Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Who is Lieutenant Walter Haut?

Lieutenant Walter Haut served at the public information officer for the 509th Bomb Group based at Roswell Army Air Base in Roswell, New Mexico in 1947. Early on July 8, 1947, Base Commander Colonel William Blanchard ordered Haut to draft a press release to the public, announcing that the United States Army Air Forces had recovered a "flying disk" at a nearby ranch.


Haut had served as a bombardier on thirty-five missions over Japan during World War Two. During Operation Crossroads over the Bikini Atoll during the summer of 1946, Haut was responsible for dropping instrument packages during A-bomb testing.

Haut has been quoted saying that there is "no chance" that senior officers who handled recovered material during the Roswell incident mistook debris from a flying saucer as a weather balloon.

The mystery continues.




Monday, September 9, 2013

Did President Eisenhower Really Meet With People From Another World?


One of the first conclusions an impartial observer must make about the subject of UFOs is that rumors and circumstance play far too great a role in what ought to be a more exacting quest for knowledge. It is just such an observation which once led Dr. Carl Sagan to comment dryly that UFOs "are more a matter for religion and superstition than they are for science."

While this dismissal is perhaps unscientific in its own right, the point is well taken. Attend any gathering of "UFO people" you want, and simply listen. Rumors abound. Perhaps worse, however, is that some of these rumors manage to circulate for years (even decades) without anyone making a reasonable effort to get to the bottom of them.

One of the most persistent of these is a story that President Eisenhower visited Edwards Air Force Base in early 1954, and either viewed the bodies of dead aliens and the wreckage of their craft, or met with live aliens on some sort of diplomatic mission to earth.

The story takes many forms, with the common thread being that Ike mysteriously disappeared one evening while on a vacation to Palm Springs, and that he was spirited to Edwards to view (or meet) aliens. It is said that he returned by dawn and shortly thereafter ordered absolute secrecy about anything having to do with UFOs.

No doubt one of the reasons that this particular rumor has continued to circulate for such a long time is that there are a number of verifiable facts associated with it--some of them rather curious.

For example, President Eisenhower did indeed make a trip to Palm Springs between February 17th and 24th, 1954, and on the evening of Saturday, February 20th, he did disappear! When members of the press learned that the president was not where he should be, rumors ran rampant that he had either died or was seriously ill.

The story even managed to get onto a press wire before being killed moments later. To quell the fuss, White House Press Secretary James Haggerty called an urgent late evening press conference to announce "solemnly" that the president had been enjoying fried chicken earlier that evening, had knocked a cap off a tooth, and had been taken to a local dentist for treatment.

 

When Ike turned up as scheduled the next morning for an early church service, the matter seemed ended. Although the Palm Springs trip was billed as a "vacation for the president", the trip appears to have come up rather suddenly.

In addition, it is a matter of record that Ike had returned from a quail shooting vacation in Georgia less than a week before leaving for Palm Springs.

While the incidence of a local dentist being called upon to treat a president of the United States is unusual enough that it should constitute a rather memorable event for those involved, the dentist's widow, in a June, 1979 interview, was curiously unable to recall any specifics relating to her husband's alleged involvement in the affair--not even the time of day it had occurred. Yet her memory appeared flawless when asked to relate details of her and her husband's attendance (by presidential invitation) at a steak fry the following evening, where her husband was introduced as "the dentist who had treated the president".

This would appear to suggest a cover story, the details of which would have easily been repeated at the time, but quite naturally forgotten 25 years later. Research at the Eisenhower Library has uncovered two other facts inconsistent with the dentist story.

The first is that while the library maintains an extensive index of records relating to the president's health, there is no record of any dental work having been performed at all during February, 1954. A file on "Dentists" contains nothing concerning any such incident either. Secondly, there is a large file containing copies of all sorts of acknowledgments which were sent by the White House to people who had something to do with the Palm Springs trip.

There are letters, for example, to people who sent flowers, people who met the airplane, people who had offered to play golf, etc. There is even a thank you letter to the minister who presided over the Sunday service Ike attended. Yet there is no record of any acknowledgment having been sent to "the dentist who treated the president."

If the matter were as routine as Haggerty attempts to make it appear, then the absence of these records seems strangely inconsistent. The rumor of the president's alleged visit to Edwards is not a new one. UFO contactee fringe writers began making unsupported claims about it less than two months after Ike's trip.

So did a bizarre fellow from the Hollywood hills named Gerald Light, who, in an April 16, 1954 letter to the head of a Southern California metaphysical organization, actually claimed to have been at Edwards where he saw Ike, the saucers and the aliens. Light's letter has been controversial for years and copies of it have turned up in all sorts of places, including the National Enquirer.

 

Investigation into Mr. Light's background, however, turned up the fact that he was an elderly mystic who believed that psychic "out-of-body-experiences" were a logical extension of the reality of life and should be treated as such. In the final analysis, Light's alleged visit to Edwards was just such an experience.

And so the story ends. Clearly something unusual occurred involving the president on the evening of February 20, 1954. Whether it was a trip to the dentist, a trip to see flying saucers, or something altogether different and unrelated, no one can say. It's the stuff rumors are made of.

Monday, August 26, 2013

Majestic 12

One of the most controversial topics surrounding the story of the alleged Roswell flying saucer recover is the formation of a study group known as Majestic 12. This study group was allegedly formed by President Harry Truman in September, 1947.
 
File:Majic6.jpg

It is worth noting that the FBI maintains to this day that stories surrounding Majestic 12 are nothing more than a hoax. It is also worth noting that the National Archives does posses one Majestic 12 document, suggesting only that the group did exist. However, the FBI went on to declare that reports of Majestic twelve were "completely bogus".

Again allegedly, incoming President Dwight Eisenhower received extensive briefings about the 1947 recovery of a flying saucer in Roswell in November, 1952 from Walter Bedell Smith and Generals Nathan Twining and Hoyt Vandenburg. There is confirmation that these briefings did take place. But, the content of those briefings is still classified.


Project Blue Book director Captain Edward Ruppelt did make oblique references to the work of Majestic 12 in his 1956 book, The Report On Unidentified Flying Objects. Air Force Colonel Edward Strieber, who spent most of his career working at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, is said to have also confirmed the existence of the Majestic 12 effort.

Majestic 12 remains a controversial topic amongst Ufologists and skeptics alike.



Sunday, August 18, 2013

Air Force Leadership Reverses Field At Roswell

The now-famous Roswell Incident occurred sometime in early July, 1947. Shortly after Captain Jesse Marcel and others visited a debris field reported by rancher Mac Brazel, USAAF Colonel Willam Blanchard issued a press release claiming that personnel from the Roswell Army Air Field actually "captured" a flying saucer. After the spike in "flying saucer" sightings following the Kenneth Arnold sighting of late June, 1947, this set the entire nation buzzing about what had been recovered. It was only a matter of hours before the story changed, sparking nearly seventy years of debate. More to come.
 File:RoswellDailyRecordJuly8,1947.jpg





Thursday, August 15, 2013

What Happened At Roswell In 1947?

We will eventually blog extensively about what have really happened at Roswell, Mexico in July 1947. Some say that a real flying saucer or saucers controlled by extraterrestrials were discovered by rancher Mac Brazel and recovered by personnel from Roswell Army Air Field and flown to Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio.

The current government explanation claims that the debris found by Brazel was from a top-secret Project Mogul spy balloon. The government's explanation certainly makes sense.

But a 1950 document authored by FBI investigator Guy Hottel has recently been released by the government that brings the "extraterrestrial theory" back in to play. Take a look.




As promised, we plan to post extensively on the alleged Roswell crash. This tidbit serves as food for though on further discussion.


Sunday, August 11, 2013

Dr. J. Allen Hynek

Dr. Josef Allen Hynek (May 1, 1910 – April 27, 1986) was a United States astronomer, professor, and ufologist. He is perhaps best remembered for his UFO research. Hynek acted as scientific adviser to UFO studies undertaken by the U.S. Air Force under three consecutive names:

1.Project Sign (1947–1949),

2.Project Grudge (1949–1952), and

3.Project Blue Book (1952 to 1969).

For decades afterwards, he conducted his own independent UFO research, developing the Close Encounter classification system, and is widely considered the father of the concept of scientific analysis of both reports and, especially, trace evidence purportedly left by UFOs.
 

Early life and career

Hynek was born in Chicago to Czech parents. In 1931, Hynek received a B.S. from the University of Chicago. In 1935, he completed his Ph.D. in astrophysics at Yerkes Observatory. He joined the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Ohio State University in 1936. He specialized in the study of stellar evolution and in the identification of spectroscopic binaries.

During World War II, Hynek was a civilian scientist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, where he helped to develop the United States Navy's radio proximity fuze.

After the war, Hynek returned to the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Ohio State, rising to full professor in 1950.

In 1956, he left to join Professor Fred Whipple, the Harvard astronomer, at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, which had combined with the Harvard Observatory at Harvard. Hynek had the assignment of directing the tracking of an American space satellite, a project for the International Geophysical Year in 1956 and thereafter. In addition to over 200 teams of amateur scientists around the world that were part of Operation Moonwatch, there were also 12 photographic Baker-Nunn stations. A special camera was devised for the task and a prototype was built and tested and then stripped apart again when, on Oct. 4, 1957, the Soviet Union launched its first satellite, Sputnik.

After completing his work on the satellite program, Hynek went back to teaching, taking the position of professor and chairman of the astronomy department at Northwestern University in 1960.

Hynek's son Joel Hynek is an Oscar winning movie visual effects supervisor who directed the design of the so-called camouflage effect from the movie Predator.
 

Early Involvement in UFOs

In response to many "flying saucer" sightings (later unidentified flying objects), the United States Air Force established Project Sign in 1948; this later became Project Grudge, which in turn became Project Blue Book in 1952. Hynek was contacted by Project Sign to act as scientific consultant for their investigation of UFO reports. Hynek would study a UFO report and subsequently decide if its description of the UFO suggested a known astronomical object.

When Project Sign hired Hynek, he was initially skeptical of UFO reports. Hynek suspected that UFO reports were made by unreliable witnesses, or by persons who had misidentified man-made or natural objects. In 1948, Hynek said that "the whole subject seems utterly ridiculous," and described it as a fad that would soon pass.

For the first few years of his UFO studies, Hynek could safely be described as a debunker. He thought that a great many UFOs could be explained as prosaic phenomena misidentified by an observer. But beyond such fairly obvious cases, Hynek often stretched logic to nearly the breaking point in an attempt to explain away as many UFO reports as possible. In his 1977 book, Hynek admitted that he enjoyed his role as a debunker for the Air Force. He also noted that debunking was what the Air Force expected of him.

Change of opinion

Hynek's opinions about UFOs began a slow and gradual shift. After examining hundreds of UFO reports over the decades (including some made by credible witnesses, including astronomers, pilots, police officers, and military personnel), Hynek concluded that some reports represented genuine empirical observations.
 

Another shift in Hynek's opinions came after conducting an informal poll of his astronomer colleagues in the early 1950s. Among those he queried was Dr. Clyde Tombaugh, who discovered the dwarf planet Pluto. Of 44 astronomers, five (over 11 percent) had seen aerial objects that they could not account for with established, mainstream science[citation needed]. Most of these astronomers had not widely shared their accounts for fear of ridicule or of damage to their reputations or careers (Tombaugh was an exception, having openly discussed his own UFO sightings. Hynek also noted that this 11% figure was, according to most polls, greater than those in the general public who claimed to have seen UFOs. Furthermore, the astronomers were presumably more knowledgeable about observing and evaluating the skies than the general public, so their observations were arguably more impressive. Hynek was also distressed by what he regarded as the dismissive or arrogant attitude of many mainstream scientists towards UFO reports and witnesses.

Early evidence of the shift in Hynek's opinions appeared in 1953, when Hynek wrote an article for the April 1953 issue of the Journal of the Optical Society of America titled "Unusual Aerial Phenomena," which contained what would become perhaps Hynek's best known statement:

"Ridicule is not part of the scientific method, and people should not be taught that it is. The steady flow of reports, often made in concert by reliable observers, raises questions of scientific obligation and responsibility. Is there ... any residue that is worthy of scientific attention? Or, if there isn't, does not an obligation exist to say so to the public—not in words of open ridicule but seriously, to keep faith with the trust the public places in science and scientists?"

The essay was very carefully worded: Hynek never states that UFOs are an extraordinary phenomenon. But it is clear that, whatever his own views, Hynek was increasingly distressed by what he saw as the superficial manner most scientists looked at UFOs. In 1953, Hynek was an associate member of the Robertson Panel, which concluded that there was nothing anomalous about UFOs, and that a public relations campaign should be undertaken to debunk the subject and reduce public interest. Hynek would later come to lament that the Robertson Panel had helped make UFOs a disreputable field of study.

When the UFO reports continued at a steady pace, Hynek devoted some time to studying the reports and determined that some were deeply puzzling, even after considerable study. He once said, "As a scientist I must be mindful of the lessons of the past; all too often it has happened that matters of great value to science were overlooked because the new phenomenon did not fit the accepted scientific outlook of the time."

In a 1985 interview, when asked what caused his change of opinion, Hynek responded, "Two things, really. One was the completely negative and unyielding attitude of the Air Force. They wouldn't give UFOs the chance of existing, even if they were flying up and down the street in broad daylight. Everything had to have an explanation. I began to resent that, even though I basically felt the same way, because I still thought they weren't going about it in the right way. You can't assume that everything is black no matter what. Secondly, the caliber of the witnesses began to trouble me. Quite a few instances were reported by military pilots, for example, and I knew them to be fairly well-trained, so this is when I first began to think that, well, maybe there was something to all this."
 

Regardless of his own private views, Hynek was, by and large, still echoing the post-Ruppelt line of Project Blue Book: There are no UFOs, and reports can largely be explained as misidentifications.

Hynek remained with Project Sign after it became Project Grudge (though with far less involvement than with Project Sign). Project Grudge was replaced with Project Blue Book in early 1952. Hynek continued as scientific consultant to Project Blue Book. Air Force Captain Edward J. Ruppelt (Blue Book's first director), held Hynek in high regard: "Dr. Hynek was one of the most impressive scientists I met while working on the UFO project, and I met a good many. He didn't do two things that some of them did: give you the answer before he knew the question; or immediately begin to expound on his accomplishments in the field of science."

Though Hynek thought Ruppelt was a capable director who steered Project Blue Book in the right direction, Ruppelt headed Blue Book for only a few years. Hynek has also stated his opinion that after Ruppelt's departure, Project Blue Book was little more than a public relations exercise, further noting that little or no research was undertaken using the scientific method.

Turnaround

Hynek began occasionally disagreeing publicly with the conclusions of Blue Book. By the early 1960s—after about a decade and a half of study—Clark writes that "Hynek's apparent turnaround on the UFO question was an open secret." Only after Blue Book was formally dissolved did Hynek speak more openly about his "turnaround."

By his own admission, the soft-spoken Hynek was cautious and conservative by nature. He speculated that his personality was a factor in the Air Force keeping him on as a consultant for over two decades.

Some other ufologists thought that Hynek was being disingenuous or even duplicitous in his turnaround. Physicist Dr. James E. McDonald, for example, wrote to Hynek in 1970, castigating him for what McDonald saw as his lapses, and suggesting that, when evaluated by later generations, retired Marine Corps Major Donald E. Keyhoe would be regarded as a more objective, honest, and scientific ufologist.

It was during the late stages of Blue Book in the 1960s that Hynek began speaking openly about his disagreements and disappointments with the Air Force. Among the cases where he openly dissented with the Air Force were the highly publicized Portage County UFO chase (where several police officers chased a UFO for half an hour), and the encounter of Lonnie Zamora. A police officer, Zamora reported an encounter with a metallic, egg-shaped aircraft near Socorro, New Mexico.

In late March 1966, in Michigan, two days of mass UFO sightings were reported, and received significant publicity. After studying the reports, Hynek offered a provisional hypothesis for some of the sightings: a few of about 100 witnesses had mistaken swamp gas for something more spectacular. At the press conference where he made his announcement, Hynek repeatedly and strenuously made the qualification that swamp gas was a plausible explanation for only a portion of the Michigan UFO reports, and certainly not for UFO reports in general. But much to his chagrin, Hynek's qualifications were largely overlooked, and the words "swamp gas" were repeated ad infinitum in relation to UFO reports. The explanation was subject to national derision.

Center for UFO Studies

Hynek was the founder and head of the Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS). Founded in 1973 (originally in Evanston, Illinois but now based in Chicago), CUFOS is an organization stressing scientific analysis of UFO cases. CUFOS's extensive archives include valuable files from civilian research groups such as NICAP, one of the most popular and credible UFO research groups of the 1950s and 1960s.

Speech before the United Nations

In November 1978, a statement on UFOs was presented by Dr. Allen Hynek, in the name of himself, of Dr. Jacques Vallée, and of Dr. Claude Poher. This speech was prepared and approved by the three authors, before the United Nations General Assembly. The objective was to initiate a centralized United Nations UFO authority.
 

UFO origin hypotheses

In 1973, at the MUFON annual symposium, held in Akron, Ohio, Hynek began to express his doubts regarding the extraterrestrial (formerly "interplanetary" or "intergalactic") hypothesis. His main point led him to the title of his speech: "The Embarrassment of the Riches." He was aware that the quantity of

UFO sightings was much higher than the Project Blue Book statistics. Just this puzzled him. "A few good sightings a year, over the world, would bolster the extraterrestrial hypothesis—but many thousands every year? From remote regions of space? And to what purpose? To scare us by stopping cars, and disturbing animals, and puzzling us with their seemingly pointless antics?"

In 1975, in a paper presented to the Joint Symposium of the American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics in Los Angeles, he wrote, "If you object, I ask you to explain – quantitatively, not qualitatively – the reported phenomena of materialization and dematerialization, of shape changes, of the noiseless hovering in the Earth's gravitational field, accelerations that – for an appreciable mass – require energy sources far beyond present capabilities – even theoretical capabilities, the well-known and often reported E-M (sc. electro-magnetic interference) effect, the psychic effects on percipients, including purported telepathic communications."

In 1977, at the First International UFO Congress in Chicago, Hynek presented his thoughts in his speech "What I really believe about UFOs." "I do believe," he said, "that the UFO phenomenon as a whole is real, but I do not mean necessarily that it's just one thing. We must ask whether the diversity of observed UFOs . . . all spring from the same basic source, as do weather phenomena, which all originate in the atmosphere", or whether they differ "as a rain shower differs from a meteor, which in turn differs from a cosmic-ray shower." We must not ask, Hynek said, what hypothesis can explain the most facts, but we must ask, which hypothesis can explain the most puzzling facts.

"There is sufficient evidence to defend both the ETI and the EDI hypothesis," Hynek continued. As evidence for the ETI (extraterrestrial intelligence) he mentioned, as examples, the radar cases as good evidence of something solid, and the physical-trace cases. Then he turned to defending the EDI (extradimensional intelligence) hypothesis. Besides the aspect of materialization and dematerialization he cited the "poltergeist" phenomenon experienced by some people after a close encounter; the photographs of UFOs, sometimes on only one frame, not seen by the witnesses; the changing form right before the witnesses' eyes; the puzzling question of telepathic communication; or that in close encounters of the third kind the creatures seem to be at home in earth's gravity and atmosphere; the sudden stillness in the presence of the craft; levitation of cars or persons; the development by some of psychic abilities after an encounter. "Do we have two aspects of one phenomenon or two different sets of phenomena?" Hynek asked.

Finally he introduced a third hypothesis. "I hold it entirely possible," he said, "that a technology exists, which encompasses both the physical and the psychic, the material and the mental. There are stars that are millions of years older than the sun. There may be a civilization that is millions of years more advanced than man's. We have gone from Kitty Hawk to the moon in some seventy years, but it's possible that a million-year-old civilization may know something that we don't ... I hypothesize an 'M&M' technology encompassing the mental and material realms. The psychic realms, so mysterious to us today, may be an ordinary part of an advanced technology."

In Hynek and Vallee's 1975 book The Edge of Reality, Hynek publishes a stereoscopic photograph of a UFO he took during a flight. According to the book the object stayed in sight long enough for Hynek to unpack his camera from his luggage and take two exposures. UFO researcher Robert Sheaffer writes in his book Psychic Vibrations that Hynek seemed to forget that he had photographed and published these two photographs as he told a reporter for the Toronto Globe and Mail that he had never seen a UFO. The article quotes Hynek saying that in all the years he has been looking upward "He has never seen 'what I would so dearly love to see. Oh, the subject has been so ridiculed that I would never report a UFO even if I did see one - not without a witness'".
 
 

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Flying Saucer Movies of the 1950s

There was huge public interest in all-things-flying-saucer since Kenneth Arnold first saw mysterious objects in the skies near Mt. Ranier in 1947. Hollywood soon decided to capitalize on the "flying saucer frenzy". One  movie portrayed the saucers as a product of some Earth-bound project. A handful of these films portrayed these visitors as beings who wished something better for Earth. Perhaps resulting from the 1948 Mantell incident or because of the experience of human explorers, many films also portrayed these mysterious visitors as hostile.

Let's look at some of the many classics:

1950
 
1951
 
 
1952
 

 
1953
 
File:Film poster The War of the Worlds 1953.jpg
 
 
1953
 

 
 
1953
 

1954
 

 
1954
 
 
 
1954
 
 
1955


 
 
 
1956
 

 
1956
 

 
 
1957
 
 
1957
 
 
 
1957
 
 
 
1958
 

 
1958
 


 
 
1959
 
 
1959
 

 
 
1959
 
 
 
This is just a small sampling of Hollywood's saucer offerings. We suggest you check them all out. 


Monday, August 5, 2013

Edward R. Murrow, "Case Of The Flying Saucer"

The renowned journalist Edward R. Murrow hosted this great radio broadcast on April 7, 1950. Type this link into your browser. Give it a listen. It's great, vintage stuff from a far more innocent time. Again, sit back, don't relax, but enjoy!

 
 
 
 


Sunday, August 4, 2013

UFOs: Friend, Foe or Fantasy

Watch this great UFO documentary produced by CBS news in 1966. It was hosted by "the most trusted man in America", Walter Cronkite. Type this link in to your browser. Then sit back, don't relax, but enjoy!

 
 
 

What Is A "Sun Dog"?

Many scientists explain UFO sightings as what are commonly referred to as "sun dogs". So, exactly what are those sun dogs? Let's take a look.

A sun dog or sundog, scientific name parhelion (plural parhelia) from Greek παρήλιον (parēlion), meaning "beside the sun"; from παρά (para), meaning "beside", and ἥλιος (helios), meaning "sun", also called a mock sun or a phantom sun, is an atmospheric phenomenon that creates bright spots of light in the sky, often on a luminous ring or halo on either side of the sun.

Sundogs may appear as a colored patch of light to the left or right of the sun, 22° distant and at the same distance above the horizon as the sun, and in ice halos. They can be seen anywhere in the world during any season, but they are not always obvious or bright. Sundogs are best seen and are most conspicuous when the sun is low.

Sundogs are commonly made by the refraction of light from plate-shaped hexagonal ice crystals in high and cold cirrus clouds or, during very cold weather, these ice crystals are called diamond dust, and drift in the air at low levels. These crystals act as prisms, bending the light rays passing through them with a minimum deflection of 22°. If the crystals are randomly oriented, a complete ring around the sun is seen — a halo. But often, as the crystals sink through the air, they become vertically aligned, so sunlight is refracted horizontally — in this case, sundogs are seen.

As the sun rises higher, the rays passing through the crystals are increasingly skewed from the horizontal plane. Their angle of deviation increases, and the sundogs move further from the sun. However, they always stay at the same elevation as the sun.
Sundogs are red-colored at the side nearest the sun. Farther out the colors grade through oranges to blue. However, the colors overlap considerably and so are muted, never pure or saturated. The colors of the sundog finally merge into the white of the parhelic circle (if the latter is visible).

Does this explain some of the UFO sightings? Perhaps. But does it explain them all?



Did Walter Cronkite Have A UFO Encounter

Walter Cronkite was known as "the most trusted man in America" during the heyday of national network news in the 1960s and 70s. Cronkite traveled to Viet Nam in early 1968 to view the aftermath of the surprise Viet Cong attack on several key cities in what was then called South Viet Nam,  known as the Tet Offensive. Cronkite gave his "We Are Mired In A Stalemate" broadcast on February 27th, 1968. Many historians believe that was a major turning point in the American public's support for the war.

 
So, when someone says that Walter Cronkite claimed to have an encounter with a UFO, it is certainly something to consider. UFologist Bill Knell claims that Cronkite told him about the encounter prior to an interview of Knell for a 1973 CBS special on UFO's.
 
What does Knell tell us? That Cronkite was part of a pool of reporters invited to watch an Air Force missile test on a small Pacific island in the 1950s. Knell says Cronkite told him what happened just as the missile was launched was astonishing.
 
 
 
 
Knell claims Cronkite told him that a disc-shaped object about "fifty to sixty feet in diameter" suddenly appeared on the scene. The disc fired a blue beam which allegedly froze the missile about seventy feet from its launcher. Knell claims he was also told that a guard and his dog were also frozen in place by the mysterious blue beam. Then the missile suddenly exploded.
 
Knell reports that Cronkite and the rest of the reporters were then quickly ushered into a nearby observation bunker and left there for about thirty minutes. When they were all finally escorted out of the bunker, an Air Force Colonel advised the group that what they had witnessed was "all part of the missile test".
 
It is worth noting that Walter Cronkite never publicly discussed this event. There are also no corroborating witnesses who have come forward saying that Cronkite also shared this UFO experience with them.
 
Does that mean the event is fictitious? That is up to the readers of True UFO Stories to decide.


Saturday, August 3, 2013

Estimate Of The Situation

The Estimate of the Situation was a document written in 1948 by personnel of the USAF Project Sign, including the project's director, Captain Robert Sneider, that explained the reasons for concluding that "the extraterrestrial hypothesis" was the best explanations for flying saucers. As late as 1960, the Air Force claimed that the document didn't exist. But many sources describe the report as being a real document that was suppressed and describe the report as "The Holy Grail of Ufology".

As background, Project Sign was established in late 1947, and was charged with investigating flying saucer reports. Sign's personnel operated on the principle that the subject should be taken seriously, on the grounds that these mysterious visitors may represent genuine aircraft whose origins are mysterious and possibly threatening US security.

It is believed that The Estimate of the Situation was completed in September, 1948. The Estimate argued that flying saucer reports coincided with what was then the close approach of the Mercury, Venus of Mars to Earth and that these planets could be being used as staging bases for a surveillance of Earth by some extraterrestrial intelligence. The report also predicted a wave of flying saucer sightings in October, 1948. It is worth noting that this wave of sightings actually occurred.

The report also sparked huge debate at the Pentagon. Soon after, the Pentagon disbanded Project Sign and replaced it with Project Grudge. Project Grudge was tasked with the singular mission of debunking flying saucer sightings.





Project Magnet

The United States is not the only nation to investigate UFO phenomena. The Canadian Department of Transport (DOT) launched a UFO research program called Project Magnet on December 2nd, 1950. Project Magnet was under the direction of senior radio engineer Wilbert Smith. The Canadian government funded Magnet until mid-1954. The project continued with private funding until Wilbert Smith's death in 1962.

 
 
Project Magnet was actually formed with the intention to collect data about UFOs and apply any recovered data to practical engineering and technology. The ultimate goal of the project was to apply any findings on the subject of geomagnetism to the possibility of exploiting Earth's magnetic field as a source of propulsion for vehicles. Smith and his colleagues in government believed that UFOs, if real, might hold the key to this new source of power.
 
In October 1952, Smith set up an observatory at Shirley's Bay, outside Ottawa to study reports of UFO sightings, believing that UFOs would emit physical characteristics that could be measured. A number of sighting reports were investigated and they led Smith to a few conclusions about UFOs.
 
1. UFOs are of extraterrestrial origin.
2. These extraterrestrial craft almost certainly manipulated magnetism for flight.
2. The other-worldly beings communicated through telepathy.
 
In fact, Smith believed that these beings were actually communicating with him. His views on that controversial subject were published posthumously in 1969 under the title Boys From The Topside.
 


Friday, August 2, 2013

The Mike Wallace Keyhoe Interview

Most of us remember journalist Mike Wallace from his excellent work on TV's long-running 60 Minutes, that debuted in 1968. But Wallace actually began honing his excellent interviewing skills during television's infancy in the 1950's.

Mike Wallace Interviews 1957 (4).jpg

Wallace did a very interesting television interview with one of Ufology's pioneers, Major Donald Keyhoe on March 8, 1958. The subject? Flying saucers. Wallace asks Major Keyhoe several tough but respectful questions. One question, asked more than once, was why would the Air Force and the American government withhold the truth about flying saucers from the American people? That question certainly demonstrates just how much times have changed.



You can search and watch this famous Wallace interview on You Tube and see for yourself.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Captain Edward Ruppelt

United States Air Force Captain Edward Ruppelt was a key figure in the early days of UFO investigation. In fact, Ruppelt is credited with coining the term UFO (originally pronounced Yoo-foe) to replace the "flying saucer" to describe the mysterious flying objects being reported all over the world.

Ruppelt was born in Iowa in 1923. He enlisted in the Army Air Corps in World War II and served with distinction as a bombardier. He earned several military decorations for his excellent service, including three Air Medals and two Distinguished Flying Crosses.

After the war, he was released into the Army Reserves. He attended Iowa State College and earned a degree in Aeronautical Engineering.
 

 
Shortly after earning his degree, Ruppelt was recalled in to active duty during the Korean War. He was assigned to the Air Technical Intelligence Command at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. Wright Patterson was the headquarters of what were then called "flying saucer investigations". Ruppelt was assigned to Project Grudge, which had mostly been tasked with debunking all flying saucer reports.
 
When Project Grudge flying saucer investigations were dissolved in 1951, to be replaced by Project Blue Book, Ruppelt was asked to take command of the new assignment. Ruppelt had developed the reputation of being " a good organizer who got other wayward projects back on track". An Air Force Colonel would normally be asked to take on an assignment of this magnitude, which was a testament to Ruppelt's leadership ability and organizational skills.
 
Ruppelt created a standardized report for UFO sightings which provided quantifiable data for Air Force leadership. He recruited open-minded, objective members for Project Blue Book to ensure that the reportage contained no pro or anti-flying saucer bias.
 
Ruppelt oversaw many famous UFO investigations, including the Green Fireballs of New Mexico, the Lubbock Lights and the UFO over-flight of Washington DC in 1952. in 1952, He was a member of the largest Pentagon press briefing since WWII about the DC incident.
 
    
                                                                     

Ruppelt left Project Blue Book in 1953. He retired for the Air Force soon after. His book, The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects, was published in 1956. It is still a chilling read.
 
Ruppelt is credited with bringing UFO investigations out of "the Dark Ages". The world lost one of it's UFO investigative pioneers when Ruppelt died of a heart attack at the young age of 37 on September 15, 1960.




Wednesday, May 29, 2013

The Lubbock Lights


The Lubbock Lights were an unusual formation of lights seen over the city of Lubbock, Texas from August–September 1951. The Lubbock Lights incident received national publicity and is regarded as one of the first great UFO cases in the United States.
Carl Hart Jr.

The first publicized sighting of the lights occurred on August 25, 1951, at around 9 pm. Three professors from Texas Technological College (now Texas Tech University), located in Lubbock, were sitting in the backyard of one of the professor's homes when they observed the "lights" fly overhead. A total of 20-30 lights, as bright as stars but larger in size, flew over the yard in a matter of seconds. The professors immediately ruled out meteors as a possible cause for the sightings, and as they discussed their sighting a second, similar, group of lights flew overhead.

The three professors - Dr. A.G. Oberg, chemical engineer, Dr. W.L. Ducker, a department head and petroleum engineer, and Dr. W.I. Robinson, a geologist - reported their sighting to the local newspaper, the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. Following the newspaper's article, three women in Lubbock reported that they had observed "peculiar flashing lights" in the sky on the same night of the professor's sightings. Dr. Carl Hemminger, a professor of German at Texas Tech, also reported seeing the objects, as did the head of the college's journalism department.

The three professors became determined to view the objects again and perhaps discover their identity. On September 5, 1951, all three men, along with two other professors from Texas Tech, were sitting in Dr. Robinson's frontyard when the lights flew overhead. According to Dr. Grayson Mead the lights "appeared to be about the size of a dinner plate and they were greenish-blue, slightly fluorescent in color. They were smaller than the full moon at the horizon. There were about a dozen to fifteen of these lights...they were absolutely circular...it gave all of us...an extremely eerie feeling." Mead claimed that the lights could not have been birds, but he also stated that they "went over so fast...that we wished we could have had a better look." The professors observed one formation of lights flying above a thin cloud at about 2,000 feet (610 m); this allowed them to calculate that the lights were traveling at over 600 miles per hour (970 km/h).

The Hart photographs
Lubbock Lights, 1.

On the evening of August 30, 1951, Carl Hart, Jr., a freshman at Texas Tech, was lying in bed looking out of the window of his room when he observed a group of 18-20 white lights in a "v" formation flying overhead. Hart took a 35-mm Kodak camera and walked to the backyard of his parent's home to see if the lights would return. Two more flights passed overhead, and Hart was able to take a total of five photos before they disappeared.  After having the photos developed Hart took them to the offices of the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal. After examining the photos the newspaper's editor, Jay Harris, told Hart that he would print them in the paper, but that he would "run him (Hart) out of town" if the photos were fake. When Hart assured him that the photos were genuine, Harris paid Hart $10 for the pictures. The photographs were soon reprinted in newspapers around the nation, and were printed in LIFE magazine, thus giving them wide publicity. The physics laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio analyzed the Hart photographs. After an extensive analysis and investigation of the photos, Lieutenant Edward J. Ruppelt, the supervisor of the Air Force's Project Blue Book, released a written statement to the press that "the [Hart] photos were never proven to be hoax, but neither were they proven to be genuine."  Hart has consistently maintained to this day that the photos are genuine. Curiously, the Texas Tech professors claimed that the photos did not represent what they had seen, since their objects had flown in a "u" formation instead of the "v" formation depicted in Hart's photos.

Air Force investigation and controversy

In late September 1951, Lieutenant Ruppelt read about the Lubbock Lights and decided to investigate them.  Project Blue Book, founded in 1948 as Project Sign, was the Air Force's official research group assigned to investigate UFO reports. Ruppelt traveled to Lubbock and interviewed the professors, Carl Hart, and others who claimed to have witnessed the lights. Ruppelt's conclusion at the time was that the professors had seen a type of bird called a plover. The city of Lubbock had installed new vapor street lights in 1951, and Ruppelt believed that the plovers, flying over Lubbock in their annual migration, were reflecting the new street lights at night. Witnesses who supported this assertion were T.E. Snider, a local farmer who on August 31, 1951 had observed some birds flying over a drive-in movie theater; the bird's undersides were reflected in the light. Another witness, Joe Bryant, had been sitting outside his home with his wife on August 25 - the same night on which the three professors had first seen the lights. According to Bryant, he and his wife had seen a group of lights fly overhead, and then two other flights. Like the professors, they were at first baffled by the objects, but when the third group of lights passed overhead they began to circle the Bryant's home. Mr. Bryant and his wife then noticed that the lights were actually plovers, and could hear them as well. In addition, Dr. J. Allen Hynek, an astronomer and one of Project Blue Book's scientific consultants, contacted one of the Texas Tech professors in 1959 and learned that the professor, after careful research, had concluded that he had actually been observing the plovers.

However, not everyone agreed with this explanation. William Hams, the chief photographer for the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, took several nighttime photos of birds flying over Lubbock's vapor street lights and found that he could not duplicate Hart's photos - the images were too dim to be developed. Dr. J.C. Cross, the head of Texas Tech's biology department, ruled out the possibility that birds could have caused the sightings. A game warden Ruppelt interviewed felt that the sightings could not have been caused by plovers, due to their slow speed (50 mph or 80 km/h) and tendency to fly in groups much smaller than the number of objects reported by eyewitnesses. The warden did admit that an unusually large number of plovers had been seen in the fall of 1951. Dr. Mead, who had observed the lights, strongly disputed the plover explanation: "these objects were too large for any bird...I have had enough experience hunting and I don't know of any bird that could go this fast we would not be able to hear...to have gone as fast as this, to be birds, they would have to have been exceedingly low to disappear quite so quickly. Curiously, in his bestselling 1956 book The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects, Ruppelt himself would come to reject the plover hypothesis, but frustratingly refrained from explaining what the lights in fact were:

"They weren't birds, they weren't refracted light, but they weren't spaceships. The lights ... have been positively identified as a very commonplace and easily explainable natural phenomenon. It is very unfortunate that I can't divulge ... the way the answer was found.... Telling the story would lead to [the identity of the scientist who "finally hit upon the answer"] and ... I promised the man complete anonymity."

The flying wing

While investigating the Lubbock Lights, Ruppelt also learned that several people in and around Lubbock claimed to have seen a "flying wing" moving over the city. Among the witnesses was the wife of Dr. Ducker, who reported that in August 1951 she had observed a "huge, soundless flying wing" pass over her house.  Ruppelt knew that the US Air Force did possess a "flying wing" jet bomber, and he felt that at least some of the sightings had been caused by the bomber, although he could not explain why, according to the witnesses, the wing made no sound as it flew overhead.