It
was 1964. Late at night. The Northern California man had lost his
hunting buddies in the woods near Lake Tahoe and climbed a tree to
sleep.
Awakened by a glowing object landing on a nearby ridge, the man
was soon fighting for his life against two neckless creatures and a
robot before the beings emitted a noxious gas and knocked him out.
A tall tale? Drunken binge? Drug-induced hallucination (it was the
'60s, after all)? No matter. That Placer County UFO sighting and
thousands more were studiously collected and meticulously researched as
part of the Air Force's strange, long-shuttered Project BLUE BOOK, a
government program on the hunt for little green men -- or perhaps Soviet
spies; no one is saying for sure.
For 22 years, the military seemed to spare little expense in
chronicling humans' reported otherworldly encounters with glowing orbs,
spinning spheres, flying ice cream cones, and more.
All of it had been hidden away in archive files until a UFO
enthusiast posted 130,000 documents worth of BLUE BOOK material in a
free online database for the first time last month. Dozens of Bay Area
close encounters were included in the trove.
The project launched in 1947, two years after the end of World War
II and just as the Cold War was gearing up. It concluded in 1969
without offering definitive proof of either aliens visiting Mother Earth
or advanced spycraft launched by our enemies. But the goldmine of
reports -- witness names redacted -- provides a snapshot of a nervous,
suspicious era that drove our government to consider even the most
fanciful reports.
"UFO investigations were taken very seriously," said Alejandro
Rojas, editor of Open Minds magazine, who points to a 1947 report of an
unidentified flying object near Mt. Rainier in Washington by private
pilot Kenneth Arnold as the mother of modern UFO sightings.
"He was a credible person, and it hit the press and became a really, really big story," Rojas said. Add a dash of post-war paranoia, and the Air Force dove in head first, he said.
"The
public's imagination went wild with (UFOs)," agreed Jeff Underwood,
historian of the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force. "It was a
serious attempt to find if there was any validity to a UFO crisis or
just mass hysteria.
"For the Air Force, it was driven more over
concerns the Soviets created a super secret weapon than if there were
little green men," he said.
In the end, many of the more than
12,000 sightings diligently investigated by the Air Force were chalked
up to weather phenomena, meteors, satellites, a bright planet, balloons,
birds or overactive imaginations.
The latter category would seem
to fit the story told in 1964 by the lost hunter near Lake Tahoe, who
swore he spent the night in a tree, firing arrows at three white
"robot"-looking creatures, setting scraps of his clothing afire and
hurling the pieces at the glowing aliens below.
Although the BLUE
BOOK documents suggest the military's time commitment was considerable,
it wasn't enough to please everyone. In 1966, then-Michigan congressman
and future president Gerald Ford complained that the Air Force was
dismissing scores of UFO sightings from his constituents as "swamp gas,"
and called for a Congressional inquiry into the phenomena.
He
wasn't the only famous politician to get an earful from his constituents
about UFOs. In a letter to President John F. Kennedy, 63-year-old Alice
Reynolds of San Mateo said she was out feeding bread to the birds when
she saw two stationary white balls, one with a tail, in the early
morning sky on Nov. 13, 1961.
She
complained that she tried to contact the Civil Defense Control Center
in Belmont, but it wasn't open, so she called the police: "They were
more curious as to why I (was) up at that time than what I called
about," she wrote to the president.
The UFO witnesses ranged from
grandmothers to amateur astronomers and even military pilots, who
should have known a weather balloon when they saw one.
Several reports included sketches, charts and purported photographs of the objects.
Bay
Area newspapers had a field day with one mysterious craft spotted by
dozens of people as it drifted over the region on Feb. 7, 1950,
including two nurses who swore they were "non-drinkers."
"Flying
'Ice Cream Cone' Reported Over Alameda," a San Francisco Chronicle
headline screamed. The article featured a cartoon drawing of the flying
confection with a Navy officer looking through binoculars yelling
"Vanilla!" while a young boy said: "I say it's chocolate!"
A San
Jose man eventually wrote to the Air Force explaining that his own close
look at the object revealed a single-engine airplane with a reddish
vapor trail behind it. Mystery solved, concluded investigators.
Popular culture drove the reports, Underwood said, and it ultimately slowed them down in the late 1960s.
"As soon as Star Trek started, I lost interest in UFOs," he laughed.
He
wasn't alone. On Dec. 17, 1969, the Air Force terminated the project,
citing conclusions from a University of Colorado report titled,
"Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects." Researchers
determined there was no threat to national security, additional
scientific knowledge or extraterrestrial vehicles uncovered by Project
BLUE BOOK. However, 701 sightings remain "unidentified."
Contact Matthias Gafni at 925-952-5026. Follow
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