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Case 13: Savannah River
AEC Plant
Dr. James E. McDonald: Discussion. -- Anderson said that the event was discussed among his group afterwards, and all agreed it could not possibly have been a conventional aircraft. He remarked that no one even thought of suggesting the unreasonable notion that it was an hallucination or illusion. Despite searching local papers for some days thereafter, not a word of this sighting was published, and no further information or comment on it came from within the very security-conscious AEC plant. He was unaware of any official report. Months after hearing of this from Anderson, in one
of my numerous rereadings of Ruppelt's book (Ref. 5), I came across a single
sentence in which Ruppelt, referring to the high concentration of reports
in the Southeast around September of 1952, states that: "Many of the reports
came from people in the vicinity of the then new super-hush-hush AEC facility
at Savannah River, Georgia." Whether one of those reports to the official
investigative agency came from within Anderson's group or other Savannah
River personnel on the 7/52 incident is unknown. If not, then we may have
here a case where dozens of technically-trained personnel witnessed an entirely
unexplainable aerial performance, yet reported nothing. Anderson knew of
no report, and was unaware of any assembling of witness-information within
his group, so the evidence points in the direction that this event may have
gone unreported. If, as Anderson is inclined to think, this event was on
July 19, 1952, it occurred only about twelve hours before the famous Washington
National Airport radar-visual sightings; but this date remains uncertain. Source: In a Prepared Statement before the House
Committee on Science & Astronautics, 1968.
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