I worked for Sylvania Electric Systems (Then changed to GTE Government
Systems) for 25 years. I worked on the Minuteman program for Twenty
years. Sylvania was responsible for building, testing and shipping the
Minuteman Ground Electric Systems equipment to Malmstrom and Grand Forks
AFBs.
In 1966 and 1967, I was responsible for tracking the testing,
deliveries, movements, etc. for this equipment. I was involved on a
near daily communicating by phone and at Sylvania with all major
contractors in-house and on-site. During this time, I began to hear
about UFO sightings taking place on these SAC bases and of course
inquired about them with these on-site contractors. I heard that a
flight of missiles had shut down at Malmstrom during one of the
incidents.
I was curious to find out more so I had the in-house representative for
Boeing (Gene Whittington) call the Assistant Base Manager at Malmstrom
to ask him about the shut-down. I was with him when he phoned. He had a
very short conversation, hung up the phone and glared at me saying that
he was told that it was a "hot potato" and that he was not ever to ask
about it again. He was not too happy with me for asking him to make the
phone call. My phone calls about UFOs dried up.
One of my confidants told me that his phone must have been monitored as
he was told by his boss not to share any UFO information with me. During
this time, I scratched down elements of information from these calls on
note pads for my own information. Some got mislaid over time and some
went with my files to Barry Greenwood who may still have what was left
in my Minuteman files.
I then left that particular job and became involved with Program
Planning and Development and developed a new Cost Schedule Performance
program for all contracts. However, because of my prior experience with
Minuteman, I was made the in-house representative for the Minuteman
Program. During this time I met two Launch Control Officers. One visited
Sylvania as part of an orientation. I was introduced to him by our
contract administrator named Irwin Saltzman. Irwin joked that I was
interested in UFOs. The LCF officer surprised us both by stating that
his LCF had been affected by a UFO. It turned out to be the August 25,
1966 incident that Hynek wrote about in the Saturday Evening Post,
December 1966.
Still later, I became acquainted with another LCF officer that had
joined Sylvania after his discharge. When the subject of UFOs came up
one day during our conversation, he amazed me by stating that one time
all of his flight of missiles went down. He nervously laughed when he
continued that the personnel topside were sighting UFOs. I cannot
remember his name and think that mostly likely he did not want his name
to be used.
In 1973, the Christian Science Monitor interviewed me about some local
UFO sightings. When the reporter, Stephen Webbe found out that I worked
on Minuteman, he asked me questions about the missile. I casually
mentioned that there was a UFO/Minuteman connection. This led to my
telling him about what I had heard about UFOs affecting the capability
of the missiles. Most of the interview was about local sightings so I
got a big surprise when I returned to work shortly after. I found that
SAC(Captain Rick Fuller) had called to complain about a headline story
in the Christian Science Monitor about Minuteman being affected by UFOs.
Then, one of the persons working for me happened to be in the Industrial
Relations manager's office and heard him talking about me on the
telephone. It turned out to be the UFO officer at the Pentagon - Colonel
Colman.
I was chewed out by the Department Manager and the Vice President and
General Manager was also upset. I was told that there were very unhappy
with me if I had used my position at Sylvania to obtain this
information. They said that if this were so that the Air Force
threatened to send an official letter of displeasure to my file. I
immediately thought of Doctor Hynek's article about the incident and
said that UFOs affecting minuteman information was in the public domain.
Hynek sent me some material and I brought it to the manager. No letter
of displeasure was sent. If it had been sent, I could have lost my
clearance which would have seriously affected by job.
In the meantime, Stephen Webbe was told by the Air force that the
missiles had gone down due to a local power failure!!! I told Stephen
that this was absurd and impossible. The missiles had back-up generators
and acid (later Lithium built by Sylvania) batteries to keep the
missiles operational. I don't think that the good colonel was happy when
Stephen got back to him. But, the admission that a flight of missiles
did go down was very interesting.
Ray Fowler
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