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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
Page 116
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«the uroAppreved mor Release 2001104/02;
is intimately associated with
the air defense role of the United
States. As such, the first
thing to be determined is the
threat potential of an unidenti-
fied flying object. When this
determination has been made
(none of the over 7,000 sight-
ings have proven inimical or
hostile) an understandably
lower priority is placed on the
further evaluation of the sight-
ing. I’m sure you will agree
that the security of the nation
is and must be our primary
concern.” (G, Wise, for Maj.
William T. Coleman, Jr., USAF,
UFO Project Officer, Public In-
formation Division, to Fred
gation of a phenomenon. Yet,
as the agency officially charged
with investigation of UFOs, the
Air Force is under pressure to
do just that. Intelligence tech-
niques are not sufficient for
scientific investigation. The
full resources of the scientific
community, including tracking
instrumentation specifically for
that purpose, wouldbe required.
Once satisfied that a given UFO
poses no threat, the Air Force
investigators apparently search
for the most plausible conven-
tional explanation. When none
can be found, the ‘shotgun’?
approach is used, Clearly, this
is not a scientific investigation.
Kempf, 8-17-61).
D. Sample UFO Cases Involving
Aspects of Secrecy
Red Bluff, California
The sighting of a UFO Aug. 13, 1960, by California Highway
Patrolmen [Section VII] described a highly maneuverable, ellip-
tical object. Toward the end of the observation, a second similar
object was observed.
In a letter to a NICAP member, the Air Force stated: ‘The
findings [are] that the individuals concerned witnessed a refraction
of the planet Mars and the two bright stars Aldebaran and Betel-
geux. . . [temperature inversions] contributed to the phenomena
as the planet Mars was quite low in the skies and the inversion
caused it to be projected upwards.’’ (9-16-60).
In a letter to NICAP, the Air Force stated: “It is an impos-
sible task to determine what the exact light source was for each
specific incident, but the planet Mars and the star Capella were
the most probable answers for these sightings.”” (10-6-60).
The change of identification occurred about the time NICAP re-
ported, in a special bulletin for October, 1960, that the first
three named astronomical objects all were below the horizon at
the time of the sighting. As it happens, the star Capella is the
only one named which was above the horizon at the time of the
sighting.
NICAP recently telephoned the office of a California Senator
and confirmed that the state is on Daylight Saving Time (P.D.T.)
from April 26 to October 25. The sighting began at 11:50 p.m.
(P.D.T.), Aug. 13, At that time, the planet Mars was about one
hour (i,e., about 15 degrees) below the eastern horizon. It is
completely absurd to suppose that it could in any way account for
the sighting. Aldebaran did not rise until about 1 a.m., Betelgeux
about 3 a.m.
As for Capella, which was barely above the horizon when the
sighting began, no star, by the wildest :stretch of imagination,
could give the appearance of a large ellipse a few hundred feet
off the ground, nor could it maneuver as described by the police
officers. [See Section VII] Also, the objects disappeared below
the eastern horizon at the end of the sighting, whereas Capella
would have risen about 35 degrees in that period. The Air Force
explanation of this case is one of the most strained and counter-
to-fact on record.
UTAH FILM
In 1963, the Air Force circulated an information sheet labelled
“Ode D ‘Classic’ -- Seagulls’? (See Pphotostat) suggesting that
there was a ‘‘strong possibility”’ that the UFOs filmed by Delbert
C. Newhouse on July 2, 1952, were seagulls, By the end of the
statement, after baldly assuming that actual Seagulls ‘“‘undoubted-
ly’? showed up in some of the frames, the conclusion was stated
more positively: There is ‘‘little reasonable doubt’’ that the
UFOs actually were seagulls The author refers to the ‘unani-
CIAROFBALROGSRORA001000'10001 -0
As a matter of fact, there is virtually no support for this iden-
tification. Mr. Newhouse, a Navy chief photographer (aviation),
viewed the UFOs at relatively close range at first. They were
shiny, perfectly disc-shaped objects. By the time he was able
to unpack his camera, the objects had receded into the distance,
but he was still able to capture them on film.
When the new Air Force information sheet was issued, NICAP
forwarded a copy to Board Member Dewey J. Fournet, Jr. Mr.
Fournet is a former Air Force Major who monitored the UFO
program for the Pentagon. While on active duty with the Air Force,
he handled the Utah movie film, helped arrange for its analysis,
was conversant with the analyses conducted and their results.
The following are excerpts from his reply to NICAP:
“This [document] was apparently written by someone only very
superficially acquainted with the Tremonton movie case -- some-
one who obviously didn’t bother to study the case history in any
detail, or by someone who is purposely distorting the facts of the
case... .
“There were two different analyses made of the movies shortly
after I received them in 1952, both by the most qualified military
photoanalytical labs then in existence. One was by the Wright-
Patterson AFB photo lab and the other by the Navy photo lab at
Anacostia... . The W-P lab concluded that the objects were
not airplanes or balloons and probably not birds. The Navy
lab concluded that they were not any of these. In neither case
was there anything even remotely hinting that birds of any type
had been identified in any frames of the movie. . . .
“The ‘unanimity of opinion’ to which the author of ‘Ode D”
refers must certainly be a recent development. There most
certainly was no such unanimity among the original parties in this
case that the objects were probably seagulls. Quite to the con-
trary, the majority concluded that they were probably not birds,
although some of us conceded this possibility if certain corol-
lary assumptions were made: [That the witness was lying or
unreliable; that despite his photographic experience, the witness
panned his camera opposite to the direction the lone object was
flying. ]
“The ‘Ode D’ author apparently is unaware of or intentionally
omitted reference to Newhouse’s statement. . . he described [the
UFOs] as ‘two pie pans, one inverted on top of the other.’... .
“Overall, whether the USAF author realized it or not, it would
be necessary to conclude that Newhouse was lying in many of his
statements in order to conclude that the Tremonton objects were
birds. IfI recall correctly, the unanimous opinion of the intelli-
gence officers was that he was completely sincere and somewhat
reserved. I have never heard anyone claim anything to the con-
trary... 2”
one D'oLassIC" - sEAQLIs
(FRO COLORED MoRION PICTURE FILM)
‘TRENONTOK, UPAR THCIDEOM
2’ guy 1952
Av approxinately 1110 on 2 July 1952 while driving in the vicinity
of Trenonton, Utah, Chief Petty Officer Delbert C. Nexhouse's wife noticed
8 group of objects’ in the sky that she could not identity. She asked his,
‘to stop the car and look. There vas a group of about ten or twelve objects
that bore no relation to anything he had seen before milling about ia &
rough formation and proceeding in a westerly direction, He opened the luggage
compartaent of his car and got his canera out of a suitcase. Loading tt
hurriedly, he exposed approxinately thirty feet of film. There was no
Feference point in the sky, and it vas impossible for hin to make any estinate
OF speed, size, altitude or distance. Tovard the end one of tie objects
veversed course and proceeded avay fron the main group. Ee held the canera
still and alloved this single one to cross the field cf view, picking it up
again and repeating for three or four such passes. By thie tine all of the
objects had disappeared. ie stated that he expended the balance of the film
Aste that afternoon on a mountain sosevhere in Taabo.
‘The original {ln was analyzed by a photo reconnaissance laboratory
shortly after the sighting. The conclusion reached was that @ strong
possibility existed that the bright spots of Light appearing on the film
were caused vy seagulls soaring in thermal air currents, The creaibility
of the conclusion vas undoubtedly supported by the presence of identifiable
seagulls in sone of the franos.
Tais conclusion vas further strengthened by movies of seagulls, taken
‘at various distances, which showed then as bright spots of light similar to those
in the Newhouse fila.
A recent analysis (1956) of the Nevhouse tim, made by USA photo
specialists totally unaware of the nature or previous history of this case,
yielded the opinton that the Bright spots of Light on the film were bird
Feflections on the strong sunlignt.
‘The unaninity of opinion present in all evaluations made in this case
leaves 1ittle reasonable doubt that the UFO's in the Nevtouse filme were, indeed,
seagulls.
Approved For Release 2001/04/02 :¢1A-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
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