Page:Ruppelt - The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects.djvu/191

 the Air Force, Thomas K. Finletter, then the Secretary for Air. On May 8, 1952, Lieutenant Colonel R. J. Taylor of Colonel Dunn’s staff and I presented an hour-long briefing to Secretary Finletter and his staff. He listened intently and asked several questions about specific sightings when the briefing was finished. If he was at all worried about the UFO’s he certainly didn’t show it. His only comment was, “You’re doing a fine job, Captain. It must be interesting. Thank you.”

Then he made the following statement for the press:

“No concrete evidence has yet reached us either to prove or disprove the existence of the so-called flying saucers. There remain, however, a number of sightings that the Air Force investigators have been unable to explain. As long as this is true, the Air Force will continue to study flying saucer reports.”

In May 1952, Project Blue Book received seventy-nine UFO reports compared to ninety-nine in April. It looked as if we’d passed the peak and were now on the downhill side. The 178 reports of the past two months, not counting the thousand or so letters that we’d received directly from the public, had piled up a sizable backlog since we’d had time to investigate and analyze only the better reports. During June we planned to clear out the backlog, and then we could relax.

But never underestimate the power of a UFO. In June the big flap hit—they began to deliver clippings in big cardboard cartons.