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Topic: Project Blue Book


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  Project Blue Book - The Black Vault Encyclopedia Project   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Project Blue Book was one of a series of systematic studies of Unidentified flying objects (UFOs) conducted by the United States Air Force.
Project Blue Book was also the inspiration for the 1978-1979 TV show Project UFO, which was supposedly based on Project Blue Book cases.
Blue Book’s explanations were not universally accepted, however, and critics--including some scientists--suggested that Project Blue Book was engaged in questionable research or, worse, perpetrating cover up.
www.blackvault.com /wiki/index.php/Project_Blue_Book   (4103 words)

  
 The Unnatural Museum - Project Blue Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Blue Book was the Air Force's twenty-one year investigation into the UFO phenomenon.
While Blue Book was unable to explain 701 of those reports it had investigated, it also never established there were really alien spacecraft operating in the skies.
After Project Blue Book was terminated all of it's files were declassified and made available to the public.
unmuseum.mus.pa.us /bluebook.htm   (285 words)

  
 FOIA - Project BLUE BOOK - Unidentified Flying Objects
Project BLUE BOOK has been declassified and the records are available for examination in our research room.
Textual records of Project BLUE BOOK (the documentation relating to investigations of unidentified flying objects), excluding names of people involved in the sightings, are now available for research in the National Archives Building.
The records include approximately 2 cubic feet of unarranged project or administrative files, 37 cubic feet of case files in which individual sightings are arranged chronologically, and 3 cubic feet of records relating to the Office of Special Investigations (OSI), portions of which are arranged chronologically, by OSI district, and by overseas command.
www.archives.gov /foia/ufos.html   (1903 words)

  
 Amazon.ca: Project Blue Book: Books: Brad Steiger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
This case was thoroughly examined by Project Blue Book's staff, and it was the only case of a UFO "landing" which Blue Book labeled as "unsolved", and possibly genuine.
Blue Book was originally named Project Sign and was created in late 1947 in the wake of the first widely publicized UFO sightings, including Kenneth Arnold's famous sighting of nine "flying saucers" near Mt. Rainier, Washington.
The two best sections of the book, in my opinion, are the Blue Book files from Kenneth Arnold's famous 1947 sighting that started the UFO phenomenon, and the classic 1964 incident in Socorro, N.M., in which a respected policeman witnessed a UFO land and saw several "crewmen" in strange uniforms outside the craft.
www.amazon.ca /Project-Blue-Book-Brad-Steiger/dp/0345345258   (1070 words)

  
 Blue Book, Project
Initially headed by Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, Project Blue Book was launched in March 1952 following a wave of sightings, including one by an Air Force pilot over Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, in September 1951.
This often led to potentially interesting cases being inadequately researched and given facile explanations, with the result that proponents of the extraterrestrial hypothesis could claim that there was a cover-up in official circles.
Meanwhile, Blue Book's astronomical consultant, J. Allen Hynek became increasingly convinced that a genuine and potentially important phenomenon lay behind some of the unresolved UFO reports.
www.daviddarling.info /encyclopedia/B/BlueBook.html   (393 words)

  
 project Blue Book
Blue Book, based at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, investigated hundreds of UFO reports yearly throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Blue Book may have done some investigating, but it was overwhelmed by the volume of reports that were coming in.
Project Blue Book even dismissed a sighting by experienced military personnel on high alert during the middle of the Cold War.
www.meta-religion.com /Paranormale/UFO/project_blue_book.htm   (995 words)

  
 Research paper: SHOULD THE USAF REOPEN PROJECT BLUE BOOK?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
When Project Blue Book was closed in 1969, the official Air Force estimates of "unsolved" cases ranged from less than 1 per cent to 2.09 per cent.(14:259) Ruppelt's 1953 statement placed the number of UFO sightings that could not be positively identified at 93 per cent.
Project Blue Book officials made meager attempts at "solving" the case by asking information of two other USAF offices, No attempt was made, however, to recontact the Hills or to interview them in person.
Project Blue Book had failed to include the additional item from the report which referred to a "strange incident (that) occurred at 0214 local on 20 Sept (1961)." The "strange incident", of course, was the report of a radar sighting by Pease AFB precision approach radar.
www.cufon.org /cufon/afrstdy1.htm   (13252 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
(Project Stork had originally been set up to evaluate the Soviet Union as a military threat and when UFO analysis was tacked onto their duties, that part of the study became known as Little Stork.) He then secured Dr. Hynek, already an Air Force consultant in astronomy, as chief scientific consultant.
Hardin was assigned the task of concentrating Blue Book on countering public criticism and implementing the CIA’s Robertson Panel recommendations which were made known to ATIC sometime by 1956.
Blue Book chiefs were made to believe that by dissuading public attention on UFOs, a correlation would result in decreasing numbers of those bothersome sightings.
www.geocities.com /wmcnovelist/Bluebook.htm   (6468 words)

  
 United States Air Force Project Blue Book
The project which was headquartered at Wright-Patterson AFB, was terminated in December of 1969 after 22 years.
Project Blue Book investigated 12,618 UFO sightings and 701 of those sightings remained unidentified.
Project Blue Book, it seems, was just a low level collection and disinformation program created under Project Sign (of December 1947) which evolved into Project Grudge (of December 1948) to cover up the true investigation into the alien presence on Earth.
www.abovetopsecret.com /pages/bluebook.html   (486 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
In February 1949 the name was changed to Project Grudge, and in March 1952, to Project Blue Book.
Project Blue Book studied some 15,000 UFO reports, many received directly from military personnel.
The project concluded that almost all reported UFO sightings had conventional explanations, and those that did not merely lacked the necessary data to solve them.
www.occultopedia.com /p/project_blue_book.htm   (884 words)

  
 [No title]
In October 1958 Blue Book received a very needed shot in the arm when Major Robert Friend replaced Captain Gregory as head of the project.
Blue Book was far from a massive institute with a staff of white-coated lab technicians, said UFO researcher Mark Rodeghier.
Project Blue Book were to determine if UFOs posed a direct threat to the security of the United States and to determine if UFOs provided any unique scientific information or advanced technology that would contribute to United States technical research.
www.lycos.com /info/blue-book--project-blue-book.html   (434 words)

  
 PROJECT BLUE BOOK
Blue Book realized that some changes were needed to better analyze the reports.
Hyenk forgot that Blue Book was never considered a "scientific study" but an evaluation of the phenomena by the department responsible for the defense of the country's air space.
The finale of Project Blue Book was the contract given to the University of Colorado based on the recommendations of the O'Brien report.
members.aol.com /TPrinty/Bluebook.html   (6339 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
Between 24 June 1947 and January 1969 Project Blue Book was responsible for cataloguing millions of UFO sightings.
After Project Blue Book was unexpectedly shut down, the US government has maintained a stoical silence over the question of UFO`s.
The United States Air Force UFO research effort, codenamed Project Blue Book, was the big brother, so to speak, of the UK project that I stewarded from 1991 to 1994.
truthseekersmidlands.tripod.com /id40.html   (276 words)

  
 Project Blue Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
During the time that Project Blue Book was in operation, it investigated over 12,600 UFO reports, and found numerous sightings to be left unexplained by science.
While Blue Book was unable to explain 701 of those 12,618 reports investigated, it also never established there were really alien spacecraft operating in the skies.
Documentation regarding the former Blue Book investigation was permanently transferred to the Modern Military Branch, National Archives and Records Service, Eighth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20408, and is available for public review and analysis.
www.geocities.com /djbeirne/2bluebook.html   (243 words)

  
 UFO Evidence : Project Blue Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Project Blue Book, it seems, was just a low level collection and disinformation program created under Project Sign (of December 1947) which evolved into Project Grudge (of December 1948) to cover up the true investigation into the alien presence on Earth." From "United States Air Force Project Blue Book", Above Top Secret Website
The Project Blue Book Archive is a new web-site which will provide free online access to the National Archives Blue Book microfilm collection, and has so far posted about 10% of the Blue Book microfilm.
The approach to analysis taken by this study was twofold: one writer evaluated evidence justifying the closure of Project Blue Book while the other writer evaluated evidence supporting its reopening.
www.ufoevidence.org /topics/ProjectBlueBook.htm   (975 words)

  
 Project Blue Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
In this interview Me. Quintanilla said that Project Blue Book was completely separate from the CIA and later from the DIA.
This is also interesting because Project Blue Book consisted of a major and several secretaries.
There is no reason to believe the Air Force would give its best evidence to Project Blue Book, because then in no way were equipped to conduct investigations of these matters.
home.columbus.rr.com /threeemusic/mufono/bluebook.html   (321 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Project Blue Book Exposed: Books: Kevin D. Randle   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Kevin Randle, a well-known investigator of the Center for UFO Studies, analyses cases from "Project Blue Book," a 22-year long U.S. Air Force study of the UFO phenomenon that ended soon after the 1967 Condon Committee report assessed that the military study of UFOs was unwarranted.
"Project Blue Book" was the code name for the US Air Force's top-secret investigation of UFO sightings from 1947 to 1969, when it was shut down.
Randle finds dozens of unexplained cases in Blue Book's files, and he discovers that the pressure on Blue Book's staff to explain away every sighting led to the staff often "making up" explanations for sightings out of thin air, without even a brief investigation or interviews with the eyewitnesses.
www.amazon.com /Project-Blue-Exposed-Kevin-Randle/dp/1569246912   (1271 words)

  
 Blue Book Project - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Blue Book Project (Tibetan), a name used by the Tibetan Solidarity Alliance in its fundraising and awareness-raising activities
Blue Book Project, an experimental band from the United Kingdom
Project Blue Book, the United States Air Force's study of Unidentified flying objects
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Blue_Book_Project   (118 words)

  
 Project Blue Book   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Project Blue Book is a famous US Air Force program that focused on investigation of UFO activity from the late 1940s through the late 1960s.
Called Project Sign and then Project Grudge in its earliest days, Project Blue Book investigated over 12,500 UFO sightings while it was operationally active.
The resources below examine the Project Blue Book track record and its role in the study of UFOs.
www.doomsdayguide.org /UFO/ufo_project_blue_book.htm   (139 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
At this time the code named project SIGN was not revealed and the media used the moniker, Project Saucer.
22: Project Blue Book is the editorial subject by an unknown canadian broadcaster in 1956.
Project Magnet was still in existence, even after the Canadian government shelved the project!
www.fadeddiscs.com /bluebooknew.html   (1694 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
The Project Blue Book Research Center is under the direction of Michael Hall, a private researcher, specializing in the historical aspects of Project Bluebook.
The primary goal of the Center is to share the history of Project Blue Book and the military and civilian personnel who were involved.
Hall, he believes that exchanging ideas, documentation and insight is vastly more important and the Project Blue Book Research Center has a few items available for purchase to assist in researching the history of Project Blue Book.
www.nicap.org /bluebook/blue.htm   (373 words)

  
 Project Blue Book - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
According to Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, by the end of 1951, several high-ranking, very influential USAF generals were so dissatisfied with the state of Air Force UFO investigations that they dismantled Project Grudge and replaced it with Project Blue Book in early 1952.
Ruppelt was the first head of the project.
In response to the Condon Committee's conclusions, on December 17, 1969, Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans, Jr.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Project_Blue_Book   (5504 words)

  
 "Project U.F.O." (1978)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
A typical X-File episode is about a strange monster/person living in the ducts of a building with slime and newpapers all around him -- sewer monsters -- bad government medical experiments -- strange government experiments that look like their aliens but turn out to be mutations or something of that nature.
I'm not putting down religion, but the entertaining Project UFO is a Harve Bennett Project Blue Book tv series and has nothing (other than a Nun sighting episode) to do with religion or UFO cults.
It (Project UFO) was no 'flag waving' government sponsered show;some cases were classified 'unexplained', not all explained hoaxes, it was a try at making money by Harve Bennett the king of 70's schlock tv.
www.imdb.com /title/tt0077065   (514 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Project Blue Book: Books: Brad Steiger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Keep connected to what's happening in the world of books by signing up for Amazon.com Books Delivers, our monthly subscription e-mail newsletters.
Project Blue Book Exposed by Kevin D. Randle
The Little Blue Book - Physician Listing — TLBB powered by Skyscape for your PDA is a complete and accurate reference of local physician practice information, pharmacy and hospital contact information available in 146 metro areas.
www.amazon.com /Project-Blue-Book-Brad-Steiger/dp/0345345258   (1575 words)

  
 Project Grudge/Blue Book
There was a final report, #14 which was widely circulated and about which an entire book was written: FLYING SAUCERS:AN ANALYSIS OF THE AIR FORCE PROJECT BLUE BOOK SPECIAL REPORT NO.14 by Leon Davidson; the fifth edition was published in 1976 by Blue-Book Publishers; 64 Prospect st., White Plains, New York 10606.
According to what he has learned, the US government captured a trio of aliens, and that as of mid 1981, one of the beings was still alive in captivity.
The information contained therein indicated what had been suspected all along:that the US Government was involved in the greatest deception in the history of mankind and that not only did flying saucers exist but that the government had several in secret storage and had captured at least three live aliens.
www.sacred-texts.com /ufo/bluebook.htm   (4027 words)

  
 Project Blue Book
The Project Blue Book report, also known as the Condon Report, is titled "Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects." This study was conducted at the University of Colorado in 1968 under contract with the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, under contract F44620-67-C-0035.
Dutton and Bantam Books also published versions, however, these editions contained 967 and 965 pages respectively, while the report published by the University of Colorado was four volumes with 1465 pages.
These comments are the research and opinions of Tim Byrne at the University of Colorado.
dmla.clan.lib.nv.us /docs/nsla/fedpubs/bluebook.htm   (211 words)

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