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UFOs and the Media
Charlotte Observer
January 1, 1945
Foo-Fighter Latest Menace To Yankees
by Robert Wilson
A U.S. Night Fighter Base, France, Jan. 1 - (AP) The Nazis
have thrown something new into the night skies over Germany
- the weird, mysterious "foo-fighter," balls of fire which
race alongside the wings of American Beaufighters flying
intruder missions over the Reich.
U.S. pilots have been encountering the eerie "foo-fighter"
for more than a month in their night flights. No one
apparently knows exactly what this sky weapon is.
The balls of fire appear suddenly and accompany the planes
for miles. They appear to be radio-controlled from the
ground and manage to keep up with planes flying 300 miles an
hour, official intelligence reports reveal.
"There are three kinds of these lights we call "foo-fighters,"
said Lt. Donald Meiers of Chicago, Ill. "One is red balls of
fire which appear off our wing tips and fly along with us,
the second is a vertical row of three balls of fire which
fly in front of us and the third is a group of about 15
lights which appear off in the distance - like a Christmas
tree up in the air - and flicker on and off."
Weirdest Yet
The pilots of this night fighter squadron - in operation
since September, 1943- find these fiery ball the weirdest
thing they have as yet encountered. They are convinced that
the "foo-fighter" is designed to be a psychological weapon
as well as military although it is not the nature of the
fire ball to attack planes.
"A 'foo-fighter' picked me up recently at 700 feet and
chased me 20 miles down the Rhine valley," Meiers said. "I
turned to starboard and two balls of fire turned with me. I
turned to the port side and they turned with me. We were
going 260 miles an hour and the balls were keeping right up
with us."
"On another occasion when a foo-fighter' picked us up, I
dove at 360 miles per hour. It kept right off our wing tips
for awhile and then zoomed up into the sky."
"When I first saw the things off my wing tips I had the
horrible thought that a German on the ground was ready to
press a button and explode them. But they don't explode or
attack us. They just seem to follow us like
will-o'-the-wisps."
(An Associated Press report from Paris Dec. 13 said the
Germans had thrown silvery balls into the air against day
raiders. Pilots then reported they had seen these objects
both individually and in clusters, during forays over the
Reich.)

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