• "UFOs, MJ-12 AND THE GOVERNMENT" Part 1

    From Ricky Sutphin@RICKSBBS/TIME to All on Friday, January 31, 2025 04:17:53
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    Note: The following is a 3 page excerpt from the paper entitled,
    "UFOs, MJ-12 AND THE GOVERNMENT", which is co-authored by
    researchers Grant Cameron and T. Scott Crain Jr. This brief
    excerpt gives additional background information on Dr. Eric
    Walker's professional activities during the last 60 yrs, along
    with a short example of one of Dr. Walkers' initial responses
    to correspondence from UFO researcher, William Steinman.

    - Tom Mickus <<UFONET I>>

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    Enter Dr. Eric A. Walker. Dr. Walker's name was deliberately
    kept secret by a small group of investigators, the authors of this
    paper included, in hopes that Dr. Walker would discuss his past
    association with MJ-12, the research and development hierarchy they
    directed, and the set of Top Secret meetings held at Wright Patterson
    Air Force Base dealing with a recovered flying saucer.

    Researcher Stanton Friedman in speaking of Dr. Walker stated
    "he has all the credentials" and Dr. Walker's credentials are indeed
    impressive. Born in England in 1910, he received his B.S. degree in
    Engineering in 1932, his M.B.A. degree in 1933 and D.Sc. degree in
    1935, all from Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

    Dr. Walker taught mathematics and electrical engineering, and
    for two years was chairman of the department of electrical engineering
    at Tufts College. He then joined the University of Conneticut where
    he taught electrical engineering and established courses for a special
    war training program.

    Once the U.S.A. had entered WWII, Dr. Walker joined the Under-
    water Sound Laboratory at Harvard University. He was promoted to
    assistant director, and then associate director, where he was in
    charge of ordnance weapons. Dr. Walker had studied the industrial
    use of acoustics. These studies were applied to the homing torpedo,
    which was successfully used against the German submarines. For his
    work Dr. Walker was awarded the Naval Ordnance Development Award, and
    also a Presidential Certificate of Merit.

    In 1944 Dr. Walker was a civilian with the Office of Scientific
    Research and Development. In 1945 Dr. Walker was persuaded by the
    Dean of Engineering at Penn State University to accept at Penn State,
    the position of head of the department of electrical engineering. In
    addition, the ordnance section of the Harvard Underwater Sound
    Laboratory was transferred to Penn State, and became the Ordnance
    Research Laboratory with Dr. Walker as director.

    This move involved moving most of the staff (200) and their
    families, building a laboratory building and family housing.

    In 1951 Dr. Walker became Dean of Engineering and Architecture
    where he directed the construction of a research reactor on the
    campus. In 1956 Dr. Milton Eisenhower, then the President of Penn
    State, named Dr. Walker as Vice-President. Part of Dr. Walker's job
    would be to coordinate and stimulate research on the Penn State campus.

    Dr. Walker's term as Vice-President would actually be minus
    two days as he became President before Vice-President because of
    the resignation of Dr. Eisenhower who moved to John Hopkins University.

    In addition to his earned degrees, Dr. Walker has honorary
    degrees from Temple, Lehigh, Hofstra, Lafayette College, University
    of Pennsylvannia, University of Rhode Island, Elizabethtown College,
    Jefferson Medical College, Wayne State University, Thiel College,
    University of Notre Dame, and the University of Pittsburgh.

    Dr. Eric Walker wrote two prize papers for the AIEE, and
    was inventor of the coliolithophone which is a device for the
    acoustical detection of gallstones.

    Dr. Walker's awards include the Navy Distinguished Public
    Service Awared; American Legion Distinguished Service Award; Fellow,
    Institute of Radio Engineers; Benjamin Franklin Fellow; Fellow,
    American Institute of Electrical Engineers; Fellow, Royal Society
    of Arts (London); Fellow, American Physical Society; Fellow, American
    Acoustical Society; Horatio Alger Award; Tasker H. Bliss Award of the
    American Society of Military Engineers, Golden Omega Award of the
    Electrical Insulation Industry; Lamme Award and honorary member from
    the American Society for Electrical Education; the White House
    Citation from President Nixon; and Department of Defense Distinguished
    Public Service Medal.

    Dr. Walker's professional activities include: member of the
    Army's Scientific Advisory Panel, member and chairman of the Naval
    Research Advisory Committee, Vice-Chairman of the President's
    Committee for Scientists and Engineers, member and former Chairman
    of the National Research Council's Committee on Undersea Warfare,
    Executive Secretary of the former Research and Development Board,
    Chairman of the National Science Foundation's Committee for
    Engineering; Chairman, Engineering College Research Council;
    President, Engineers Joint Council; appointed in 1957 by President
    Dwight Eisenhower as General Chairman of the Conference on Technical
    and Distribution Research for the Benefit of Small Business; member
    of the board of visitors, Naval Academy; member of the board of
    visitors, U.S. Military Academy; trustee for the Institute for
    Defense Analysis starting in 1958; elected to the chairman of the
    board at IDA in 1981, retiring in 1986 to become Chairman Emeritus;
    President Pennsylvania Association of Colleges and Universities;
    member, Advisory Committee on Higher Education; member, Commission
    on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges
    and Schools: Vice-President and President of the American Society
    for Engineering Education, Chairman National Science Board of The
    National Science Foundation.

    Dr. Walker was one of the founding members of the National
    Academy of Engineering. He served as Vice-President and President.
    He was a member of the Board of the Engineering Foundation; member
    of the board of trustees, Science Service; President, Commonwealth
    Industrial Research Corp; Board of Directors, Mid-State Bank and
    Trust Company; Board of Directors, Girard Trust Company; Board of
    Directors, Westinghouse Air Brake Co.; Chairman, Board of Directors,
    Melpar, Inc.; consultant on research and engineering to Koppers Corp.,
    Borg-Warner, Bendix Aviation, Hughes Aircraft, IBM, and others.

    Dr. Walker initiated the Conference on The Administration of
    Research in 1947. He has published numerous articles in various
    periodicals and co-authored a book entitled "The Physical Bases of
    Electrical Engineering". Dr. Walker wrote a column for "The Center
    Daily Times" in the early 70's. Dr. Walker directed a nation wide
    study for the ASEE on the "Goals of Engineering Education."

    Dr. Walker's first reference to UFOs came in a speech he
    made in 1969 at the Franklin Lectures (Approaching the Benign
    Enviroment, Eric A. Walker, Franklin Lectures in the Science and
    Humanities, First series, @1970 lectures April 1969 at Auburn U.)


    "We will soon spend millions to probe the
    atmosphere of Venus and Mars, while here
    on earth it remains polluted with dust and
    heat with which we cannot cope. Indeed it
    may be a good thing that ships from another
    planet are not sampling our atmosphere - the
    conclusion might be that life cannot possibly
    exist on earth."


    Researcher William Steinman was not given Walker's phone
    number by researcher Stanton Friedman, so his first attempt to
    contact Dr. Walker came in the form of a letter, dated March 19,
    1984. He got a response, but not what he expected. Steinman
    explained how Dr. Walker responded in a letter to Grant Cameron,
    dated September 8, 1987.

    Steinman writes:

    "The answer to my correspondence was very strange;
    it stated "STOP! DON'T TRY TO FIND ME I CAME ON
    THAT MACHINE I WILL LEAVE MAY 15 ERGOT QUIET QUIET
    QUIET." The above was typed on the lower portion
    of my letter that I sent to Walker, as evidence by
    my signature and "very sincerely yours." My return
    address was cut from the upper portion of my own
    letter to Dr. Walker and was taped to the front of
    his stamped envelope to me!"


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