The article below was published in the daily newspaper The Spokane Chronicle, Spokane, Washington, USA, page 33, le 29 juillet 1947.
See the case file.
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BOISE, Idaho, July 20. (AP) - It's flying disk time again in Idaho and the United Air Lines pilot who spotted the latest one says "they ought to be kept off the civil airways."
Capt. Charles F. Gibian, who while coming in to Boise for a landing last night reported spotting a disklike object "going like hell" at about 9000 feet, told the Boise Statesman:
"If it is real, it must be some sort of military experiment and if that is the case they ought to arrange to keep the objects off the civil airways."
Army and navy spokesmen have denied knowledge of the disks.
Gibian, who talked to the Statesman by telephone from Pendleton, Ore., became the second United pilot on flight 105 to report seeing the flying objects. His predecessor was Capt. E. J. Smith, who said he spotted two groups of disks July 4, near Emmett, Idaho.
First Report in Week
Gibian's disk was the first reported since word of the objects tapered off about two weeks ago.
The pilot said his first officer, Jack Harvey, also saw the object last night.
They said they saw a round, flat object in the sky west of Mountain Home, a village 45 miles east of here.
Both men said they thought the object was an airplane until "in a matter of seconds it disappeared, apparently going away from us."
Gibian said if the object was "40 miles or so distant from the airliner, it was as big as an airplane."
The civil aeronautics administration communication station here reported there were no other aircraft in the sky in the vicinity of Mountain Home at the time Gibian and Harvey reported seeing the object.