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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010001 0
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 :
Visibility was unlimited. The pilots agreed, ‘‘It could not be
any clearer than it was that night above 5,000 feet.’’
When the plane began letting down for landing, about 9:15 p.m.,
Captain Killian and F/O Dee lost sight of the objects. At 9:30
p.m. in Akron, Ohio, George Popowitch of the UFO Research
Committee received a phone call from a contact at the Akron
airport. A United Airlines plane (Flight 937) had just landed for
a 15-minute stop, and reported sighting three UFOs which had
followed their plane for 30 minutes. Popowitch had already re-
ceived 9 reports from local citizens between 9:15 and 9:20 of
three UFOs seen in the area, sohe arranged to interview the crew
of the airliner.
Capt. A. D. Yates and Eng. L. E. Baney said they had tracked
the objects from the vicinity of Lockhaven, Pennsylvania, to
Youngstown, Ohio, between 8:40 and 9:10 p.m. United Airlines
flight 321, also, had discussed the objectsby radio. Captain Yates
had seen the UFOs pacing his planetothe south. But in the vicin-
ity of Warren, Ohio the objects passed the aircraft, veered to the
right, and finally disappeared to the northwest.
UFO Landing Reported
Early in 1961, a private pilot in Texas witnessed an apparent
landing of a UFO. NICAP Member Jack Varnell, Knox City,
Texas, conducted an extensive investigation into the sighting and
the resulting USAF interest. [44] Anemployee of the Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation office, he joined the search for the
landed object shortly after noon of the day following the sighting,
and observed proceedings firsthand from then on.
January 10, 1961: Pilot W.K. Rutledge and passenger George
Thomas, both of Abilene, Texas, were enroute to Abilene from
Tulsa, Oklahoma. At 6,500 feet over Wichita Falls, Texas, about
9:00 p.m. they spotted a red object about 1,500 feet above the
plane, glowing brilliantly in the night sky. Rutledge changed
course to follow it at about 180 mph, establishing radio contact with
the control tower at Shepard AFB, Wichita Falls, during the chase.
He followed it WSW to Munday, then north to Vera (where several
persons on the ground saw it), Thenthe object moved WSW again,
toward Benjamin, finally turning SW. When beyond Benjamin, the
object began to reduce its speed and altitude, going into a glide
and apparently landing 4 to 5 miles SW of the town in a heavily
wooded area.
The pilot circled in his single-engine Beech ‘“(Debonair’”’
while law officers, alerted by radio, sped to the scene. Included
were Knox County Sheriff Homer T, Melton (nowa Texas Ranger),
one of his deputies, and the police chiefs of Knox City and Munday.
Rutledge radioed his position to the Shepard AFB control tower
when he began to circle, and the word was relayed to the conver-
ging patrol cars.
Poor communication between air and ground hampered Rut-
ledge in his efforts to direct the search cars. At one point, a
cruiser driven by Deputy Stone came within 100 yards of the
landing spot, but the pilot was unable todirect him closer. During
this period the glow from the UFO, which had been visible to
Rutledge on the ground, was diminishing to a dull red. About
the time Stone approached it (unknowingly) and blinked his lights,
the glow from the UFO vanished completely.
After about 90 minutes of chasing and circling, Rutledge
noticed he was running low on fuel and decided to go on to Abilene.
AIR FORCE INVESTIGATION
Next morning the search was resumed by police, about 20
high school boys, and several other citizens of the area. Despite
a cold drizzle, they hunted until 3:00 p.m., when Rutledge and
Thomas flew back from Abilene. Since there was no convenient
airport, Rutledge landed on a highway near Benjamin. When
they got into town they were immediately metby USAF Lieutenant
McClure and a Sergeant; the four retired to a restaurant nearby
for the questioning. NICAP Member Jack Varnell listened from
the next table.
The Air Force officer’s opening implications that the object
might have been a balloon or meteorite were quickly shortcut
by Rutledge’s firm statement: ‘‘WhatI saw last night was certain-
ly not a meteorite or a weather balloon.’’ He then made it clear
that the object ‘‘came down slowly,’’ and did not ‘‘fall.’’? The
lieutenant changed his tone at this point, Varnell reported, and
became much more serious and interested.
As the interview progressed, the cafe began to fill, since the
CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010001-0
sighting was by this time the chief topic of conversation in the
small Texas town. Questions were posed and answers noted for
more than a half hour, but the muffled voices were hard to hear
in the crowded room.
The USAF men expressed an interest in locating the site of
the landing, so the group returned to Rutledge’s parked airplane.
While Jack Varnell and the sheriff stopped traffic, Rutledge,
Thomas, and Lieutenant McClure took off from the highway.
The sergeant and the enlisted driver of the USAF car drove off.
The small plane made three or four passes over the 1,000
acre tract of mesquite where the object had reportedly landed,
and then flew off. Contrary to expectations, the other USAF men
did not join the ground search party, which broke up about the
time the plane departed.
Shortly after 5:00 p.m., the three airmen, the pilot and his
companion were seen at a drive-in restaurant near Knox City.
Rutledge was observed by Jack Varnell to be filling out what
appeared to be the standard USAF Technical Information Sheet
with Lieutenant_McClure.
July 4-5, 1961: On two consecutive nights while flying in the
Cleveland-Akron area, Ernest Stadvec encountered strangely man-
euvering lights which he could not identify. A World War II
bomber pilot, he now owns a flying service in Akron, Ohio.
“I have been flying since 1942 both day and night,’’ he stated,
“and currently own a flying business that requires us to fly day
or night in all types of weather. Over the years I have seen many
falling stars and other phenomena associated with atmospheric
conditions as well. What we saw was not an astronomical or
meteorological phenomenon.’’
On the first night, over northwest Akron, Stadvec and two
passengers spotted a brilliant green and white light apparently
suspended to the right of the plane, about 10:15 p.m.
“The object we saw dived at us ona collison course to the
extent that I actually called out to my passengers that the object
was going to ram uS,’’ Stadvec said. ‘‘After the object came at
us it reversed course and climbed rapidly into a clear night
sky.’”’
And he continued: ‘‘This happened again the next night [about
the same time] when the object flashed up from in front of us and
again climbed into a clear sky. In both instances, the object
climbed at tremendous speeds, levelled off and disappeared to
the northwest.’’
On the second night about the time of the sighting, radar at
Cleveland Hopkins airport detected a meteor-like object, which
flared up on the screen and faded out within a few minutes. [46]
A similar experience was reported more recently by a private
pilot from Williamsport, Penna., and his passenger, John P.
Campbell, reporter for the Williamsburg Sun-Gazette.
February 7, 1963: Returning to Pennsylvania from Danville,
Virginia at 11:45 p.m. (near Charlottesville, Virginia, about 95
miles SW of Washington, D.C.) Carl Chambers noticed a starlike
light, and soon realized it was moving toward his plane. ‘‘After
noting that its altitude and position changed rapidly, I radioed the
Washington FAA and reported the incident,’’ Chambers said ina
signed report to NICAP.
“For nearly an hour after, we stayed in contact with Wash-
ington. During that time, the object hovered off the right wing
[easterly] and moved toward, under, and above theaircraft. Then
it dropped off and a few minutes later appeared about 35 miles
south of Washington, where it seemingly hovered over a missile
defense base. From that position and less than a half-minute
later it reappeared some 10 or 15 miles north of the capital.’’
FAA tower personnel confirmed to Chambers that they had
received a similar report from another pilot in the area at the
same time. The object had an intermittent yellow-white glow,
and at its closest point appeared tobe about three feet in diameter.
Cigar-Shaped or Rocket-Like UFOs
The third general category of UFOtypes which pilots and others
have reported is the rocket or cigar shape, sometimes leaving a
flame -like exhaust. Reports of this type ave comparatively rare,
but they have been seen by enough competent witnesses to estab-
lish them as a distinct type. (Some objects reported as "'cigar-
shaped" have, on closer investigation, turned out to be elliptical
in shape, i.e., tapered to a point--or nearly so--on the ends.
The term "cigar -shaped" is used here to apply to spindle or cyl-
indrical shaped objects with somewhat blunted ends).
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