SUBJECT: SCIENCE AND THE UNKNOWN FILE: UFO1251
DATE OF ARTICLE: January 27, 1989
SOURCE OF ARTICLE: American-Statesman
LOCATION: Austin, Texas
BYLINE: NONE
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THIS FILE WAS PROVIDED BY THE UFO NEWSCLIPPING SERVICE
AND PREPARED BY PARANET ALPHA -- PARANET INFORMATION
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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.
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