000015467 CtASSIFIGAyy~~ ~aArPle! ~ aEaoar No. Oa?.~~~~oe FOREIGN OOCUMENT>a Oft RADIO BAOAbCAST$ CO NO. ..- COUNTRY Algeria: Spaias !tench Equatorial A!bJes SUBJECT >![ilites?,- - IIneoarea':iogsl? sirara!'t NOW PiJievspapere as indicated. pur..Hi~[VM 81~ V.Jlic~ SPAIII-~11Y ~~i$. AFRICA W.V1.Lit, B~ ~ Vti~. /.WaWW~,_ SYA11~ -- ?-..6~~, ~Y~?~, ~ n~' reddish color which changed to an i~ease yellor as tlyey tlev lksther.avsy. They gradually disappeared is the diitance. 8o,imusml souad vas heaad. The spec- tscle lasted hardly a ml.nute. The Citra nrvs agency reports that on the night of 3O July 1952, ~y res- ideate o! AnduJ:-r, 3paia, sat what vas paas~ed to be a w-called !lying Aancer. The ob~ect_vas red, sow, and sp~osimatelT tae ass of s desert dii~h. It 21ty ARL`WAR Id?.SIDE~S BEPORT SJCUL'SR -- Tangier, Espana, 1 Aug 52 ~.sw war Luc roacstieaa, and tLen dived toesrd the sea a- Brest speed. 3e snbaaitted the :^eporb to the local suthoritlea sad to t>;e st~lministratl~w ntt~.... p o of Par! Geatil ~n Gabon? French Squatarial A15rioa7 reDOrted that aL 02k0 hears on i sme 1052 The aster of a cargo shi anchored in ll~pnt !the ?mst LVlmPOUS OBJECT &Ii6N 41T~ FG14' S~'i'II. -- Comlin'7s L Cuinee lraoesiee, 26 Jva 52 or tors cieatil2, beading 150 degrees. The aorthera alq vas Clear End starry; the Noathern, slightly clo~adY. Visibility vac esceliea!. a elirbt aeut2swat A....~. The first sate vas at his forward post ready to w:~s anchor while the mat- ter vas oa the bridge vlth the officer oa duty.. Kith the exception o! the moor- ing lights, the chip vas in aamplete darmess, thus permitting ezeelleat night visibility: ~ ? A?~ 0240, the first mate telephoned the master into:misg him that hs bad amt sighted as uakaownlvmiaaus ob~+et la the e1q vhiah acme t5rom Post Wati~. and passed directly owr the ship. 'Praising his blti~auLrs (Zeiss 7 s So, for night vision) skyward, the ~oaatar vas able to see Quite aleariy, oa the past 4uiarter, s wry bright sad phosphorisaeat orange lid, oireulav in chaps sad mariag at a great apssd in a seemingly strai~ht~ise aouree.? 3tsadis~ os the wing of the bridge, and with the aid of the gyrocompass repeater, tbs caster estimated its average direction tp ba abov~.l0 degrees. He followed the light Quite easily is his biaocu'iars tar about 3 minutes sad lost sight o! it vbaa it moved' at great speed over the Prince buoy, about 7 miles tram the ship. The master vas uaatart oP nay aeacmpeayaag sound and ad- ?: wits that it vas difficult to estimate the alt.t~9.e of the ole~ea*., yet he 3udged } this to be 3,000-4,000 meters. Its diluester 9aa tl~t of a p].aaat. The first ma#~e stated that pefore ioe Lslepi+aned. the master, he saw that ob- ,sect coma traa~ths direction of Port Gentil, stop,-Hake a right t~?: n, and resume its initial course. ?As it peaeed directly over the ship, it repeated the acme sort of gyration.. T:rs master stated that his 20 years of sea duty ambled him to affirm that rba~ Pee saw vas neither a l~aovn celestial phenomenon, such u a falling star ar metKCrr, nor s current type of aircraft, ytittthezmore,.it vas coafirmetl that there mere no plaaas is the air that night aver Part Geattl. sTaaaaE ~ m saz o~>~.- -- oTan L'$cho a'oran, 17 Jul 5Z 4t 2300 boors oa l$ Jniy.l9j~, in the t~a,n of Bou9canetia, two haters clearly lag oft a greenish mo]oe cad 2lghtiag up the'aky. It seemingly did not alter its course ss it increased its speed and disappeared toward the south. illumination above and st first toot it to be s taxiing star. Actually, it seemed .more litre s meteor followed by tw other bodies, all trsil3ng~a ~el.lav eland of amdce. Then, these disappeared cad out of nowhere appeared an oval- shaped, longish ball of tire. 'lh.ying at a law altitude and clearly visible, it rapidly followed a rectilinear course. +!: 8TRAli(Ai PSEN~OIf iiI'l~SaD 1Rt0iI TfiO P0~1P3 I!I ORAtt -- Oran, L'8cho d'Oran, 26 Jot 52 Recently ~a~esuaoably 25 3nly 1952 several inhabitants of Oraa reported seeing a flying ssuaer at approximate the same time. ? AL 1535 bourn, Baou1 Ie 8eaatt, foreman of s local aompaay, saw an incaa- desce~?ahite suss in the sky shave Oran. IL tier southvestvard, traveling at sa altitude of abontt.2,000 asters. There vas no luminous exhaust sad no smoke. After 30 seconds, the pheaoaenoa grew hasy and disappeared. The rersonoel of the company office sad Palacio, as esployee in tbt Algeronaphte [factozyt] also env the "saucer.' 000015467 ~? 00-iT-2410E3 I At 1537 home, ![notice Dubeseay, who curio tar L'Echo d~Oran, sew what ap- peared to be a brilliant disk going in a southwest direction at a great speed am at medium altitude. It 111sappearad at'Eer 5 seeosde. In a similar time ia- terval, Atise 'and ]Careenty, two grocers; tLo sex the iratuorra object before it disappearea behind a aloud. ?Sa~s ? ~r ~o AA'SAS ~ oel-a1 -- oran, L'Ealw a'osan, 28 dui 52 on 26.JUly?1992, people Sa two arras of Oran reported seeing uausval flying objects, described u "saucers." At about 2300 hours, three vcoea is th* =ckm$-1 district of Oran noticed a large, arangs-rid, limiaons patch in the sky, as the sirs of a duck's egg, bat t2atter. Trsvaliag !loom east to Nest, it, appeared to belt for a eecacd then vsn- iebed. ' Three truatrortby individuals living oa the Tiaret plateaus asv an unusual ~tlying object at 1048 hams. The Iccs1 palish observed it for abo~nt 40 seeorda ', and described it as a shining, ci~yar-shaped less without a smoke trail. It