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UFO : The Inside Story of the US Government's Search for Alien Life Here--And Out There
UFO : The Inside Story of the US Government's Search for Alien Life Here--And Out There
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Author(s): Graff, Garrett M.
ISBN No.: 9781982196776
Pages: 544
Year: 202311
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 44.85
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Prologue: War of the Worlds Prologue War of the Worlds Just after 8 p.m. on the East Coast on Sunday, October 30, 1938, millions of American families tuned into CBS Radio had heard just seventeen seconds of Ramón Raquello''s orchestra playing the tango "La Cumparsita," live from the Meridian Room of the Park Plaza Hotel in New York, when a voice interrupted: Ladies and gentlemen, we interrupt our program of dance music to bring you a special bulletin from the Intercontinental Radio News. At twenty minutes before eight, central time, Professor Farrell of the Mount Jennings Observatory, Chicago, Illinois, reports observing several explosions of incandescent gas, occurring at regular intervals on the planet Mars. After a note about spectroscope readings and a confirmation by a Professor Pierson at the Princeton Observatory that Farrell''s reports were indeed correct, Raquello''s orchestra returned to the air. A few minutes later, another news bulletin. "Ladies and gentlemen, following on the news given in our bulletin a moment ago, the Government Meteorological Bureau has requested the large observatories of the country to keep an astronomical watch on any further disturbances occurring on the planet Mars," the announcer said, adding that the network was working to set up an interview with the nearby Princeton Observatory. Again, the orchestra returned.


Again, a bulletin provided an update. And then, about eleven minutes into the broadcast, a breathless series of news reports and man-on-the-street interviews about a Martian craft landing near Princeton, New Jersey, started to play. Sirens, crowd murmurs, and shouted orders from concerned police punctuated the audio delivered by the field correspondent and a Princeton astronomer who had rushed the eleven miles to the scene. The reporter, Carl Phillips, said breathlessly, "Well, I hardly know where to begin--to paint for you a word picture of the strange scene before my eyes, like something out of a modern Arabian Nights ." Phillips was obviously confused and struggling to get his bearings while live on air. "I guess that''s it--yes, I guess that''s the thing, directly in front of me, half buried in a vast pit. Must have struck with terrific force. The ground is covered with splinters of a tree it must have struck on its way down.


What I can see of the object itself doesn''t look very much like a meteor, at least not the meteors I''ve seen. It looks more like a huge cylinder. It has a diameter of. What would you say, Professor Pierson?" The Princeton astronomer was clearly trying to wrap his head around the scene, too. "What''s that?" he said, caught off guard by the question. "What would you say--what is the diameter of this?" "About thirty yards," the professor said. A cylinder, that is, nearly the length of a football field. Phillips moved on as the police began to push the crowd back and he located the farm''s owner, Mr.


Wilmuth, who recounted the experience of the object crashing into the field. They edged closer to the object as Phillips tried to capture on his microphone a strange humming sound coming from inside. Pierson proclaimed the object, whatever it was, definitely extraterrestrial. Then the top of the craft opened and the Martians emerged. First came the tentacles. "Good heavens, something''s wriggling out of the shadow like a gray snake," Phillips declared from the farm in Grovers Mill, New Jersey. "Now it''s another one, and another. They look like tentacles to me.


There, I can see the thing''s body. It''s large, large as a bear and it glistens like wet leather. But that face, it. Ladies and gentlemen, it''s indescribable. I can hardly force myself to keep looking at it." Moments later, a police officer was reportedly approaching the craft with a white flag--"If those creatures know what that means," Phillips wondered on air--when the Martians suddenly fired a heat ray, killing everyone nearby and spreading fire across the field from the extraterrestrial craft. The transmission cut off. The music resumed.


At around eighteen minutes into the hour--8:18 p.m.--the news returned, with reports of burned bodies, mobilized militias and troops, and emergency care rushing to the scene. Another bulletin from Trenton stated that Carl Phillips had been found dead and charred. The radio studio itself, the new announcer explained, had been turned over to the state, as the military operations commenced. Eight battalions--seven thousand soldiers--had surrounded the pit in New Jersey, attempting to surround and isolate whatever the strange creatures were that had caused such destruction. A Captain Lansing, from the Signal Corps, said that "all cause for alarm, if such cause ever existed, is now entirely unjustified." The creatures, he promised, could hardly survive the military''s heavy machine-gun fire, but even as he spoke, his voice began to fill with wonder and alarm.


"It''s something moving. solid metal. kind of shield-like affair rising up out of the cylinder. It''s going higher and higher. Why, it''s standing on legs. actually rearing up on a sort of metal framework. Now it''s reaching above the trees and the searchlights are on it. Hold on!" The field report cut off.


No one ever heard from Captain Lansing again. Just after 8:24 p.m., listeners were given terrifying news: "I have a grave announcement to make," the voice said over the radio. "Incredible as it may seem, both the observations of science and the evidence of our eyes lead to the inescapable assumption that those strange beings who landed in the Jersey farmlands tonight are the vanguard of an invading army from the planet Mars." By 8:30 p.m., word came that the US Army in New Jersey had been defeated, with just 120 soldiers--of seven thousand!--having survived the heat ray attack.


Communication networks were down. More Martian cylinders were reported to be hitting Earth--Buffalo, Chicago, St. Louis. People were beginning to flee cities. Martial law had been declared. They were everywhere. The nation was crumbling. The secretary of the interior, live from Washington, addressed the unfolding national emergency: "I shall not try to conceal the gravity of the situation that confronts the country, nor the concern of your government in protecting the lives and property of its people.


" And then, around 8:40 p.m., some forty minutes into the broadcast, normality returned as a station identification break made an even more stunning proclamation: "You are listening to a CBS presentation of Orson Welles and the Mercury Theatre on the Air in an original dramatization of The War of the Worlds , by H. G. Wells. The performance will continue after a brief intermission. This is the Columbia Broadcasting System." There had not been, listeners soon realized, an invasion, or epic battle, or lives lost.


There had not been a Ramón or even an orchestra--just a phonograph record playing in an empty CBS studio, the tango especially chosen for its tedium. The most dramatic night of radio in American history had been a scripted performance. A spectacular dramatist, twenty-three-year-old Orson Welles had thrived in the entertainment industry amid the darkest days of the Great Depression thanks to a unique artistic collaboration with a producer named John Houseman, forged through FDR''s Federal Theatre Project. In 1937, the pair launched the Mercury Theatre as a place to experiment with innovative productions and adaptations--and before long, the efforts and vision had paid off. Mercury Theatre was a wild success in its first year, and CBS picked it up to air on the radio beginning on July 11, 1938. "On the broad wings of the Federal eagle, we had risen to success and fame beyond ourselves as America''s youngest, cleverest, most creative and audacious producers to whom none of the ordinary rules of the theater applied," Houseman wrote later. One of their biggest opportunities came that same year, when Houseman and Welles realized a possible use for the Sunday night literary adaptations lineup, which was still so new that it didn''t even have a corporate sponsor. For the week of Halloween, Welles had wanted to do something bold and new, and "conceived the idea of doing a radio broadcast in such a manner that a crisis would actually seem to be happening," he recalled--"a dramatized form as to appear to be a real event taking place at that time, rather than a mere radio play.


" Adapting H. G. Wells''s old and somewhat heavy-handed science fiction novel, The War of the Worlds , to the modern age of radio, he thought, might do the trick. Once it was decided, the Mercury Theatre team had only a week to translate the 1897 first-person novel about a Martian invasion of England into radio fodder and prepare for their roles. (To do so, some actors playing the announcers listened to archival broadcasts of the crash of the Hindenburg, attempting to mimic the growing terror of the announcer''s voice, as the airship had crashed and burned in real time, killing thirty-six people.) The hard work paid off. It sounded like a real invasion. On the evening of the broadcast, roughly a dozen actors stood behind microphones, playing a score of characters--Welles himself played Professor Pierson, among other roles--and delivering an impressively convincing performance.


At the end of the hour, his show complete, Welles took a moment to make a statement. "This is Orson Welles, ladies and gentlemen, out of character to assure you that The War of the Worlds has no further significance than as the holiday offering it was intended to be," he said cheerfully. "The Mercury.


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