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- UFO ENCOUNTERS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The most important date in the history of UFOs is June 24th 1947. It marks
- the beginning of the modern period of UFO observations. It is also the
- water shed between the old-fashioned treatment of UFOs as unconnected events
- and their much more scientific treatment as probably connected cases of the
- same phenomenon. Only since that date have books been written on the
- subject of UFOs, have organizations and magazines appeared which are devoted
- to them, and have the terms 'UFO' and 'flying saucer' become known to the
- public.
-
- What happened on June 24th 1947 was that an American named Kenneth Arnold
- saw a formation of nine strange objects flying through the air at a very
- high speed. This was not the first US UFO sighting of the post-1945 period,
- nor the first involving saucer-shaped craft, nor was it a particularly close
- or detailed sighting, and its only witness was Arnold, who had no camera
- with him. Yet despite all these factors it received a huge amount of
- publicity and has become celebrated as the beginning of an era.
-
- Kenneth Arnold was a successful businessman, aged 32 in 1947, who owned a
- company which supplied fire control equipment, based in Boise, Idaho. He
- held a pilot's license and was an experienced flier. On the afternoon of
- June 24th he was flying his own small, single-engined Callair aircraft
- across the Cascade Mountains from Chehalis to Yakima in Washington State, in
- the north-western corner of the USA. His nominal flight distance was under
- 120 miles, but all pilot's overflying the area had been asked to look out
- for signs of a large troop-carrying transport aircraft which had disappeared
- - believed crashed - in the vicinity of Mount Ranier. That mountain, rising
- to 14,410 feet, was close to Arnold's due-east route, and he diverted to
- search for wreckage.
-
- A sudden flash of reflected light made Arnold look round. He saw nine
- unidentified craft flying towards Mount Ranier from the north. Although
- they were some twenty or so miles away from him it was a clear day and he
- was able to get a good view of them. One was crescent-shaped with what
- appeared to be a central dome, while the other eight - flying behind in a
- diagonal formation, like a skein of geese - were flat and shaped like pie
- dishes.
-
- None has tails like conventional aircraft. They were very shiny, and they
- moved in rather a peculiar jumping manner, 'like a saucer would if you
- skipped it across water', to use Arnold's own description. They were flying
- at roughly the same height as Arnold's aircraft, 10,000 feet but were
- keeping close to the mountain peak's, swerving in and out between them. The
- most surprising thing about these craft, though, was their high speed.
- Arnold timed them between Mount Ranier and Mount Adams (to the south-east),
- and based on this their speed was later calculated at over 1600 mph.
-
- It is tempting to suggest that Arnold was mistaken or made it all up. After
- all, he was on his own, the objects were a long way from him, and doubts
- have been expressed as to whether the human eye can follow objects
- travelling at such a high speed. Yet Arnold was a man of honesty and good
- repute. He could not have expected to gain anything by fabricating such a
- story. (In fact he did gain financially, but he was the first UFO observer
- to do so and no such gain could have been predicted.) Also, he was used to
- flying across the mountains of Washington State and knew his route well.
-
- Arnold described his experiences to newspaper reporters, and the story
- became headline news across the USA. The flying objects were quickly dubbed
- 'flying saucers' from their peculiar motion through the air (rather than
- from their shape) and they captured the public imagination immediately.
- Because of their odd shape and high speed (two and a half times greater then
- any man made aircraft of that time) the flying saucers were at once assumed
- to be extraterrestrial in origin. The enormous publicity surrounding the
- Arnold case brought revelations of similar sightings elsewhere in the USA
- over the previous month or two, while new reports came in growing numbers,
- almost daily.
-
-
- SAUCERS ON THE BRAIN
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Although there was much public disbelief and ridicule there was also a sense
- of excitement. Undoubtedly many people wanted to see flying saucers, often
- so badly that they seized on any slightly unusual aerial phenomena and
- called it a flying saucer. Others allowed their imaginations to supply the
- phenomena, while some perpetrated deliberate hoaxes, and it became very
- difficult to ascertain the validity of trustworthiness of any particular
- report. A new wave of sightings had been sparked off by the initial
- reaction to the Arnold case. During 1947 there were 853 reported sightings
- (Report on the UFO Wave of 1947 by Ted Bloecher, 1967), of which some
- occurred before, but none were reported to the press untilafter, June 24th.
- Many of the witnesses claimed to have seen flying saucers identical with
- those observed by Arnold.
-
-
- CONTINUED SIGHTINGS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The most unusual thing about this 1947 wave of saucer sightings is that it
- is still continuing: it did not fade out after a few months like all
- previous waves but is still with us to this day, gaining a few hundred new
- sightings each year.
-
- But what of Kenneth Arnold? He was embarrassed by the notoriety which
- surrounded, neither altering nor embellishing, and was unwilling to offer
- any explanation of his sighting. In 1950 he published privately a small
- pamphlet about his experience near Mount Ranier, and in 1952 he collaborated
- with Ray Palmer (editor of Fate and Flying Saucers magazines, an early
- enthusiast of UFOs) to produce a book on the subject, The Coming of the
- Saucers. Interestingly, Arnold has claimed to have seen several other UFOs
- since 1947, and in 1962 (in an issue of Flying Saucers magazine) he asserted
- that flying saucers are neither flying vehicles nor extraterrestrial in
- origin but 'are groups and masses of living organisms that are as much a
- part of our atmosphere and space as life we find in the depths of our
- oceans. . . they have the natural ability to change their densities at
- will.'
-
- It is worth looking at some of the other 1947 UFO sightings. For example,
- on June 21st, three days before Arnold's eventful flight, a group of
- doughnut-shaped UFOs was seen just off the coast of Washington State. Four
- people in a boat made the sighting, of whom one, Harold Dahi, took photos of
- the UFOs. Apparently one of these craft dropped some pieces of metal
- overboard before flying off. The USAF investigated this and, although a
- statement was made by them to the effect that it had been a hoax, this case
- has some unexplained aspects. Elsewhere in the USA quite a few responsible
- people, whose evidence could not be ignored, were also seeing strange things
- in the sky. Three policemen in Portland, Oregon, saw flying discs. A USAF
- pilot saw a formation of five or six aerial discs as he was flying over
- Nevada (this was on 28th June). Other Air Force and civilian pilots had
- similar experiences. Strangely, there was a UFO wave in Hungary that same
- month, with about fifty reports of silvery balls seen in the sky by
- daylight.
-
- Such big news did flying saucers become that sightings could not be ignored
- by the US government. Towards the end of 1947 steps were taken to set up an
- official US Air Force department which would investigate and try to identify
- every UFO report. This was inaugurated in January 1948 as Project Sign.
-
-
- PLANES GIVE CHASE
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- That some month a very dramatic UFO case occurred in the state of Kentucky.
- Many witnesses on the ground, including officers at Godman Air Force Base,
- saw a very large object in the sky. (The time was early afternoon.)
- Descriptions varied considerably - it may have been conical, globular or
- discshaped, and silver, white or red-and-white in colour. Three P-51
- Mustang fighter aircraft gave chase. These were single-seaters, carrying no
- oxygen equipment. The senior pilot, Captain Thomas Mansell, disregarded
- safety regulations and climbed to 20,000 feet in pursuit. The other two
- Mustangs turned back at 15,000 feet. Shortly afterwards radio connect with
- Mansell was lost. The wreckage of his aircraft was found later, a few miles
- away.
-
- Those are the facts, but much speculation surrounds the case. The official
- version is that Mansell was chasing a Skyhook weather balloon (which was
- then still on the classified list) and that he blacked out through lack of
- oxygen.
- Yet Mansell was a very experienced pilot, and the official explanation
- satisfied neither the public nor the media. It must go down in the records
- as 'not proven' and as the first instance of a UFO leading a man to his
- death. It was almost as spectacular and controversial an incident as the
- Kenneth Arnold case, and it helped to increase public awareness to the
- existence of UFOs.
-
- Within nine months of its foundation the personnel of Project Sign had
- prepared a report concluding that UFOs were, possibly, visiting
- extraterrestrial spacecraft. This report was not accepted by the Air force
- Chief of Staff, and the investigation was reconstituted on different lines
- in february 1949 as Project Grudge, which seemed to have been given the task
- of debunking any suggestion of extraterrestrial involvement. Later on
- (1952) Grudge became the better known Project Blue Book.
-
- From March 1949 the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), too, had
- interested itself in UFO sightings. Without doubt this measure was taken
- because UFOs were considered to be a possible or potential threat to the
- security of the USA. The fact that the USAF and the CIA continue to
- investigate UFO reports shows that the threat still exists.
-
-
- THE ROSWELL SAUCER
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- All post-1945 UfO sightings in the USA have been investigated by one or more
- US government agencies. Even before specifically named projects or officers
- were set up for this purpose, both the US Air Force and the Central
- Intelligence Agency looked into UFO cases to see if there was any
- extraterrestrial involvement. Where the reports of these agencies have been
- made public (as in the case of the US Air Force's Project Sign, Project
- Grudge and Project Blue Book) all UFO sightings have been explained away as
- natural phenomena, ordinary aircraft, mistakes or hoaxes, or (in a small
- percentage of cases) they have been listed as 'unidentified'. In other
- words, no US government agency has ever admitted officially that any
- specific UFO was an extraterrestrial spacecraft.
-
- Does this mean that none of the thousands of UFOs seen over the USA since
- mid-1947 have been extraterrestrial spacecraft? No, all it means is that the
- US authorities have been unwilling to admit to their existence. In fact
- there is a considerable weight of evidence which suggests that the US
- authorities not only know of the existence of extraterrestrial spacecraft,
- but that at least one such craft has been found, complete with its non-human
- occupants, and kept hidden behind a tight security screen for over 35 years.
-
- Early in 1950 stories appeared in some US newspapers to the effect that the
- US Air Force had possession of the wreckage of a flying saucer and the
- bodies if its tiny crew members. Later that year a more detailed version of
- the story appeared in the book Behind the Flying Saucer by Frank Scully, a
- US journalist. This claimed that three flying saucers had been found
- crashed in Arizona or New Mexico, together with bodies of 34 alien crew
- members, sometime during the later 1940s. The US Air Force was said to have
- removed all physical evidence to a secret location, threatening civilian and
- service witnesses with dire consequences if they divulged any details.
- Despite this alleged conspiracy of silence, Scully's book contains a
- description of the aliens. They were supposed to be small humanoids about a
- metre tall and to have come from Venus. Their saucers contained many
- mechanisms and materials which could not be identified by the Air Force
- scientists, though it was believed that the aliens drank heavy water and ate
- small wafers which swelled up in water.
-
-
- AIR FORCE DENIALS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Behind the Flying Saucers caused a great furore, even though it was
- categorically denied by the US Air Force. About two years after the book's
- publication it was condemned as a hoax and Scully was discredited. It seems
- to have been true that two of Scully's major informants were confidence
- tricksters and that some of the details in the book were exaggerated or
- entirely made up. Even so, the central idea of a saucer crash in
- south-western USA with all details hushed up by the authorities almost
- certainly has some factual basis. In the first place, there have been many
- independent rumours of this event, provided by retired Air Force personnel
- or their families. Secondly, it is alleged that Captain Edward Ruppelt,
- soon after he retired as chief of the USAF's Project Blue Book in 1953, met
- FrankScully and told him that Behind the Flying Saucers had caused problems
- for Project Blue Book because it was close to the truth. Thirdly, a new
- investigation into the subject in 1979 by Charles Berlitz and William Moore
- produced a great deal of new evidence for the existence of a conspiracy and
- made clear the probable outline of events, though without, it must be
- admitted, obtaining any direct physical evidence. Their book is The Roswell
- Incident, 1980.
-
- On the evening of July 2nd 1947 a flying saucer was seen to travel over the
- small town of Roswell, New Mexico. Near the town it passed through a
- thunderstorm and was struck by lightning, suffering severe damage and losing
- a lot of material. This debris fell to earth on the Brazel sheep ranch,
- about half-way between Roswell and Corona, and it was found by ranch's owner
- next morning. It was all in fragments, some pieces of sheet and some pieces
- of strut or beam, but all of it very light in weight and extremely strong.
- Despite having the appearance of tinfoil, these pieces could not be dent or
- dented, even with a heavy hammer. It was a material unknown on our planet.
-
- Personnel from Roswell Army Air Base collected it all up and took it away.
- Several days later, on July 8th, the base's public information officer put
- out a statement that a 'flying disc' had been found and taken to the base.
- But higher levels of command quickly denied this. The debris was flown to
- Fort Worth in Texas, where it was declared (at a press conference) to be
- just a weather balloon. All relevant witnesses contacted by Berlitz and
- Moore agreed that this was a cover-up story.
-
- The damaged flying saucer had struggled on for about 125 miles after the
- lightning strike before crashing on the deserted plains of San Agustin, not
- far from the town of Socorro, New Mexico. This wreckage, easily
- identifiable as a large metallic disc about nine or ten metres in diameter
- and with non-human bodies (all dead) visible inside and nearby, was found
- the next morning, July 3rd. One witness was a civil engineer who lived
- locally; others were members of an archaeological expedition from the
- University of Pennsylvania. They barely had time to look at the wrackage
- before Air Force officers arrived, telling them to leave at once and say
- nothing.
-
-
- AUTOPSIES ON ETs
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The saucer and its alien occupants (about 30 of them) were transported by
- truck the several hundred miles to Edwards Air Force Base in California,
- which was the nearest secure site with adequate facilities for scientific
- investigation of the saucer and the performance of autopsies on the crew.
- By putting together details supplied by several informants, Berlitz and
- Moore managed to conclude that the aliens were approximately one metre in
- height, humanoid though with a larger head in proportion to body size than
- we have, having no external ears or nose, no hair on their heads or bodies,
- extremely thin limbs, hands with four fingers but no thumbs, and greyish
- skin.
-
- At various times during the late 1940s and early 1950s it was expected by
- Air Force officers privy to the secret that the existence of the saucer and
- aliens was about to be made public. It is suggested that President
- Eisenhower secretly visited Edwards Air Force Base in February 1954 to view
- the remains.
-
- Assuming that all the verbal evidence is reliable, the conclusions to be
- drawn from this are that Scully's book was at least partly true (his 'three
- saucers crashed in Arizona or New Mexico' could refer to the debris and
- crash sites in New Mexico and to the fact that the saucer was transported
- across Arizona by truck en route to Edwards Air Force Base) and that the
- whole affair is still subject to an official conspiracy of silence by the US
- authorities.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- UFO Encounters was taken from:
- SPACE VOYAGER NO.8 April/May 1984, written by Chris Morgan.
- Inputted by Hyperdyne c/o X.A.C.T. 05/07/9.T.3., for the electronic
- frontier.
-
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