Baker said the disc finally rose higher and disappeared toward the north.”
Saturday, 14 December 2019
UFO News Article:
“Army Intelligence ‘Interested’
In ‘Saucer’ Visit Here”
14 April 1950
(The Kokomo
Tribune, Indiana)
Source: Newspapers.com
The whole article:
“It was reported in Kokomo
Friday that army intelligence officers are interested in the report of Earl F.
Baker, 1310 North McCann street
[Kokomo , Indiana ],
who said he saw a flying disc hovering over his backyard early Saturday morning
[8 April 1950].
Baker told The Tribune that he saw the ‘saucer’ after
he was awakened by the frantic barking of his pet Scottie dog as he jumped
against the back door of the home.
The man said he saw a grayish metal disc 50 feet in diameter
hovering over his backyard—between 200 and 300 feet in the air. He
said he could see a conning tower on top of the saucer and a bluish light
coming from three portholes in the outer rim of the disc.
Baker said the disc finally rose higher and disappeared toward the north.”
Baker said the disc finally rose higher and disappeared toward the north.”
Wikipedia article: “Military Intelligence Corps (United
States Army)”:
Quote from the Wikipedia article:
“The Military Intelligence Corps is the intelligence
branch of the United States Army. The primary mission of military intelligence
in the United States Army is to provide timely, relevant, accurate, and
synchronized intelligence and electronic warfare support to tactical,
operational and strategic-level commanders. The Army's intelligence components
produce intelligence both for Army use and for sharing across the national
intelligence community.[1]”
Military Intelligence Corps (Army Intelligence) branch
plaque
(wikimedia.org image)
(tageo.com photo)
UFO Radio Interview:
“Shane Ryan, the 1966 Westall
Flying Saucer Incident”
Streamed live: 10 December 2019
(Podcast UFO, Sebago ,
Maine )
Source: Martin Willis Live Shows (YouTube channel)
Quote from the video text:
“Guest Shane Ryan joins us from Canberra , Australia
to discuss the 1966 Westall Flying Saucer Incident, a schoolyard encounter.
Shane has made a serious study of other school-based UFO sightings around the
world.
Shane lives in Canberra
with his wife and two sons and works in the Education and Visitor Services team
at Australian Parliament House.”
Related
posts:
(Martin Willis Live Shows
(YouTube channel)/
youtube.com image)
Friday, 13 December 2019
UFO News Article:
“Tokyo Air Leader Refuses to
Comment On ‘Disc’ Reports”
22 February 1952
(Nevada State Journal, Reno ,
Nevada )
Source: Newspapers.com
The whole article:
“Lt. Gen. O. P. Weyland, Far East Air Forces
commander, said
today his headquarters could ‘add nothing’ to an Air
Force
announcement that ‘flying discs’ had been seen over Korea
by
B-29 bomber crews.
The crew members wish to remain ‘anonymous,’ Weyland
said.”
My comment: Notice how the United Press journalist
comments (‘add nothing’ and ‘anonymous’) on Lt. Gen. Weyland’s statement. This
is good journalism. Where have the critical journalists (except Billy Cox (http://devoid.blogs.heraldtribune.com/),
Leslie Kean and George Knapp) that cover the UFO issue gone?
A USAAF B-29 Superfortress (text by Wikipedia)
(lib.utexas.edu image)
UFO News Article:
“ ‘Strange Object’ Sighted in Skies by Pilots –
Seen Over Big Delta Wednesday”
12 December 1952
(Fairbanks Daily
News-Miner, Alaska )
Source: Newspapers.com
The whole article:
“Three airline pilots reportedly disclosed yesterday
they sighted a mysterious unidentified object ‘that looked like a landing
light’ traveling through the air at ‘a very high rate of speed’ Wednesday
evening [10 December 1952] in the vicinity of Big Delta.
Reliable news sources say the object was reported as
flying at an estimated altitude of 15,000 feet , some 6,000 feet above the
passenger plane.
Called Control
The crew, upon sighting the object, immediately
contacted air defense control by radio and reported the strange light. Yesterday
afternoon the pilots were taken to Ladd field for a two-and-a-half hour
interrogation by high officials there.
The pilots, following a request by the military, made absolutely no comment on the incident and the air force was unwilling to make a public statement.
Denies Report
The pilots, following a request by the military, made absolutely no comment on the incident and the air force was unwilling to make a public statement.
Denies Report
One news source said the mysterious flying object was
picked up by a Ladd field radar installation, but the base public information
office denied the report with the terse release: ‘We have had no reports of any
radar pickup like that.’
The air force said information gathered from the
airline pilots was forwarded to high command for further evaluation. All future
press releases will come from there, they added.”
My comment: Here – we once again have U.S. military
officials who admit that they sent a UFO report to “high command.” It is not
the first time we have seen this.
NOTE: A U.S. Air Force pilot sighted a UFO (Project Blue Book
NOTE: A U.S. Air Force pilot sighted a UFO (Project Blue Book
case) over Ladd Air Force Base [Ladd Army Airfield] on
8 December 1952. Radar also showed the UFO (see link below).
8 December 1952. Radar also showed the UFO (see link below).
Wikipedia article: “Big Delta, Alaska ”:
Wikipedia article: “Ladd Army Airfield”:
Quote from the Wikipedia article:
“Ladd Army Airfield (IATA: FBK, ICAO: PAFB,
FAA LID: FBK) is the military airfield located at Fort Jonathan
Wainwright, located in Fairbanks ,
Alaska . It was originally called
Fairbanks Air Base, but was renamed Ladd Field on 1 December 1939,[4] in
honor of Major Arthur K. Ladd, a pilot in the U.S. Army Air Corps who died in a
plane crash near Dale, South Carolina on 13 December 1935.[5][6]
History
Origins
The major use of Ladd Field was primarily cold-weather
testing of aircraft and equipment. Only Interior Alaska offered the
consistently cold temperatures needed. However, the Attack on Pearl Harbor in
December 1941 forced the temporary halt on testing at Ladd since the military
needed all aircraft for the defense of Alaska .
World War II
When the Air Force was made a separate branch in 1947
the name was changed to Ladd Air Force Base. For many years, it would be one of
two Air Force bases in the Fairbanks
area.
Cold War
From the late 1940s into the 1950s, Ladd AFB served as
the northern hub for Air Force activities in Alaska . As headquarters first of the
Northern Sector of the Alaskan Air Command and later of the 11th Air Division,
Ladd was centrally involved in the Cold War missions of the Alaskan Command and
in the transient missions of other military units, including the Strategic Air
Command (SAC).
Ladd was not exclusively an Air Force site. The Army
was also present to provide antiaircraft (AAA) support and base defense. At
Ladd, Cold War activities fell mainly into three time periods: an early phase
from 1946–1950; a buildup and support hub phase from 1950–1957; and a transfer
phase from 1958–1961, when the installation was turned over to the Army.
During 1946-1950, personnel from Ladd laid some of the
groundwork of the early Cold War with strategic reconnaissance and Arctic
research projects. Among other missions, they made initial assessments of the
Soviet presence in the Arctic ; more fully
developed the practice of polar navigation; extended Arctic topography; tested
cold weather equipment, clothing, and human performance, as well as maintained
the area air defenses of the region.
In 1948, as Cold War tensions heightened, the Army's
2nd Infantry sent ground defense soldiers to Ladd.
From the onset of the Korean War in 1950 and
continuing through 1957, Ladd saw intense use. It became a busy operations and
logistics center with significantly expanded facilities and personnel strength.
As the northern region headquarters of the 11th Air Division, the base was the logistical support center forAlaska 's new defense projects. Ladd
supported Aircraft Control & Warning (AC&W) sites and forward operating
bases such as Galena , Alaska , the northwestern segments of the
Distant Early Warning Line (DEW Line), and the White Alice communications
network (WACS).”
As the northern region headquarters of the 11th Air Division, the base was the logistical support center for
Related
posts:
Aerial view of Big Delta region [Alaska ] (text by Wikipedia)
Thursday, 12 December 2019
Google Website Searches:
Focus On UFO News Articles From the Year 1952
A big thanks and kudos must go to Ancestry.com LLC and
all the people who have done the newspaper article clipping job.
Website: Newspapers.com (owned by Ancestry.com LLC, Lehi , Utah ):
(Search term: “Unidentified Flying Object” “1952” )
(“Unidentified Flying Objects” “1952” )
(“UFO” “1952” )
(“UFOs” “1952” )
(“Unidentified Object” “1952” )
(“Unidentified Objects” “1952” )
(“Flying Object” “1952” )
(Flying Objects” “1952” )
(“Flying Saucer” “1952” )
(“Flying Saucers” “1952” )
(“Flying Disc” “1952” )
(“Flying Discs” “1952” )
(“Flying Disk” “1952” )
(“Flying Disks” “1952” )
UFO news article:
“ ‘Object’ Circles Over Camp Drum”
27 September 1952
(The Ithaca Journal, New York )
Source: Newspapers.com
The whole article:
“The Air Force has no comment on an unidentified
flying object that reportedly paid a half-hour visit to this Northern
New York camp.
Military authorities said Friday that the object
hovered over the base last Monday night [22 September 1952]. The information at
first had been classified as confidential.
Eight soldiers said the object was about 20 feet across and trailed
red-orange sparks. It circled rapidly and sometimes hovered, they reported.
Officers from Griffis [Griffiss] Air Force Base atRome questioned the men
on Tuesday. The officers declined comment.”
Officers from Griffis [Griffiss] Air Force Base at
Wikipedia article: “Fort Drum ”:
Quote from the above Wikipedia article:
“Fort
Drum [located near Watertown , New York ] is a
U.S. Army military reservation and a census-designated place (CDP) in Jefferson County ,
on the northern border of New York ,
United States .
The population of the CDP portion of the base was 12,955 at the 2010 census.[2]
It is home to the 10th Mountain Division.
History
This
section of the article incorporates text taken from a public-domain document
prepared by the United
States military.[4]
A portion of the present Fort Drum
was first used as a military training site in 1908 when it was named Pine
Camp; the following year land was purchased to develop the camp as an
installation. The army had an earlier presence in the North
Country from the early 19th century, prior to the War of 1812.
World War II expansion
With the outbreak of World War II in Europe ,
Pine Camp was selected by the Army for a major expansion. An additional 75,000 acres (30,000 ha ) of land was
purchased, displacing 525 local families. Five entire villages were eliminated,
while others were reduced from one-third to one-half their size. Three thousand
buildings, including 24 schools, six churches and a post office, were
abandoned.
By Labor Day 1941, 100 tracts of land were taken over.
Contractors went to work, and in a period of 10 months at a cost of $20
million, an entire city was built to house the divisions scheduled to train at
Pine Camp.
Eight hundred buildings were constructed, including
240 barracks, 84 mess halls, 86 storehouses, 58 warehouses, 27 officers'
quarters, 22 headquarters buildings, and 99 recreational buildings, as well as
guardhouses and a hospital. Construction workers suffered during this period,
as the winter of 1941-42 was one of the coldest in North
Country history.
The three divisions to train at Pine Camp included the
4th Armored Division (Gen. Creighton Abrams was a battalion commander there at
the time), the 45th Infantry Division (United States ), and the 5th Armored
Division.
Pine Camp was renamed as Camp Drum
in 1951, named after Lieutenant General Hugh A. Drum, who was chief of staff of
the First United States Army during World War I and First Army commander at the
start of World War II. During and after the Korean War, a number of units were
stationed and trained here to take advantage of the terrain and climate.”
Wikipedia article: “Griffiss Air Force Base”:
Quote from the Wikipedia article:
“Griffiss Air Force Base is a former United
States Air Force installation in the northeastern United States, located in
central New York state at Rome, about fifteen miles (25 km ) northwest of Utica.
Missions included fighter interceptors, electronic
research, installation, and support activities, aerial refueling, and bombers.
Opened in 1942, the base closed pursuant to BRAC action in 1995 and its
airfield is now Griffiss International Airport ,
owned by Oneida County . In November 1984 the site was
added to the National Priorities List because hazardous chemicals were found in
soil and ground water. Solvents, lead and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) had
been disposed in landfills and dry wells
Closed 24 years ago in September 1995 by the Base
Realignment and Closure Commission decision, it was realigned for civilian and
non-combat purposes in 1995, and is now home to the Griffiss Business and
Technology Park. Post-closure, two USAF activities remained: the Rome
Research Site of the Air Force Research Laboratory, and the Eastern Air
Defense Sector (EADS) of the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD)
as operated by the New York Air National Guard from a small complex of
buildings in the Technology
Park .”
NNY360.com (Watertown Daily Times, Watertown ,
New York ) article about Fort Drum
(with photo of the base):
Related posts:
(tageo.com photo)
UFO Report:
“ERNAGE 1989: Les faits et leur analyse”
(“ERNAGE 1989: The facts and their analysis”)
By A. Amond, W. De Brouwer, P. Ferryn and A. Meessen
(Belgian Committee for
the Study of Space Phenomena (Comité Belge d’Etude des Phénomènes Spatiaux) (COBEPS), Belgium )
This UFO report focuses on the UFO sighting of Belgian Army Lieutenant Colonel André Amond and his wife, Chantal.
The incident occurred at Ernage, near Gembloux, inBelgium on the
evening of 11 December 1989.
This UFO report focuses on the UFO sighting of Belgian Army Lieutenant Colonel André Amond and his wife, Chantal.
The incident occurred at Ernage, near Gembloux, in
The report concludes that the Belgian UFO wave
sightings in 1989 and 1990 “can’t be explained in terms of helicopters or other
conventional aircraft.”
Regarding the Ernage UFO case, the report says: “Our conclusion is straight forward: The sighting at Ernage on December 11, 1989 of Lt Col André AMOND and his wife cannot be related to any known aerial vehicle.”
The report translated into English:
Wikipedia article: “Ernage”:
English translation of the Wikipedia article (by
Google Translate):
Related
posts:
(tageo.com photo)
Freeze-frame from a video of one of the triangular shaped UFOs which
were seen over Belgium during the 1989-1990 UFO wave
(Rai/google.com image)
Monday, 9 December 2019
UFO Lecture:
“Falcon Lake UFO Lecture”
7 November 2019
(University
of Manitoba , Winnipeg , Canada )
Source: University of Manitoba Archives & Special
Collections (YouTube channel)
Video text:
“The Falcon Lake UFO Files Talk by renowned Canadian
Ufologist, Chris Rutkowski. Also featuring Stan Michalak, son of Stefan
Michalak.
Related posts:
Chris A. Rutkowski, Canadian Astronomer, UFO Author,
Lecturer & Researcher
(University of Manitoba/youtube.com image)
UFO News Article (Excerpt):
Article About Airship Sighting
In San Francisco, California
24 November 1896
(San Francisco Chronicle, California )
Source: Newspapers.com
Quote from the article:
“… Sutro by his employes at the Cliff House, the
airship was seen in that vicinity about two weeks ago. Speaking about the
matter yesterday, the Mayor said: ‘It was about dark one evening, about two
weeks ago [on around 10 November 1896], when I reached the Cliff House, and, as
I alighted from the car, a number of my employes rushed up to me and began
telling me about having seen a strange object hovering over the Seal rocks.
According to their story, the object came in from the sea and passed directly
over the Cliff House, stopping its rapid speed only for a second while over the
Seal rocks. It seemed to be about 500 feet above the earth, and it was too dark
to get a view sufficient to describe it. The bright light that seemed to be
attached to the rear end of the object, apparently a searchlight, was visible
to all, and as it passed rapidly out of sight, going in the direction of the
city, it left my men full of wonderment as to what it could be.’ ”
My comment: This is one of the 1896-1897 airship
reports which clearly describes a highly advanced aircraft. It is not possible
to misunderstand the following sentence: “ ‘According to their story, the
object came in from the sea and passed directly over the Cliff House, stopping
its rapid speed only for a second while over the Seal rocks.’ ”
Wikipedia article: “Cliff House, San Francisco ”:
Related posts:
Third Cliff House, ca. 1900 (text by Wikipedia)
(wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)
(tageo.com photo)
UFO News Article:
“ ‘This Thing Like a Ball of Fire’…Just Gas?”
3 April 1966
(Detroit Free Press, Michigan )
Source: Newspapers.com
This is a large, brilliant article (includes a map of
the sightings) about the March 1966 Southern Michigan UFO flap.
Quote from the article:
“ ‘. . . A whirlwind came out of the north, and a
brightness WAS about it … the colour of amber, out of the midst of the fire.’
—Ezekiel
1:4
‘It WAS an
object . . . I don’t care who believes me. I believe me.’
—Frank Mannor
When the
strange object landed on the banks of the river Chebar thousands of years ago,
the Biblical prophet ‘beheld . . . four living creatures . . . in the likeness
of man, every one with four faces.’
The object
Frank Mannor beheld in the swamp behind his farm home near Dexter, in Washtenaw County , March 20 disgorged no living
creatures.
But he’s
absolutely certain that ‘we seen this thing like a ball of fire, maybe more
like a shooting star, come out of the west, then drop below a clump of trees
half a mile behind the house.’
The
47-year-old sometime truck driver’s account of his experience, as graphic as
Ezekiel’s in the Bible, was the dramatic highlight of Michigan ’s biggest ‘flying saucer’ spree.
WHAT LENT
IT widespread credibility was the corroborating testimony: Reports of sightings
of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFO’s) similar to Mannor’s description, by
dozens of southeastern Michigan
police officers trained to prevent mass hysteria rather than encourage it.
…
THE PHENOMENON started March 14 during a routine
patrol by Car 19, Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Department. Here’s how it appears
on the official reports:
‘3:50 a.m. Received call from Deputies (Robert)
Bushroe and (John) Foster. Stating that they saw some suspicious objects in the
sky. Disc, star like colors red and green, moving very fast, making sharp
turns, having left to right movements, going in a northwest direction.
‘5:04 a.m. [most likely at 4:04 a.m.] Livingston County called and stated that they also
saw the objects. . . .
‘4:05 a.m.—Ypsilanti Police stated that the object was
seen at the location of US-12 and I-94.
‘4:10 a.m. Monroe
County called and they
also saw the objects.
‘4:20 a.m. (Bushroe and Foster) saw four more in the
same location moving at a high rate of speed. . . .
‘4:54 a.m. Two more were spotted coming from the
southeast, over Monroe
County .
‘5:30 Dep. Patterson & I (Cpl. Broderick) looked
out of the office and saw a bright light that appeared to be over the Ypsilanti area. It looked
like a star, but was moving from north to east.’
Bushroe added this note when he returned from patrol.
‘This is the strangest thing that Deputy Foster and
myself have ever witnessed. We would not have beleaved [sic] this story if we hadn’t seen it with our own eyes. These
objects could move at fantastic speeds, and make very sharp turns dive and
climb, and hover with great maneuverability. We have no idea of what these
objects were, or where they could have come from. At 4:20 a.m. there were 4 of
these objects flying in a line formation, in a northwesterly direction, at 5:30
these objects went out of view and were not seen again.’
That same morning, Dexter Patrolman Robert Hunawill
was on patrol with Patrolman Richard Alexa and two county deputies. He said:
‘We first saw them in the early morning, maybe about 4 a .m. . . . We saw red and
white lights off in the distance, about four of them.’
HUNAWILL later reported eight other sightings and took
photographs several times.
‘Again in the 20th,’ he said, ‘my wife and I saw four
objects hovering over the Mannor farm while the deputies were searching the
swamp. Later that night, we’d just come home and were pulling into the driveway
when one of the objects came over the house at no more than 3,000 feet . Took a
couple of minutes to pass over. A couple of deputies followed it out of town
and saw it hover over Island Lake
Road in the direction of the Mannor farm.
‘It’s not marsh gas. My reaction to Dr. Hynek is the
same as the rest of the people around here. He made us look like fools. I don’t
think he’ll get any co-operation out of these people any more.’
THURSDAY morning, March 17: Washtenaw Deputies David
Fitzpatrick and Nuel Schneider had been called out on a minor accident.
Fitzpatrick’s account:
‘We seen three different objects in the sky to the
south of us. Two of these objects were close together and the other farther to
the east. On one of these object we could see on one side white light and on
the other a green light.
‘We headed south towards Milan on Marion Road . At this time we stopped the
patrol car and looked back to the west and at the same time looked toward the
east and seen a real bright object hovering over what looked like US-23.
‘We then drove to Arkona and Carpenter Roads and
Deputy Hennes let us use his field glasses. At the time we seen this strange
object and some colors. The top of it was yellowish blue-green, and the bottom
bright red with what looked like black marks across it.
‘The object itself looked like a toy top. When at the
above location, we were about five to 10 miles from this object.
‘This seems very unbelievable and something right out
of these science fiction movies on TV!’
NEXT: The Mannor sighting.
‘We all run out on the porch and we seen this thing
like a ball of fire, maybe more like a shooting star, come out of the west,
then drop below a clump of trees maybe half a mile behind the house.
‘Me and Ronnie (Mannor’s 19-year-old son) decided to
come down for a look. My wife, Lena , kicked up
an awful fuss, Said we might get radioactive.
‘I told her if they was anything radioactive we’d get
it just as bad in the house as down in the swamp. I asked my two sons-in-law to
come, but their wives wouldn’t let ’em.
‘We come over that knoll just this side of the swamp
and there it was, about eye-level with us, no more than 500 yards away. It had a
blue light in front, and in the back a light that kept changing from red to
white, like it was rotating, like the light on a police car.
‘It was almost flat on the bottom, and kinda high and
peaked on top. We couldn’t see much except the outline and the lights at the
end, because the whole thing was wrapped in a light like a halo, and it kept
shimmering.’
The next night, Mrs. Mary Leonard and her three
children returned from buying groceries to their home just southwest of Ann Arbor .
‘There was just one light,’ said Mrs. Leonard. ‘It
glowed off and on, and it zig-zagged a little. It was greenish and reddish, and
it looked like it had a little light on it. We saw it in the southwest about
8:30 p.m., more than half way up from the horizon.’ ”
Wikipedia article: “Dexter , Michigan ”:
Wikipedia article: “Ypsilanti , Michigan ”:
Related posts:
Frank Mannor
(4.bp.blogspot.com/PRUFON.net
photo)
(lib.utexas.edu image)
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