<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
<p>That night I went through the Project “Saucer” summary of cases. It
was a strange experience.</p>
<p>The first report I checked was the Mantell case. Nothing that Boggs had said
had changed my firm opinion. I knew the answer was not Venus, and I was certain
Boggs knew it, too.</p>
<p>The Godman Field incident was listed as Case 33. The report also touches on the
Lockbourne Air Base sighting. As already described, the same mysterious object,
or a similar one, was seen moving at five hundred miles an hour over Lockbourne
Field. It was also sighted at other points in Ohio.</p>
<p>The very first sentence in Case 33 showed a determined attempt to explain away
the object that Mantell chased:</p>
<p>“Detailed attention should be given to any possible astronomical body or
phenomenon which might serve to identify the object or objects.”</p>
<p>(Some of the final Project report on Mantell has been given in an earlier
chapter. I am repeating a few paragraphs below, to help in weighing Major
Boggs’s answer.)</p>
<p>These are official statements of the Project astronomer:</p>
<p>“On January 7, 1948, Venus was less than half its full brilliance.
However, under exceptionally good atmospheric conditions, and with the eye
shielded from the direct rays of the sun, Venus might be seen as an exceedingly
tiny bright point of light. It is possible to see it in daytime when one knows
exactly where to look. Of course, the chances of looking at the right spot are
very few.</p>
<p>“It has been unofficially reported that the object was a Navy cosmic ray
balloon. If this can be established it is to be preferred as an explanation.
However, if reports from other localities refer to the same object, any such
device must have been a good many miles high—25 to 50—in order to
have been seen clearly, almost simultaneously, from places 175 miles
apart.”</p>
<p>This absolutely ruled out the balloon possibility, as the investigator fully
realized. That he must have considered the space-ship answer at this point is
strongly indicated in the following sentence:</p>
<p>“If all reports were of a single object, in the knowledge of this
investigator no man-made object could have been large enough and far enough
away for the approximate simultaneous sightings.”</p>
<p>The next paragraph of this Project “Saucer” report practically
nullified Major Boggs’s statement that Venus was the sole explanation:</p>
<p>“It is most unlikely, however, that so many separate persons should at
that time have chanced on Venus in the daylight sky. It seems therefore much
more probable that more than one object was involved. The sighting might have
included two or more balloons (or aircraft) or they might have included Venus
(in the fatal chase) and balloons. . . . Such a hypothesis, however, does still
necessitate the inclusion of at least two other objects than Venus, and it
certainly is coincidental that so many people would have chosen this one day to
be confused (to the extent of reporting the matter) by normal airborne objects.
. . .”</p>
<p>Farther on in the summaries, I found a report that has an extremely significant
bearing on the Mantell case. This was Case 175, in which the same consultant
attempts to explain a strange daylight sighting at Santa Fe, New Mexico.</p>
<p>One of the Santa Fe observers described the mysterious aerial object as round
and extremely bright, “like a dime in the sky.” Here is what the
Project “Saucer” investigator had to say:</p>
<p>“The magnitude of Venus was -3.8 (approximately the same as on January 7,
1948). it could have been visible in the daylight sky. It would have appeared,
however, more like a pinpoint of brilliant light than ‘like a dime in the
sky.’ It seems unlikely that it would be noticed at all. . . .
Considering discrepancies in the two reports, I suggest the moon in a gibbous
phase; in daytime this is unusual and most people are not used to it, so that
they fail to identify it. While this hypothesis has little to correspond to
either report, it is worth mentioning.</p>
<p>“It seems far more probable that some type of balloon was the object in
this case.”</p>
<p>Both the Godman Field and the Santa Fe cases were almost identical, so far as
the visibility of Venus was concerned. In the Santa Fe case, which had very
little publicity, Project “Saucer” dropped the Venus explanation as
a practically impossible answer. But in Case 33, it had tried desperately to
make Venus loom up as a huge gleaming object during Mantell’s fatal
chase.</p>
<p>There was only one explanation: Project “Saucer” must have known
the truth from the start-that Mantell had pursued a tremendous space ship. That
fact alone, if it had exploded in the headlines at that time, might have caused
dangerous panic. To make it worse, Captain Mantell had been killed. Even if he
had actually died from blacking out while trying to follow the swiftly
ascending space ship, few would have believed it. The story would spread like
wildfire: <i>Spacemen kill an American Air Force Pilot!</i></p>
<p>This explained the tight lid that had been clamped down at once on the Mantell
case. It was more than a year before that policy had been changed; then the
first official discussions of possible space visitors had begun to appear.</p>
<p><i>True’s</i> plans to announce the interplanetary answer would have
fitted a program of preparing the people. But the Air Force had not expected
such nation-wide reaction from <i>True’s</i> article; that much I knew.
Evidently, they had not suspected such a detailed analysis of the Godman Field
case, in particular. I could see now why Boggs, Jesse Stay, and the others had
tried so hard to convince me that we had made a mistake.</p>
<p>It was quite possible that we had revived that first Air Force fear of
dangerous publicity. But Mantell had been dead for two years. News stories
would not have the same impact now, even if they did report that spacemen had
downed the pilot. And I doubted that there would be headlines. Unless the Air
Force supplied some convincing details, the manner of his death would still be
speculation.</p>
<p>Apparently I had been right; this case was the key to the riddle. It had been
the first major sighting in 1948. Project “Saucer” had been started
immediately afterward. In searching for a plausible answer, which could be
published if needed, officials had probably set the pattern for handling all
other reports, “Explaining away” would be a logical program, until
the public could be prepared for an official announcement.</p>
<p>As I went through other case reports, I found increasing evidence to back up
this belief.</p>
<p>Case 1, the Muroc Air Base sightings, had plainly baffled Project men seeking a
plausible answer. Because of the Air Force witnesses, they could not ignore the
reports. Highly trained Air Force test pilots and ground officers had seen two
fast-moving silver-colored disks circling over the base.</p>
<p>Flying at speeds of from three to four hundred miles an hour, the disks whirled
in amazingly tight maneuvers. Since they were only eight thousand feet above
the field, these turns could be clearly seen.</p>
<p>“It is tempting to explain the object as ordinary aircraft observed under
unusual light conditions,” the case report reads. “But the evidence
of tight circles, if maintained, is strongly contradictory.”</p>
<p>Although Case 1 was technically in the “unexplained” group, Wright
Field had made a final effort to explain away the reports. Said the Air
Materiel Command:</p>
<p>“The sightings were the result of misinterpretation of real stimuli,
probably research balloons.”</p>
<p>In all the world’s history, there is no record of a
three-hundred-mile-an-hour wind. To cover the distance involved, the drifting
balloons would have had to move at this speed, or faster. If a
three-hundred-mile wind had been blowing at eight thousand feet, nothing on
earth could have stood it, Muroc Air Base would have been blown off the map.
What did the Muroc test pilots <i>really</i> see that day?</p>
<p>While searching for the Chiles-Whitted report, ran across the Fairfield Suisan
mystery-light case, which I had learned about in Seattle. This was Case 215.
The Project “Saucer” comment reads:</p>
<p>“If the observations were exactly as stated by the witnesses, the ball of
light could not be a fireball. . . . A fireball would not have come into view
at 1,000 feet and risen to 20,000. If correct, there is no astronomical
explanation. Under unusual conditions, a fireball might appear to rise somewhat
as a result of perspective. The absence of trail and sound definitely does not
favor the meteor hypothesis, but . . . does not rule it out finally. It does
not seem likely any meteor or auroral phenomenon could be as bright as
this.”</p>
<p>Then came one of the most revealing lines in all the case reports:</p>
<p>“In the almost hopeless absence of any other natural explanation, one
must consider the possibility of the object’s having been a meteor, even
though the description does not fit very well.”</p>
<p>One air-base officer, I recalled, had insisted that the object had been a
lighted balloon. Checking the secret report from the Air Weather Service, I
found this:</p>
<p>“Case 2 15. Very high winds, 60-70 miles per hour from southwest, all
levels. Definitely prohibits any balloon from southerly motion.”</p>
<p><i>This case is officially listed as answered</i>.</p>
<p>In Case 19, where a cigar-shaped object was seen at Dayton, Ohio, the Project
investigator made a valiant attempt to fit an answer:</p>
<p>“Possibly a close pair of fireballs, but it seems unlikely. If one were
to stretch the description to its very limits and make allowances for untrained
observers, he could say that the cigar-like shape might have been illusion
caused by rapid motion, and that the bright sunlight might have made both the
objects and the trails nearly invisible.</p>
<p>“This investigator does not prefer that interpolation, and it should he
resorted to only if all other possible explanations fail.”</p>
<p><i>This case, too, is officially listed as answered</i>.</p>
<p>Case 24, which occurred June 12, 1947, twelve days before the Arnold sighting,
shows the same determined attempt to find an explanation, no matter how
farfetched.</p>
<p>In this case, two fast-moving objects were seen at Weiser, Idaho, Twice they
approached the earth, then swiftly circled upward. The Project investigator
tried hard to prove that these might have been parts of a double fireball. But
at the end, he said, “In spite of all this, this investigator would
prefer a terrestrial explanation for the incident.”</p>
<p>It was plain that this report had not been planned originally for release to
the public. No Project investigator would have been so frank. With each new
report, I was more and more convinced that these had been confidential
discussions of various possible answers, circulated between Project
“Saucer” officials. Why they had been released now was still a
puzzle, though I began to see a glimmer of the answer.</p>
<p>The Chiles-Whitted sighting was listed as Case 144. As I started on the report,
I wondered if Major Boggs’s “bolide” answer would have any
more foundation than these other “astronomical” cases.</p>
<p>The report began with these words:</p>
<p>“There is no astronomical explanation, if we accept the report at face
value. But the sheer improbability of the facts as stated, particularly in the
absence of any known aircraft in the vicinity, makes it necessary to see
whether any other explanation, even though farfetched, can be
considered.”</p>
<p>After this candid admission of his intentions, the Project consultant earnestly
attempts to fit the two pilots’ space ship description to a slow-moving
meteor.</p>
<p>“It will have to be left to the psychologists,” he goes on,
“to tell us whether the immediate trail of a bright meteor could produce
the subjective impression of a ship with lighted windows. Considering only the
Chiles-Whitted sighting, the hypothesis seems very improbable.”</p>
<p>As I mentioned in an earlier chapter, observers at Robbins Air Force Base,
Macon, Georgia, saw the same mysterious object streak overhead, trailing
varicolored flames. This was about one hour before Chiles and Whitted saw the
onrushing space ship.</p>
<p>To bolster up the meteor theory, the Project consultant suggests a one-hour
error in time. The explanation: The airliner would be on daylight-saving time.</p>
<p>“If there is no time difference,” he proceeds, “the. object
must have been an extraordinary meteor. . . . in which case it would have
covered the distance from Macon to Montgomery in a minute or two.”</p>
<p>Having checked the time angle before, I knew this was incorrect. Both reports
were given in eastern standard time. And in a later part of the Project report,
the consultant admits this fact. But he has an alternate answer: “If the
difference in time is real, the object was some form of known aircraft,
regardless of its bizarre nature.”</p>
<p>The “bizarre nature” is not specified. Nor does the Project
“Saucer” report try to fit the Robbins Field description to any
earth-made aircraft. The air-base observers were struck by the object’s
huge size, its projectile-like shape, and the weird flames trailing behind.
Except for the double-deck windows, the air-base men’s description
tallied with the pilots’. With the ship at five thousand feet or higher,
its windows would not have been visible from the ground. All the observers
agreed on the object’s very high speed.</p>
<p>Neither of the Project “Saucer” alternate answers will fit the
facts.</p>
<p>1. The one-hour interval has been proved correct. Therefore, as the Project
consultant admits, it could not be a meteor.</p>
<p>2. The Robbins Field witnesses have flatly denied it was a conventional plane.
The Air Force screened 225 airplane schedules, and proved there was no such
plane in the area. No ordinary aircraft would have caused the brilliant streak
that startled the DC-3 passenger and both of the pilots.</p>
<p>Major Boggs’s bolide answer had gone the way of his Venus explanation. I
wondered if the Gorman light-balloon solution would fade out the same way. But
the Project report on Gorman (Case 172) merely hinted at the balloon answer. In
the Appendix, there was a brief comment: “Note that standard 30 inch and
65 inch weather balloons have vertical speeds of 600 and 1100 feet per minute,
respectively.”</p>
<p>In all the reports I have mentioned, and on through both the case books, one
thing was immediately obvious. All the testimony, all the actual evidence was
missing. These were only the declared conclusions of Project
“Saucer.” Whether they matched the actual conclusions in Wright
Field secret files there was no way of knowing.</p>
<p>But even in these sketch reports, I found some odd hints, clues to what Project
officials might really be thinking.</p>
<p>After an analysis of two Indianapolis cases, one investigator reports:</p>
<p>“Barring hallucination, these two incidents and 17, 75 and 84 seem the
most tangible from the standpoint of description, of all those reported, and
the most difficult to explain away as sheer nonsense.”</p>
<p>Case 17, I found, was that of Kenneth Arnold. But in spite of the above
admission that this case cannot be explained away, it is officially listed as
answered.</p>
<p>Case 75 struck a familiar note. This was the strange occurrence at Twin Falls,
Idaho, on which <i>True</i> had had a tip months before. A disk moving through
a canyon at tremendous speed had whipped the treetops as if by a violent
hurricane. The report was brief, but one sentence stood out with a startling
effect:</p>
<p>“Twin Falls, Idaho, August 13, 1847,” the report began.
“There is clearly nothing astronomical in this incident. . . . Two points
stand out, the sky-blue color, and the fact that the trees ‘spun around
on top as if they were in a vacuum.’”</p>
<p>Then came the sentence that made me sit up in my chair.</p>
<p>“Apparently it must be classed with the other bona fide disk
sightings.”</p>
<p><i>The other bona fide sightings!</i></p>
<p>Was this a slip? Or had the Air Force deliberately left this report in the
file? If they had, what was back of it—what was back of releasing all of
these telltale case summaries?</p>
<p>I skimmed through the rest as quickly as possible looking for other clues. Here
are a few of the things that. caught my eye:</p>
<p>Case 10. United Airlines report . . . despite conjectures, no logical
explanation seems possible. . . .</p>
<p>Case 122. Holloman Air Force Base, April 6, 1948. [This was the Commander
McLaughlin White Sands report.] No logical explanation. . . .</p>
<p>Case 124. North Atlantic, April 18, 1948 . . . radar sighting . . . no
astronomical explanation. . . .</p>
<p>Case 127. Yugoslav-Greek frontier, May 7, 1948 . . . information too limited. .
. .</p>
<p>Case 168. Arnheim, The Hague, July 20, 1948 . . . object seen four times . . .
had two decks and no wings . . . very high speed comparable to a V-2. . . .</p>
<p>Case 183. Japan, October 15, 1948. Radar experts should determine acceleration
rates. . . .</p>
<p>Case 188. Goose Bay, Labrador, October 29, 1948. Not astronomical . . . picked
up by radar . . . radar experts should evaluate the sightings . . . .</p>
<p>Case 189. Goose Bay, Labrador, October 31, 1948 . . . not astronomical . . .
observed on radarscope. . . .</p>
<p>Case 196. Radarscope observation . . . object traveling directly into the wind.
. . .</p>
<p>Case 198. Radar blimp moving at high speed and continuously changing direction.
. . .</p>
<p>Case 222. Furstenfeldbruck, Germany, November 23, 1948 . . . object plotted by
radar DF at 27,000 feet . . . short time later circling at 40,000 feet . . .
speed estimated 200-500 m.p.h. . . .</p>
<p>Case 223 . . . seventeen individuals saw and reported object . . . green flare
. . . all commercial and government airfield questioned . . . no success. . . .</p>
<p>Case 224. Las Vegas, New Mexico, December 8, 1948 . . . description exactly as
in 223 . . . flare reported traveling very high speed . . . very accurate
observation made by two F.B.I. agents. . . .</p>
<p>Case 231 . . . another glowing green flare just as described above. . . .</p>
<p>Case 233 . . . definitely no balloon . . . made turns . . . accelerated from
200 to 500 miles per hour . . . .</p>
<p>Going back over this group of cases, I made an incredible discovery: All but
three of these unsolved cases were officially listed as answered.</p>
<p>The three were the United Airlines case, the White Sands sightings, and the
double-decked space-ship report from The Hague.</p>
<p>Going back to the first report, I checked all the summaries. Nine times out of
ten, the explanations were pure conjecture. Sometimes no answer was even
attempted.</p>
<p>Although 375 cases were mentioned, the summaries ended with Case 244. Several
cases were omitted. I found clues to some of these in the secret Air Weather
Service report, including the mysterious “green light” sightings at
Las Vegas and Albuquerque.</p>
<p>Of the remaining 228 cases, Project “Saucer” lists all but 34 as
explained. These unsolved cases are brought up again for a final attempt at
explaining them away. In the appendix, the Air Materiel Command carefully
states:</p>
<p>“It is not the intent to discredit the character of observers, but each
case has undesirable elements and these can’t be disregarded.”</p>
<p>After this perfunctory gesture, the A.M.C. proceeds to discredit completely the
testimony of highly trained Air Force test pilots and officers at Muroc. (The
300-400 m.p.h. research balloon explanation.)</p>
<p>The A.M.C. then brushes off the report of Captain Emil Smith and the crew of a
United Airline plane. On July 4, 1947, nine huge flying disks were counted by
Captain Smith and his crew. The strange objects were in sight for about twelve
minutes; the crew watched them for the entire period and described them in
detail later.</p>
<p>Despite Project “Saucer’s” admission that it had no answer,
the A.M.C. contrived one. Ignoring the evidence of veteran airline pilots, it
said:</p>
<p>“Since the sighting occurred at sunset, when illusory effect are most
likely, the objects could have been ordinary aircraft, balloons, birds, or pure
illusion.”</p>
<p>In only three cases did the A.M.C. admit it had no answer. Even here, it was
implied that the witnesses were either confused or incompetent.</p>
<p>In its press release of December 27, 1949, the Air Force had mentioned 375
cases. It implied that all of these were answered. The truth was just the
reverse, as was proved by these case books. Almost two hundred cases still were
shown to be unsolved-although the real answers might be hidden in Wright Field
files.</p>
<p>These two black books puzzled me. Why had the Air Force lifted its secrecy on
these case summaries? Why had Major Boggs given me those answers, when these
books would flatly refute them?</p>
<p>I thought I new the reason now but there was only one way to make sure. The
actual Wright Field files should tell the answer.</p>
<p>When I phoned General Sory Smith, his voice sounded a little peculiar. “I
called Wright Field,” he said. “But they said you wouldn’t
find anything of value out there.”</p>
<p>“You mean they refused to let me see their files?”</p>
<p>“No, I didn’t say that. But they’re short of personnel. They
don’t want to take people off other jobs to look up the records.”</p>
<p>“I won’t need any help,” I said. “Major Boggs said each
case had a separate book. If they’d just show me the shelves, I could do
the job in two days.”</p>
<p>There was a long silence.</p>
<p>“I’ll ask them again,” the General said finally. “Call
me sometime next week.”</p>
<p>I said I would, and hung up. The message from Wright Field hadn’t
surprised me. But Smith’s changed manner did. He had sounded oddly
disturbed.</p>
<p>While I was waiting for Wright Field’s answer, Ken Purdy phoned. He told
me that staff men from <i>Time</i> and <i>Life</i> magazines were seriously
checking on the “little men” story. Both Purdy and I were sure this
was a colossal hoax, but there was just a faint chance that someone had been on
the fringe of a real happening and had made up the rest of the story.</p>
<p>They key man in the story seemed to be one George Koehler, of Denver, Colorado.
The morning after Purdy called, I took a plane to Denver. During the flight I
went over the “little men” story again. It had been printed in over
a hundred papers.</p>
<p>According to the usual version, George Koehler had accidentally learned of two
crashed saucers at a radar station on our southwest border. The ships were made
of some strange metal. The cabin was stationary, placed within a large rotating
ring.</p>
<p>Here is the story as it was told in the <i>Kansas City Star</i>:</p>
<div style="margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;">
<p>In flight, the ring revolved at a high rate of speed, while the cabin remained
stationary like the center of a gyroscope.</p>
<p>Each of the two ships seen by Koehler were occupied by a crew of two. In the
badly damaged ship, these bodies were charred so badly that little could be
learned from them. The occupants of the other ship, while dead when they were
found, were not burned or disfigured, and, when Koehler saw them, were in a
perfect state of preservation. Medical reports, according to Koehler, showed
that these men were almost identical with earth-dwelling humans, except for a
few minor differences. They were of a uniform height of three feet, were
uniformly blond, beardless, and their teeth were completely free of fillings or
cavities. They did not wear undergarments, but had their bodies taped.</p>
<p>The ships seemed to be magnetically controlled and powered.</p>
<p>In addition to a piece of metal, Koehler had a clock or automatic calendar
taken from one of the crafts.</p>
<p>Koehler said that the best assumption as to the source of the ships was the
planet Venus.</p>
</div>
<p>When I arrived at Denver, I went to the radio station where Koehler worked. I
told him that if he had proof that we could print, we would buy the story.</p>
<p>As the first substantial proof, I asked to see the piece of strange metal he
was supposed to have. Koehler said it had been sent to another city to be
analyzed. I asked to see pictures of the crashed saucers. These, too, proved to
be somewhere else. So did the queer “space clock” that Koehler was
said to have.</p>
<p>By this time I was sure it was all a gag. I had the feeling that Koehler, back
of his manner of seeming indignation at my demands, was hugely enjoying
himself. I cut the interview short and called Ken Purdy in New York.</p>
<p>“Well, thank God that’s laid to rest,” he said when I told
him.</p>
<p>But even though the “little men” story had turned out-as
expected—a dud, Koehler had done me a good turn. An old friend, William
E. Barrett, well-known fiction writer, now lived in Denver. Thanks to
Koehler’s gag, I had a pleasant visit with Bill and his family.</p>
<p>On the trip back, I bought a paper at the Chicago airport. On an inside page I
ran across Koehler’s name. According to the A.P., he had just admitted
the whole thing was a big joke.</p>
<p>But in spite of this, the “little men” story goes on and on.
Apparently not even Koehler can stop it now.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />