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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
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back upward, and consequently it went rapidly out of sight and
out of hearing distance...What the object was, where it came
from, and where it went, are all a complete mystery to me but
the sighting was as clear as a picture ona wall.’’ [33]
4 as jt fi cap pao
Flame Gler, slightly -
whitish hue
Furzy Edges
July 31, 1957; Calistoga, California. William J. Besler,
I B/- 19897
president of Besler Corporation, Oakland, California, was relax-
ing in the natural hot springs mineral bath at Calistoga, about
9:30 a.m. ‘“‘I happened to glance out the window,’’ Besler said,
‘‘and was attracted by a very bright light behind a poplar tree on
the top of a nearby knoll at an angle of about 20 degrees from
the horizon. The light was climbing behind the branches and I
thought it might be a brilliantly white bird, but discerned in a
matter of seconds that it was ascending too slowly and deliber-
ately for any bird. The bright light rose above the tree, and it
was then apparent that there were two objects approximately a
thumb-nail’s height at arm’s length above the tree and completely
stationary. I wondered what kind of jet-jobs or objects could be
reflecting the sun’s light and remain so completely stationary but
so brilliantly white and maintain such a fixed position relative to
each other.
“The objects then started to rise higher above the tree and
I began to wonder, so I got out of the tub and proceeded to the
window for a better look, by which time the lights were no longer
in their previous position relative to the tree. I looked around
the horizon, left and right, and up; and there they were - now
almost due north and at an angle of about 70 degrees from the
horizontal, describing antics which no jet-jobs, guided missiles
or airplanes could accomplish.
“T pushed the window open...and got a good look at the two
bright lights which can be described as the size of the tip of a
blue-head wood stick match at arm’s length at a distance from
each other equal to about 6 or 7 times their diameter. No better
description can be given than that they were brilliantly white
lights against an azure blue cloudless sky...
“‘To describe the antics they were going through is to first
state that they made no pattern nor any sense. One could climb
above the other, then the other would climb above the first, the
lights sometimes blinking on and off at a surprising frequency of
four blinks per second as they climbed. When the lights would
blink out, there was absolutely nothing to see, indicating that
they could hardly have been a somersaulting disc, black on one
side and white on the other, as something would have shown up
against the clear azure sky.
“The two lights then circled around each other twice and
began moving in a more or less straight line due west and con-
tinued in this path at a speed I would estimate at 200 mph., for
an are of perhaps 15 degre requiring some 8 seconds.
For
pprove elease 2001/04/02
nodded, (
s(CIA-RDP81R00560
I was watching them intently they mysteriously and instantane-
ously went out...I looked in all directions for the next 30 sec-
onds but they didn’t reappear...’’
(Mr. Besler added a note about the natural tendency for a
person to try to account for unusual observations in terms of
familiar experiences. ‘‘I was aware from almost the first of the
18 seconds I had them in observation that these could well be
UFOs. Nonetheless my mind was struggling at all times to
identify them as planes, birds, pieces of tinfoil in the wind, or
something familiar to this planet. Even after they disappeared
my mind kept searching for an explanation other than the obvious
that there had been a couple of brilliant flying unidentified ob-
jects (saucers?) under observation by the rare chance ofa
glance out of a window.’’) [34]
November 11, 1957; California Desert. During the surge of
sightings in November 1957 [See Section XII; November 1957
Chronology], a silvery elliptical UFO was sighted flying below
an airliner, Robert D,. Hahn, a jewelry designer, was flying from
Minneapolis to Los Angeles aboard Western Airlines flight #61.
“Flight #61 was over desert country approximately 30 to 45
minutes before landing at Los Angeles International Airport,”’
Hahn reported. The sighting occurred approximately seven to
ten minutes before we passed what appeared to be an Air Force
base. My seat was just above the leading edge of the wing next
to the window on the right side of the plane. We were at about
14,000 feet, or so it had been announced some time previously.
I was observing several jets making vapor trails at high altitude,
crossing and criss-crossing. The earth seemed rugged and
deserted with no sign of roads or cultivation, with the exception
of a meandering, apparently dirt, road approximately 10 to 12
miles to the right angling away from our line of flight.
“My first observation of the object struck me as a large,
roughly elliptical, metallic building on the ground at the base of
a hill that seemed to have dark patches, like brush or small
trees. I wondered what such a structure was doing out there with
no roads or sign of access appearing near it - it was, I should
judge, eight to nine miles ahead and to the right of the plane.
Suddenly, I observed it was moving
“Dark patches on the hill, probably scrub trees, were pass-
ing beneath it. It went up and over the hill angling toward the
road. Its course was extremely erratic, seeming to zig-zag two
or three hundred feet in an instant to the right or left while
maintaining a general direction angle of about 45 degrees away
from our course. Its overall speed seemed to me (pure ‘guesti-
mate’) about one-third our own. It eventually disappeared from
my view behind and under the wing, paralleling the road about a
mile to the right...
“J would judge the size of the object to be approximately 200
to 250 feet in diameter - its height off the ground to be only a
couple hundred feet as it went over the first hill and never over
1000 feet during my observation.’’
Mr. Hahn added that the UFO’s surface resembled ‘‘sand-
blasted aluminum,’’ and was not shiny. He sawno trail or exhaust
from the object. [35.]
(That afternoon a group of Rocketdyne engineers sighted
three elliptical UFOs over the San Fernando Valley; See Section
VI)
September 7, 1958; Mission, Kansas. The publisher of The
American Hereford Journal, Hayes Walker, Jr., and his wife saw
a white disc speed across the sky about 5:30 p.m. The UFO,
round and flat, passed nearly overhead traveling from southwest
to northeast, disappearing over the horizon in 12-15 seconds.
It was ‘‘more distinct than the daytime moon,’’ Walker reported.
[36]
Rendezvous of Two UFOs
February 16, 1960; Laguna Beach, Calif. Mr. Earl T. Ross,
retired chemical manufacturing company executive (industrial
chemist and engineer) reported the following case to NICAP.
“At 9:15 a.m., Tuesday, February 16, 1960, from my home...
I saw, in a very clear and cloudless blue sky, an oval, light
colored object move steadily toward the east from a point a little
south of overhead. Then, perhaps two seconds later, I saw another
similar object approach and overtake the first from a position
lower in the southern sky; the second object wobbled or rather
on an axis 560R its center and at 01. Oo to its
00010001000
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