Sunday, 3 April 2016

Google Website Searches:
Focus On UFO Incidents At
Malls/Marts/Shopping Centers/
Stores/Shops/Warehouses


Website: National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena (NICAP.org):

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Website: National UFO Reporting Center (NUFORC.org):

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Website: UFO Casebook (ufocasebook.com):

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Website: UFOINFO.com:

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Website: UFO DNA (thecid.com/ufo):

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NICAP.org UFO case report:
A large disk shaped UFO was observed by hundreds of people at the Glendale Shopping Center and other persons in Indianapolis, Indiana, in September (date could be incorrect) 1965, according to the report.

The whole UFO case report:
“September 1965: On an unknown date it September at 8:30 PM in Indianapolis, Indiana, a mother and her two sons, age 9 and 7 respectively, were driving home from at Cub Scout meeting that had been held at the White River Elementary School. The evening was warm and the sky was very clear. Several airplanes were in the air. The witnesses eyes were on the skies because there had been a number of publicized UFO sightings. Just as they were starting in to a curve at Haynes Avenue they saw a band of lights in the sky. The band of lights was moving very fast and then stopped and hovered, bobbing around like a small boat in choppy water. The witnesses reported that the band of light was as large as a house!

After completing the curve, the mother stopped the car and all got out to watch what they knew was a disc but they could only see the lights around the edge. A groups of planes headed toward the disc and the object took off to the south over the Glendale area. The duration of the sighting was three minutes. Later that evening they watched Frank Edwards on the TV news talking about what they had seen which was witnessed by hundreds at the Glendale Shopping Center. He said that witnesses described the object as a large disc (Exhibit 5A) with red, white, blue, and green lights around the edge. According to Mr. Edwards, it flew east and hovered over some radio towers knocking a radio station off the air for a short time.

This sighting was later recalled for us by the witness. The date of the sighting could be incorrect. There are no entries in the computer or in the EGBA for this sighting although it was mentioned by TV news person, Frank Edwards. Norma Croda recently investigated this sighting. (Ref 3).”

http://www.nicap.org/Early_Sixties.htm



















Satellite photo of Indianapolis, Indiana (tageo.com)
(tageo.com photo)

UFO Article (Blog):
“The James Stokes UFO Sighting, November 1957”


By Kevin D. Randle, 26 July 2014
(A Different Perspective, Cedar Rapids, Iowa)

Quote from the article:
“As should be obvious, I have spent some time looking into the November 1957 UFO sightings, especially those in the desert southwest. I have been through what I can find, including the original reports that appear in The A.P.R.O. Bulletin, the NICAP UFO Investigator, the Project Blue Book files, and the skeptical end of these cases including Watch the Skies! by Curtis Peebles.

What I find interesting is how the Project Blue Book investigators seemed to miss basic facts, made allegations that were never corroborated (which is a nice way to suggest they just made up stuff), and wrote off cases based not on the evidence but on their own personal bias. The James Stokes case of November 5, 1957, proves the point.

What prompted this is what I read in Watch the Skies!. The information is right out of the Project Blue Book files, reported as if this was an unbiased search for the truth, the only credible source for information and dismisses Stokes as a liar. That allegation is based on trivia, much of it coming from the mistakes made by the Air Force which could have been corrected if they had cared anything for the truth.

The first point is the claim that Stokes, after his sighting and before he did anything else, called the media, in this case the Alamogordo radio station to describe what he had seen. But the evidence, available at the time, is that Stokes first called his superior, Major Ralph Everett, at Holloman Air Force Base to ask if he could talk about the case. When he received the affirmative, he didn’t call the radio station. He called his friend, Jim Lorenzen. But the radio station news director, Terry Clarke, having learned Stokes’ name from Everett, was looking for Stokes so that even if Stokes hadn’t called Lorenzen, who then called radio station, the story would have gotten out. So, Stokes story can’t be criticized for his the media contact.”


















(ufocasebook.com image)

UFO Article (Blog):
“Coral In The Desert: Searching for Socorro.”


By Dr. Michael D. Swords, 29 June 2010
(The Big Study)

Quote from the article:
“Many people know that Coral and Jim Lorenzen had long UFO research careers working out of Tucson, Arizona, and a few know that they began their ‘hobby’ in Wisconsin. Only those interested in UFO history realize that much of their important work occurred while they were working in government jobs in the Alamagordo/HollomanAFB area of New Mexico. They were the primary UFOlogical source for information for the James Stokes affair, just after Levelland, and had many contacts, even in the military, in what was a particularly UFO-friendly environment. The famous [and controversial] UFO photograph to the left [usually written off by conservatives as a noctilucent cloud or some similar weather phenomenon] was a Holloman area case looked into by Coral who felt that the woman’s testimony about the thing’s fast speed was honest, and so trusted the photo. [My memory is dull on this point, but what softly rings it in is that Coral knew the witness---if so, then maybe one should keep this photo in the graybasket rather than the trashbasket.] The real point is that Coral knew many people in the Socorro neighborhood including some with military connections.

Has Coral strengthened the case for Socorro? Well, you could read it that way. She is also reminding us that lots of stuff gets tested in and around Holloman.”














Jim and Coral Lorenzen
(1bp.blogspot.com photo)

UFO Article:
“UFO Lands at AIR FORCE BASE”


By Coral Lorenzen
(Unknown date)
(Fate Magazine, U.S.A.)

Source: NICAP.org

Quote from the article:
“THE LOUDSPEAKER at Main Control on the Holloman Air Force Base-White Sands Proving Ground Integrated Test Range suddenly blared these electrifying words: ‘I’ve got a UFO.’

It was Thursday, April 30, 1964. A lone B-57 was flying a routine mission in the vicinity of Stallion Site, a few miles east of San Antonio, N. Mex., on the north range. The pilot had called Main Control and said: ‘I’m not alone up here.’ Control called for an explanation and the pilot replied: ‘I’ve got a UFO.’

The controller then asked: ‘What does it look like?’

The B-57 pilot replied: ‘It’s egg-shaped and white.’

‘Any markings,’ asked control.

‘Same as Socorro,’ the pilot said and then added, ‘I’m going to make another pass.’

Minutes later, after the big jet had made its turn and come in over the area where the UFO was first seen, the pilot contacted Main Control again and reported: ‘It’s on the ground.’

Then radio communications ceased. Photo crews were asked to stand by.”


Wikipedia article: “Holloman Air Force Base”:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holloman_Air_Force_Base

Wikipedia article: “White Sands Missile Range”:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Sands_Missile_Range

Holloman Air Force Base is located 10 kilometres (6 miles) south west of the central business district of Alamogordo, New Mexico.















Aerial view of Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico
(airports-worldwide.com(airports-worldwide.com photo)




















Satellite photo of Alamogordo, New Mexico (tageo.com)
(tageo.com photo)