- said. "The current theory is, as I see it, there were two craft, they had a
- midair collision. . . . If the government could prove it was a weather balloon
- or something else, we'd say, well, thank you. We want proof one way or the
- other."
-
- Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times, 1996.
-
- DAVIS, DOUGLAS, 'UFO Town' Finally Begins to Have Some Fun With Mystery Crash
- in 1947; New Mexico: Roswell plans second annual festival for this summer. But
- some still wonder what really fell to Earth on that long-ag.,
-
- Los Angeles Times, 02-25-1996, pp B-4.
-
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