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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010008 3
Page 6
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010008-3
SAUCER FIASCO conzwen
Condon said to one critic: “You ought to be ruined professionally.”’
Condon’s and Low’s prejudice and would be unjustifiably negative. Staff
members speculated that Condon was tired as well as disenchanted. He
remained an enigma because the staff saw so little of him.
At an informal meeting in Denver on December 12, 1967, Saunders,
Levine, McDonald and Hynek agreed that a new organization might he
formed consisting only of professional-level members, designed to assure
the continuation of intelligent uFo study regardless of whether the Condon
report were negative or positive. After Hynek left, McDonald first became
aware of Low’s memo, and expressed his shock.
On January 19, 1968, Low phoned McDonald at the University of
Arizona. McDonald reminded Low of the clearly negative tone of Con-
don’s public statements over a period of time, including Condon’s disturb-
ing preoccupation with the crackpot elements. He also brought up Con-
don’s failure to investigate personally significant field cases or to question
any of the working staff who had been making a serious UFO study.
McDonald stressed that he was not opposed to negative findings. What
bothered him was that negative findings were already being clearly ex-
pressed by both Low and Condon. Low hung up in anger. McDonald pre-
pared a long letter to Low to review his complaints. Low did not get
around to reading the letter until February 6. In it, McDonald mentioned
for the first time his concern about the memo, quoting to Low the phrases
about “the trick.” “I am rather puzzled by the viewpoints expressed there,”
McDonald wrote, “but I gather that they seem entirely straightforward to
you, else this part of the record would, presumably, not be available for
inspection in the open Project files. .. .”
Mrs. Mary Louise Armstrong, who had worked directly with Low as
his administrative assistant, was in the office as Low finished reading the
letter. Low exploded. He said that whoever gave the memo to McDonald
should be fired immediately. Then he seemed to cool down.
The stainless
steel sandwich. ,
Most Teflon-coated irons have the Teflon*
bonded to a surface of aluminum. Not
Hoover’s Steam/Dry Spray Iron. You see,
aluminum is a good heat conductor, but it’s
soft. Scratches easily. So between the aluminum
and the Teflon, Hoover sandwiches a layer of
tough, scratch-resistant stainless steel.
A fussier way of doing things, perhaps.
But isn’t that what you expect
from Hoover?
DIAMOND JUBILEE
1908-1968
*DvPont's registered trademark for its TFE non-stick finish
62 LOOK 5-14-68
Approved For Release 2001/04/02
On Wednesday, February 7, Saunders was summoned to Condon’s
office. Low and Condon were present. The questioning focused on the
memo. Did Saunders know of it and know where it was kept? Saunders
said that the memo was only part of the whole problem. It alone did not
seem especially important, he felt. The broader issues of scientific integrity
were at stake. Condon, furious that he had not immediately been informed
that McDonald knew of the memo, told Saunders, “For an act like that,
you ought to be ruined professionally.”
Saunders countered by saying that Condon and Low seemed to be
treating the symptoms rather than the disease. He reminded them of the
efforts of the entire staff to get Low and Condon to modify their intrac-
table stance. He reviewed the long sequence of events and reminded Low
that he had blocked the investigation of one particularly startling UFO
case. Low protested that the investigation on this was completed. No men-
tion was made of any dissatisfaction with Saunders’s work.
Dr. Levine was summoned while Saunders was still in Condon’s
office. Saunders offered to stay. Low rose from his chair and physically
ushered him out the door. Levine was unnerved by the forcible ejection of
Saunders. Again, the questioning went straight to the memo. Levine said
that he was at the Denver meeting when the memo was given to McDonald.
He understood there was nothing whatever confidential about the memo,
and did not see anything wrong with the action. Condon asked why Levine
had not brought the memo to him, and Levine said that Condon’s public
and private statements had indicated that there was little likelihood of
effective communication. He told Condon that Low had slammed the door
in his face when he brought up the handling by Low of an Edwards Air
Force Base case, and recalled that Condon himself had suggested that
Levine call in sick when he was scheduled to make a talk at Colorado’s
High Altitude Observatory.
: CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010008-3
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