Page:Ruppelt - The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects.djvu/40

 acuity factor only strengthened the “Amold-saw-a-flying-saucer” faction’s theory that what he’s seen was a spaceship. If he could see the objects 20 to 25 miles away, they must have been about 210 feet long instead of the poorly estimated 45 to 50 feet.

In 1947 this was a fantastic story, but now it is just another UFO report marked “Unknown.” It is typical in that if the facts are accurate, if Arnold actually did see the UFO s go behind a mountain peak, and if he knew his exact position at the time, the UFO problem cannot be lightly sloughed off; but there are always “ifs” in UFO reports. This is the type of report that led Major General John A. Samford, Director of Intelligence for Headquarters, Air Force, to make the following comment during a press conference in July 1952: “However, there have remained a percentage of this total [of all UFO reports received by the Air Force], about 20 per cent of the reports, that have come from credible observers of relatively incredible things. We keep on being concerned about them.”

In warping, twisting, and changing the Arnold incident, the writers of saucer lore haven’t been content to confine themselves to the incident itself; they have dragged in the crashed Marine Corps’ C-46. They intimate that the same flying saucers that Arnold saw shot down the C-46, grabbed up the bodies of the passengers and crew, and now have them pickled at the University of Venus Medical School. As proof they apply the same illogical reasoning that they apply to most everything. The military never released photos of the bodies of the dead men, therefore there were no bodies. There were photographs and there were bodies. In consideration of the families of air crewmen and passengers, photos of air crashes showing dead bodies are never released.

Arnold himself seems to be the reason for a lot of the excitement that heralded in flying saucers. Stories of odd incidents that occur in this world are continually being reported by newspapers, but never on the scale of the first UFO report. Occasional stories of the “Himalayan snowmen,” or the “Malayan monsters,” rate only a few inches or a column on the back pages of newspapers. Arnold’s story, if it didn’t make the headlines, at least made the front page. I had the reason for this explained to me one day when I was investigating a series of UFO reports in California in the spring of 1952.