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CIA RDP81R00560R000100010008 3
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Approved For Release 2001/04/02]: CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010008-3
A statement from the director of NICAP
After 17 months, nicap has broken with the University of Colorado uro
Project. We join Loox and John G. Fuller in disclosing the facts as a
public service.
At first, NIcAP was dubious about an AF-financed project. After Dr.
Condon pledged a fair study, we briefed scientists, trained field teams,
loaned verified reports by pilots, aerospace engineers and other capable
observers. Later, news stories quoted Condon as strongly biased, reject-
ing all evidence. When we found that barely one half of one percent of
NICAP’s cases were investigated (and none by Condon himself), we
stopped transmitting. Administrator Low’s disturbing proposals and
the firing of Drs. Saunders and Levine led to our final break. .
nicaP will submit plans to the President and Congress for a new
official investigation, free of military or civilian agencies, with majority-
vote controls, frequent public reports and other safeguards. We welcome
suggestions (confidential, if desired) from scientists and other citizens
seeking a full, open evaluation. Meantime, to offset the Colorado failure,
our investigations will be intensified—nicap is the world’s largest uro
fact-finding organization, with over 300 scientific and technical advisers,
trained investigators and thousands of nationwide members. To help in-
crease factual evidence, we urge that all verified sightings be reported to
us. Names will be kept confidential, if requested.
Maj. Donald E. Keyhoe, USMC, Ret., Director
National Investigations Committee on Aerial Phenomena
1536 Connecticut Avenue, NV, Washington, D.C. 20036
Condon accused him of being disloyal and treacherous, and Levine
replied that loyalty to a scientific goal might take precedence over per-
sonal loyalty. Condon asked why Levine didn’t invite him to come over and
investigate the important cases. Levine indicated that he did not feel it was
his place to invite the chief scientist of the project over. The questioning
lasted about an hour. Condon dismissed Levine abruptly. _
Mrs. Armstrong had joined the project at its inception with no con-
victions whatever about uFo’s. By February, 1967, she was convinced that
the study was being gravely misdirected. When, on February 7, 1968,
Condon told her that he was going to fire Saunders and Levine the next
day, Mrs. Armstrong’s first impulse was to resign immediately. But she
then decided first to confront Condon with what she regarded as clear,
unassailable documentation of the factors behind the disagreement and
low morale of the staff.
She talked to Condon on February 22, 1968, at his office. She told
him frankly that there appeared to be an almost unanimous lack of confi-
dence in the project coordinator and his scientific direction of the project.
She pointed out that Low had indicated little interest in talking to those
who carried out the investigations or in reading their reports. She said that
her long, close association with Low gave strong evidence that he was try-
ing very hard to say as little as possible in the final report, and to say that
in the most negative way possible. At Condon’s request, she wrote a follow-
up letter in which she added that the tone of the memo indicated that Low
was not unbiased from the beginning. Condon then wrote her: “My posi-
tion is that that letter is a confidential matter between the two of us and
that for you to disclose it to anyone else would be gravely unethical.” But
after long consideration, Mrs. Armstrong felt that it was more important
*.to the public interest to state her feelings clearly.
The others who left the project also felt they had an obligation to
speak out, and when Condon failed to respond positively to his outspoken
letter of criticism, McDonald brought the matter before the executive ofli-
cers of the National Academy of Sciences in a vigorous written protest.
Saunders and Levine cleared their desks at Woodbury Hall and left.
Asked about the near-mutiny in the investigating staff, Condon said
that he would make no comment. Low stated that he had absolutely “zero
comment” to make about the dismissals. Thurston E. Manning, vice presi-
dent and dean of the faculties of the University of Colorado, delivered
word through his secretary that he had nothing to say. Scott Tyler, in
charge of public relations for the university, said that he had no comment.
The hope that the establishment of the Colorado study brought with
it has dimmed. All that seems to be left is the $500,000 trick. © END
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