<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p>When I reached home, I found a brief letter from Ken Purdy.</p>
<div style="margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;">
<p>Dear Don:</p>
<p>The Mantell and Eastern cases both look good. I don’t see how they can
brush them off. It looks more like the interplanetary answer to me, but we
won’t decide on treatment until we’re sure. [I had suggested two or
three angles, if this proved the real answer.]</p>
<p>Who would be the best authority to check our disk operation theory and give us
more details on directional control? I’d like to have it checked by two
more engineers.</p>
</div>
<p class="right">
KEN</p>
<p>Next day, I dug out my copy of Boal’s interview with
D———, the famous aircraft designer.</p>
<p>“Certainly the flying saucers are possible,” the designer had told
Boal. “Give me enough money and I’ll build you one. It might have
to be a model because the fuel would be a problem. If the saucers that have
been seen came from other worlds, which isn’t at all Buck Rogerish, they
may be powered with atomic energy or by the energy that produces cosmic
rays—which is many times more powerful—or by some other fuel or
natural force that our research hasn’t yet discovered. But the circular
airfoil is quite feasible.</p>
<p>“It wouldn’t have the stability of the conventional airplane, but
it would have enormous maneuverability—it could rise vertically, hover,
descend vertically, and fly at extremely high speed, with the proper power.
Don’t take my word for it. Check with other engineers.”</p>
<p>Before looking up a private engineer I had in mind, I went to the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. The N.A.C.A. is America’s most
authoritative source of aerodynamic knowledge. I knew they had already tried
out disk-shaped airfoils, and I asked about this first. I found that two
official N.A.C.A. reports, Technical Note 539 and Report 431, discuss tests on
circular and elliptical Clark Y airfoils. Both reports state that these designs
were found practical.</p>
<p>Later, I talked with one of the top engineers in the N.A.C.A. Without showing
him D———’s sketch, I asked how a disk might operate.</p>
<p>“It could be built with variable-direction jet or rocket nozzles,”
be said. “The nozzles would be placed around the rim, and by changing
their direction the disk could be made to rise and descend vertically. It could
hover, fly straight ahead, and make sharp turns.</p>
<p>“Its direction and velocity would be governed by the number of nozzles
operating, the power applied, and the angle at which they were tilted. They
could be pointed toward the ground, rearward, in a lateral direction, or in
various combinations.</p>
<p>“A disk flying level, straight ahead, could be turned swiftly to right or
left by shifting the angles of the nozzles or cutting off power from part of
the group. This method of control would operate in the earth’s atmosphere
and also, using rocket power, in free space, where conventional controls would
be useless.”</p>
<p>The method he had described was not the one which D——— had
outlined.</p>
<p>“What about a rotating disk?” I asked the N.A.C.A. man.
“Suppose you had one with a stationary center, and a large circular
section rotating around it? The rotating part would have a camber built into
it, or it would have slotted vanes.”</p>
<p>He gave me a curious look, “Where’d you get that idea about the
camber?”</p>
<p>I told him it had come to me from <i>True</i>.</p>
<p>“It could be done,” he said. “The slotted-vanes method has
already been tried. There’s an engineer in Glendale, California,
who’s built a model. His name’s E. W. Kay.”</p>
<p>He gave me a few details on how a cambered or slotted-vane rotating disk might
operate, then interrupted himself to ask me what I thought the saucers were.</p>
<p>“They’re either interplanetary or some secret development,” I
said. ‘What do you think?”</p>
<p>“The N.A.C.A. has no proof they even exist,” he answered.</p>
<p>When I left the building a few minutes later, I was still weighing that
statement. If the Air Force or the Navy had a secret disk device, the N.A.C.A.
would almost certainly know about it. The chances were that any disk-shaped
missile or new type of circular aircraft would first have been tested in the
N.A.C.A. wind tunnels at Langley Field. If the saucers were interplanetary, the
N.A.C.A.—at least top officials—would probably have been in on any
discussion of the disks’ performance. Either way, the N.A.C.A.’s
official attitude could be expected to match the Pentagon’s.</p>
<p>After lunch, I took a taxi to the office of the private engineer. Like
D———, he has asked that he not be quoted by name. The name I
am using, Paul Redell, will serve that purpose. Redell is a well-known
aeronautical engineer. He has worked with major aircraft companies and served
as a special consultant to government agencies and the industries. He is also a
competent pilot.</p>
<p>Although I had known him several years, he refused at first to talk about the
saucers. Then I realized he thought I meant to quote him. I showed him some of
the material I had roughed out, in which names were omitted or changed as
requested.</p>
<p>“All right,” Redell said finally. “What do you want to
know?”</p>
<p>“Anything you can tell us. But first, your ideas on these
sketches.” I showed him D———’s drawings and then
gave him the high points of the investigation. When I mentioned the
mystery-light incident at Fairfield Suisan Air Force Base, Redell sat up
quickly.</p>
<p>“The Gorman case again!”</p>
<p>“We heard about some other ‘light’ cases,” I said.
“One was at Las Vegas.”</p>
<p>“I know about that one. That is, it you mean the green light—wait a
minute!” Redell frowned into space for a few seconds, “You say that
Fairfield Suisan sighting was on December third? Then the Las Vegas sighting
was only a few days later. It was the first week of the month, I’m
positive.”</p>
<p>“Those light reports have got me stumped,” I said. “A light
just can’t fly around by itself. And those two-foot disks—”</p>
<p>“You haven’t worked on the Gorman case?” asked Redell.</p>
<p>I told him I hadn’t thought it was coming up on my schedule.</p>
<p>“Leave these sketches here,” he said. “Look into that Gorman
sighting. Then check on our plans for space exploration. I’ll give you
some sources. When you get through, come on back and we’ll talk it
over.”</p>
<p>The Gorman “saucer dogfight” had been described in newspapers; the
pilot had reported chasing a swiftly maneuvering white light, which had finally
escaped him. Judging from the Project “Saucer” preliminary report,
this case had baffled all the Air Force investigators. When I met George
Gorman, I found him to be intelligent, coolheaded, and very firmly convinced of
every detail in his story. I had learned something about his background. He had
had college training. During the war, he had been an Air Force instructor,
training French student pilots. In Fargo, his home, he had a good reputation,
not only for veracity but as a businessman. Only twenty-six, he was part owner
of a construction company, and also the Fargo representative for a
hardware-store chain. Even knowing all this, I found it hard at first to
believe some of the dogfight details. But the ground observers confirmed them.</p>
<p>It was about nine o’clock in the evening, October 1, 1948. Gorman, now an
Air National Guard lieutenant, had been on a practice flight in an F-51
fighter. The other pilots on this practice patrol had already landed. Gorman
had just been cleared by the C.A.A. operator in the Fargo Airport tower when he
saw a fast-moving light below his circling fighter.</p>
<p>From his altitude, 4,500 feet, it appeared to be the tail light of a swiftly
flying plane. As nearly as he could tell, it was 1,000 feet high, moving at
about 250 m.p.h. Gorman called the tower to recheck his clearance. He was told
the only other plane in the area was a Piper Cub. Gorman Could see the Cub
plainly outlined below him. There was a night football game going on, and the
field was brightly lighted. But the Cub was nowhere near the strange light.</p>
<p>As the mystery light raced above the football field. Gorman noticed an odd
phenomenon. Instead of seeing the silhouette of a plane, he saw no shape at all
around the light. By contrast, he could see the Cub’s outline clearly.</p>
<p>Meantime, the airport traffic controller, L. D. Jensen, had also spotted the
queer light. Concerned with the danger of collision—he said later that
he, too, thought it a plane’s tail light—he trained his binoculars
on it. Like Gorman, he was unable to distinguish a shape near the light.
Neither could another C.A.A. man who was with him in the tower, a Fargo
resident named Manuel E. Johnson.</p>
<p>Up in the F-51, Gorman dived on the light, which was steadily blinking on and
off.</p>
<p>“As I closed in,” he told Project “Saucer” men later,
“it suddenly became steady and pulled up into a sharp left turn. It was a
clear white and completely roundabout six to eight inches in diameter.</p>
<p>“I thought it was making a pass at the tower. I dived after it and
brought my manifold pressure up to sixty, but I couldn’t catch the
thing.”</p>
<p>Gorman reported his speed at full power as 350 to 400 miles per hour. During
the maneuvers that followed, both the C.A.A. men watched from the tower. Jensen
was using powerful night glasses, but still no shape was visible near the
mysterious light. The fantastic dogfight continued for twenty minutes. Gorman
described it in detail.</p>
<p>“When I attempted to turn with the light, I blacked out temporarily,
owing to excessive speed. I am in fairly good physical condition, and I
don’t believe there are many, if any, pilots who could withstand the turn
and speed effected by the light and remain conscious.”</p>
<p>During these sharp maneuvers, the light climbed quickly, then made another left
bank.</p>
<p>“I put my fifty-one into a sharp turn and tried to cut it off,”
said Gorman. “By then we were at about seven thousand feet, Suddenly it
made a sharp right turn and we headed straight at each other. Just when we were
about to collide I guess I lost my nerve. I went into a dive and the light
passed over my canopy at about five hundred feet. Then it made a left circle
about one thousand feet above and I gave chase again.”</p>
<p>When collision seemed imminent a second time, the object shot straight into the
air. Gorman climbed after it at full throttle.</p>
<p>Just about this time, two. other witnesses, a private pilot and his passenger,
saw the fast-moving light. The pilot was Dr. A. D. Cannon, an oculist; his
passenger was Einar Nelson. Dr. Cannon later told investigators the light was
moving at high speed. He thought it might be a Canadian jet fighter from over
the border. (A careful check with Canadian air officials ruled out this
answer.) After landing at the airport, Dr. Cannon and Mr. Nelson again watched
the light, saw it change direction and disappear.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Gorman was making desperate efforts to catch the thing. He was now
determined to ram it, since there seemed nothing solid behind it to cause a
dangerous crash. If his fighter was disabled, or if it caught fire, he could
bail out.</p>
<p>But despite the F-51’s fast climb, the light still outdistanced him. At
14,000 feet, Gorman’s plane went into a power stall, He made one last
try, climbing up to 17,000 feet. A few moments later, the light turned in a
north-northwest direction and quickly disappeared.</p>
<p>Throughout the dogfight, Gorman noticed no deviation on his instruments,
according to the Project “Saucer” report. Gorman did not confirm or
deny this when I talked with him. But he did agree with the rest of the Project
statement. He did not notice any sound, odor, or exhaust trail.</p>
<p>Gorman’s remarks about ramming the light reminded me of what Art Green
had said. When I asked Gorman about the court-martial rumor, he gave me a
searching glance.</p>
<p>“Where did you hear that?”</p>
<p>“Several places,” I told him. “At Chicago, in Salt Lake
City—in fact, we’ve been hearing it all over.”</p>
<p>“Well, there’s nothing to it,” Gorman declared. He changed
the subject.</p>
<p>Some time afterward, a Fargo pilot told me there had been trouble over the
ramming story.</p>
<p>“But it wasn’t Gorman’s fault. Somebody else released that
report to the A. P. The news story didn’t actually say there was an Air
Force order to ram it, but the idea got around, and we heard that Washington
squawked. Gorman had a pretty rough time of it for a while. Some of the
newspapers razzed his story. And the Project ‘Saucer’ teams really
worked on him. I guess they were trying to scare him into saying he was
mistaken, and it was a balloon.”</p>
<p>When I asked Gorman about this, he denied he’d had rough treatment by the
Project teams.</p>
<p>“Sure, they asked about a thousand questions, and I could tell they
thought it might be a hoax at first. But that was before they quizzed the
others who saw it.”</p>
<p>“Anybody suggest it was a balloon?” I said casually.</p>
<p>“At first, they were sure that’s what it was,” answered
Gorman. “You see, there was a weather balloon released here. You know the
kind, it has a lighted candle on it. The Project teams said I’d chased
after that candle and just imagined the light’s maneuvers—confused
it with my own movement, because of the dark.”</p>
<p>Gorman grinned. “They had it just about wrapped up—until they
talked to George Sanderson. He’s the weather observer. He was tracking
the balloon with a theodolite, and he showed them his records. The time and
altitudes didn’t fit, and the wind direction was wrong. The balloon was
drifting in the opposite direction. Both the tower men backed him up. So that
killed the weather-balloon idea.”</p>
<p>The next step by Project “Saucer” investigators had been to look
for some unidentified aircraft. This failed, too. Obviously, it was only
routine; the outline of a conventional plane would certainly have been seen by
Gorman and the men in the tower.</p>
<p>An astronomical check by Professor Hynek ruled out stars, fireballs, and
comets—a vain hope, to begin with. The only other conventional answer, as
the Project report later stated, was hallucination. In view of all the
testimony, hallucination had to he ruled out. Finally, the investigators
admitted they had no solution.</p>
<p>The first Project “Saucer” report, on April 27, 1949, left the
Gorman “mystery light” unidentified.</p>
<p>In the <i>Saturday Evening Post</i> of May 7, 1949, Sidney Shallett analyzed
the Gorman case, in the second of his articles on flying saucers. Shallet
suggested this solution: that Gorman had chased one of the Navy’s giant
cosmic-ray research balloons. Each of these huge balloons is lighted, so that
night-flying planes will not collide with the gas bag or the instrument case
suspended below. Shallett concluded that Gorman was suffering from a
combination of vertigo and confusion with the light on the balloon.</p>
<p>As already mentioned, these huge Navy balloons are filled with only a small
amount of helium before their release at Minneapolis. They then rise swiftly to
very high altitudes, unless a leak develops. In Shallett’s words,
“These balloons travel high and fast. . . .”</p>
<p>Fargo is about two hundred miles from Minneapolis. Normally, a cosmic-ray
research balloon would have reached a very high altitude by the time it had
drifted this far. The only possible answer to its low-altitude sighting would
be a serious leak.</p>
<p>If a leaking balloon had come down to one thousand feet at Fargo, it would
either have remained at that height or kept on descending. The mystery light
was observed at this altitude moving at high speed. If a Cub’s outline
was visible against the lighted football field, the massive shape of even a
partly deflated balloon would have stood out like an elephant. Even before
release, the partially inflated gas bags are almost a hundred feet tall. The
crowd at the football game would certainly have seen such a monstrous shape
above the glare of the floodlights, for the plastic balloons gleam brightly in
any light rays. The two C.A.A. men, watching with binoculars, could not
possibly have missed it.</p>
<p>For the cosmic-balloon answer to be correct, this leaking gas bag would have
had to rise swiftly to seventeen thousand feet—after a loss of helium had
forced it down to one thousand. As a balloon pilot, I know this is impossible.
The Project “Saucer” report said unequivocally: “The object
could outturn and outspeed the F-51, and was able to attain a much steeper
climb and to maintain a constant rate of climb far in excess of the Air Force
fighter.”</p>
<p>A leaking balloon? More and more, I became convinced that Secretary Forrestal
had persuaded some editors that it was their patriotic duty to conceal the
answer, whatever it was.</p>
<p>That thought had begun to worry me, because of my part in this investigation.
Perhaps John Steele had been right, and we shouldn’t be trying to dig out
the answer. But I had already told Purdy, and he had agreed, that if national
security was involved, we would drop the thing completely.</p>
<p>By the time I had proved the balloon answer wrong, I was badly puzzled. The
idea of a disembodied light was the hardest thing to swallow that I’d
come across so far.</p>
<p>And yet there were the other light reports—the strange sighting at
Fairfield Suisan Field, the weird green lights at Las Vegas and Albuquerque.
And there was the encounter that Lieutenant H. G. Combs had had one night above
Andrews Field, near Washington, D. C.</p>
<p>This incident had occurred on November 18, 1948, six weeks after Gorman’s
experience. Combs, flying with another lieutenant named Jackson, was about to
land his T-6, at 9:45 P.M., when a strange object loomed up near him. It looked
like a grayish globe, and it gave off an odd, fuzzy light.</p>
<p>Combs chased the weird object for over ten minutes, during which it appeared to
evade every move he made. Once, its speed was nearly six hundred miles an hour,
as closely as he could estimate. In a final attempt to identify it, Combs
zoomed the T-6 up at a steep angle and flashed his landing lights on it. Before
he could get a good look, the globe light whirled off to the east and vanished.</p>
<p>Since Combs’s story had been in the newspapers, Project
“Saucer” evidently had felt in wise to give some explanation. When
I read it, in the preliminary report, I was amazed. Here was the concluding
sentence:</p>
<p>“The mystery was cleared up when the object was identified positively as
a cluster of cosmic-ray research balloons.”</p>
<p>Even one of the giant balloons would have been hard to take as the explanation.
Combs was almost sure to have collided with it in his head-on passes. But an
entire cluster! I tried to picture the T-6 zooming and twisting through the
night sky, with several huge balloons in its path. It would be a miracle if
Combs got through without hitting one of them, even if each balloon was
lighted. But he had seen only one light; so had Lieutenant Jackson. That would
mean all the rest of the balloons were unlighted—an unbelievable
coincidence.</p>
<p>It was not until months afterward that I found Project “Saucer” had
withdrawn this “solution.” In its final report, this case, Number
207, was listed in the “Unidentified” group. How the
balloon-cluster explanation ever got into the first report is still a mystery.</p>
<p>When I talked with Gorman, I told him I was baffled by the idea of a light
maneuvering through the skies with no airfoil to support it.</p>
<p>“I know,” he said. “It got me, too, at first.”</p>
<p>“You mean you know the answer?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“It’s just my personal opinion,” said Gorman. “But
I’d rather not have it printed. You see, I got some ideas from all the
questions those Project teams asked me. If my hunch turns out to be right, I
might be talking about an official secret.”</p>
<p>I tried to pry some hint out of him, but Gorman just smiled and shook his head.</p>
<p>“I can tell you this much,” he said, “because it’s been
mentioned in print. There was <i>thought</i> behind every move the light made.
It wasn’t any radar-responder gadget making it veer away from my
ship.”</p>
<p>“How do you know that?”</p>
<p>“Because it reacted differently at different times. If it had been a
mechanical control, it would have turned or climbed the same way each time I
got near it. Instead, it was as if some intelligent mind was directing every
turn like a game of chess, and always one move ahead of me. Maybe you can
figure out the rest.”</p>
<p>That was all I could get out of him. It bothered me, because Combs’s
report indicated the same thing. I had a strong temptation to skip the
space-plans research and tell Redell what Gorman had told me. But Redell had an
orderly mind, and he didn’t like to be pushed.</p>
<p>Reluctantly, I gave up the idea. I had a feeling Redell knew the answer to the
mystery lights, and it wasn’t easy to put off the solution.</p>
<p>The letter that came from Art Green, while I was working on the space plans,
didn’t make it easier:</p>
<div style="margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;">
<p>Dear Keyhoe:</p>
<p>Just heard about your Seattle visit. That Fairfield Suisan thing is on the
level; several Air Force pilots have told me about it.</p>
<p>When you get to Fargo, ask Gorman what they found when they checked his ship
with a Geiger counter. If he says it was negative, then he must be under
orders. I happen to know better.</p>
</div>
<p class="right">
Yours, <br/>
ART GREEN</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />