Source: waterufo.net (the late Carl W. Feindt)
Tuesday, 31 December 2019
UFO News Article:
“40 on Canadian Warship See Saucers off Korea”
2 August 1952
(Unknown newspaper) (United Press (UP) article)
Source: waterufo.net (the late Carl W. Feindt)
The whole article:
“Those ‘Flying Saucers’ have popped up in Korea .
A Canadian destroyer recently reported sighting two
such objects and recorded them on its radar, it was learned here today.
A Navy report said 40 officers and crew members of the
destroyer Crusader saw the ‘saucers’ the night of July 10 [1952]. All had the
familiar qualities of the puzzling flying discs.
The report, addressed to the commanders of the Far East naval forces and the Fifth Air Force, said the
ship’s radar registered ‘fixes’ on the objects. It placed them two miles high
and seven miles away.
The report said the objects disappeared before
dawn.”
UFO news article:
“KOREA ,
JAPAN
JUMP INTO ACT, SEE SKY SAUCERS”
2 August 1952
(Sudbury Daily Star , Canada )
Source: waterufo.net (the late Carl W. Feindt)
The whole article:
“Those ‘flying saucers’ have popped up in Korea and Japan .
A Canadian destroyer recently reported sighting two
such objects and recorded them on its radar, it was learned here today.
A navy report said 40 officers and crew members of the
destroyer Crusader saw the ‘saucers’ the night of July 10. All had the familiar
qualities of the puzzling flying discs.
The report, addressed to the commanders of the Far East naval forces and the fifth Air Force, said the
ship’s radar registered ‘fixes’ on the objects. It placed them two miles high
and seven miles away. The report said the objects disappeared before dawn.
A second report, a day or two later, dismissed the
radar find as the planet Jupiter. One officer commented, however: ‘Jupiter
doesn't come in pairs and it is several million miles out of range of our
radar.’ ”
Wikipedia article: “HMCS Crusader (R20)”:
Quote from the Wikipedia article:
“HMCS Crusader was a C-class destroyer originally
ordered by the Royal Navy in 1942 and transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in
1946.”
Related posts:
The Royal Canadian Navy C-class destroyer HMCS
Crusader (DD 228), circa in 1946 after the transfer to the RCN. Crusader had
been commissioned in 1945 as HMS Crusader (R20). She was later converted to an
anti-submarine frigate (DDE 228) and scrapped in 1964. (text by Wikipedia) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(wikimedia.org photo)