They flew like a saucer would if you skipped it across the water.
Kenneth Arnold to East Oregonian reporter Bill Bequette at the airport at Pendleton on June 25, 1947, where Arnold was refueling his private plane. Bill Bequette and editor Nolan Skiff’s front page story in the evening paper of the same day, titled “Impossible! Maybe, But Seein’ Is Believin’, Says Flyer,” started the modern Flying Saucer legend, which was widely reported and discussed worldwide in the 1950s.
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Kenneth Arnold
One reply on “Kenneth Arnold”
A secondary reason for my disbelief that UAPs are craft from alien civilizations is that their depictions tend to follow rather than to lead the depictions found in popular speculative fiction.