Declassified UFO / UAP Document
Australian Flying Saucer Review, No. 7, November 1962
AI-Generated Summary
This document is the November 1962 issue of the Australian Flying Saucer Review, containing reports on UAP sightings, scientific discussions on extraterrestrial life, and administrative records regarding the publication's copyright registration.
This document is the November 1962 issue (No. 7) of the Australian Flying Saucer Review, a non-profit educational publication produced by the UFO Investigation Centre. The issue serves as a compilation of reports, editorials, and articles regarding Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UAP). The editorial content advocates for greater government transparency regarding UFOs, arguing that the suppression of information and evasive official responses are counterproductive, especially given the increasing frequency of sightings globally. The publication features several specific case reports, including the 1962 X-15 rocket ship sightings by pilots Robert White and Joseph Walker, where objects were captured on film at high altitudes. Another report details a sighting in the Mozambique Channel by the crew of the Liberian S.S. Lagunillas in February 1962. The issue also includes an article titled 'Cosmic Intruders' by George A. Tararin, which discusses historical statements by various international figures—including diplomats, scientists, and military leaders—regarding the potential for extraterrestrial contact and the implications for global politics and security. Additionally, the publication covers the 'Project Star Search' (formerly Project Ozma) at Green Bank, West Virginia, detailing scientific efforts to detect signals from other civilizations. A section on the 'Mt. Shasta Mystery' explores legends and reports of strange lights and underground activity associated with the mountain in Northern California. The document also includes administrative records related to the copyright registration of the publication itself, documenting the correspondence between the UFO Investigation Centre and the Commonwealth of Australia Patent Office between 1966 and 1967. These administrative pages detail the challenges the Centre faced in securing copyright for their collective work, including requirements to clarify the legal status of the organization and the correct publication dates for their issues.
For too long, Governments and other official organisations have continued to cloud the issue with evasive answers, suppression of news, vague explanations and ambiguous statements while they, themselves, keenly pursue the matter.
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Key Persons
- Robert WhiteX-15 pilot
- Joseph WalkerX-15 pilot
- Gaspare de LemaItalian artist and witness
- Charles A. ManeyPhysicist