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up to ten UFOs moving over Lake Superior in V-formation,
north-northeast at 9000 miles per hour.
Source: Incident At Exeter, John G. Fuller
Gulf of Mexico, December 6, 1952. One of the most
fascinating accounts of radar tracked objects was reported
in Major Keyhoe’s Flying Saucers from Outer Space based
on information released to him by Al Chop. The sighting
was first made by a bomber pilot at 5:24 a.m., 100 miles
south of the Louisiana coast. The pilot called his radar
officer at the Texas base and asked him to check the coast-
line on the auxillary scope in the cockpit. Suddenly a blip
appeared at one edge of the screen of the officer’s main ra-
. darscope. In the next revolution, the unidentified craft had
gone 13 miles. Its third appearance indicated the object
would meet the B-29 headon. The radar officer yelled for
the flight engineer to help track the object. Between the
two of them they computed the object’s speed at 5,240
mph. Such speeds seemed impossible to both the bomber
pilot and the radar officer, who took time to recalibrate his
set. He found no malfunction and by this time there were
four UFOs on his screen and also seen by the pilot. During
the first six minutes, five such saucers were sighted, ‘all
moving at more than 5000 mph. Then the scopes cleared.
For one minute the airmen saw nothing. Then two blurs of
blue-white whizzed by and five saucers raced in behind the
bomber, cut across its course, then headed straight for the
B-29. Disaster was imminent. Abruptly the UFOs slowed
to the speed of the bomber and hung behind it for ten sec-
onds. When they left, it was to join a huge mother ship
that sloshed across the radar scope and was gone, at 9000
mph. Intelligence officers questioned the experienced air
and radar men over and over again, receiving always the
same unshakeable reports on speed, design and maneuvers.
The experience could be explained in only one way: In-
teplanetary machines.
Custer, Wash., January 12, 1965: A farm family re-
ported a glowing round object had landed on a snow cov-
ered field briefly. After the object took off, the family
checked and found the snow melted in a 30 foot circle and
the earth scorched. Shortly before this brief landing, radar
officers at Blaine Air Force Base had been tracking a 30-
foot disc that had buzzed an automobile being driven by a
federal law enforcement officer a few miles from the field.
This officer’s signed statement is on file with NICAP (Na-
tional Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena, in
Washington D.C.) The farm family was quoted as having
been instructed by the Air Force not to discuss the inci-
dent.
Source: Flying Saucers—Serious Business, by
Frank Edwards
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010002-9
On three occasions radar equipped F-94s locked on aeri-
al targets only to have the lock-on broken by apparent vio-
lent maneuvers of the target.
Source: The Report on Unidentified Objects,
by Edward J. Ruppelt, former head
of the Air Force Project Blue Book.
DO ASTRONOMERS GIVE CREDENCE TO UFOs?
In Frank Edwards’ highly informative Flying Saucers—
Serious Business, he quotes Frank Halstead, Curator of the
Darling Observatory, Duluth,. Minn. in an interview with
the author:
Edwards: “A little while ago you stated that you believe
that intelligent beings exist elsewhere in the
universe, possibly, or probably, developed far
beyond our intelligence levels in some instan-
ces?”
Halstead: “That is correct.”
Edwards: “In that case they would already have solved the
problems of crossing space, would they not?”
Halstead: “I believe that is a reasonable assumption.”
Edwards: “Such space travelers would conceivably have
visited Earth, then?”
Halstead: “This is pure speculation, or almost pure specu-
lation, but I think that we should assume that
we have had space visitors. . . . I feel that we
have had visitors from space just as I feel that
in the universe we are not alone.”
Edwards: “In your opinion, Mr. Halstead, could the Uni-
dentified Flying objects of our time be space
ships?”
Halstead: “Frankly, sir, they could hardly be anything
else.”
The experience of Professor Walter N. Webb, chief lec-
turer on astronomy at Charles Hayden Planetarium in
Boston, who described the yellow glow that undulated over
the hills at the south end of Silver Lake in Michigan
in 1951 is another example of the trained eye confronted
with an unidentifiable object. To the experienced astron-
omer the wavey path ruled out planes and planets and ex-
isting conditions ruled out inversion effect of ground based
lights. The professor’s conclusion: An UFO. To further
substantiate the conviction of reputable astronomers that
UFOs do exist, there is the account of Dr. Clyde Tom-
baugh’s experience in 1949. Dr. Tombaugh, discoverer of
the planet, Pluto, was at his Las Cruces, New Mexico, home
when he saw a cigar-shaped object silhouetted against the
sky. He could make out a row of yellow lighted openings,
giving the impression of portholes or windows, running
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