Tuesday, 7 April 2020

UFO News Article:
“Flying Object Seen Over Gulf –
Coast Guardsmen Report Sighting”


5 November 1957
(Hattiesburg American, Mississippi)

Source: NewspaperArchive.com

The whole article:
“The Coast Guard Cutter Sebago sighted an unidentified flying
object over the Gulf of Mexico at 5:21 a.m. (CST) today
[5 November 1957]. The object, seen for about three seconds,
resembled a brilliant planet moving at tremendous speed.

Coast Guard headquarters in New Orleans received a radio message about the sighting. The message did not say exactly who on board the cutter had seen the object.

But it said the object had been tracked on the Sebago’s radar screen for 11 minutes before the visual contact and for 16 minutes afterward. During these periods, the object darted off the screen every few minutes but soon returned.

Cmdr. James Schrader, head of search and rescue operations in the Gulf, said the object had been seen at latitude 25.47 north, longitude 89.24 west or about 200 miles [320 kilometres] directly south of the mouth of the Mississippi River.

Cmdr. Schrader said the radio message gave this log of the morning incident:

5:10 a.m.—The object was seen on the radar screen, moving north to south, about 14 miles from the cutter. The object continued to move closer, shifting toward the port side.

5:14—Contact was lost.

5:16—The object, about 55 miles from the Sebago, faded off the screen.

5:20—Contact was regained. The object appeared stationary, seven miles due north.

5:21—The object was seen, moving horizontally south to north. It was seen for about three seconds and resembled a brilliant planet with a high rate of speed.

5:21 — Radar contact was resumed.

5:37—The cutter reported its last radar contact with the object about 175 miles north of the ship.

The Sebago is expected to report back to its home base in Mobile by Thursday.”


Wikipedia article: “USCGC Sebago (WHEC-42)”:


Quote from the Wikipedia article:
USCG Sebago (WHEC-42) was an Owasco class high endurance cutter which served with the US Coast Guard from 1945 to 1972. Originally intended for World War II service, she was not commissioned until a month after the end of hostilities and consequently did not see combat until her deployment in the Vietnam War more than 20 years later.

Sebago was built by Western Pipe & Steel at the company’s San Pedro shipyard. Named after Sebago Lake, Maine, she was commissioned as a patrol gunboat with ID number WPG-42 on 20 September 1945. Her ID was later changed to WHEC-42 (HEC for ‘High Endurance Cutter’ - the ‘W’ signifies a Coast Guard vessel).[2][3]”

Related posts:



realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=1957








USCGC Sebago (WHEC-42) (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)









Gulf of Mexico map (ontheworldmap.com)
(ontheworldmap.com image)

Google Website Searches:
Focus On 1957 UFO News Articles


Website: NewspaperArchive.com (owned by Heritage Microfilm, Inc., Cedar Rapids, Iowa):

(Search term: “1957” “Unidentified Flying Object”)

(“1957” “Unidentified Flying Objects”)

(“1957” “UFO”)

(“1957” “UFOs”)

(“1957” “Flying Saucer”)

(“1957” “Flying Saucers”)







(Heritage Microfilm, Inc./thegenealogyguide.com image)

Google Website Searches:
Focus On November 1957 and 1957 UFO Incidents


1957 was “a major sighting wave year,” according to NICAP.org’s 1957 UFO chronology report (see below link).

Larry Hatch’s 13 September 1998 UFO report informs us that there occurred many UFO incidents at or around nuclear sites and related places in 1957 – especially in November (see below link).

Website: Fold3 (fold3.com) (Project Blue Book, U.S. Air Force):



Website: J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS) (cufos.org):

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

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

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

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

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

Website: UFO Casebook (ufocasebook.com):

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

Website: UFOINFO.com:

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

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

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

Website: Water UFO (waterufo.net):

(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

Website: Northern Ontario UFO Research & Study, Sudbury
Canada (NOUFORS.com):

https://www.google.com/search?num=100&q=“November+1957”+site:noufors.com
(“November 1957”)

(“1957”)

Website: UFO UpDates, Toronto, Canada (ufoupdateslist.com):

(“November 1957”)


Website: Archives For the Unexplained (AFU.se), Norrköping, Sweden:

(“November 1957”)















UFO Map: North America 1957 (archive.org/larryhatch.net)
(text by larryhatch.net) (larryhatch.net/archive.org image)

Google Website Searches:
Focus On UFO Incidents At the
Pantex Plant Nuclear Weapons Facility


Website: J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS.org):


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


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


Website: UFOINFO.com:


Website: Archives For the Unexplained (AFU.se), Norrköping, Sweden:


Related posts:


U.S. government web page: “U.S. Department of Energy Pantex Plant”:


Wikipedia article: “Pantex Plant”:


Quote from the Wikipedia article:
“The Pantex Plant is the primary United States nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility that aims to maintain the safety, security and reliability of the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.[1][2] The facility is located on a 16,000-acre (25 sq mi; 65 km2) site 17 miles (27 km) northeast of Amarillo, in Carson County, Texas in the Panhandle of Texas. The plant is managed and operated for the United States Department of Energy by Consolidated Nuclear Security and Sandia National Laboratories. Consolidated Nuclear Security, LLC (CNS) is composed of member companies Bechtel National, Inc., Leidos, Inc., Orbital ATK, Inc, and SOC LLC, with Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc. as a teaming subcontractor.[3] CNS also operates the Y-12 National Security Complex.[3]

As a major national security site, the plant and its grounds are strictly controlled and off-limits to all civilians, and the airspace above and around the plant is prohibited to civilian air traffic by the FAA as Prohibited Area P-47.

History

Bunkers at Pantex used for temporary staging of nuclear weapons.
The Pantex Plant was originally constructed as a conventional bomb plant for the United States Army Air Force during the early days of World War II. The Pantex Ordnance Plant was authorized February 24, 1942. Construction was completed on November 15, 1942 and workers from all over the U.S. flocked to Amarillo for jobs.

Pantex was abruptly deactivated when the war ended and remained vacant until 1949, when Texas Technological College in Lubbock (now Texas Tech University) purchased the site for $1.[4] Texas Tech used the land for experimental cattle-feeding operations.

In 1951, at the request of the Atomic Energy Commission (now the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)), the Army exercised a recapture clause in the sale contract and reclaimed the main plant and 10,000 acres (40 km2) of surrounding land for use as a nuclear weapons production facility. The Atomic Energy Commission refurbished and expanded the plant at a cost of $25 million. The remaining 6,000 acres (24 km2) of the original site were leased from Texas Tech in 1989.

The Pantex Plant was operated by Procter & Gamble from 1951 to 1956, Mason & Hanger from 1956 to 2001, and Babcock & Wilcox from 2001 to 2014.[5]

The plant employed about 3,600 people in 2010 and had a budget of $600 million for fiscal year 2010.[6]”

Related posts:












realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=H-Bomb







Aerial view of Pantex Plant, Carson County, Texas (wikimedia.org)
(wikimedia.org photo)















Satellite photo of Amarillo, Texas (tageo.com)
(tageo.com photo)

Sunday, 5 April 2020

UFO Lecture/Paper:
“Twenty-one Years of UFO Reports”


(NICAP.org)

Quote from the UFO lecture/paper:
American Association for the Advancement of Science, 
134th Meeting

General Symposium, Unidentified Flying Objects

J. Allen Hynek, Professor and Chairman, 
Department of Astronomy
Northwestern University
Evanston, Illinois
December 27, 1969

My role here today is that of reporter; to report to you on my score or so years of experience with UFO reports (note that I do not say UFO’s, for I myself have never had a UFO experience) and with those who make such reports, from this and many other countries. I was asked in 948, as an astronomer then at Ohio State University, and thus geographically near the Wright- Patterson AFB, to review the UFO reports received by the Air Force and to determine how many of them originated from misperceptions of astronomical objects or events. This consulting role continued across the years and gave me the chance to monitor the flow of UFO reports submitted to the Air Force, and to observe the Air Force handling of the problem as first one, then another officer took charge of Project Bluebook.

As reporter of the UFO scene, I am reminded of the old dictum of the reporter: find out Who, What, Where, When, and Why. I will have no difficulty in dealing with the Who, What, Where, and When, for that means simply dealing with facts - particularly with the incontrovertible fact that UFO reports exist, and that the time and location of the reported event is generally known, as well as the identity of the witnesses.

The ‘Why’ I shall leave to other scientists, but I shall challenge their explanations if they are not conversant with the Who, What, Where, and When. I am very weary of pontifications by those who have not done field- or home-work, so to speak.”


Related posts:

realtvufos.blogspot.com/search?q=J.+Allen+Hynek













Dr. J. Allen Hynek, U.S. Astronomer, the U.S. Air Force's 
Scientific Consultant on UFOs (1948-1969), UFO Author,
Lecturer & Researcher (4.bp.blogspot.com photo)

UFO Lecture/Paper (Excerpt):
“The Kirtland CE/RV Incident
Albuquerque, New Mexico
November 4, 1957”


(NICAP.org)

The whole UFO lecture/paper excerpt:
Dr. J. Allen Hynek:
We will never know whether UFO reports represent genuinely new empirical observations if we continue the type of logical fallacy illustrated by the Air Force analysis of a radar-visual UFO report from Kirtland Air Force Base, Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1957. Two witnesses in the control tower reported at 11:00 p.m. that an object, which looked (through binoculars) like a lighted, up-ended automobile, came within 200 feet of the ground when it disappeared behind a fence in a highly restricted area, easily visible from the control tower, then rose abruptly at very high angular rate and disappeared. It was observed visually for about six minutes, about half of that time through binoculars, and tracked in part by radar. The report of the Air Force officer who investigated this case, which is in the Bluebook file, states:

The two sources are Airways Operations Specialists with a total of 23 years experience. Both were on duty in the control tower at Kirtland Air Force Base when the sighting was made - both appeared to he mature and well poised individuals, apparently of well above average intelligence, and temperamentally well qualified for the demanding requirements of control tower operators. Although completely cooperative and willing to answer any question, both sources appeared to be slightly embarrassed that they could not identify or offer an explanation of the object which they are unshakably convinced they saw. In the opinion of the interviewer, both sources are completely competent and reliable.

Project Bluebook explained this sighting as that of an aircraft; and gave the following specific reasons:

1. The observers are considered competent and reliable sources and in the opinion of the interviewer actually saw an object they could not identify. 
2. The object was tracked on a radar scope by a competent operator. 
3. The object does not meet identification criteria for any other phenomenon.

So, the witnesses were solid, the radar operator competent, and the object unidentifiable as any other phenomenon; therefore the object had to be an aircraft. Clearly, if such reasoning is applied to all UFO reports we can hardly expect to find out whether any genuinely new empirical observations exist to be explained. Schroedinger, the father of quantum mechanics, wrote: ‘The first requirement of a scientist is that he be curious; he must be capable of being astonished, and eager to find out.’ Perhaps he should have added, ‘and be ready to examine data even when presented in a bewildering and confusing form.’

Source: Twenty-one Years of UFO Reports
J. Allen Hynek, Professor and Chairman, Department of Astronomy, Northwestern University; American Association for the Advancement of Science, 134th Meeting, General Symposium, Unidentified Flying Objects; December 27, 1969”

http://www.nicap.org/reports/kirtland57hyn.htm














Dr. J. Allen Hynek, U.S. Astronomer, the U.S. Air Force's 
Scientific Consultant on UFOs (1948-1969), UFO Author,
Lecturer & Researcher (4.bp.blogspot.com photo)