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UFOs and the Media
Space.com
July 30, 2000
Pioneering Astronaut Sees
UFO Cover-up
By Leonard David, Senior Space Writer,
WASHINGTON -- One of America's first
astronauts claims that the government has withheld
information that alien spacecraft have visited Earth. Leroy
Gordon "Gordo" Cooper Jr. says the government has "swept
under the rug" the truth about unidentified flying objects
or UFOs. Cooper, 72, was one of the original Mercury Seven
picked by NASA in 1959. The last of the Mercury astronauts
to be lofted into space, Cooper was blasted into orbit atop
an Atlas rocket in May 1963. He circled Earth for 22 orbits
in his Faith 7 capsule, becoming the first American to stay
in space for a day. Cooper returned to space in August 1965
with the late Pete Conrad on the Gemini 5 mission. After
retiring from NASA in 1970, he went to work for Disney as a
vice president for research and development. He later worked
as a high-tech consultant and aircraft designer. Since 1989,
he has been a partner in an aeronautical design firm in Van
Nuys, California. Now a retired Air Force colonel living in
Los Angeles, he is campaigning to have the government open
the books on UFO research.
Charges of cover-up
"There certainly
have been too many people, very qualified people and
qualified groups of people, that have had interface of one
type or another with extraterrestrial craft or beings,"
Cooper said. "To really deny that something is going on and
deny that they definitely exist…we need a little more
explanation." Government officials say there is nothing to
cover up about UFOs.
"Everybody is entitled to their beliefs and opinions based
on their own readings and experiences," said Don Savage, a
NASA spokesman. "The biggest problem with UFOs is that it's
a difficult area to bring the scientific process into any
kind of study."
UFO sightings, Savage said, "are transient events. They are
not repeatable, so they are not subject to scientific study
per se. It's something that we don't have any research into
here at NASA." But Cooper is undeterred in his UFO beliefs.
Early sightings
In his book,
written with Bruce Henderson, Cooper tells how he saw his
first UFO over Europe in 1951. An Air Force pilot in West
Germany, Cooper and his squadron mates were scrambled in
their F-86 Sabre jets to intercept what appeared to be
several metallic silver and saucer-shaped craft. Cooper also
describes an incident at Edwards Air Force Base, California,
in which he once looked at film of a crashed UFO in the
American Southwest taken in the late 1950s. That film, he
writes, was whisked away to the Pentagon never to be seen or
heard of again. Throughout the book, the former astronaut
argues for the government to open up its files and come
clean about alien visitations. So convinced is Cooper that
UFOs deserve serious study that he once testified before the
United Nations in 1978 on the topic. His hope was that the
U.N. would become a central repository for accounts of UFO
sightings. "I made the effort to get the U.N. to pick up the
ball," Cooper said at the book signing. "They thought it was
a great idea, but they never did anything about it."
The "Right Stuff" on the line
Still spry and
witty, Cooper enjoys talking about his own jaunts into
space. "In the early days, there was so little that we knew
about space. Every day was an 'oh, gee-whiz day' or big
adventure," he said. Recalling his circuits around Earth in
his Mercury capsule, Cooper said that the spacecraft's
cooling system developed problems. That in turn caused the
electrical systems to fail one by one. Where other pilots
might have panicked, Cooper coolly took control of his
capsule and flew it manually. All his maneuvers to drop out
of orbit for a splashdown in the ocean were done with
seat-of-the-pants flying -- a far-cry from the automated
cockpit procedures of today's computerized space shuttle.
Cooper used his
knowledge of star patterns and Earth's horizon to orient his
tiny spacecraft for reentry into the atmosphere. For good
measure, he had lines scribbled on his window to make sure
he was positioned properly before firing his reentry
rockets. "So I used my wrist watch for time, my eyeballs out
the window for attitude. Then I fired my retrorockets at the
right time and landed right by the carrier," Cooper said,
matter-of-factly. Asked who was the best pilot among the
Mercury astronauts, Cooper thrilled his listeners by
reciting the line spoken by Dennis Quaid, who played Cooper
in the movie The Right Stuff. "You're looking at him,"
Cooper said, flashing a grin.
Holding out for Mars
Cooper is ready to
leave Earth again, at the drop of a space helmet. "I told
the NASA administrator (Dan Goldin) that when I was John
Glenn's age, I wanted to take another flight," he said with
a smile. "But the flight I want is to be put on [is] the
Mars mission. I hope to hang in there for it."

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