AFU 19520915 APRO Bulletin v1 n2 (CUFOS)
AFU 19520915 APRO Bulletin v1 n2 (CUFOS)
AFU 19520915 APRO Bulletin v1 n2 (CUFOS)
how 1 Huh is
By JIM LAWRENCE
/he 1 Had Flying Saucers manned by
By CORAL LORMZSN crews throe foot tall actually lan
In his July 28, 1952 broad ded on earth? That was the ques
cast. Henry J* Taylor, noted econ tion. This is how TRUE and Mr.
omist, author and journalist, gave Cahn found the answer*1
a lengthy and oftimes meaningless This head graces -an article
dissertation on flying saucers,the in the Sopt* 1952 TRUE magazine in
saucer history, and saucer poss which J* P Cahn gives a running
ibilities. A transcript of the account of how he set out to find
broadcast came into our hands via the answer and somehow.somewhere a~
a General Motors dealer who,'cause long the way decided to embark on
the program is sponsored by Gener a voyage of character assassination
al Motors, regularly receives the instead* We think tho whole thing
transcript* The title of Taylor's is a little too slantod to hold
talk on saucers was'Firsthand much water* In short, Cahn has not
Facts about the Flying Saucer Mys proved that little men didn't land
tery1, in which there was nothing in New Mexico any more than- Scully
firsthand, and also nothi'ig which proved that they did*
might be .listed as faces* Mr, Tay Instead of showing that proofs
lor should" be cited, however, for of this report do not exist,he de
when he realized the tide was tur ironstrated that Scully's alleged
ning, he garnered the loophole coil proofs are not reliable*-These are
veniently supplied byformer broad two entirely differentpropositions.
casts and jumped on zhe interplan Although some corroboration of
etary bandwagon^As usufel, however, Scully's main thesis appears else
he didn't state in definite words whero in this issue, we do not (and
that he. thought they were inter never have) recommended Scully's
planetary-just left thai impros book as the Bible of Saucerianism.
si on* By and large, we consider the
The Sept, 9 issue of "LOOK" general attitude of TRUE magazine
stars another billet-doux authorecL a healthy one, containing less than
by one Chester. Morrison, and fea the usual amount of journalistic
turing the emm'inent Dr. Donald H* bigotry* The policy of reporter
Menzel of Harvard U> As a whole, Cahn is another matter, however.
the article upholds Mttiizel's thso.- We would find his alleged facts
ry or biased opinion that the sauT and conclusions much more palatable
cers are any r>ne of several e if ho did not constantly garnish
pjainable natural phenomena and them with cute-type aspersions
definitely not of extraterrestrial concerning the personal habits of
origin* This time, Menzol uses his villainsnamely Scully, New-
.ton and GeBauer* Those villainsare
INDEX all neurotic paranoics while each
Saucer Bandwagon Pago 1 interviewee who supported this the-
How True is TRUE ~.page 1 ry was on honest, stable, respect
W. Va* 'Monster1 SightingsPage 1 able, red-blooded American-type in
Editorial --'-Page 2 (a dividual* Of course, anyone who
*The Grapevine- -Pago constantly inserts the word 'soe1
Rio Disc Sketch.
Cartoon*--'Page
Page I into his conversation for no appar*
ent reason can't be trustedanyw
Recent Sightings-Pages 6* 7, 81 one has seen a-Hollywood gangster
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 1^, 15 and 16. picture knows that, see?
********
THE GREEN MONSTER? On the night of Sept. 13, Mrs. Kathleon May-..'
Flatwood, West Virginia and her threo children, two other youths, and
national guardsman Geno Lemon climbed a hill behind Suttc
to investigate a report that a saucer landed there. Tnoy uwu w aw a
saucer, but did see 0 'monster1 ten foot high, four foot wido with bul
ging eyes a foot apart, sweaty, blood-red face, and green glowing bo
dy* When Lemon shone his flash on the creature it started toward them
with a floating, bouncing motion, and tho group fled in hysterics.They
52ld,tn?i suy t0 state police, and lrtor the officers and a posse
armed with shotguns wont t6 the spot nnd found skidmarks where no car
could have been , the 'sickening metallic odor1 described by thogjroop;
Mrs* May also said the thing hissed as it moved* After tho oxperionce
the party was -nearly prostrated with fright and several of thcchildren
had to bo put to bed and under a Doctor's care. ???????????
September 15* 1952 Page Two
Sore?
; :; The -APRO Bulletin II Ar
And here's a criticism of .Adam-
Edited, and published bir the proposed substitution: An or
ABRi&L PHENOMENA1 3ESEARCK ganization like ours will always
BGA!*&*I attract a certain number of phon-
Box 358 los. Any member who attempts , to
. Sturgeon lay, Wisconsin \ , beirpetrate a fsaua. in our name or
i."XLgle' red herrings in' our collec
; Published Bi-Monthly tive path is not welcome. -Wo. would
\ To tempers ;of APRO sj2.pj2P.rt a phase of thought ' which
iEditor: (Jorali Lorenzen . would~undormine such a member.
Assistant Edit-orr1 Ronald Larseri ' ?ho constitution can be amen
ded (article nine). Let's have your
APRO Officers* commentJ
National Director and Criticism number two is con-
Headquarters President* corned with the 'Grapevine. *He con-i
Coral Lorenzen sidcrs it slanderous. I -believe
his reaction stems mainly from his
Vice Presidents misinterpretation of the abbrevia
Jack Moody tion SP (second part of Grapevine).
It's intended meaning was SCIENCE
Secretary; FICTION, However, in the Profes
Richard Haislet sor's interpretation, a science-
fiction magazine became a San Frca
Treasurer: cisco magazine and as a result it
W. T. Hagen appeared that a personal friend of
his was unjustly, accused. Natural
THE EDITORIAL ly he was upset as the following
In a recent letter from Prof quotes will show: "The man is not
essor George Adamski, he. offers two a space spy. This is slander if
major criticisms of APRO* These anything. I am sorry to see your
criticisms, if* as S3rious as the first bulletin come out . with the
Professor seems to think merit the slander of an individual..So I be
sincere consideration all mem lieve that your. Grapevine which is
bers. We will present them here, rumor should not be in the bul
with comment, for your evaluation* letin. For a rumor most always
Criticism No, one quoted from leads to malicious action and if we
Adamski's letter of August 6th want tho truth rumors should not bo
"Your constitution fis very fine supported.'1
with one exception quote* Cominun- The Professor also takes ex-
ists, parlor pinks, or fellow trav cottier, to tho space spy rumor in
elers. This is bad phrasing, fox the Grapevine feature. This is a.
any organization for do you knoi.' little difficult to reconcile with
that Prank Scully has been callod a the fact that the space spy rumor
pink1? And many great souls in the first came to -us from *damskl in a
world-have been called tfcai because latter dated April 1, 1952.
they were misunderstood in their We justify the existence of the
statements " Grapevine in this way* We believe
This writer does not conside.i that it is better to pin a rumor
the face that someone called somc- down and spike it or verify it.
one something a "van*, objection. than to let it fly around unchecked
Our constitution does not specify feeling that spiking a false rumor
anyone who haj. been called a conn- contributes as much to the truth as
firunist, pfcrlor pink or follow trav a verification of a true one. Also
eler. assertion absolute exclusion of all material
Wo consider ihs
that misunderstanding loads to many lacking conclusive verification
false accusations a good point. from this bulletin would result i:-.
Witness the fact that the Professo^ the elimination of the bulletin it
"apparently misunderstood our inten selfthe goal of our organization
tions in including the qualifica being the eventual achievement of
tion concerning 'pinksf . the same conclusive verification.
Again we quote from Adamskis In a wordtruth!
U clarification of concept or.
August t>, 'In place' of your commun
ist, etc.,-why don* t you put this qur part, resulting partly from the
in? It will* take capo of all that: Piwofossor's constructive efforts,
"The organization should not has led us to the following chango
support any phase of thought'-which in policy: Beginning with this
would have a tendency* to undermine issue, no rumor or hearsay will be
it's members, it's society,it's na carried .vrf.thout the simultaneous
tion, or any other nation, be-it or inclusion of the channel through
which the report reached us.
this world or another," our tritX**
Our comment is this Our wor- wo bolieve, will prevent
ding was purposely crude,blunt; and lotin from being used by
anyone as
"WHAT^LL HE US NEXT?
men probably know more about radar THE EDITORIAL (Con't from Pago 2)
than the armchair gonerfcls who are bo carefully weighed and no infor
going around loudly stating that mation will be carried that could
the saucers are mirages, hoaxes, reasonably be considered slander
hallucinations, etc., etc, QUICK, ous or libelous toward any indivi
in an 8-line quickie lcbelod "Sau dual. For oxample, wo take the
cers, Snucers, Everywhere*, com- case of the ex-4ir Force man who
mented lightly on the Washington, reports seeing spece-men flying
Columbus, Boston,New York City and suits at Wright-Patterson.
W. Va, sightings and finally dea Disclosing his name might jeo
ling the below-the-belt .punch that pardize his position in hisplanned
of 100 reports a month, the AF ad , return to active service and r.tthe
mittedly can only explain 75#. same time sever what appears to be
. LIFE, in it's 'On The News- a valuable source. The informa
fronts of the World' -featured the tion he offers supports 'Scully's
pic of the Coast Guard discs, and contentions and attacks no one*
the general run of tho August 11th Therefore, the information is car
articlo uphold their previously of*, ried without naming nnnes.
forod thoory that the saucors, a.tj In closing this little treat-
least some of then, are interplane isef wo wish to cennond Professor
tary.
Adamski for his sincere concern,
At tho same time, in *Letters and invite tho cccmont of all mem-
to the Ed1. LOOK displayed a photo bors on this and other matters.
of a skoten of t disc-shrped thing
with wheels supposedly,'the firsts APRO membership subscriptions
saucer, built in 1912 by Mr. Amos are coming in at a greet rate, and
A. Wychoff, 79, of Oaklmd, Calif, it is due to the work incurred in
It was filled with inflnnnable gas bri'ofing new nonbers thrt wo are
and exploded, according to him. late. Hope November won't hold
-**.
OXECCEWTT SQCDOITKMDS
Texarkana, Toxas, June 28th* Two People who saw it said it was rcdf
silvery, round discs roportod over orange, white, green and black' and
Texarkana 6il5 p. m* the preceding speculated' it may have boon a not-
Wednesday. Mrs. John Spear, 3702 oorito* Aatrbnomers said it might
Boulevard, said her daxtg&tor Pat have boon a noteoritojalthough it
first sighted discs, called her Mo would be unusual for- it to be soon
ther. Also seen by Mr* and Mrs* in tho daytime. Dr. R**H* Thomas,
Thomas McFedden, of same* address. of U* of Utah said it night have
Discs flew in northerly direction, been a big one* Dozens of persons
about 200 feet part, emitting no in Oklahoma city reported a bluish
sound or flame* MeFadden estimated ball of flame to, tho oas.t*
height at 5,000 feet. Discs watched Brockvillc, Ont* July 9. 'Ob
by group for two or three .minutes servers reported a floating light-
until they went out-of sight. bulb over Broekvillo Monday night,
Ajax, Ontario, July 3rd* Two a^ about 5000 feet.. It moved in
housewives, Mrs. Loyd Stoneman and a northwesterly direction, stayed
Mrs. E. McAllister said a" flaming in view from. 8:30 p.m* 'til short
rod disc flashed acrossrss tho skyy ly bofbro nine1* As it disappeared
shortly after 6i3O a. n.f loaving from sight it was Joined'by a sec
a vapor trail. It came in . fron ond small lights
the
th north,
th passed over tho town of Ottawa, July 8* Two members
Whitby ana vanished over Lake On of thCCorps of Commissionaires
tario, they said. watched a fiery- round opject cone
Donny Reimer,* APRO member in in a perfectly straight line from
Minneapolis** submitted tho follow tho cast, turn slowly towards the
ing report of hie' porscnal sight south when almosf di-rectly over
ings-About 7 p.m.-Sat., July 5. I head, nako a slow circlo and dis*
saw an unfamiliar' object cruisinga- appear i k intp: tho-'oast. They
doscrilrodit
cross the sky* not far from my house doscrilro it ,as/*r4t
,as/*r4ht and n por-
s fys
wost sky, over Newport News, Va. v July 19. Lcfayette.* Ind
Six appeared first at *bout*8f000 lot a. PffS^MS N. JthSt
fjot and passed underneath the air- fora/spots object over
ir SSft8 }? ^a*** straight Parks*, graduate &orlngTffife
th1 SSL J^Si'i1110!** *3** watjh*a University, followed ob-
i5?5t* {y ^rDoa wo*ward -and were je*ts course with finger and al-
joined by two noro saucers. Then so checked "angles and nuober of
theyy zoomed up' to 10,000 foot,
med up end seconds it took to pass? His con-
S5 f2w&f118^?8
fh2w&fi118^?8 P*130*0? Potion shewed
off Potions hd it wrs going ov-
T Sines disappeared
8 Se sappeared into the, or 2,200 nph, at an altitude of a-
15k* 22KiP0?
going ?SiSrc<:i.?hoy
far ,aBovo 1,000 nilos W0P0
?SiSrc<:i?hoy bout h000
por about 4o ft.foct
foct Ws cigar-shaped,
iahd
in dianotor and 326
hour, nanouvorod too sharply for, feet' long. Sky not quite dark (9
52?2iO??lpSco5
fitH
" ??ght ?r-ttor-' P- n-h shlP silhcuetted. Did not
* lu* ^P?^** Project of. leave trail, but was covored with
ficer for the i*P investigation of sharp bright light, pale yellow
saucers said 60 roports had roachod varying to a very light blue. Lt-
wp> and that was tvdeo as nany as tor it passed over town, it nade a
*? 8?ri??4 ononyop ^2* right CJaglQ ^^ * eo SW,-very
...*22L, BU1fi ?uyJon2,?hl0^ ^ Sickly* Checking others* accounts
astrononcr, said that while look- showed Parks * guess at -2 nilos
h^J?h^Dts
ne watchod
5?)dPrN,?ttl3r 13th distcnce quite accurate. State po
on object like an ice lice called about it, said they
crean cone with elliptical dark ob.- wcro talking to Aii F6reo jot piano
jeet in contor, noving deliberate- on radio and pilot said doinefoo
17 ffif^ thOnSk^ cvo^ Dayt0IU ^i08 Pr hour,the object lift hir
??u ^ 5vas ****&** sun.
Air- objoct turned SW, Parks saw
Port, la.,, and flight
g
Fcl1 of ^'i01''
enginoor
g shaped. sav " ^ ^
pd. Estimated speed on cSi
S54icJ f Los 9^oloB sights sorvative side according to ParksT
7!^rl0US ^P^^11^ Mlw co^ who said it was further away than
d saucors ovor Donvor. Carpon- figured, passed through anelo of
S5 ??8 *fl?3n8*at 17i
saw first objoct,
whon to 30 dogreef in twrsfcondf:
ostinatod to be noise was nade, and
No
over Colorado Springs, 100 nilos was perfect. *
south of hin. Object noved fron a- July 19, Washington, D. C. .a.
SF-J^SS0!*8
180 south, and about^^ *i ^
1 ninuto ** *ad*
lat- ners cigiSler
at station WRC $Blner ChaJ:
transnittor
tcr two others wore sighted noving in Washington suburbs- looked uo
westward fron 180 degrees oouth to at the sky end saw 6 or 7 bripht
^?^I9?4?Ogr?2s S b? SW .uCar-
penter- said. Lt sane tit,, *rth one
oranee discs streaking through sky
n in single file. Spod along for li
^JTt^TftS2^?^
^JT^TS2^011'?^ X95
95 dc-
dc boutt 5 seconds
groes Bttol80 where itclisappoarod. second disappeared
^ voo vooSod
tclisappoarod. ly upward and disappeared.
Sd thax?
h?
^6 ob^c5s dLs" JuXy 17 Cornwall, Ont. - Three
23EE? .195 dcgrocs but J^70 bQys> sleeping under stars to keep
seconds later appeared noving cqoI, saw a flashing pink- light
eastward to 180 degrees S, he said, -streak across the sky. PIt trailed
CarSn2 S8*^^ tholr d*l*oflo whito snoko. travoled " <east to
as 25,000 to 30,000 feot.and looked west, wajs visible for 3 to k soc-
likc novtog planets, with no ap- onds, unlike any shooting stars
pcrcnt twirling on their own.a*os. they saw later.
Carpenter had boon alortcd for the July 20, Lincolnwood, Illinois,
objects by a radio report fron ai>i Lt. Ccl. Edwin H, Weig repcrtoc
5*6?' ii2{ot on^fJil5* ahord rtJ11** seeing yellowing streak of light
Estimated spccd:3,000 n.p.h Tinoj noving at tronondous speod prcv-
OCPiJi2OAn:tn8i\
Ji2A8i\ ... T ious wcck ovor lincolnwood.
ius Said
m vl L P^yona.
P^yona City, Japan, he believes the objocts not nctur-
, Takeshi Hnna,3M-, femer, dur- al, sono nay bo imaginary, but not
ing blackout duo to oarthquako, saw all of then. Sfcitod C/J> receive
bluish bright flrsh and running occasional roports of objocts in
out doors sp-w *+ brlls about size of sky which arc reported to O'Hrre
baseball flying -in a straight lino Field, Wcig is oxoc. officer- of
fomrtion novo in northward air- the Illinois wing of C/*P.
(Con't next Coi*) (Con't next page)
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of speed. Monents later my friend LOCN. TV station interrupted ccn~
and I hoard an eorio noiso---all vontion program to teloviso tho
vory peculiar.* chase through tolophoto lenses.
July 23, Chicago* Roy Gibbons* Columbus weather bnae.au ostiaatdd
Daily Trib*. staff writer quotes balloon at 65,000 feet, ordinarily
Chicago scientists1 (but does not out of pang of naked eye. Eaesvi**
nanc then) r.s saying that post of tionally clear skies, they said,
tho recent roports of mysterious and the apparently enornous sise
objects sighted in tho sky can bo of balloon made it easy- to sec.
explained by known natural laws, (Seems to use the weather bureau
ghig -would rule out tho ppsslbill* should know where those balloons
tjrthat tho earth is being rccon- arc-^at least once in a while.)
noitored by flying saucers carry- July 26, Nova Scotia* Mrs. Rob
ing visitors fron another planot, ert Cohoon reported to Naval avia-
the article said. But then, these tion authorities she saw flying
writers are never very specific, dinner plate* circle ball- park
are they? near her hone at a terrific speed*
July 2f, Washington. Itr-imothor Tho object,' giving off a red and
artlclo rehashing the Washington yellow glow and a stream of fire,
.'blips', the Air Force admitted it disappeared into the west. Hugo,
has a total of 250 unexplained sau- July 26, Ogdensburg, N. Y, 'Sky
cor.sightings in'it's filos* Bubble' spottod by Laurent Choi*
w JJuIL?7Fairf\nnd! Wls Ganc lotto,! of Ottawa, Canada*Doscribed
warden Bill Carrick of Sturgeon Bay as befog ninost transparents, by
and druggist frank Kollner of Stur- cholettc, a carpenter working at
goon Bry observed a flying saucer the Hartwell's Locks. " Other work-
while on thoir way up Door ponin^ rs couldn't see the objects* Two
sula toward the bay area, rotur- Of then looked like bubbles. Flew
ning fron a trout fishing trip, ovor Ottawa In a NB direction, then
Carrick's sister Nancy also ob-. one swung away fron other and hcad-
sorvod the craft. They described Od more northerly, IX sane tine,
it as resenbling a bun warmer^ residents of Preycot't roportedthroo
flattened a little, and rcfloct- sinilar phenomena* Jet plrncs
ing the sun's rays like chromiun. went up to look* classified then
The threo-peoplo wore driving NE as a balloon1, and believed to bo
on highway 57 when they saw tho responsible for Choletto's report*
object in front of then, visiblo Reports of sinilar objects seen in
below tho visor on their auto* Horkiner, N. Y. and Hamilton coun-
By this they assumed it had boon ties*
going their own general direction July 26. Inglowood, Calif. Mrs.
end was about1000 ft.altitudc when vorn Morgolis saw object in NW sky
they spotted it. They wore going -&& which appeared elongated, then
65 mph, and said it was going sov- SOoncd to form into a ball, then
eral tines that. It proceeded up disappeared. Griffith Park obsor-
tho road about 2 miles, then made vatory scientist took din view of
a sharp turn west, disappearing sightings, said they had obscrvod
in about ifO soconds* They stopped no unusual objects through scop&fl^
the car when they spotted it, aoA Hobert Buckles, at L. i.7 control
said it was rising as it proceed- towor sald thore was no such thlng
ed west. Both non and Carrick's as saucers, but there was an uni-
sistar stressed that tho objeet dcntifiable object over L*A. that
was net a balloon, seagull, piano at first was stationary, then flew
or any object they had over seen awcy ^th vapor or sneke trails
SJ???3h "jUaor ^Carrick behind lt. j. p. Bradshaw, labor
7QTy skGPtical union official at Wilmington es*
c! ttatd speed of object he saw as