Page:Ruppelt - The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects.djvu/124

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January 1950 issue of True magazine. Next to Scully’s book Keyhoe s book was tame, but it convinced more people. Keyhoe had based his conjecture on fact, and his facts were correct, even if the conjecture wasn’t.

Neither the seesaw advances and retreats of the United Nations troops in Korea nor the two flying saucer books seemed to have any effect on the number of UFO reports logged into ATIC, however. By official count, seventy-seven came in the first half of 1950 and seventy-five during the latter half. The actual count could have been more because in 1950, UFO reports were about as popular as sand in spinach, and I would guess that at least a few wound up in the “circular file.”

In early January 19511 was recalled to active duty and assigned to Air Technical Intelligence Center as an intelligence officer. I had been at ATIC only eight and a half hours when I first heard the words “flying saucer” officially used. I had never paid a great deal of attention to flying saucer reports but I had read a few—especially those that had been made by pilots. I’d managed to collect some 2,000 hours of flying time and had seen many odd things in the air, but I’d always been able to figure out what they were in a few seconds. I was convinced that if a pilot, or any crew member of an airplane, said that he’d seen something that he couldn’t identify he meant it—it wasn’t a hallucination. But I wasn’t convinced that flying saucers were spaceships.

My interest in UFO’s picked up in a hurry when I learned that ATIC was the government agency that was responsible for the UFO project. And I was really impressed when I found out that the person who sat three desks down and one over from mine was in charge of the whole UFO show. So when I came to work on my second morning at ATIC and heard the words “flying saucer report” being talked about and saw a group of people standing around the chief of the UFO project’s desk I about sprung an eardrum listening to what they had to say. It seemed to be a big deal—except that most of them were laughing. It must be a report of hoax or hallucination, I remember thinking to myself, but I listened as one of the group told the others about the report.

The night before a Mid-Continent Airlines DC-3 was taxiing out to take off from the airport at Sioux City, Iowa, when the airport control tower operators noticed a bright bluish-white