From: titan@sys6626.bison.mb.ca (Titanium Knight)
Newsgroups: alt.alien.visitors
Subject: * Hynek Interview
Date: 6 Jul 93 14:16:11 GMT
Organization: System 6626 BBS, Winnipeg Manitoba Canada


>>> From the FidoNet UFO echo <<<
 
Message #1609 "UFO" (Read: 4)
Date: 20 Feb 93  11:59:19
From: Don Allen
  To: All
Subj: Hynek Int. 
 
** Forwarded from CUFON ** 
 
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                  CLOSE ENCOUNTER WITH DR. J. ALLEN HYNEK 
                              By Dennis Stacy 
                      An Interview With The Dean 1985 
                  Re-Edited for CUFON by Dale Goudie 1991 
 
For over two decades, from 1948 to 1969, Dr. J. Allen Hynek was a
consultant  in astronomy to the United States Air Force. The subject
of his advice,  however, was not the fledgling space program or even
the moon and stars  above, but Unidentified Flying Objects.  In 1973
he founded the Center for  UFO Studies (CUFOS) and had serves as
Director and editor of its journal,  "International UFO Reporter." 
 
STACY: Dr. Hynek, as a scientist, you go back as far with UFO
phenomenon as  probably anyone alive today. Exactly how did that
relationship begin? 
 
HYNEK: That's an easy story to tell. In the spring of 1948, I was
teaching  astronomy at Ohio State University, in Columbus.  One day
thee men, and they  weren't dressed in black, came over to see me from
Wright Patterson Air  Force Base in nearby Dayton.  They started out
by talking about the weather,  as I remember, and this and that, and
then finally one of them asked me what  I thought about flying
saucers. I told them I thought they were a lot of  junk and nonsense
and that seemed to please them, so they got down to  business. They
said they needed some astronomical consultation because it  was their
job to find out what these flying saucer stories were all about. 
 
Some were meteors, they thought, others stars and so on, so they could
use  an astronomer.  What the hell, I said, it sounded like fun and
besides, I  would be getting a top secret security clearance out of
it, too.  At that  time, it was called Project Sign, and some of the
personnel at least were  taking the problem quite seriously. At the
same time a big split was  occurring in the Air Force between two
schools of thought.  The serious  school prepared an estimation of the
situation which they sent to General  Vandenburg, but the other side
eventually won out and the serious ones were  shipped off to other
places. The negatives won the day, in other words. 
 
My own investigations for Project Sign added to that, too, I think,
because  I was quite negative in most of my evaluations.  I stretched
far to give  something a natural explanation, sometimes when it may
not have really had  it. I remember one case from Snake River Canyon,
I think it was, where a man  and his two sons saw a metallic object
come swirling down the canyon which  caused the top of the trees to
sway. In my attempt to find a natural  explanation for it, I said that
it was some sort of atmospheric eddy. Of  course, I had never seen an
eddy like that and had no real reason to believe  that one even
existed. But I was so anxious to find a natural explanation  because I
was convinced that it had to have one that, naturally, I did in  fact,
it wasn't until quite some time had passed that I began to change my 
mind. 
 
STACY: Was there ever any direct pressure applied by the Air Force
itself  for you to come up with a conventional explanation to these
phenomena? 
 
HYNEK: There was an implied pressure, yes, very definitely. 
 
STACY: In other words, you found yourself caught, like most of us, in
a  situation of trying to please your boss? 
 
HYNEK: Yes, you might as well put it that way, although at the same
time I  wasn't going against my scientific precepts. As an astronomer
and physicist,  I simply felt a priori that everything had to have a
natural explanation in  this world. There were no ifs, and or buts
about it. The ones I couldn't  solve, I thought if we just tried
harder, had a really proper investigation,  that we probably would
find as answer for. My batting average was about 80  per cent and I
figured that anytime you were hitting that high, you were  doing
pretty good. That left about 20 per cent unsolved for me, but only 
about three or four per cent for the Air Force, because they used
statistics  in a way I would never have allowed for myself. For
example, cases labeled  as insufficient information they would
consider solved !  They also had some  other little tricks. If a light
were seen, they would say, "aircraft have  lights, therefore, probable
aircraft." Then, at the end of the year, when  the statistics were
made up, they would drop the "possible" or "probable"  and simply call
it aircraft. 
 
STACY: What began to change your own perception of the phenomenon? 
 
HYNEK: Two things, really. One was the completely negative and
unyielding  attitude of the Air Force. They wouldn't give UFOs the
chance of existing,  even if they were flying up and down the street
in broad daylight.  Everything had to have as explanation.  I began to
resent that, even though  I basically felt the same way, because I
still thought they weren't going  about it in the right way. You can't
assume that everything is black no  matter what. Secondly, the caliber
of the witnesses began to trouble me.  Quite a few instances were
reported by military pilots, for example, and I  knew them to be
fairly well-trained, so this is when I first began to think  that,
well, maybe there something to all this. 
 
The famous "swamp gas" case which came later on finally pushed me over
the  edge. From that point on, I began to look at reports from a
different angle,  which was to say that some of them could be true
UFOs. 
 
STACY: As your own attitude changed, did the Air Force's attitude
toward you  change, too? 
 
HYNEK: It certainly did, quite a bit, as a matter of fact. By way of 
background, I might add that the late Dr. James E. McDonald, a good
friend  of mine who was then an atmospheric meteorologist at the
University of  Arizona, and I had some fairly sharp words about it. He
used to accuse me  very much, saying you're the scientific consultant
to the Air Force, you  should be pounding on generals' doors and
insisting on getting a better job  done. I said, Jim, I was there, you
weren't you don't know the mindset.  They were under instruction from
the Pentagon, following the Robertson Panel  of 1953, that the whole
subject had to be debunked, period, no question  about it.  That was
the prevailing attitude. The panel was convened by the  CIA, and I sat
in on it, but I was not asked to sign the resolution.  Had I  been
asked, I would not have signed it, because they took a completely 
negative attitude about everything. So when Jim McDonald used to
accuse me  of a sort of miscarriage of scientific justice, I had to
tell him that had I  done what he wanted, the generals would not have
listened to me. They were  already listening to Dr. Donald Menzel and
the other boys over at the  Harvard Astronomy Department as it was. 
 
STACY: Did you think you would have been shown the front door and
asked not  to come back? 
 
HYNEK: Inside of two weeks I imagine. You're familiar with the case of
Tycho  Brahe and Johannes Kepler from the history of astronomy? Brahe
had the  observations and didn't know what to do with them, and
Kepler,who was  nearsighted and couldn't make the observations, did.
So essentially, I  played Kepler to the Air Force's Tycho Brahe. I
knew the Air Force was  getting the data and I wanted a look at it, so
I made very full use of the  copying machines at Wright-Patterson. I
kept practically a duplicate set of  records because I knew that
someday that data would be worth something.  Toward the end, however,
I was barely speaking with Major Quintanilla who  was in charge.  We
had started as really good friends and then things got  very bad
because he had one lieutenant who was such a nincompoop, it seemed  to
me.  Everything had to be "Jupiter or Venus" or this or that.  You
have  no idea what a closed mind, what a closed attitude it was. I
kept doggedly  on, but I can safely say that the whole time I was with
the Air Force we  never had anything that resembled a really good
scientific dialogue on the  subject. 
 
STACY: They weren't really interested in an actual investigation of
the  subject then? 
 
HYNEK: They said they were, of course, but they would turn handsprings
to keep a good case from getting to the "attention of the media". Any
case they  solved, they had no trouble talking to the media about. It
was really very  sad.... I think their greatest mistake in the early
days, however, was not  turning it over to the universities or some
academic group. They regarded it  as an intelligence matter and it
became increasingly more and more  embarrassing to them. After all, we
paid good tax dollars to have the Air  Force guard our skies and it
would have been bad public relations for them  to say, yes there's
something up there, but we're helpless. They just  couldn't do that,
so they took the very human action of protecting their own  interests.
What they said was that we solved 96 per cent of the cases and  that
we could have solved the other four per cent if we had just tried 
harder. 
 
STACY: Was it theyfamous Michigan sightings of 1966, explained away as
"swamp gas" that finally did lead the Air Force to bring in a
reputable university? 
 
HYNEK: Yes, that, as you know, became something of a national joke and
Michigan was soon being known as the "Swamp Gas State." Eventually,
it  resulted in a Congressional Hearing called for by then state
Congressman,  Gerald Ford, who of course later went on to become
President.  The  investigation was turned over to the Brian O'Brien
Committee who did a very  good job. Had their recommendations been
carried out, things might have  turned out much better than they did.
The recommended that UFOs be taken  away from the Air Force and given
to a group of universities, to study the  thing in a as wide a way as
possible.  Well, they didn't go to a group, they  went to a university
and a man they were certain would be very hard-nosed  about it,
namely, Dr. Edward Condon at the University of Colorado.  That was 
how the Condon Committee and eventually the Report came to be. 
 
STACY: Were you ever called on to testify before, or advise the
Committee? 
 
HYNEK: In the early days they called on me to talk to them, to brief
them,  but that was the extent of it. They certainly didn't take any
of my advice. 
 
STACY: By 1968, the generally negative Condon Report was made public
and the  Air Force used its conclusions to get out of the UFO
business. Were you  still an official advisor or consultant at that
time? 
 
HYNEK: Oh, yes, I was with the Air Force right up until the very end,
but it  was just on paper. No one had cut the chicken's head off yet,
but the  chicken was dead.  The last days at Blue Book were just a
perfunctory  shuffling of papers. 
 
STACY: In terms of the UFO phenomenon itself, what was going on about
this time? 
 
HYNEK: Well, as you know, the Condon Report said that a group of
scientists  had looked at UFOs and that the subject was dead. The
UFOs, of course,  didn't bother to read the report and during the Flap
of 1973, they came back  in force. 
 
>>> End of Article <<<
 
---  .
Titan|um Knight
Mail: titan@sys6626.bison.mb.ca
The Atomic Cafe--Where neutrons meet atoms and split.

