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- January 27, 1989
- American-Statesman
- Austin, Texas
-
- SCIENCE AND THE UNKNOWN
-
- Private citizens who have reported UFO sightings to government officials
- sometimes complain of secrecy, frustration and laughter.
-
- Floyd Petri founded the Center for Instrumented UFO Research in Bastrop in
- part to circumvent such bureaucratic hassles.
-
- "Our purpose is to confirm the existence or nonexistence of the UFO by
- scientific means," said Petri, a retired police chief.
-
- "Before organizations such as this existed, an individual was nothing more
- than a UFO buff or a witness. Often, after people made a report to the
- authorities, that was the last they heard of it. Any physical evidence they
- offered went up in smoke."
-
- Petri said the 10-year-old center is accumulating equipment and personnel to
- set up a monitoring station and a field unit, probably in a van. Both will be
- equipped with devices such as radar, mangetometers, cameras, video equipment,
- radiation and sound detection equipment, and chart recorders.
-
- "There are many Americans who are funding this kind of research right out of
- their own pockets," he said. "Just like there are people who spend thousands
- of dollars a year fishing. This is my hobby. This is where my money goes.
- There also have been donations and benefactors interested in our research."
-
- The scientific instrumentation -- much of which the center owns--sounds
- impressive. But some of the most fruitful research -- retrieving government
- documents pertaining to UFOs -- forces the private UFO investigator to use
- simpler but equally powerful tools such as typewriters and the mail.
-
- "The Freedom of Information Act is one of the nicest things that ever
- happened to us," Petri said. "There is a world of information in the hands of
- the government and individuals. If it was gathered, studied and disseminated
- properly, the information would shed some light on the UFO enigma. Many
- groups are trying to do that now."
-
- Petri's organization is interested in investigating suspected landing sites
- and trace materials from all kinds of encounters -- from cattle mutilations to
- indentations thought to be made by saucer landing pods. And the center is
- involved in the computer enhancement of photos showing UFOs to determine their
- validity.
-
- UFO abduction cases also draw the center's attention if there's evidence in
- addition to an abductee's account.
-
- Petri also serves as state section director of Bastrop and Travis Counties
- for the Mutual UFO Network.
-
- The center and MUFON work together to train UFO investigators, discuss cases
- and plan field trips for investigations. Joint meetings are under the acronym
- PULSE -- Project UFO Landings, Sightings and Encounters -- so the two
- organizations can maintain separate identities.
-
- "The goals are to share information and ferret out bad, distorted
- information," Petri said. "So the organizations don't mind communicating."
-
- Ten members are training to be field investigators. Three have been trained.
- Most are professional people with skills such as photography, computers, legal
- investigation and medicine.
-
- Membership is by invitation. The center seeks people with professional
- expertise that could be of use in UFO investigations. Though it costs nothing
- to join, members must subscribe to the MUFON UFO Journal.
-
- "We're not here to make converts but to collect evidence," Petri said.