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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
appeared below me. I was cruising at about 20,000 feet. What
caused me to look back at the object was the fact that it moved from
below me 10,000 feet vertically in a matter of seconds.”’
He turned and chased the object at better than 500 mph., but
was unable to gain on it. Balocco estimated the UFO was about
10 miles from him during the 3-4 minute chase. At that distance,
he said, it appeared about 1/4’’ wide and about 3’ long. ‘‘The ob-
ject was the color of white heat andit threw out a red glow behind
it. It hadtwo red lights onthe left hand side, bounding and flashing
off the end, encircling anarc.’’ The Marine officer said he seemed
to gain on the object for a time, but it then dropped from his
altitude and disappeared toward the coast.
Another pilot involved in the search, Capt. Thomas W. Riggs,
reported he sighted an object flying low near the Carolina coast,
but couldn’t identify it. [13]
September 7, 1953. Near Vandalia, Ohio, U.S. Navy Reserve
Lt. “‘S.D.S.”’ was flying to Indianapolis from Columbus with his
wingman, both in FG-1D Corsairs. Shortly after 8 p:m., he
‘noticed a brilliant white flashing light pass directly below us
from south to north, traveling extremely fast at about 2000 feet.’’
He was at 4000 feet. ‘‘I called my wingman, but he did not see it.
After passing beneath us, it pulled up and climbed rapidly out of
sight to the north. The light was much like burning magnesium.
‘‘Returning from Indianapolis (about 9 p.m.) I was leading the
flight. JI noticed the same brilliant white light at 12 o’clock high
and called my wingman again. This time he saw it. It stayed
motionless relative to the airplane’s movement for abouttwo min-
utes, then disappeared. It reappeared again quickly at 9 o’clock
level. It again remained motionless for about two minutes
and then dove and pulled up ahead of us and climbed out of sight.
At no time were we close enough to see any concrete object or
shape. Both of us were at a loss to explain this phenomenon.’’
(Case reported by L. H. Stringfield, Ground Observer Corps
official; see Section VII)
e Jorgensen
42,000 Ft.
UFOs tee eat?
“Zr *
3 mi
Scarborough o
° 6 miles
18,000 Ft. DALLAS
NOR Tf r
May 14, 1954
May 14, 1954. Near Dallas, Texas, a flight of Marine Corps
jets led by Maj. Charles Scarborough, was headed north in mid-
afternoon. Ata point 6 miles westof the city, Major Scarborough
sighted 16 unidentified objects in groups of four, dead ahead but
at higher altitude, 15 degrees above. He radioed Capt. Roy
Jorgensen, whose jet he had in sight by its contrail. Captain
Jorgensen, at higher altitude, saw the UFOs below his left wing.
Just as the two pilots triedtoboxin the UFOs, Major Scarborough
saw them fade from glowing white to orange and disappear, ap-
parently speeding away due north. (See sketch) Based on Captain
Jorgensen’s position the UFOs were 3 miles ahead of Major
Scarborough’s plane, and 15 degrees above him. Triangulation
shows that the UFOs were at about 32,000 feet.
1955. A Navy Commander stationed at Anacostia Naval Air
Station, was flying over Virginia, when he looked back over his
shoulder and saw a huge disc flying formation on him, about 75
feet away. The Commander, also a Navy missile expert, de-
scribed it as ‘‘two saucers, face to face,’’ apparently metallic
about 100 feet in diameter, thick at the center with a domed top
through which shone an amber light. When he tried to ease his
plane in for a closer look, the disc tilted upward and accelerated
away, leaving the clouds swirling behind it. (Report acquired by
Rear Adm. Delmer S, Fahrney, USN, Ret.)
Dec. 11, 1955. At about 9 p.m., along the Atlantic Coast near
Jacksonville, Florida, a fast-maneuvering, round, orange-red ob-
ject was reported by the crews of two airliners and by persons
on the ground. Two Navy jets, on a night practice mission,
were directed to the area by the Jacksonville Naval Air Station
control tower. The jets located the object, but when they at-
tempted to close in, it shot up to 30,000 feet and then dived back,
circling and buzzing the jets, while Naval Air Station officers and
tower controlers watched via radar. (Reported by Capt. Joe
Hull, Capital Airlines pilot).
1956. A Navy R7V-2 Super Constellation, approaching
Gander, Newfoundland, on its way from the other side of the
Atlantic, carried its regular crew, the relief crew and two other
crews being returned home from foreign duty -- almost 30 airmen
in all. The senior pilot, a Commander, spotted a cluster of lights
below and an estimated 25 miles ahead; this was confirmed by
the co-pilot, navigator, radioman, and several others called to
the cockpit for the purpose. As the pilot banked to give them a
better look, the lights dimmed and several colored rings appeared
and began to spread out. At this point, the Commander realized
the lights were not on the ocean surface, but climbing toward
him. He levelled out and began a full-power climb, in an effort
to avoid what by this time looked like a giant disc. Just before
the impact was due, the disc tilted, slowed and went by the trans-
port’s wing. As the Navy pilot began a bank, he saw the disc was
flying alongside, about 100 yards away. He estimated its diameter
as 3-4 times his plane’s wingspan (370-500 feet) and thickness as
at least 30 feet at the center. It looked like one dish atop another.
Gradually the object pulled away then tilted upward, accelerated
and was lost to sight among the stars. After it left, the pilot
contacted Gander by radio and was informed they had watched
both his aircraft and the other object on radar, but were unable
to get a radio reply from the other ‘‘aircraft.”’
(Report acquired by Rear Adm. DelmerS. Fahrney USN, Ret.)
August 15, 1957. In Woodland Hills, Calif., Eugene E. Allison,
Chief Aviation Pilot (ret.), his wife, son and a relative were
around the family swimming pool, late in the afternoon, when they
saw what appeared to be a solid white disc-shaped object hovering
between two drifting cirro-stratus clouds. After about six min-
utes, ‘‘the object appeared to rock from side to side, rising straight
up out of sight in approximately three seconds’’ according to the
10-year Navy veteran and Pensacola graduate. {14}
July 10, 1962. On the U.S. Naval Auxiliary Air Station, New
Iberia, La., a Navy man (name confidential) was watching a group
of S-2 Trackers inthe landing pattern. ‘‘Suddenly, a discus shaped
object came in very fast and low about 1500 feet, slowed over the
area of the runway and hangar, and then went out of sight while
climbing at a 20 degree to 30 degree angle. It passed across the
station heading northeast, and as it came directly ahead, I stopped
the car to try to time it. It was accelerating rapidly at this
time, however. The only unusual feature ofthe object, aside from
the fact that it was no conventional aircraft, was a rotating dome
on top that appeared to be equally divided into two sections, one
half light gray in color, the other halfblack. The estimated speed
of rotation was about 90 rpm.’’ [15]
NOTES
. True; March 1950
. San Diego Journal, March 16, 1950; newswire reports; etc.
. Report on file at NICAP
. Keyhoe, Donald E., Flying Saucers Are Real. (Gold Medal
Books, 1950), p. 27
5. Report on file at NICAP
6. True; December 1952
7. Ruppelt, Edward J., Report on Unidentified Flying Objects.
(Doubleday, 1956), p. 106
8. Ibid., ppg. 162-165
9. United Press; January 4, 1954
10. Report on file at NICAP
11. Report on file at NICAP
12. New York Post, New York Journal-American, July 12, 1950
13. Associated Press; February 12, 1953
14. Report on file at NICAP
15. Report on file at NICAP
Pond e
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