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from the direction of the fleet. The UFO eluded their pursuit
and disappeared. When returning to base, one of the pilots
looked back and saw the UFO following him. He turned to chase
it, but the UFO also turned and sped away. [24]
September 27/28 - Throughout western Germany, Denmark,
and southern Sweden, there were widespread UFO reports. A
brightly luminous object with a comet-like tail was visible for a
long period of time moving irregularly near Hamburg and Kiel.
Once, three satellite objects were reported moving arounda larger
object [cf., Section II; Satellite Object cases]. A cigar-shaped
object moving silently eastward also was reported. [25]
The November 1957 ‘‘Flap”
When the Soviet Union launched the first earth satellite,
October 4, 1957, Americans suddenly became ‘‘space (and sky)
conscious.’? Amateur astronomers and average citizens strained
for a glimpse of the barely visible sphere. However, there was
no particular increase of UFO reports. The whole month of Oc-
tober produced no more than 4-5 substantial UFO cases in the
United States. One of the most intriguing accounts, never fully
investigated, described a whitish oval-shaped object observed in
the vicinity of Cape Canaveral on the nights of October 6 and 7.
[26
| amediately following the launching of the dog-carrying
Sputnik II, late on the evening of November 2 (Eastern Standard
Time), the country was suddenly inundated with UFO reports.
The sightings actually began before word ofthe satellite launching
was flashed to the western world. Most of the significant reports
concerned very large, usually elliptical objects, observed on or
near the ground (not merely fleeting lights in the sky). The pos-~
sibility that hysteria played a part in the reports which followed
cannot be ruled out entirely. But clearly it is not the whole
answer. Reliable witnesses soberly described plainly observed
UFOs, and the press gave their stories very full coverage.
Before the sightings began to taper off two weeks later, eager
citizens began to introduce many erroneous reports. After el-
liptical UFOs were reported daily in the press for a week,
people began to scan the sky hoping to see one for themselves.
The planet Venus, glowing prominently in the early evening sky
to the WSW, was often reported as a UFO by inexperienced sky
observers. To complicate matters, there was a spectacular
auroral display the evening of November 6, which was also visible
unusually far south. The flashing red auroral lights, in some
cases, were transformed into ‘“‘UFOs.”’ An occasional fireball
(exceptionally bright and long-lasting meteor) flashed through the
skies, adding to the confusion.
The features of the UFO reports which defied explanation
were the consistent descriptions of red to reddish-orange, egg-
shaped (roughly elliptical) objects on or near the ground, and
electrical failures experienced in their vicinity. For the month
of November, NICAP has records of 118 apparently reliable
sightings. In approximately one of every three cases, electro-
magnetic (E-M) interference was reported. Subsequent research
showed that E-M effects associated with UFOs were not un-
common, [Section VIII].
By November 3, newspapers were full of UFO reports; by
November 5 the reports were given banner headlines. Also on
the 5th, the Air Force issued a special press release to the effect
that no evidence of UFOs had been found and all except 2% of
the reports had been explained. The release did not even
mention the sightings then in progress. A second press release
November 15, after which the reports virtually died out, listed
and debunked five specific cases which had been widely publi-
cized. [Section IX].
An Air Force press release nearly a year later (No. 986-
58) listed 414 sightings for November 1957. About 64% (266)
were explained as stars and planets, aircraft and balloons.
Only four were listed as ‘‘unknown;’’ 70 as ‘insufficient data.’’
The Air Force gave no weight to reports of electro-magnetic
interference, later stating ‘‘the number of cases involving car
stallings is negligible.’’ (Air Force letter on file at NICAP)
Anything reported to the Air Force as a UFO is included in
their statistics. This procedure makes it a foregone conclusion
that only a comparatively small percentage of total reports might
remain which would be difficult to fit into a known category.
NICAP considers it a more meaningful approach to first weed
out fairly obvious reports of meteors, etc., then to study the
remainder of more substantial reports as a group. The per-
centage of mistaken observations is considered irrelevant.
November 1957
Sightings Explained Insufficient data Unknown
Air Force: 414 340 70 4
NICAP: After weeding out process, 118 cases not readily attribu
table to conventional objects or phenomena.
The following chronology lists the 118 cases which appear to
be authentic and presently unexplainable, plus a few unverified
or probably explainable incidents (in italics) to give a more
complete picture of what was being reported at the time. The
information is drawn from many sources, including signedor taped
reports, investigation reports compiled by NICAP personnel,
and newspaper and radio reports when cross-checks have given
reasonable assurance the data is reliable.
Because of the flood of published information on UFOs at the
time, it is likely that minor inaccuracies or inconsistencies will
subsequently be discovered. On the whole, the picture given is
believed to be essentially accurate. Collectively, the reports
are too widespread and consistent to be ignored. They have not
been adequately explained in conventional terms, and apparently
cannot be so explained.
THE NOVEMBER 1957 "FLAP"
Chronology
SU
Date Location Time
1 Nr Coleman, Texas 2:00 a.m.
(200 miles SE of Levelland)
Description
Oblong, reddish object hovered, maneuvered over area, seen by 4 members
of oil drilling crew.
1 Sandia Mountains, 6:20 a.m. Secretary saw glowing oblong object which hovered, then rose out of sight.
New Mexico
1 Nr Campbellsville, Kentucky 4:30 p.m. Boy Scout executive: elongated luminous white UFO, accelerated and sped
away.
1 Johannesburg, South Africa Day Two UFOs, one a reflective disc; one flew S at high speed, 2nd hovered,
then followed first.
2 Amarillo, Texas 8:30 p.m. UFO reported on road south of city; car engines stalled. (Later, pilot re-
ported UFO to control tower.)
2 Nr Seminole, New Mexico About 8:30 p.m. Motorist reported to sheriff he saw lights on road, car lights and engine
failed; object on road suddenly rose and sped away.
2 Clemens, North Carolina 9:12 p.m. Woman saw elliptical UFO, bright yellow, speed behind cloudbank.
2/3 Levelland, Texas About 10:50 p.m. Torpedo-shaped object, making loud explosive noise, rose from field and
passed low over truck. Truck lights and engine failed. (Pedro Saucedo)
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