APRO Bulletin, July 1958
Congressional pressure was building for open hearings on UFOs. APRO was one of several civilian groups pushing for transparency while the Air Force maintained its dismissive posture.
Sighting Reports
The A. P. R. 0. Bulletin is the official copyrighted publication of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (A. P. R. 0.), 1712 Van Court, Alamogordo, New Mexico, and is issued every other month to members only. The Aerial Phenomena Research Organization is a non-profit group dedicated to the eve
On Unconventional Aeria I Obiects Dr. Jung, world-fam.ous Swiss psychologist, APRO member, was asked what he thought of Flying Saucers by the Association Mondial Interplanetaire. Here is his answer, reproduced from the FLYING SAUCER REVIEW, of London, England. In the course of years, I have gathered
,/ In .1952, APRO received a report from an airman who had been previously stationed in Arizona in 1948. He stated that he had been called out with a scientificmilitary team to examine a flying saucer which had crashed in New Mexico. When he arrived, the area was roped off and under military guard.
ring of components resembling electromagnets mounted in a protuberance directly below the perimeter of the cabin where the airfoil joined the central core. We discounted the story at the time, considering it to be inspired by Scully's book. Recently, however, it received some corroboration when a re
Saucer Artifact Chief Standing Horse, an Indian missionary residing at Sapulpa, Oklahoma, U.S., claims that a small metallic disc in his possession was dropped from a "large, cigar-shaped object" which hovered high in the sky over his mission north of Sapulpa, Oklahoma on Thanksgiving Day, 1956. The
miles southeast of Vaughn, New Mexico, in a desolate, wild area. Most observers bolstering object was gone. It was not sighted again.