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Holloman. ‘I've got a UFO.' Whether they admit it or not, so is the military. After all, it would be downright embarrassing, if not frightening, to admit that unconventional aircraft have penetrated the supposedly airtight blanket of security to the extent that they reportedly land near one of the most thoroughly instrumented bases in the United States. And it has been known since the early 1950's that UFO's can jam planes' radio frequencies and monitor transmissions. Uncomfortable proof of this allegation is the fact that the UFO's demonstratably know so much about our aerial procedures that they can simulate coded FAA recognition signals. On April 30, 1964, local news media personnel were buzzing with the rumor that a UFO had been captured on the ground and was being kept in a Holloman Air Force base hangar under heavy guard. Indefatigable saucer investigator Coral Lorenzen, author of The Great Flying Saucer Hoax and an international director of the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization, immediately followed through on the startling rumors by putting in a call to Terry Clarke of KALG Radio in Alamogordo, nine miles east of Clarke told Mrs. Lorenzen that his information source had monitored the range radio communications that day the essentials of that tape were published m an art by investigator Lorenzen in the October, 1964 issue of Fate. "The loudspeaker at Main Control on the Holloman Air Force Base-White Sands Proving Ground Integrated Test Range suddenly blared these electrifying words: "It was Thursday, April 30, 1964. A lone B-57 was flying a routine mission in the vicinity of Stalion site a few miles east of San Antonio, N. Mex., on the north range ... "The controller then asked: 'What does it look like?" "The B-57 pilot replied: 'It's egg-shaped and white.'