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UFOs and the Media
The Washington Post
July 28, 1952
Investigation On In Secret After Chase
Over Capital
By Paul Sampson
Military secrecy veils an
investigation of the mysterious, glowing aerial objects that
showed up on radar screens in the Washington area Saturday
night for the second consecutive week. A jet pilot sent up
by the Air Defense Command to investigate the objects
reported he was unable to overtake the glowing lights moving
near Andrews Air Force Base. The CAA reported reported the
objects traveled at "predominantly lower levels"-about 1700
feet. July 19.
Air Force spokesmen said yesterday
only that an investigation was being made into the sighting
of the objects on the radar screen in the CAA Air Route
Traffic Control Center at Washington National Airport, and
on two other radar screens . Methods of the investigations
were classified as secret, a spoken said. " We have no
evidence they are flying saucers; conversely we have no
evidence they are not flying saucers. We don't know what
they are," a spokesman added.
The same source reported an expert
from the Air Technical Intelligence Center at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton Ohio, was here last
week investigating the objects sighted July 19. The expert
has been identified as Capt. E. J. Ruppelt. Reached by
telephone at his home in Dayton yesterday, Ruppelt said he
could make no comment on his activity in Washington. Capt.
Ruppelt confirmed he was in Washington last week but said he
had not come here to investigate the mysterious objects. He
recalled he did make an investigation after hearing of the
objects, but could not say what he investigated.
Another Air Force spokesman said here
yesterday the Air Force is taking all steps necessary to
evaluate the sightings. "The intelligence people," this
spokesman explained, "sent someone over to the control
center at the time of the sightings and did whatever
necessary to make the proper evaluation. Asked whether the
radar equipment might have been misfunctioning, the
spokesman said, "radar, like the compass is not a perfect
instrument and is subject to error." He thought, however,
the investigation would be made by persons acquainted with
the problems of radar.
Two other radar screens in the area
picked up the objects.An employee of the National Airport
control tower said the radar scope there picked up very weak
"blips" of the objects. The tower radar's for "short range"
and is not so powerful as that at the center. Radar at
Andrews Air Force Base also registered the objects from
about seven miles south of the base. A traffic control
center spokesman said the nature of the signals on the radar
screen ruled out any possibility they were from clouds or
any other "weather" disturbance. "The returns we
received from the unidentified objects were similar and
analagous to targets representing aircraft in flight," he
said.
The objects, "flying saucer or what have you, appeared on
the radar scope at the airport center at 9:08 PM. Varying
from 4 to 12 in number,the objects appeared on the screen
until 3:00 AM., when they disappeared.
At 11:25 PM., two F-94 jet fighters
fro Air Defense Command squadron, at New Castle Delaware,
capable of 600 hundred mph speeds, took off to investigate
the objects. Airline, civil and military pilots described
the objects as looking like the lit end of a cigarette or a
cluster of orange and red lights.
One jet pilot observed 4 lights in the
vicinity of Andrews Air Force Base, but was not able to
over-take them, and they disappeared in about two minutes.
The same pilot observed a steady white light in the vicinity
of Mt Vernon at 11:49 PM. The light, about 5 miles from him,
faded in a minute. The lights were also observed in the
Beltsville, MD., vicinity. At 1:40 AM two-other F-94 jet
fighters took off and scanned the area until 2:20 AM., but
did not make any sightings.
Visible Two Ways
Although "unidentified objects" have been picked up on radar
before, the incidents of the last two saturdays are believed
to be the first time the objects have been picked up on
radar-while visible to the human eye. Besides the pilots,
who last Saturday saw the lights, a woman living on
Mississippi Ave., told the Post she saw a very "bright light
streaking across the sky towards Andrews Air Force Base
about 11:45 PM. Then a second object with a tail like a
comet whizzed by, and a few seconds later, a third passed in
a different direction toward Suntland, she said.
Radar operators plotted the speed of "saturday
night's visitors" at from 38 to 90 mph, but one jet pilot
reported faster speeds for the light he saw. The jet pilot
reported he had no apparent "closing speed" when he
attempted to reach the lights he saw near Andrews Air Force
Base. That means the lights were moving at least as fast as
his top speed-a maximum of 600 mph.
One person who saw the lights when
they first appeared in this area did not see them last
night. He is E.W. Chambers, an engineer at Radio Station WRC,
who spotted the lights while working early the morning of
July 20 at station's Hyattsville tower. Chamber's said he
was sorry he had seen the lights because he had been
skeptical about "flying saucers" before. Now he said, he
sort of "wonders" and worrys about the whole thing.
Leon Davidson, 804 South Irving St.
Arlington, a chemical engineer who made an exhaustive study
of "flying saucers' as a hobby, said yesterday reports of
saucers in the East, have been relatively rare. Davidson has
studied the official report on the saucers, including some
of the secret portions never made public, and analyzed all
the data in the report. Davidson, whose study of saucers is
impressively detailed and scientific, said he believes the
lights are American "aviation products"-probably "circular
flying wings," using new type jet engines that permit rapid
acceleration and relatively low speeds. He believes, they
are either "new fighter," guided missiles, or piloted guided
missiles. He cited some of the recent jet fighters,
including the Navy's new " F-4-D, which has a radical
"bat-wing," as examples of what the objects might resemble.
Davidson thinks the fact
that the lights have been seen in this area indicates the
authorities may be ready to disclose the "new aircraft" in
the near future. Previously, most of the "verified saucers"
have been seen over sparsely inhabited areas, Davidson
explained, and now, when they appear here, it may indicate
that "secrecy" is not so important any more.

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