• Subject: RE-POST: Blue Bo

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    Subject: RE-POST: Blue Book Unknowns pt 1/6
    Message-ID: <1992Jan17.021825.2709@bilver.uucp>
    From: dona@bilver.uucp (Don Allen)
    Date: 17 Jan 92 02:18:25 GMT
    Organization: W. J. Vermillion - Winter Park, FL
    Lines: 646


    This is what _didn't_ make it into the "official" release of Project Bluebook..guess the sightings data was too damning. :-)


    ----------Bluebook Part 1 -----------------------------------------------



    THE BLUE BOOK UNKNOWNS
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The unexplained UFO reports from the files of the U.S. Air Force's Project
    Blue Book UFO investigations.

    Compiled by Don Berliner, for the Fund for UFO Research
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~
    the conclusions or views expressed in this publication are the views of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Fund for UFO Research, Inc.


    THE UNEXPLAINED UFO CASES FROM THE PROJECT BLUE BOOK FILES
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    In January, 1974, I visited the U.S. Air Force Archives at Maxwell AFB, Montgomery, Ala., to review the files of Project Blue Book as the first step toward writing a book on the subject.

    In a full week, I read all the "unexplained" cases in the original files and made extensive notes, including the names and other identifying information on all witnesses where given. The cooperation of the staff of the Archives was excellent, and no restrictions were placed on my work.

    A few months later, the files were withdrawn from public view so they could be prepared for transfer to the National Archives in Washington, D.C. This
    process involved making a xerox copy of almost 30 file drawers of material, blacking out the names and other identifiers of all witnesses, and then microfilming the censored xerox copy. The microfilm has been available to the public at the National Archives since 1976. The original Project Blue Book files remain under lock and key at the Archives.

    On almost every page of the 12,000+ case files, there are big black marks
    where information that could be used to cross-check Project Blue Book's controversial work has been censored.

    This includes the names of witnesses to widely-publicized cases, and even
    names in newspaper clippings!

    As it was perfectly legal for me to copy witness' names when I visited the Air Force Archives, those names can be found in this report of 585 (less 13 missing) unexplained cases. And since the Privacy Act, which motivated the
    Air Force to censor the files in the first place, does not apply to reporters or anyone else outside the Government, they can be used as the reader pleases.

    Inasmuch as the book I planned to write has never progressed beyond the manuscript stage, I see no reason to keep this information under wraps any longer. Perhaps it will encourage others to re-investigate cases and make the results known.

    "Unidentified" says a great deal...and it says almost nothing.

    Probably the most controversial aspect of the entire Air Force investigation
    of UFOs was its handling of individual cases.

    The means by.which one case was determined to be "identified" and another "unidentified" has no doubt fueled more arguments about Project Blue Book than anything else it did.

    For many years, Blue Book's most vocal opponents have insisted that the standards by which cases were allegedly explained were grossly unscientific. Blue Book's goal, according to those who held it low esteem, was to attach
    some explanation to every case, regardless of logic or common sense. Examples of Blue Book saying a violently maneuvering disc was an aircraft, or of
    blaming a puzzling radar tracking on a supposedly malfunctioning radar set which it never bothered to check out, are numerous in the popular UFO literature.

    And they are even more numerous in the files of Project Blue Book. The urgency with which Blue Book officials tagged answers onto cases without having done the proper investigation is obvious, though not proven. But if the Air Force was so eager to label cases "identified", despite the lack of supporting evidence, then those few cases which it labeled "unidentified" presumably withstood every attempt to apply every other kind of label. And so it may be that those cases are truly unidentifiable in familiar terms.

    Indeed, the Air Force defines "unidentifiable" cases as those which
    "apparently contain all pertinent data necessary to suggest a valid hypothesis concerning the lack of explanation of the report, but the description of the object or its motion cannot be correlated with any known object or
    phenomenon."

    To meet such criteria, a report must obviously come from a reputable source, and it must not bear any resemblance to airplanes, balloons, helicopters, spacecraft, birds, clouds, stars, planets, meteors, comets, electrical phenomena, or anything else known to frequent the air, the sky, or nearby space.

    Unfortunately, the Air Force failed to stick to its own rules. Some of the "unidentifiable" cases most certainly can be correlated with known objects or phenomena. But most of them cannot. Moreover, many of the so-called "identified" cases cannot honestly be so correlated. But we are primarily concerned here with those cases which Project Blue Book openly admits it
    tried to explain and failed.

    The amount of detail in these cases varies enormously. Some cases -
    frequently those which were well publicized at the time of the event - contain considerable information, while others are vague and seriously incomplete. Project Blue Book generally placed the blame for such incompleteness on the witnesses, but it should take its own share of the responsibility. 'In thousands of cases, there is no completed questionnaire in the Project files, nor even any indication that one was sent to the witness. And in most of the instances where a questionnaire was filled out, it was never followed up to
    get more complete answers to questions which the witnesses failed to deal with properly. For much of the life of Project Blue Book and its predecessors, there was no satisfactory.questionnaire at all. And one of those used for a lengthy period was so badly organized that a witness should not be held to blame for giving incomplete answers.

    Yet, despite all the roadblocks, many reports are sufficiently complete to
    tell a pretty clear story of a puzzling experience. With this data now available, anyone can look at Project Blue Book's "unidentified" UFO reports and make up his own mind.

    July 3, 1947; Harborside, Maine. 2:30 p.m. EDT. Witness:
    astronomer John Cole of South Brooksville, Me. Watched 10-15
    seconds while ten very light objects, with two dark forms to
    their left, moved like a swarm of bees to the northwest. A loud
    roar was heard.

    July 4, 1947; over Emmet, Idaho. 8:17 p.m. PDT. Witnesses:
    United Air Lines Capt. E.J. Smith, First Officer Ralph Stevens,
    Stewardess Marty Morrow. Watched for 12-15 minutes while four
    objects with flat bottoms and rough tops moved at varying speeds,
    with one high and to the right of the others.

    July 6, 1947; Fairfield-Suisan Air Base, California. Daytime.
    Witnesses: Army Air Forces Capt. and Mrs. James Burniston.
    Watched for 1 minute while one object having no wings or tail
    rolled from side-to-side three times and then flew away very fast
    to the southeast.

    July 8, 1947; Muroc Air Base, California. 9:30 a.m. PDT.
    Witnesses: lst Lt. Joseph McHenry, T/Sgt Ruvolo, S/Sgt Nauman,
    Miss Janette Scotte. Watched for an unstated length of time
    while two disc-shaped or spherical objects--silver and apparently
    metallic--flew a wide circular pattern, and then one of them
    later flew a tighter circle.

    July 9, 1947; Meridian, Idaho. 12:17 p.m. PDT. Witness: Idaho
    statesman aviation editor and former (AAF) B-29 pilot Dave
    Johnson. Watched for more than 10 seconds from an Idaho Air
    National Guard AT-6 while a black disc, which stood out against
    the clouds, made a half-roll and then a stair-step climb.

    July 10, 1947; Harmon Field, Newfoundland, Canada. Between 3 and
    5 p.m. local time. Witnesses: three ground crewmen, including
    Mr. Leidy, for Pan American Airways. Watched briefly while one
    translucent disc- or wheel-shaped object flew very fast, leaving
    a dark blue trail and then ascended and cut a path through the
    clouds.

    July 29, 1947; Hamilton Air Base, California. 2:50 p.m. PDT.
    Witnesses: Assistant Base Operations Officer Capt. William
    Rhyerd, ex-AAF B-29 pilot Ward Stewart. Watched for unknown
    length of time while two round, shiny, white objects with
    estimated 15-25 foot diameters, flew 3-4 times the apparent speed
    of a P-80, also in sight. One object flew straight and level;
    the other weaved from side-to-side like an escort fighter.

    Sept. 3, 1947; Oswego, Oregon. 12:15 p.m. PDT. Witness:
    housewife Mrs. Raymond Dupui. Watched for unknown length of time
    as 12-15 round, silver objects flew an unstated pattern.


    Oct., 1947; Dodgeville, Wisconsin. 11
    unnamed civilian man. Watched for 1 hour while an undescribed
    object flew counterclockwise circles.

    Oct. 14, 1947; 11 mi. NNE of Cave Creek, Arizona. Noon MDT.
    Witnesses: ex-AAF fighter pilot J.L. Clark, civilian pilot
    Anderson, third man. Watched 45-60 seconds while one 3-foot
    "flying wing"-shaped object, which looked black against the white
    clouds and red against the blue sky, flew straight at an
    estimated 380 m.p.h., at 8-10,000 feet, from NW to SE.

    April 5, 1948; Holloman AFB, New Mexico. Afternoon. Witnesses:
    Geophysics Lab balloon observers Alsen, Johnson, Chance. Two
    irregular, round, white or golden objects. One made three loops
    then rose and disappeared rapidly; the other flew in a fast arc
    to the west during the 3O^second sighting.

    July 29, 1948: Indianapolis, Indiana. 9:88 a.m. witness*:
    James Toney, Robert Huggins, both employees of a rug cleaning
    firm. One shiny aluminum object, shaped something like an
    airplane's propeller, with 10-12 small cups protruding from
    either blade. Estimated size 6-8' long, 1.5-2' wide. The object
    glided across the road a few hundred feet in front of their
    vehicle and apparently went down in a wooded area. Sighting
    lasted a few seconds.

    July 31, 1948; Indianapolis, Indiana. 8:25 a.m. Witnesses: Mr.
    and Mrs. Vernon Swigert; he was an electrician. Object was
    shaped like a cymbal, or domed disc; about 20' across and 6-8'
    thick, and was white without any shine. It flew straight and
    level from horizon to horizon in about 10 seconds, shimmering in
    the sun as if spinning.

    July or August, 1948; vicinity of Marion, Virginia. Shortly
    after sunset. Witness: Max Abbott, flying a Bellanca Cruisair
    four-passenger private airplane. A single bright white light
    accelerated and turned up a valley.

    Sept. 23, 1948; San Pablo, California. 12 noon. Witnesses:
    Sylvester Bentham and retired U.S. Army Col. Horace Eakins. Two
    objects: one, a buff or grey rectangle with vertical lines; the
    other a translucent "amoeba" with a dark spot near the center.
    The arms of the "amoeba" undulated. Both objects travelled very
    fast.

    Oct. 15, 1948; Fusuoka, Japan. 11:05 p.m. Witnesses: pilot
    Halter and radar operator Hemphill of a P-61 "Black Widow" night
    fighter. Up to six objects tracked on radar, only one seen
    visually. Dull or dark object shaped like a dirigible with a
    flat bottom and clipped tail end. Six seen on radar separately
    Pilot attempted to close on visual object, but it dove away fast.

    Dec. 3, 1948; Fairfield-Suisan AFB, California. 8:15 p.m.
    Witness: USAF Sgt., control tower operator. One round, white
    light flew for 25 seconds with varying speed, bouncing motion,
    and finally a rapid erratic climb.

    Jan. 4, 1949; Hickam Field, Hawaii. 2 p.m. Witness: USAF pilot
    Capt. Paul Storey, on ground. one flat white, elliptical object
    with a matte top circled while oscillating to the right and left,
    and then sped away.

    Jan. 27, 1949; Cortez-Bradenton, Florida. 10:20 p.m. Witnesses:
    Capt. Sames, acting chief of the Aircraft Branch, Eglin AFB, and
    Mrs. Sames. They watched for 25 minutes while a cigar-shaped
    object as long as two Pullman cars and having seven lighted
    square windows and throwing sparks, descended and then climbed
    with a bouncing motion at an estimated 400 m.p.h.

    March 17, 1949; Camp Hood, Texas. 7:52 p.m. Witnesses: guards
    of the 2nd Armored Division. While awaiting the start of a
    flare firing, they watched, for an hour, while eight large,
    green, red and white flare-like objects flew in generally
    straight lines.

    April 3, 1949; Dillon, Montana. 11:55 a.m. Witnesses:
    construction company owner Gosta Miller and three other unnamed
    persons. One object shaped like two plates attached
    face-to-face; matte bottom, bright aluminum top; 20' diameter,
    4-5' thickness. It rocked or rotated in six cycles, descended,
    rocked, flew, rocked; all this was very fast.

    April 4, 1949; Merced, California. 10:20 p.m. witness: William
    Parrott, former Air Force pilot and major. One generally round
    object with a curved bottom and dull coloring. The object gave
    off a clicking sound until overhead. Parrott's dog reacted. 35
    seconds.

    April 24, 1949; Arrey, New Mexico. l0:30 a.m. Witnesses:
    General Mills meteorologist and balloon expert C.B. Moore and
    others on a balloon launch crew. One white, round ellipsoid,
    about 2.5 times as long as wide.

    April 28, 1949; Tucson, Arizona. 5:45 p.m. Witnesses: Howard
    Hann, Mr. Hubert, Tex Keahey. One bright, sausage-shaped object
    was observed for 40 minutes while it rolled and flew fast.

    May 5, 1949; Ft. Bliss, Texas. 11:40 a.m. Witnesses: Army
    officers Maj. Day, Maj. Olhausen, Capt. Vaughn. Two oblong white
    discs, flying at an estimated 200-250 m.p.h., made a shallow turn
    during the 30-50 second observation.

    May 6, 1949; Livermore, California. 9:35 a.m. Witness: C. G.
    Green. Two shiny, disc-like objects rotated around each other
    and banked. Then one shot upwards with a grey trail and rejoined
    the other. The sighting lasted 5 minutes.

    May 9, 1949; Tucson, Arizona. 2:30 p.m. Witness: M/Sgt. Troy
    Putnam. Two round, flat silvery objects, estimated to be 25' in
    diameter, flew 750-1,000 m.p.h. in a banked but steady manner.

    May 27, 1949; South-central Oregon. 2:25 p.m. Witness: Joseph
    Shell, ferrying SNJ trainer for North American Aviation, from Red
    Bluff, California, to Burns, Oregon. Five to eight oval objects,
    twice as long as wide, and 1/5 as thick. They flew in trail
    formation, with an interval equal to 3-4 times their length,
    except that the second and third were closer together.

    July 24, 1949; Mountain Home, Idaho. 12 noon. Witness: Henry
    Clark, manager of a flying service, flying a Piper Clipper.
    Seven delta-shaped objects, 35-55' in span, 20-30' long, 2-5'
    thick; light colored except for a 12' diameter dark circle at the
    rear of each. They flew in a tight formation of twos with one
    behind, and made a perfect, but unbanked, turn. During the
    10 minute sighting, they displayed decreasing smooth
    oscillations. Clark's engine ran rough during the sighting, and
    upon landing was found to have all its spark plugs burned out.

    July 30, 1949; Mt. Hood, Oregon. 9 p.m. Witnesses: Northwest
    Airlines Capt. Thrush, two Portland control tower operators, and
    one flying instructor. One object with one white light and two
    red lights, maneuvered and hovered.

    Feb 5, 1950; Teaticket, Massachusetts. 5:10 p.m. Witnesses:
    Marvin Odom, former U.S. Navy fighter pilot, USAF Lt. Philip
    Foushee, pilot from Otis AFB, and two others. Two thin,
    illuminated cylinders, one of which dropped a fireball,
    maneuvered together and then disappeared high and fast after 5
    minutes.

    Feb. 24, 1950; Albuquerque, New Mexico. 1:55 p.m. Witnesses:
    Municipal Airport Weather Observers Luther McDonald, Harrison
    Manson. One white, slightly elongated oval was watched for 1.5
    minutes through a theodolite while it flew straight and level.

    Feb. 25, 1950; Los Alamos, New Mexico. 3:55 p.m. Witnesses:
    Twelve Atomic Energy Commission security inspectors. One
    cylinder with tapered ends, silver and flashing, flew slow and
    hen fast, fluttered and oscillated, and changed course.
    observations by individuals varied from 3 seconds to 2 minutes.

    arch 3, 1950; Selfridge AFB, Michigan. 11:05 p.m. Witness:
    st Lt Frank Mattson. One intense, dull yellowish light
    descended vertically, then flew straight and level very fast for
    4 minutes.

    March 20, 1950; Stuggart, Arkansas. 9:26 p.m. Witnesses:
    Chicago & Southern Airlines Capt. Jack Adams, First Officer G. W.
    Anderson, Jr. One 100' circular disc with 9-12 portholes along
    the lower side emitting a soft purple light, and a light at the
    top which flashed 3 times in 9 seconds, flew at not less than
    1,000 m.p.h. It was seen for 25-35 seconds.

    March 27, 1980; Motobo, Okinawa. 10:30 a.m. Witness: USAF
    radar operator Cpl. Bolfango. Tracked on radar for 2 minutes
    while it was stationary and then moved at 500 m.p.h.. Visual
    observation not detailed, only mentioned in summary.

    March 28, 1950; Santiago, Chile. 3:15 p.m. Witness: M/Sgt.
    Patterson, of the office of the U.S. Air Attache. One white
    object observed for 5-10 seconds through binoculars while it flew
    high and fast, crossing 30^ of sky.

    March 29, 1950; Marrowbore Lake, Tennessee. 7 a.m. Witnesses:
    real estate salesmen Whiteside and Williams. Six-twelve dark
    objects shaped like 300-lb. bombs, estimated 5 feet long. Flew
    500 m.p.h. and descended, making a noise like wind blowing
    through the trees.

    April 8, 1950; Kokomo, Indiana. 2 a.m. Witness: Earl Baker.
    One grey metallic disc, 50' in diameter, 15' thick; top-shaped
    with a "conning tower" at the top and three ports on the rim
    giving off a blue light. It hovered for 2 minutes, then flew
    away. Baker aroused from sleep by his dog.

    April 14, 1950; Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey. 2:30 p.m. Witness:
    Army M/Sgt. James. Four rectangular, amber objects, about 3' by
    4'. changed speed and direction rapidly; the group of objects
    rose and fell during the 3-4 minute sighting.

    May 7, 1950; Nine miles sough of Ely, Nevada. 6:45 p.m.
    Witnesses: Mr. and Mrs. George Smith and their grandson. One
    silvery white object hovered at 100' altitude, moved back and
    forth for 10 minutes and then flew up and away. Note in case
    file: "No investigation."

    June 27, 1950; Texarkana, Texas. 7:50 a.m. Witnesses: Terrell
    and Yates, employees of Red River Arsenal. One object, bright,
    shaped like two dishpans face-to-face, flew straight and level,
    fast for 4-5 seconds.

    July 13, 1950; Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. 5 p.m. Witnesses:
    two skilled Arsenal employees including Mr. Washburn. one
    object, shaped like a bowtie, and like polished aluminum. Flew
    straight and level, then one triangle rotated 1/4 turn in the
    opposite direction and returned to its original position. The
    object then made a right-angle turn and accelerated away after at
    least 30 seconds.

    Aug. 4, 1950; approx. 100 mi. SE of New York City (39' 35' N.,
    72' 24.5' W.). 10 a.m. EDT. Witnesses: Master Nils Lewring,
    Chief Mate Jacob Koelwyn, Third Mate, of M/V Marcala. One 10'
    cylindrical object at 50-100' altitude, flying with a churning or
    rotary motion, accelerated at end of 15 second sighting.

    Aug. 20, 1950; Nicosia, Cyprus. 1:30 p.m. Witnesses: USAF MATS
    liaison officer Lt. William Ghormley, Col. W. V. Brown, Lt.
    col. L.w. Brauer. One small, round, bright object flew fast,
    straight and level for 15-20 seconds.

    Aug. 25, 1950; approx. 250 mi. SW of Bermuda (29' 40' N., 67*
    28' W.). 8 p.m. Witness: B-29 radarman S/Sgt. William Shaffer.
    Radar observation, plus possible blue streak 3 minutes later.
    B-29 followed unidentified target, then passed it at l/4-mile
    distance, target followed for 5 minutes, then passed B-29 and
    sped away. Total time of tracking: 20 minutes.

    Aug. 30, 1950; Sandy Point, Newfoundland, Canada. 1:30 p.m.
    Witnesses: three local employees, including Kaeel and Alexander,
    of the Air Force Base. A dark, barrel-shaped object with a pole
    down from it into the water, flew at 3-5 m.p.h. and 15-20'
    altitude for 5 minutes.

    Sept. 3, 1950; Spokane, Washington. 2 p.m. Witnesses: Maj R.J.
    Gardiner, Mrs. Gardiner and neighbor (former saw three objects,
    others saw one). Metallic bronze discs, 20-30' long, 2-6' thick.
    Moved independently and erratically for 5 minutes.

    Sept. 20, 1950; Kit Carson, Colorado. 10:49 a.m. Witness
    identified only as a "reliable source". Two large, round,
    glowing objects and three smaller, internally lit objects. Two
    hovered for 1 minute, moved, and three smaller ones came from
    behind or within the two larger objects, and all sped upward and
    away.

    Sept. 21, 1950; Provincetown, Massachusetts. 9:52 a.m. Witness:
    M.I.T. research associate and Air National Guard Maj. M.H. Ligda.
    Radar tracking of one object during M.I.T tracking of USAF flight
    of F-84 or F-86 jet fighters. Object speed was 22 miles/minute
    (l,200 m.p.h.), made turn of 11-12 gs acceleration during 1
    minute observation.

    Oct. 15, 1950; Oak Ridge, Tennessee. 3:20 p.m. Atomic Energy
    Commission Trooper Rymer, J. Moneymaker, Capt. Zarzecki. Two
    shiny silver objects shaped like bullet or bladder. They dove
    with a smoke trail and one vanished. The other hovered at 5-6,
    altitude, 50' away, left and returned several times somewhat
    further away.

    Oct. 15, 1950; Pope AFB, North Carolina. Witness: Daniel.
    Listed as "unidentified" in folder index, but no supporting data
    could be found.

    Oct 15, 1950; Pope AFB, North Carolina. Witness: Woodward.
    Same as previous observation.

    Oct. 23, 1950; Bonlee, North Carolina. 12:42 p.m. Witness:
    ex-USAF pilot Frank Risher. One aluminum object shaped like a
    dirigible or Convair C-99 cargo plane, with 3 portholes, arrived
    from southeast, hovered 3-5 seconds and flew away to the south-
    south-east at end of 40 second sighting.

    Nov. 5, 1950, Oak Ridge, Tennessee. 11:55 a.m. Witness:
    Fairchild Aircraft illustrator Don Patrick. One translucent
    object, light grey with dark core, shaped like a pear or bean.
    Flew for 5-10 minutes with rapid, darting movements.

    Dec. 2, 1950; Nanyika, Kenya. 10:50 a.m. Mr. and Mrs. L. Scott.
    One pearly, iridescent object with a flattened top, spun while
    hovering and made a sound like bees buzzing. Only data in files
    was from East African "Standard" newspaper.

    Dec. 6, 1950; Ft. Myers, Florida. 5 p.m. Witnesses: former
    aircraft purchasing agent Harry Lamp and four boys, using
    lO-power binoculars. One 75' object, 3-4' thick, bubble on top,
    silver with a red rim having two white and two orange jets along
    it. The center revolved when the object hovered; then it flew
    away very fast.

    Dec. 11, 1950; l0 mi. NW of Gulcana, Alaska. 10:13 p.m.
    Witnesses: crew of Northwest Air Lines flight 802. Two white
    flashes, followed by a dark cloud which rose and split in two.

    Jan. 8, 1951; South of Ft. Worth, Texas. 10:45 p.m. Witnesses:
    Mr. and Mrs. W.J. Boggus, plus unidentified drivers and
    passengers in other cars stopped to watch. Two groups of red and
    green lights in triangular formations were stationary and then
    moved.

    Jan. 12, 1951, Ft. Benning, Georgia. 10 p.m. Witness: U.S.
    Army 2nd Lt. A.C. Hale. One light with a fan-shaped wake
    remained motionless like a star about 20 minutes and then sped
    away.

    Jan 16, 1951; Artesia, New Mexico. Time unknown. Witnesses:
    Two members of a balloon project from the General Mills .
    Aeronautical Research Laboratory, the manger of the Artesia
    Airport, and three pilots. The balloon crew was observing their
    110' balloon at an altitude of 112,000' when a dull white, round
    object was spotted. It appeared larger than the balloon, but
    made no movement. Later, the balloon crew and the others saw
    two objects from the airport; flying side-by-side, they circled
    the balloon and flew away to the northeast. The second
    observation lasted about 40 seconds. Note: there is confusion
    over the date of this case, with some USAF records showing it as
    1952; however, 1951 appears to be correct.

    Feb. 1, 1951; Johnson Air Base, Japan. 5:10 p.m. Witnesses:
    pilot and radar operator of F-82 night fighter. One amber light
    made three or four 360* turns to the right, reversed toward the
    F-82 and then climbed out of sight.

    Feb. 21, 1951; Durban, South Africa. 4:55 a.m. Witnesses:
    three men in a truck, several other persons, none named. A dark
    red, torpedo-shaped object with darker center, flew straight and
    level.

    Feb. 26, 1951; Ladd AFB, Alaska. 7:10 a.m. Witness: USAF Sgt.
    J.B. Sells. One dull grey, metallic object, estimated to be 120'
    long and 10-12' thick, hovered, puffed smoke and sped away after
    1-1.5 minutes. Note: may have been Feb. 25.

    Mar. 10, 1951; Chinnampo, Korea. 9:51 a.m. Witnesses: crew of
    USAF B-29 bomber, including scanners and tail gunner. A large
    red-yellow glow burst and became blue-white. No further
    information in files.

    Mar. 13, 1951; McClellan AFB, California. 3:20 p.m. Witnesses:
    USAF lst Lt. B.J. Hastie, Mrs. Rafferty. A cylinder with twin
    tails, 200' long and 90' wide, turned north and flew at
    incredible speed. Two minutes.

    Mar. 15, 1951; New Delhi, India. 10:20 a.m. Witnesses: 25
    members of a flying club, including the chief aerial engineer and
    his two assistants. One metallic cigar-shaped object with white
    exhaust which turned black when it accelerated to an estimated
    1,000 m.p.h. and made a large loop. Seven minutes.

    June 1, 1951; Niagara Falls, New York. 4:20 a.m. Witnesses:
    M/Sgt H.E. Sweeney, 2 enlisted men. One glowing yellow-orange,
    saucer-shaped object with arc-shaped wings, flew straight up.
    Seen for 30-40 seconds.

    July 24, 1951; Portsmouth, New Hampshire. 7:10 Witnesses:
    Hanscom AFB Operations Officer Capt. Cobb, Cpl. Fein. One
    100-200' tubular object, 5 times long as it was wide, with fins
    at one end, and colored greyish with many black spots. Flew
    800-1,000 m.p.h. at 1-2,000' altitude, leaving a faint swath. 20
    seconds.

    Aug. 25, 1951; Albuquerque, New Mexico. 9:58 p.m. Witnesses:
    Sandia Base Security Guard Hugh Young and wife. A flying wing-
    shaped craft passed over their heads at an estimated 800-1,000'
    altitude with no sound. Size estimated at 1.5 times wingspan of
    B-36 bomber,or 350'. Dark, chordwise stripes on underside, and
    6-8 pairs of soft, glowing lights on trailing edge of "wing".
    Speed estimated at 300-400 m.p.h., object seen for about 30
    seconds.

    Aug. 31, ; Matador, Texas. 12:45 p.m. Witnesses: Mrs. Tom
    Tilson, one or two other women, all apparently of excellent
    reputations. One pear-shaped object with a length of a B-29
    fuselage (100'), aluminum or silver with a port or some type of
    aperture on the side. It moved with smaller end forward,
    drifting slowly at about 150' altitude, then headed up in a
    circular fashion and out of sight after a few seconds.

    Sept. 6, 1951; Claremont, California. 7:20 p.m. (not really
    clear). Witnesses: S/Sgt W.T. Smith, M/Sgt L.L. Duel (?). Six
    orange lights in an irregular formation, flew straight and level
    into a coastal fog bank after 3-4 minutes.

    Sept. 14, 1951; Goose Bay, Labrador, Canada. 9:30 p.m.
    Witnesses: T/Sgt W.B. Maupin, Cpl. J.W. Green. Three objects
    tracked on radar. Two were on a collision course, then one
    evaded to the right upon the request, by radio, of one of the
    radar operators! No aircraft were known to be in the area. A
    third unidentified track then joined the first two. More than 15
    minutes.

    Oct. 2, 1951; Columbus, Ohio. 6 p.m. Witness: Battelle
    Memorial Institute graduate physicist Howard Cross. One bright
    oval with a clipped tail flew straight and level, fading into the
    distance after 1 minute.

    Oct. 3, 1951; Kadena, Okinawa. 10:27 p.m. Witnesses: radar
    operators Sgt. M.W. Watson and Pvt. Gonzales and one other
    Sergeant. One large, sausage-shaped blip tracked at an estimated
    4,800 m.p.h.

    Oct. 9, 1951; Terre Haute, Indiana. 1:42 p.m. Witness: CAA
    Chief Aircraft Communicator Roy Messmore at Hulman Municipal
    Airport. One round silver object flew directly overhead,
    reaching the horizon in 15 seconds. Note: a very similar
    incident happened 3 minutes later near Paris, Illinois (15 miles
    NW) and was also listed as "unidentified" for several years, but
    was eventually reclassified.

    Oct. 11, 1951; Minneapolis, Minnesota. 6:30 a.m. Witnesses:
    General Mills balloon researchers, including aeronautical
    engineer J.J. Kaliszewski, aerologist C.B. Moore, pilot Dick
    Reilly in the air, and Doug Smith on the ground. The flight crew
    saw the first object, a brightly glowing one with a dark
    underside and a halo around it. The object arrived high and
    fast, then slowed and made slow climbing circles for about two
    minutes, and finally sped away to the east. Soon they saw
    another one, confirmed by ground observers using a theodolite,
    which sped across the sky. Total time first object was seen was
    5 minutes, second was a few seconds.

    Nov. 18, 1951; Washington, D.C. 3:20 a.m. Witnesses: Crew of
    Capital Airlines DC-4 Fliqht 610, Andrews AFB Senior air traffic
    controller Tom Selby. One object with several lights, followed
    the DC-4 for about 20 minutes and then turned back.

    Nov. 24, 1951; Mankato, Minnesota. 33:53 p.m. Witnesses: USAF
    or ANG pilots W.H. Fairbrother and D.E. Stewart in P-51 Mustangs.
    One milky white object shaped like Northrop flying wing (broad,
    slightly swept-back wing with no fuselage or tail). Estimated 8'
    span. Flew straight and level for 5 seconds.

    Dec. 7, 1951; Sunbury, Ohio. 4:30 p.m. Witness: amateur
    astronomer Carl Loar. One silvery sphere seen through telescope.
    Two specks sighted at sides, object seemed to explode and was
    replaced by a dark cloud and many specks. 30 minutes.

    Dec. 7, 1951; Oak Ridge, Tennessee. 8:15 a.m. Witness: Atomic
    Energy Commission guard J.H. Collins. One 20' square object,
    white-grey but not shiny flew above ridge to clouds and back
    again twice, taking 30-40 seconds each time.

    Feb. 11, 1952; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. 3 a.m. Witnesses:
    Capt. G.P. Arns and Maj. R.J. Gedson flying a Beech AT-ll
    trainer. One yellow-orange comet-shaped object pulsed flame for
    1-2 seconds of a 1 minute straight and level flight.

    Feb. 23, 1952; over North Korea. 11:15 p.m. Witness:
    Captain/B-29 navigator. One bluish cylinder, three times long as
    wide, with a tail and rapid pulsations, came in high and fast,
    made several turns and levelled out under B-29 which was evading
    mild antiaircraft fire. 45 second sighting.

    March 20, 1952; Centreville, Maryland. 10:42 p.m. Witnesses:
    WWl/WW2 veteran A.D. Hutchinson and son. One dull orange-yellow
    saucer-shaped light flew straight and level very fast for 30
    seconds.

    March 23, 1952; Yakima, Washington. 6:56 and 7 p.m.
    Witnesses: pilot and radar operator of F-94 jet interceptor. On
    either occasion, a red fireball increased in brightness and then
    faded over 45 second span. Stationary both times. Note:

    --------Cont in Bluebook Part 2---------------------------------------

    Don
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