THE YC ,; u r - Center for UFO Studies betr1 the saJDe piercing·. acnmd prenous:cy and.. having t...

12
September 12 J 1965 !BE FLAP OF 1965 marks this as a red letter year for UFOs and UFO - enthusialts. Since 1957, the saucers seemed to have been leading sively m·>re sheltered lives, and most publi:: news authorities had long regarded them as a noYel ty safely tucked awr.y in the annals of his tory. BUt the ·TFOs didn't take this sitting down. It start !d late in .rune. Gat.bering momentum l :i. ke a snowball rolling down- hill, tl ;r1ng saucers were seen everywhere. Pe 1.1ple were talking about them, reporter ·; ·were writing about them. They were - 1. he subject of editorials and were discussed by columnists. And, for first time, people were beginn1n: to take a generally serious, att1tude ••• r1dicule was surprisi:1gly low; interest was su!"prisingly high. f:ure, som P. said it was the beat and the lights in the sky were no big r, e :• than the holes in the sighters , heeds. But, more _ so than I•ve ever knt'W it to be before, writers were say., ng that there's too _mucl1 eYidence, · to o 11.any responsible witnesses to just :.augh it oft. ·Tbe •65 ;·lap had fizzled out by mtd-fl. ugust. · But rext time, and each · suc- cessive time thereafter, UFO naps will b3 met with more and more· JNblic interest, and serious conc•· rn. · · - ywsletter IS PUBLISW::D BY ·.m NICAP YO UTH CCUNC.It FOF yc ·· INTERESTED IN UFts AND RF.LATED TCPtCs. Tim COIIP-ITTEE ON AERIAL IR c itf Nt) . FOR 'tlm- COJCTE NTS. SUbscription - 3 issues for SOiJ, nt!l . s\lltlter over, schooi · in,.··and . UDder the tl:re.llDi;cal ot · the · . local · Boal"d of Education, this _ edition is ·Ottt a·: littl&·'· later · mcnth than I bad - in_ tended. · · - ta anxious to hear . YCers- bavt.t · not tnrormation_ to the Newsl.ett''!.• . Untort l, utely; ·I . am llOW-.:' lilaited the time which . I · able to devote tc. nth Yters · ahd, · haven't · been in· w1 th .DiaD,V members . to the .. ,xtent' 1 ·would like •. _The Jfewsletter*:!ilitiated fqr of 8.n 1Dtormal . asedilDD . through which Y Cera COUld repdt-t '- 1111 ')rm8. tion··· from. _ their aJ"eaa · aM .tamUiarize other members witli theaselws the1r •Yie1IFJ)Otnts. l -. - we · should ba&J" . from each · YCer• at lttLAst once or ... y: oath members "re asked . to .. -t}le ·' !ewsletteP thef 'ft!&l that they have into:rmatior bf to·:, al • '·

Transcript of THE YC ,; u r - Center for UFO Studies betr1 the saJDe piercing·. acnmd prenous:cy and.. having t...

September 12J 1965

!BE FLAP OF ~mR, 1965 marks this as a red letter year for UFOs and UFO ­enthusialts. Since 1957, the saucers seemed to have been leading progres~ sively m·>re sheltered lives, and most publi:: news authorities had long regarded them as a noYel ty safely tucked awr.y in the annals of his tory. BUt the ·TFOs didn't take this sitting down.

It start !d late in .rune. Gat.bering momentum l :i.ke a snowball rolling down­hill, tl;r1ng saucers were seen everywhere. Pe1.1ple were talking about them, reporter ·; ·were writing about them. They were -1. he subject of editorials and were discussed by columnists. And, for th~ first time, people were beginn1n: to take a generally serious, realistt~ att1tude ••• r1dicule was surprisi:1gly low; interest was su!"prisingly high . f:ure, somP. said it was the beat and the lights in the sky were no bigr,e:• than the holes in the sighters , heeds. But, more _so than I•ve ever knt'W it to be before, writers were say.,ng that there's too _mucl1 eYidence,· too 11.any responsible witnesses to just :.augh it oft.

·Tbe •65 ;·lap had fizzled out by mtd-fl.ugust. · But rext time, and each · suc­cessive time thereafter, UFO sigh~ing naps will b3 met with more and more· JNblic interest, and serious conc•·rn. ·

·· -ywsletter IS PUBLISW::D BY ·.m NICAP YOUTH CCUNC.It FOF yc ·· ~~ Atm:·~, p£&soN~ INTERESTED IN UFts AND RF.LATED TCPtCs. Tim N~.TIORA!. .llt'l~tGJ.TIONS COIIP-ITTEE ON AERIAL ~NO~mNA IR citf Nt) ~AY . R'!'l!RPO~IP.LE .FOR 'tlm- COJCTENTS.

SUbscription - 3 issues for SOiJ,

nt!l . s\lltlter over, schooi· in,.··and. _mySJe~:r UDder the tl:re.llDi;cal s~pp~e.s_e.i~­ot ·the · .local· Boal"d of Education, this_ ~rd edition is ·Ottt a·: littl&·'·later \~ ·the ·mcnth than I bad -in_tended. · · -

I ·ta p~tlcul~r'ly anxious to hear. fr~·. tbose YCers- 'ftbo ,-: ~ as,: yet,. bavt.t ·not c9J).tri~ted tnrormation_ to the Newsl.ett''!.• . Untort l,utely; ·I .am llOW-.:'lilaited 1~ ·· the time which . I ~- ·able to devote tc. cor~espo~. :~- nth Yters · ahd,· e.ccor4~1y, haven't · been keep~ in· tou~!h w1 th .DiaD,V members . to the .. ,xtent' 1 ·would like • . _The Jfewsletter*:!ilitiated fqr t.tu;a:.·p~~'ose of prov1d~-- 8.n 1Dtormal. asedilDD . through which Y Cera COUld repdt-t '- 1111 ')rm8. tion··· from . _their aJ"eaa ·aM .tamUiarize other members witli theaselws ~\m.· the1r •Yie1IFJ)Otnts. l -. -~ink -we · should ba&J" . from each· YCer• at lttLAst once ~vert,:~ - or -4· ··edit1ort~ ...

y:oath ~uncil members "re asked . to ·~nd :t.nf'ormatio~~-·tO:· .. -t}le ·'!ewsletteP ~ eY.e~ thef 'ft!&l that they have into:rmatior bf 1nt~Jr,st to·:, al • '·

THE YC N~LBTTsn 3~d edition

,; ~ u r 0 l! ;V iJ £~cr'li' OJ'I'IIf(J../.1~ rl s"" I by VN.l1.1~ Shields, YC •innesota

. In. the f'uturr; it 1s eertainly peas1ble t})at Man ·iliight develop a. .pPOPU].s1on system bas~d on electromaguetism. aDd since this . is so; · ~t 1' .:Lao possibl~ tbat e. race lilm"e ~dv~nced than 111m ·bas alriiadr done so • .

It ·1s a knoWn tact tbat the eJnrth and moat likely all bodies ot -ticient JAss 1nelud11".g stars ba'le WJD8t1--c t1elda. 'Each such body liU an .lf-pole am an S-pole, am -can 1Dtl....,. charged par~1cles and ·possi­l»lf larger objl\Cts within its lf&gMtie f~d. nms, such bOdies act on a 1ar•er scale much like . En ·ordinary bar magae1M

ua~; of course, _ba-s not y.et learmd to cemtrol .. c>r focus •1JMt1sm as he has with l"ight,· heat, am o-ua. p-sical torees~- · Boweftr, .-a does know that it ·is po~sibl.~ to g8131!r.atl8. -cnet1u ~ ~ectr1c1cy. · · -a. pert of the electrcaagnet· touc~d b7 the l.e" ~011 the negative pole ~ tbe current ~oU!rce becouaea tbe· S;...pole or tbe' electr-c.aanet, and t~ part ...,bed by the leati from -tl-;~ posit·ive l'\Ol~ 'Of the current s~ce becomes · u. If-pole of the electromagnet. !f · such eleotro•cMt1c-· talpce could be dl,reeted, a ....,l'op·..ils1on. syste!D oould ba const-ruct-ed._ · "By. sem~ a concentra tell ~- rrom· the s~pole or a tJ>emend"OUS"ly ~rtal' electrcaagne-t at a .

:tial bodY •s s-pole~ and· e.n tf...-beam a.t tbe same ~ts . N•J)Ole, ··a strong· . J.apalaion force could· be set up. . Ali att~t~on· tGl"ce: c<1Uld be. ach1eYed ~

tbe same way-. by send~ mit beiUDs o·t -'···oPP.fJS-1-- pol-rity at a ~'s · .. --tie poles. Ruch ·beams ·wou.ld n<i.t n&cetts~ily lltlve to strike a planet~s 01' sta:tr's )X\J.es directly, for mugnetic· f:i.elda from such botlies "eXtend .far

t'rOI:l its surface.- Through skill~ul .m\niplllat!an· of ilagne.t1c beB.Ils~ _.111« l!!&neuvers. coulti be })erfo~d. ·and great sfjeods attatlW!fl, pro'lided the ship car-ried no living· beings. For ·th-is rea·so~, · aagneticalJ¥-powered ,paoesh1ps t?<r.ll1. mQst likely- have to be robOu~

Sou"t"c·cs o:r ma"!ri~t1c b&SJil-a· Q-t: . the nat~ ·I · have ~escribed . -weald probnhly give· off s~ay· magn9t~J:c r•~a"tibns pow9rtnl -enough .to s.et wp tnductior. curren·Gs in nae"!'tr.f coud.uct.¢r.s. · · "These '1M\lCtion .currents ·us I.Jid!ea'*'- in . the mal'}'· -~lec tric~l fa_i1ures ·:n,.trtng .. sigllt~s. (see tJif'O •tleee t·epox-t·, . ~e< tion VIII,, ~J.e.c t."rornagneti·c J:tte<:ts,.) · .

An.ot.hN' 1Uetl\Ot1 or electromaar.et1.c propul-si-on is po•a1--bl.~~ n b&ft be&n postUlat"()d that es.ch. planet ·possesses. & slicht ~bala.Dee ot oilltrl• \fith reg9rd to static (!lectricity, . e.f,~ - - ·th•· earth 1s said to ~sa a neeat1~e cbarge~ ~1th u suff1c1e~~ ir8&t soaree ot ·power. it 1$ thfn"stor3 conce1vabl-l. to ·b'~l11d up -·ar.t1ticial.ly a necat1..n ~ttat1o obarp ..,_ble of creating a repul~ion fcrc~e, or a postttve char~ eapa.ble or 8Nat1ng an attr~eti"on ·foroe. Such u torce would DOt. need 41"-ction, ae . .-14 ele:ctremagnetism. ~- S·impl~· shit'tl-N t~ staltic t:ha-rp ·tl-om. one ~ o~ the - ~vs-cesbip to :mether , · malle.ftnabU1ty oo:ul~ be acb1evecl.. 'ftl1t

, •tattc .obarge· .-Could· cau.~e ·el!!'Ctrio&:l fa!:~~ am 00\lld al-s:o . -ac~ount r-~ $bit. glo'ir lthieh .-is -·said to . mt..":r•>\ind· tDADJ<"QFF&. The str~ 10D1.u ·t1on of ••t.f air caused-:-by sue:h ·:· a ·p~:.:X'rul · stae~c Qbarg• cOUJ;l\ . result in -a pril.-1~- ~l~ varying with .the .static · force being appl1~. ·

, . . ~ .. it · is }>o$3L'lle that tJPOis are -propelled e1·tner 'b7 el~• ~U.-~ - its .-~, e:tttt;e _,ol' by ·st.a-t~c ·c~•; per-baps ~lthe!' 'Qt. 11111... ·1• · tbe aMWel' ··to- U'!'O ·pre puls1on. 1fa do- no~HtbOiit now; perbapa we ..... W1~1~~ -

Y C. I/ J,·tlo;s f?eporf~ ~ Al Kl1aber ·tells uS that tbe August m4et1ng or the NiCJP Chicago-~fffliace drew auch a large attendance that the meeting bad to be held .in two parts ~ . . A debate o'or the authenticit, of lJli'Os was .- bald, with Sherm Larsen, president ot tbe Atf.111ate. taking up the case for the UPO an¢ Mr. Peter Reich, Av1a:1o~ writer ~or Cbica&o•s American taking the con aide.

A~ tllture ·meetings of the Cb1cago-Af"f111ate, guest . speakers will inclwb tbe 41rector of Adler Planetarium (where tbe .•eet1ngs are :held) and a radar expert; Professor r!ln Q. Pos1n, fuaous space writer, is expected to S!'\eal! sometl.me aut .year, probably 1n Ja.m1817.

A1 baa :r9centlJ learned of a ·sighting wblch occurred on April 15, 1965, A rea·ident ·of a Chicago suburb was •111Dc ber 1nco.e tax rerum forms at about ':30 pai on this fairly clood7 eveDine. ID ber c!lr, she note'i soaetMnJ in ~ alr;y tQ ber right. 3he turned ott bel" beadligbts and radio am cpen~d tba . wlDdow. Sb-! coUld hear nothing. The brmt ob.je~t passed ower the !'.:»a·\ ahead of bar. Sba proceeded on, aD1 saw the olt eat bpYering aboye a field to btr lett. ·. 'lhe ·top one-third of tbe UPO was b ue aDd tbe r-,st ,.ras a brillia~t wtr ... te. ··It !ho:te very brightly. ~eD.t1iallr it dimmed out and diseiipear-M ~ ber vigw ~

()tber ·. Ill~?!_s. de'felopae:n~s:

~ 17. 1~~ - An 1tell which we DIIJ)..ected to mention in earlier H'!Ws­];et!ti:cappear.eC. 1n tbe ro£4· (ru.) •orning ~t.ar ot th1z date. '!'i t!ed, -..a t~n Ponders UPO &le", the article cited Ka3or ~eyhoe•~.rep?rt · 111 True •1gaziM am ack:Dowledpd tbe tact that the Uf1tF is covering 'lP 1110 1DforMt1on. It concluded with r~rks by ·::ongregsmcn indicating t~ir :f.atereat urt desire to look into the tJftl to;>1c- (.4 copy of this art1•!le was prov.ded to the Pfii}:tter bY llr. Lon Hmmnel of Polo, !111no1s, a IIMt-bel"_ of tb ~ Chl.ca.go-A . te . a~ · good flroiem o.t' A).q ·

-.A111Ut 2 • Canton, Ill. - A maber of residents reported to police tb.lt ·. tfiB1 had Jeen a low-f1Y1D& object and bad heard a p1erc1ng1 warblin& whiue

t!I8T beli!Yed ?IllS •1tted by it. A ·~ desct'tbed 1t as dislc shaped, tbJ:'ee t'eet 1n dlan~~tter, and about a toot thick. /1. ma~ aaid ·be sa7t :. t hover:tng 30 ~ a~Vl tbe grOUDd aul tben it tlew south. •Jther persons also rep•ll'ted baYiDI betr1 the saJDe piercing·. acnmd prenous:cy and. . having t eun a br-i~t J..-!!lbt 110v ln8 at h1&h speed. Polit!e om.c iala s ta tecl that such ct,lle.,.s were deac :o1b1nc exactly tbl aomd . ot a new elee tron1e ·state fl'>li<!e sq1Ja .d. ear ·stren :::-~cantly put into aentce. Police ew~s were reportP.dly 1n -;bet area · at· t ·1a t1Die answerins auto craab aa:.ls. (:.'lot:3: This exptennt::on aeess to ·>e renaop.abl.e; the dUk s1&ht1Dg, b.o11'e·rP.r, may sti} 1 Of!' r:u:!. t•! f.iCDif'~ea 1t. ) · .

-A111Ut ~ - lUmlmrst, Ill. - Robert JCebr. 18, aol C11rt Rabn, 19, botb ,)f th1e -Chic 1go suburb,-reported •ilhtin& a Jqsterious ob~ect htgh 1~ tho ~ky tJtoa a .pol.nt near the ~lllt.urst stonr! qWlrry. · ilahn said t~.e object .acrieC. 1D :a · Jer~r pattern tr:011 north. tc.. ~oun. ror aboU·.; 15 ~econds ~ t~en di~nppe.atte d rt first ·-tppeared to be red, he said, then c~ed to wbite and later turaed· re-l . aga1n~ ·

-A111'Ut 2 ·· Dolton, Ill. - Artbrar D'AJ~~elo) 40 1 .u:Jd his w1te Anne, 31 1 were .-.·tUiad lr; strage lights W'bich thq ob~erved abov.a their nuto on t;hr! Qlcht ef 3 A~ust. D'Ange~o said be an tbe ob,Ject abont 1,000 feet ttboYe ·b1a .car. First ba uaw· _a_ b~u1-sh white light, tbrm- the ligb.t disappearud aDd· tW.e o-etn dots appeered Wbere tbe ~ht m. .. ~ tteen. TheY. r.or~ e t1'1-•1111e·, ro•:ated three t1JMs, . &!ld ··u.n tur refi. .Tben the red dots. d1.t-·

· · (Yc . tllino1a cont '" next PI&~)

THE YC NEWE LETT.,ri;rt 3rd edition

appeared and the bluish light reappeared in the same place before the object n .nished altogether.

--AUCUSt 3 - Chicago - Homer Smith, 53, of Chicago said he watched two bright · 0 yal shapes travel in a circular course ·tor more than an hour above the

BJde Parl: area before they faded away in a southeasterly direction. _Their course ~s fixed, but occasionally the distance between the two would chance. aDd sometimes one would overtake the other.

Smith, a former newspaper reporter now in the publishing business 1 said be · · ., thOUght c.t first the objects were searchlight beams. They were above the clouds, however, while searchlights would have reflected off the clouds, be noted ..

. saith sald he saw other unidentified flying objects while in .Africa several ·years ag<t. "I think theytre trying to contact us," he said, "We men are pretty cvnce1ted to think wetre the only intelligent beings in the cosmos.• Slmilar c.escriptions came from · Smith's downstairs neighbor, Donald Sparks,

. and anotlter resident or the· area,· George Wright.

--Aucust 8 - The Chicago sun-Times ran an article on page 32 entitled "An AstronomP-r Calls Flying Saucers •serious Business'n• The article dealt with .raoques Vallee •s recent book "Anatomy of a Phenomenon", pointing out that · .any UFO s1ght1ngs could not be accounted for by conventional explanations .ad that the Air Force has not taken a scientific approah in inYestigatinc t7P0 .s1ght1ngs.

fl'a. tile Los .Angeles, Calit. B!rald Examine£. 29 .July lOOS:

llfS'rBRY . OBJECT~ LIGHT · AOUTHLAJm HORIZON

· ··:.expert '.n aatellltes t~ declared bimself as ]N&zled as scores·· ot Sott~ ~ rea14enta . about UD1dent1t1ed tlyin&: ·obJect• the1 sa~ in tba sJq· ·Wednaadiq Diahtit , JIYt;terJ li&hts . and other phe11011eft& nre reportecl tram 8:40 pm to ~-. J11!1 tro. lfal1ba to La. ·Puent•• ·

Rob~ .~' 31• ot 525· Barrin&ton AYe .. ,. West Los. Angeles sa.id at 9t07 Jill M.1•w.an ·obJect ntluctuatiu«· in ·two-second cycle•" · or- br1g£.t~~~tas. It. sped

-~ boriaon to horizon, aouthl:»o\Dl• in about tift seacmds, tMt ad4e4. ·'

S.DI»>'rft ·p:.C:l bEt was formerly c)l1ef or .tUm evaluation tor tbe Astropbfs1cal ~ser~wry at BarYard tJniYersity. His- ~ob, he a.a14, ,.. to 1deilt1ty satel:- . Ute• .. in.·.orb~t. "Tbis object was det1!11tely not a $&tell1te . or taUibl r.o.cut-eailtDc._• M. ~a1d. · ·

.·· ·"

· SaDbOfti ai1d B111. Reddish, a motion p1ctve t1111 ed1tQ!' ot 10866 ~aao Jtoblea · IJ:r1"-• c;r~da B1lls, said they were UD&ble to get c.tt1c1al 1ntormat1on.- ··

aa~:: ea!d be :called tM ·Los ADgeles. Pollee . Departoae!it1 the COast . Guar¢, ~itt1.~ Park Pbsenatory, -International Airport and the hderal Artat1on; AgeDCY ·w1tbout success. ·

...... KR.F

tHE YC N~SLETTER 3rd edition

YC f?d5SJciuse~ l?eporfs. uara1e sends us a resume ot s1ght1ngs from her area: ·

JIASSACHUSETTS

JUD8 5 - Dorchester - A family reported seeing a circular, lUilinous sbape · boveri.ng 100 tee't ott the ground near their bome.

. JUne 30-

It suddenly woosbed away with a high-pitched sound.

south Acton- A married couple were watching an. outdoor movie when they saw 3 brilliant objects in tr1a~ar formation in the distant sky above tbe screen. The man, wbo · is a termer helicopter pilot-in~truc­tor, said that after several minutes one streaked off to the lett and· then the other two to the right.

JUly 2 - Hudson - At 3 am 2 patrolmen were checking a supermarket when they saw a UFO moving from tne NW to the SF:. Said one, noccas1onally it wou1d almost slow to a stop and begin · shaking violently."

JUlJ 16 • Weymouth-Braintree - Several residents spotted 2 round white disks flying together at low altitudes 1D the Yicin1 ty of the Weymouth Naval Air station and hovering over the· base, than flying ott. Ot!icinls at the base claim nothing was seen there.

JDl7 19 - Wayland - A 12 year old girl named Karen DeAngelis was attracted to her window at 11 pm by a barking dog (he wasn1t barking at the WO). Looking out she noticed a veey. bright ob~ect several times larger than a start nbich seemed to be rotating. She said "One side was l:'J!e

J'fllY 20

a light bulb• but the other side was duller -- 1~ a paper white"• Tba obJect continued moving towards . the south slowly ·in a level path until 1t went out .ot sight behind some trees. '.rhe night was clear and · there was no moon at the time. The object was observed throush a screen am seemed to be self-luminous~ The · sighting lasted 2 minutes.

-\layland - At 9:15pm a .woman visiting in the yard of a neigh­bor happened to l~ok up when she noticed a very bright object aboUt 4 times the size of a star. ·. At. tirst it was stationa.-y, but. then began to· move ·. tast and get brighter and dimmer (as if blinking) • The UFO· was at a 30 degree angle in the N':"t slcj, but after 20 mi~tes it disappeared over tbe hortaon. Both families had seen it. (Rote -- Assuming tbis .. ·· data to be correct~ the UFO was too slow tor a satel­lite and too fast for a star -- T. Y.)

••• YC· MassacbUsetts continued next page •••

3rd edition

YC Massachusetts Reports (Cont'~lJ-----.. ~-·

J'l).y 20~21 -· Wayland - A -woman reported seeing -a bright :;bject high i -n the sky movl ng in a 'Pr'· di-re.ction at 9t30 pm. Her­son ~lso san it travelling rap·tdly · in a w'=!st~l"ly direc.tio~ above the tree tops, and he report'3d .1t had an orange •low. Tbe next. night the ~ame - woman looked out of ·aer wimow at 11:45 am noticed a bright object ••er her neighbor ts roof. It was moYing very r-.t and was blinking. Jga~n it "as !11 the N':'T Sky • .

. .TUlY 29~1 - Sherborn - A Mrs. E. L. Abbott_, ~no ha~ been a· lic.ensed-· pilot ror the past 3 years saw 2 ttFos. The f1rst ·· object was sighted a"t lO:SO .PII and . stayed in view· 10 mimlte-s ~ · It wa·s travelling slowly in ·the hlgb. western ·Slcy going sou.th. The u;.-o ha"d a bo'!J.::lcy aotion SI;ld seemed to· have a yellow glo'l'i. The secooo UFO was seeD e.t 2:30 am 1n the l ow l"f"es-tern skyn se~n tbrouch binoculars, it _ had a reddish

.July 20 - Hint; h:'lm . . .

colol" with a peen glo" arountl lt. 1'\.fter a cou/ J,.e Dl1tl'l.i&es the object st~rted moving tlQ!"th slowly with a boun~Y moTement, at whi~h point ~s . Abbott went in. She~~ seen it ·for sov.eral . mint< tes ..

Five resident5 saw a circular, lumincms Uf(' fl.:tt h );1«llU e~ting froa. i ·ts 4 prot:.•uding arms. It hovered for · 45 a"inute.s, am thea £r.a.dus.l]J dlsappefl roed over :.he· western hor1zo~

- Bes~ts saw at night ".a gr·ea~ silver . a$l -~ UFO appear from the south, -ho·ve:r tor 20 ~s • . dane~ f'rom . s ide t.o s!.de., and sba-rt tra-.elling t·o"ar<! ~ the nol"tb.

JUly 21- ~~er~ -~A Pramingbam man intotmed Sheroorn poli~e that · ~\ · 11:02 pm be sa1r • · brlght~-li'ghted ·· objec:t 1·n .the sk,y

e•er a dairy am the G·eueral Motors .:J l nnt

·NEW HADSHIRE

JUlY 20 - :dnnchester ... "CitizenS. saw o~aect siPli"lar to OnP, " s_een over wayland•~ on sa... date.. This . sighti.ne •as later than tb,e· 11!Tayla.M one · (possibly :same UP'O)~

june am·· J'Ul_y - Mn!lCM•ter - lftisMrQQ ."a1ghtl,.r..gs ot tn<"Os in dittft'e:tl~ ·colors.

'lF:RMONT

u~llY. ·l uatnowi

J'l1lY - ·llurlington - A Ven10nt s·tate pat.b0log1~t swears he saw. 3- low..:..f_l1·1Dc obJe.Gts· rac"1n& a~- a h;i.f,blraJ' ·near But'l1ngton at "b11l'Jding speede".

. , .

.. I . . I· · . ~ .. . '·

''SLEEP TIGHT T Oi 'iLYHT YOf_i R AI R F ) RCE IS AWAKE, t '

Dou.~n Arnet'\ ca W§Ay tbrougbout the duration of the summer flap, UFOs have put 1n frequent appearanc~s down South America way (where itts winter). Tbe original South ~meriean sightings, early in JUly,. were given much publicity and are now old b.&t tc most of us. For that reason, I'm giving only brief mention to these rtr~t few South American occurrences &nd aa dealing mostly with later bappeDings.

s J'al7 l9E5 - Antarctic Base - A. UFO shaped like a double convex lens was aeen and pbotoarapbed by Argentine Navy men. At a British base the object .waa also seen, Zil•&agging about the horizon. At a · Chilean base tbe obJect had been spotted twice .in two weeks and

10 JUly

ten colour pbotosrapbs bad been taken. ·

(~ate approximate) -- from BueDOs Aires via Reuters -- A police corporal was reported as s~ing he and his wbole ta.ily saw a tlat, blue-colored object bover1ng o~er · the northeastern Argen-· t 'ine province of Chaco. It was reported to have hung in tbe slq ror several m1Dutes before shooting off to the southwest with a trail of f'lamea.

In Montevideo, a local Uruguayan news agency reported same 100 . persons ~aw a 1\DD:i,.nous t'l.y1ng object changing color above a beach in the River Plate area.

8 Aucust -- CUritiba, BrazU -- A squadron or 18 flying saucers was seen . by f i ve persons in the north of Brazil •a Parana State! accord.1Di'· to press reports here today. The report said two gir s first sighted tour objects coming over tbe horizon 1n daylight at . Astorga, about 250 miles west or Sao Paulo. They called tbre• neighbors, who reportedly saw the four objecb followed by 14 other saucers flying in formation. The objects were described as silvery with a greenish light shiniD& froo: the top. (t"rom the NeW York Times. August 4.)

19 August -- Buenos Aires -- An Argetina newspaper published a story ·t o cap the big crop of flying saucer sight1ngs reported in Latin America. It tells of a flying saucer base in the mountains.· '1'he account 1n the mass-circulation ta . Razon ssys almost eveey evening several saucers converge in a remote valley ot tba

cordoba hills. (from the Toronto Daily Star)

o •• The Argentine newspapers also fabricated a story telli~ of a fisher man's contact with a "little man~ . The fisherman in question, however, denied any kriowledge of such a happen!~. The only significant thing to note, as of 19 August, is tb3 continuation or general interest in !lying saucers in Sout!t Ameri ca.

26 .August -- Santiago, Chile -- (Reuters) People who have sighted strange objects in the sky recently may not be 'seeing things t, three scientists agr~ed today. ·

"There is scientific evidence that s trange objects visit ~Jr planet, " said Chilean Professor Gabriel Alvial. He added: "It is lamentable that the governments b~ve drawn a veil of aecrec.r aro'lM this."

RUSsia's nr. Mitrovan zverev,p who wo:::-ke at the Cerro Calan (South Amer~ca cont 1d next page)

SoUth .America (cont 'd):

ObserYatory in Chile, saidl "Something unknown to our understanding is going on around the earth."

And Professor Claudio Anguita, observatory director, said: nwe are not alone 1n the universe."

(This item speaks tor itselt. I wish scientists in North America were equally objective and equally willing to voice their views.)

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15 J\llY lft65 -- South Kelowna, British Columbia -- Construction worket" George Kozub and his wife bad jus·t ·finished supper . and were outside in the garden when a shiny object was spotted to the east. Kozub novelly described it as "shaped like a turtle with ahump in the middle am a tail behind.. It shone like ~~ nothing you could imagine. The sky was clear and this thing, whatever it was, was not following a fixed course. It see11ed to hover at about 8000 teet then it picked up speed and seemed to vanish, almost straight up."

His house guests, Mr. and Krs. · Wick Gordie, of Calgary, and fellow Calgar1an Vernon Giles, also saw the object. ·

19 - 21 J\uy -- Windsor area -- Reports of UFOs in the Windsor area extended rrom Leamington, 40 miles southeast of Windsor, to .Amherstburg, 15 miles south, as well as 1n neighboring Y1ch1gan state. The \Vimsor city airport was deluged wi tb calls.

AJnong the reports was one from John Boucher of 1l1ndsor who . saw two bright objects, each with two lights, moving north about 9:15 pm, July 21. Tom 117h1te, also of ''-'indsor, said he saw "something bright moving fast" at the same time. A weather office spokesman said that weather balloons are sometimes re­leased at about 6 pm but they do not carry· lights and could not be seen after dusk. He had no other explanation for the sightinga.

24 : • 25 J\uy - Toronto -- Jlany residents or Toronto and surroum1ng subarba. reported sightings of UFOs. M&nf witnesses said tbat tbe objects were blue-white and · flashing, but disappeared 1n less tbal) a . •1m1te. George Dawber--- w~ taucht celestial · nartcat1on 1ft :the RCIJP in World War II, said · :tbe li&ht ot tbe · ·ob.1ect· cbaDCe4 1D 1ntens1tr as it· ct-ossed th8; skiel. ·. ¥l'· nawber, ·who saw tbe object several times; · .said ·;;it couldn't bave been an air.plaue

. or .a.': shoot1ng star. ·

· ee ~- - St. Catbarinea, Ontario •- -.-A ~··rea1dent.· ot ·'York ~t..- in ~t• · Catba~1DIU · who ·ts an amateur slq-watcber- Pepot-ted ·. aeeina ·a :v rormat1on of' .

seven silvery UFOs. · They came. out- or · tbe -.soutQel'n alq at 10:22-·. pm. Within eight secoms they· were lost. to sight 1n. tbe .. _aor.tb.

10 AU&US~ - Whitehorse• tbf!. Yukon -- '- mmer ·or Whitehorse ree14ent• J-epotted aeein& "a br1Cht ,. ob3ect" tn the ·aley' ftcSl'theast ot . t~ cit)' . .. · .Ob­servers · said the ·UFO traYelled northward . then ·stoppttd, · aDf·. · , appeared to bead soutb ·at lnc~>f?asa4 al.ti£Ude before -. 4S:s•p~u1Dg. about l u YUkon .tim•• . ·

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'!IIE YC NE "ifiLE~~~ER 3rd edition

The NICAP Youth .Council ----..-..~-----

John ~. Bl1ek6 Jr. Cobblewoo1 Road Blairstow-:11 N. J. 07825

'!'a. JIU111tan 22 Hanley Drive st. catba:~ines, ont. Canada

M1•• sue 3Uck1enbroich 11519 Withersfield Drive St. tou1s .1 Missouri 63138

Alan 1Ca1sher floute 1, Box 69'7 pat Ch1cllgo, Illinois 60185

·· ·Eric L. 0:.1ver 3483 BOWDU•n Street

·~phis 1 ~~ennessee 36128 . .

wtas Barbura Sla1 th 83S AQIUS1;a Avenue Jloraantowu, 1lf. Virginia 26505

. Jliss Luci:'.e Lewis -307 Christiana Street

· lloZ"th Tom.wanda 6 New York

Miss Karman Key 202 Maumee ~treet · . Jonesville 6 Michigan 49250.

Mickey ~stein 89 Haynes Road west Hartford, Conn. 0611'7

Miss Iqrnda Honour · 1004 Wellington Drive Clearwater, Florida 33516

William Shields 7538 -Shertdan Avenue, South Richtield, Minnesota 55423

Miss Margie Katz 105 Woodcliff Road SOuth Brookline, Hass. 0216'7

Miss Diane Macintyre 112 Wins ton A "Yenue ColoniaJ. Heights 1 Virginia 238St ·

)(iss Linda Stone 15315 Woodruff Place Bellflower, California

John P. Speights 420 Bloombury Park Drive Raleigh, _ Korth Carol1na _27609

. Jf!')'f· -~!.f.S: Newly appointed to the Youth Council are Diane Macintyre, yc ·vtrginja; Barbara Smith, YC West Yirg1nia; and Lucile tewis 6 YC Jew York. Cor\g1'atulat1ons girls• and welcome aboard! .

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