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Updated: June 15, 2025


The Commissioner held that they had not been taken aboard the aircraft. But he was concerned with whatever else may have been carried onto the DC10 by First Officer Cassin in his flight bag; and about the contents of Captain Collin's flight bag which he believed would include the atlas and briefing documents.

"Whatever damage you say I have done can be corrected with a ten-minute briefing." "That's up to you," Authority answered nimbly. "As you say, you've been put in charge of the project." "Then I'll leave things as they are." "Very well. I just wanted to go on record." "Thank you," Brent Taber said. "Thank you very much."

"I'll organize a search right away. Where are you calling from?" "Police headquarters at Sandbank." "Okay. Take it easy, and I'll send a whirlybird to pick you up," Tom promised. "And don't forget some clothes," Bud added with a chuckle. "Mel and I are getting chilly." "Right!" Tom hung up and gave Arv Hanson a quick briefing. Then he phoned the base airfield to dispatch a helicopter.

*Not immediately, no,* Corina replied, puzzled. *As I said earlier, it should be the other way around. Let me think about it, please.* *Okay.* Medart continued aloud, to both. "Well, why not go eat? Then give her the grand tour, Sunbeam, anything she wants to see. Just have her at Briefing Room One by 1600." "Yes, sir." Lunch was good, and the tour was interesting, if tiring.

"Yes, Captain, to both. I would like to tell you my plans as soon as you have the time." "I've got it now, Ranger. Here or in the briefing room?" "It might as well be here. The whole crew will need to know." Corina braced herself mentally. This was real; she was giving orders to the Captain of an Imperial Battle Cruiser, certain they would be obeyed.

During those weeks when I was making my first desperate attempts at briefing up the law I was sometimes interrupted by his exclamations when certain figures went by in the corridor. "Say, Hugh, do you know who that was?" "No." "Miller Gorse." "Who's he?" "Do you mean to say you never heard of Miller Gorse?" "I've been away a long time," I would answer apologetically.

The split in opinions on what to do about the rising tide of UFO reports, the split that first came out in the open at General Samford's briefing, was widening every day. One group was getting dead-serious about the situation. They thought we now had plenty of evidence to back up an official statement that the UFO's were something real and, to be specific, not something from this earth.

"He probably had a good thorough briefing from Black Doctor Tanner before he got the assignment," Tiger said grimly. "Maybe but somehow I don't think he cares for the Black Doctor much more than we do." But whatever the reason, much of the tension was gone when the Lancet had left the Moruan system behind.

The identification of known objects was routine, and caused no excitement. The excitement and serious interest occurred when we received UFO reports in which the observer was reliable and the stimuli could not be identified. These were the reports that challenged the project and caused me to spend hours briefing top U.S. officials. These were the reports that we called "Unknowns."

He himself was not uncritical of the administrative work of the airline as it touched upon the fatal flight and concerning this matter he said: "3.5 The flight planned route entered in the company's base computer was varied after the crew's briefing in that the position for McMurdo on the computer printout used at the briefing, was incorrect by over 2 degrees of longitude and was subsequently corrected prior to this flight."

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