PUBLIC VAULT UFO ARCHIVE KR
INDEX
  1. 판독 보류 페이지입니다.

    that-that while the information they give me may be mad [unclear] their names never will be." In [unclear] cases, Captain Ruppelt said, investigation has shown that the people he has inter- viewed had been deceived by things that have been deceiving others all along-balloons, planes, meteors, and so on-but a nettling residue of around twenty per cent of the cases have wound up in that exasperating old pigeonhole labelled "Unidentified." Nothing, for example, could be found to account for the "something silvery directly overhead" reported by a mystified Civil Aeronautics Administration inspector at Terre Haute. A commercial pilot who, flying near Battle Creek, Michigan, spotted "an oval-shaped silver object" ahead of his ship, posed a similarly un- solved problem, as did a highly respected naval officer, stationed at the dirigible base at Lakehurst, New Jersey, who re- ported that he had stared through his binoculars at a brilliant image making turns that were far too tight for any known aircraft. Twenty-five per cent of the observ- ers interrogated by the Aerial Phenom- ena Officer in the last two and a half years have been military pilots. Eight per cent have been commercial pilots, some with as much as twenty years' ex- perience in the air, and at one stage in the current phase of the investigation, even a few physicists at Los Alamos, New Mexico, men who make a fetish of objectivity, were interviewed after they reported having seen puzzling lights hovering above their atomic- energy laboratories. "If you took any one of these incidents by itself, it might not mean much," Captain Ruppelt said. "But in view of the number and calibre of the informants, you couldn't help taking their claims seriously." In February, 1951, Dr. Urner Liddel, a nuclear physicist attached to the Office of Naval Research, at Wash- ington, D.C., declared that at last, thanks to the lifting of certain security restrictions, he could provide the solution to the mystery of the flying saucers: They were "skyhooks," he said-bal- loons a hundred feet in diameter, which the Navy had secretly been sending up for the past four years in order to study cosmic rays. Dr. Liddel's asser- tion was immediately disputed by Dr. Anthony O. Mirarchi, who, as former head of the Air Force's Atmospheric Composition Bureau, had assisted in the diagnosis of Project Saucer reports. Dr. Mirarchi said he thought the saucers might be missiles from some foreign HAVE YOU GRASPED THE Southwick IDEA? Here is tailoring so completely flexil natural that the comfort contrast is re: markable. Once you experience the blissf and casual distinction of SUPERFLEX co tion, you'll never go back to over-stuffed styled clothes. Suits from $70. Sports from $55. At these and oth PAUL STUART, INC. New York City WARNER & COMPANY Baltimore, Md. SILVERSTONE'S Milwaukee, Wis. ARTHUR L Boston JOHN WANAMAK Philadel ROBERT K San Franc For stores in oth GRIECO BROS., Inc., 200 Fift HIGHLIGHTS IN 14K GOLD Present her with a smart acce the school year right and acc Ring $40. 17J Movado w Available in stainle Poodle charm $53.50 Cut-out Initials (Allow one wee Shown Actual Size Fed Mail and Phone Orders Filled BLACK, STARR FIFTH AVENUE AT 48TH STRE EAST ORANGE MANHASS page 77, 78 90

    that-that while the information they give me may be mad [unclear] their names never will be." In [unclear] cases, Captain Ruppelt said, investigation has shown that the people he has inter- viewed had been deceived by things that have been deceiving others all along-balloons, planes, meteors, and so on-but a nettling residue of around twenty per cent of the cases have wound up in that exasperating old pigeonhole labelled "Unidentified." Nothing, for example, could be found to account for the "something silvery directly overhead" reported by a mystified Civil Aeronautics Administration inspector at Terre Haute. A commercial pilot who, flying near Battle Creek, Michigan, spotted "an oval-shaped silver object" ahead of his ship, posed a similarly un- solved problem, as did a highly respected naval officer, stationed at the dirigible base at Lakehurst, New Jersey, who re- ported that he had stared through his binoculars at a brilliant image making turns that were far too tight for any known aircraft. Twenty-five per cent of the observ- ers interrogated by the Aerial Phenom- ena Officer in the last two and a half years have been military pilots. Eight per cent have been commercial pilots, some with as much as twenty years' ex- perience in the air, and at one stage in the current phase of the investigation, even a few physicists at Los Alamos, New Mexico, men who make a fetish of objectivity, were interviewed after they reported having seen puzzling lights hovering above their atomic- energy laboratories. "If you took any one of these incidents by itself, it might not mean much," Captain Ruppelt said. "But in view of the number and calibre of the informants, you couldn't help taking their claims seriously." In February, 1951, Dr. Urner Liddel, a nuclear physicist attached to the Office of Naval Research, at Wash- ington, D.C., declared that at last, thanks to the lifting of certain security restrictions, he could provide the solution to the mystery of the flying saucers: They were "skyhooks," he said-bal- loons a hundred feet in diameter, which the Navy had secretly been sending up for the past four years in order to study cosmic rays. Dr. Liddel's asser- tion was immediately disputed by Dr. Anthony O. Mirarchi, who, as former head of the Air Force's Atmospheric Composition Bureau, had assisted in the diagnosis of Project Saucer reports. Dr. Mirarchi said he thought the saucers might be missiles from some foreign HAVE YOU GRASPED THE Southwick IDEA? Here is tailoring so completely flexil natural that the comfort contrast is re: markable. Once you experience the blissf and casual distinction of SUPERFLEX co tion, you'll never go back to over-stuffed styled clothes. Suits from $70. Sports from $55. At these and oth PAUL STUART, INC. New York City WARNER & COMPANY Baltimore, Md. SILVERSTONE'S Milwaukee, Wis. ARTHUR L Boston JOHN WANAMAK Philadel ROBERT K San Franc For stores in oth GRIECO BROS., Inc., 200 Fift HIGHLIGHTS IN 14K GOLD Present her with a smart acce the school year right and acc Ring $40. 17J Movado w Available in stainle Poodle charm $53.50 Cut-out Initials (Allow one wee Shown Actual Size Fed Mail and Phone Orders Filled BLACK, STARR FIFTH AVENUE AT 48TH STRE EAST ORANGE MANHASS page 77, 78 90