On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 7:25 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:

*​> ​You and other skeptics should be demanding release of material from
> which Project Mogul balloons were made,*
>

 ​We already know what they were make of, surplus junk from a toy company.
​From:
​

http://muller.lbl.gov/teaching/physics10/Roswell/USMogulReport.html

​"
*One of the most puzzling aspects of the reports that a "UFO" crashed near
Corona in 1947 were the later descriptions of "hieroglyphic-like"
characters by seemingly reliable, firsthand witnesses. Research has
revealed that the debris found on the ranch and displayed in General
Ramey's office probably did have strange characters. These, however, were
not hieroglyphics, but figures printed on the pinkish-purple tape used to
construct the radar targets used by the NYU group.*

*The witnesses have recalled small pink/purple "flowers" that appeared to
be some sort of writing that couldn't be deciphered. These figures were
printed on tape that sealed the seams of the of the radar target. The radar
targets, sometimes called corner reflectors, had been manufactured during
or shortly after World War II, and due to shortages, the manufacturer, a
toy company, used whatever resources were available. This toy company used
plastic tape with pink/purple flowers and geometric designs in the
construction of its toys and, in a time of shortage, used it on the
government contract for the corner reflectors.*


*Allegations have also been made that the debris displayed to the press on
July 8 and subsequently photographed was not the original wreckage; i.e., a
switch had occurred sometime after the debris left Roswell AAF.​ However,
statements made by Moore and Trakowski attested that the corner reflectors
they launched during that period had the same flowers and figures that were
later reported by Marcel, Cavitt, and Brazel as being on the debris found
on the Foster ranch in Corona.*

*In fact, Trakowski distinctly remembered the figures on the tape because,
when the targets first were produced, much fanfare was made over the use of
a toy manufacturer for production. He related that a fellow USAAF officer,
John E. Peterson, monitored the procurement of the targets and "thought it
was the biggest joke in the world that they had to go to a toy
manufacturer" to make the radar targets and an "even a bigger joke when.
the reflecting material on the balsa frames was some kind of a pinkish
purple tape with hearts and flowers​"*



> *​> ​if for no other reason than to finally put the Roswell crash scenario
> to bed.*
>

​Crackpot conspiracy can never EVER be put to bed, they were not created by
logic so logic can not destroy them.

John K Clark ​

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