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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1963)
6 A SUNDAY, JANUARY 6. 1963 MEPFOBD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON A Conversation With Daniel W. Fry, Scientist Living in Merlin By CLEVE TWITCHELL Mail Tribune Staff Writer (Copyright 1963, Medford Printing Co.) Few people who have mcl Daniel W. Fry in his new hoine town - the community of Merlin, seven miles northwest of Grants Pass - realize who he is. Fry's husky, easygoing appearance tends to label him as a typical outdoorsman. And friends who have known him for years say he is so modest that it is often difficult to get him to speak of his accomplishments. People who have met him casually would probably be surprised to learn that Fry possesses a brain that has produced a number of scientific feats, Including the de signing of several parts of the guidance system of the Atlas missile. Undergoos Fantastic Experience And many would probably be shocked to learn that the same Daniel W. Fry who lives in Merlin today under went 12 years ago what must be (providing, of course, that it did happen - and no one has ever proven that it didn't) one of the most fantastic experiences ever under gone by a resident of planet earth. For Fry stales quite seriously - and rather con vincingly when one can coax him Into talking about it -that in 1050 he took a ride in a so-called "flying saucer" and conversed with a man who was not born on earth. And he states in an equally convincing manner that during the first part of 1961 the man and his ship landed in a forest clearing several miles northwest of Merlin. Fry is in southern' Oregon today in an effort to ful fill a dream that began 15 years ago - a dream that was interrupted by his extra-terrestrial encounter in 1950. To Develop Merlin Area He is attempting to develop the Merlin area, in which he has owned property since 1940. Fry made up his mind to buy in southern Oregon the day the first A-bomb fell on Hiroshima. He considered this area one of the safest in the United States in the event of nuclear attack. He bought 80 acres and spent the winter of 1947 in a cabin on it. Then a job with Aerojet General corpora tion drew him to southern California. His post with Aerojet subsequently involved occasion al trips to White Sands Proving Grounds in New Mexico, and it happened that on July 4, 1050, a date Fry will always remember, he, was at White Sands. It was a hot night, Fry recalls, and the air condition ing iystem broke down, so he went out for a walk on the desert. He had gone about half a mile beyond a rifle range on tho outskirts of the base when he first noticed some thing in the sky. He saw a star seem to go out, then a second, a third and a fourth. Soon ho realized that what was making the stars seem to go out was an object grad ually increasing in size as it came toward him. An Ovale Spheroid Object ..' As the object came closer, Fry said, "I could see that It was an ovate spheroid about 30 feet in diameter at the equator, or largest .-art. It was now traveling at not more than 15 or 20 miles per hour and seemed to be decelerating at a rato that would bring It to zero velocity by the time It reached the ground." ' As ho watched, Fry said, the object glided in lightly and settled to tho ground about 70 feet away from him without the slightest bump or jar. Except for the crack ling of the brush beneath it when it landed, the object made no sound. Fry had been working in the rocket field for several years and thought he was fairly well acquainted with developments in the aircraft field, but this object's per formance was far advanced over anything he'd ever heard of. Fry admits that at first he felt "a strong desire to be somewhere else!" He said he considered going back to the base to get more witnesses, but then he envisioned the possibility of returning with other men only In find that Ihe object had taken off. And so he decided to approach the object. Touches Smooth Surface He approached cautiously and finally got up enough nerve to place r finger tip on the hull of Ihe ship. It felt incredibly smooth, Fry said. He stroked the metal with the palm of his hand and felt a tingling sensation. Just then a crisp voice "came out of the air" saying, "Better not touch the hull, pal, it's still hot!" Fry lept backwards several feel, catching his heel in a low bush, causing him to sprawl nt full length in the sand. He said he heard what sounded like a low chuckle. Then the voice came again in a friendlier tone, "Take it easy, pal, you're among friends." The voice apologized for making Fry jump, saying, "Sorry, buddy, but you were about to kill yourself and there wasn't time to diddle with controls." The voice went on to explain that Fry had lunched a force field around the craft ralher than the actual surface and that exposure for more than a few seconds could cau.se con gestion of Ihe liver and eventual death. Punled By Voice's Use Fry was puzzled by the voice's use of not only the English language but also tho American idiom. In reply, Ihe voice cxplainrd that he had been studying the use of the American language and idiom for the past two years. "1 have never yet set fool upon your planet," said the voice. "It will require al le.i.it four more of your years for me to Income adapted to your atmosphere and gravity and lo become immunized to your biotics." It took Fry what seemed lo him like a long lime lo digest Ihe full meaning and implication of what the voice had Just said. But as he looks back on the exper ience, lie says he realized that if whoever was In the ship had meant to do him harm, he would have done so by that point, so he decided to go along with the "voice" and learn whatever lie could. Man In Second Craft One of the first thing' he learned was thai the voice was that of a man situated In a second craft some 900 miles above the surface of the earth, and that the object before him was actually a remote-controlled device used for gathering samples of earth atmosphere. The being identified himself with Ihe name ALan (pronounced "Ah-Lan "). Fry learned the following concerning A Lao s purpose In visiting earth: "One of the principal purposes of this expedition is to determine the basic adaptability of the earth race, particularly Ihe degree of their ability to adapt their minds quickly and calmly lo conceptions thai are completely foreign to their customary modes of tbfigh1. Previous expedition by our ancestors met with r i F-V by-.,- iff "-"-" Vliv.'W This artist's drawing on the cover of Fry's book "White Sands Incident" depicts the shape of the spacecraft which Fry says landed near White Sands Proving Grounds in New Mexico in 1950 and took him for a ride. The craft was an ovate (egg-shaped) spheroid. The marks around il were made by the artist lo denole motion. Daniel W. Fry says an extra-terrestrial craft landed in this clearing near his cabin in the hills northwest of Merlin in 1961. He went up to the cabin "on an impulse" and found the craft already on the ground with his friend A-Lan standing nearby. After a conversation of some 20 minutes, the man got back in the ship and took off, Fry said. imp .. w i -i & r-x fr; hh in Daniel W. Fry of Merlin says he look a 30-minute ride a space vehicle from another planet In 1950. almost l"lal failure in this respect. This lime there is hope lhal we may be able lo find minds sufficiently receptive so that we may be of some assistance in the progress of your race." - Descended From Earth People Fry learned lhal A Lan was descended from men and women who once lived on earth - on the continent of Lcnuiria during an era when its inhabitants engaged in war with a civilization on the continent of Atlantis. A Lan said his ancestors were among a handful who escaped in spacecraft lo Ihe planet Mars. Subsequently, they began a new civilization, which eventually evolved, the visitor explained, to the point where its people began to dwell in spacecraft constantly moving about rather than on an single planel. During the half hour that followed, Fry said he kept up a constant line of questioning, almost all of il on scientific and technical matters. The conversation led to an invitation for Fry lo take a short ride aboard Ihe crafl, which he did. The "short ride" consisted of a hop across the United Slates to a point 20 miles over the city of New York and back again. Judging that the trip took about 30 minutes, he figures that the craft maintained an average speed of fi.OOl) miles per hour - not so fast in 19H3 when satel lites travel IB, (100 miles per hour, but in l!)5o it was unheard of, Fry points out. Feels No Accleration The most amazing part of the ride was that Fry felt no acceleration. "Instinctively I braced myself in Ihe seal." he said, "but Ihe ground just fell away from the ship with incredible rapidity. 1 did not feel the slightest sense of motion." The visitor's explanation of this phenomenon was llt.it Ihe ship maintained Us own force field, like a tiny planet. Therefore il could (all away from the earth as if two magnets were repelling each oilier and no one on Ihe crafl 'would feel the motion in the same way that no one on earth can feel its motion as it rotates and rco!ves around the sun. Alter Fry was relumed to approximately the same location where he had first seen the visiting craft, A-Lan excused himself, saying he would contact Fry again, and took off. Feels Seme of Depression "For a long lime 1 stood in the sand looking from the crumpled brush (crushed beneath the landing eraftl up lo the stars," Fry recalls, lie said he felt a strong scn.se of depression, because only a few hours earlier he had been a "self-satisfied technician" working on setting up lest.s lor one of tho largest rocket motors ever assembled mi earth, lie now realized lhal this big motor was hope lessly obsolete before il had even been tested Daniel W. Fry's life since Ihe night of July 4, 1M50, has not been easy. He said very little about the exper ience of thai night for almost four years until he finally wrote a book called "The White Sands Incident " He w.i.s t.ilkt-d into taking that step when hp exper- ienced a second meeting with his cxtra-lerrestrial friend. The contact took place at his cabin located northwest of Merlin, Fry says. A-Lan asked him to make his story known to Ihe public in an effort to open people's minds, if nothing else - lo suggest that there are other inhabi tants of the universe besides those of earth. Diagnoses- Problems of Earth In this conversation, Fry said A-Lan diagnosed the problems of earth's peoples as basically arising from an overdevelopment of the material sciences and undevelop ment of the social and spiritual sciences. He urged Fry to try to lay some groundwork toward correcting this imbalance. In the months that followed, Fry founded an organiza tion and a magazine, both titled "Understanding," for the purpose of "bringing about a greater degree of under standing among the peoples of earth and making avail able lo them more of the higher understanding of those who are not of earth." Both are now in their seventh year. He also made himself available for lectures, often as many as 250 a year. He spent his "vacations" from engi neering work going on lecture tours, actually at a pun ishing pace with an average of two hours of sleep per night. His performances prompted one observer lo re mark that Fry was the only person he knew who would willingly drive all night to lecture for 16 people and then go homo without requesting a fee for the talk. Lectures Were Well Received Many of Fry's lectures were well received. At one lime he was Ihe most popular speaker on the service club circuit in southern California and was in demand virtual ly every week day noon hour. But when oii the lecture platform he was also a frequent target of insult and ridicule, particularly when he first embarked on public speaking and had not yet gained the polish his more recent talks exhibit. No one who knows Fry, however, can recall an instance when he has lost his temper. He answers all questions calmly and methodically and more often than not gels in the final word in an exchange with a heckler. Fry received one of his greatest compliments - and most concrete proof of the authenticity of his 1950 While Sands experience - when an attempt at making fun of him went awry. In July, 1958, Dr. Parry Moon, scientist at the Massa chusetts Institute of Technology, along with a co-author published a paper in the Journal of the Franklin Institute setting forth a new finding with respect lo gravity. Shortly after the paper was published, Dr. Moon was sent - as a joke - a copy of one of Fry's books, "Steps to the Stars." The book, published four years previously, contained the same finding, and some of the wording Fry had used was almost identical to the sentences Dr. Moon had used - four years later. So identical were several of the sentences lhal Fry now possesses a letter from Dr. Moon assuring him thai he had nol seen "Steps to the Stars" before publishing his 1958 paper and that no plagerism was involved. Involves Theory of Gravity The finding that Fry had published four years before Dr. Moon involved the theory that gravity actually reaches a zero point, beyond which it becomes negative. In other words, the earth's gravitational field does not act as an attracting force on into infinity. It reaches a definite zero point, beyond which il becomes a repelling force, Fry and Dr. Moon agreed. They use this conclusion lo explain why the universe is constantly "exploding" outward. Fry said he arrived al this conclusion as a result of his conversation with A-Lan during the White Sand; incident. From 1954 to 1961 Fry was vice president in charge of research at Crescent Engineering and Research com pany in southern California. It was during this time that he designed a number of scientifically advanced items, including several parts of the guidance system in the Atlas missile. He attributes many of these accom plishments to his White Sands experience also. Meets A-Lan Face-to-Face In the first part of 1961, Fry said he went up to his cabin In the Merlin area "on an impulse" and met A-Lan face-to-facc. The spaceman's crafl was on the ground In a clearing next to the cabin. A-Lan was an ordinary looking person wearing casual clothes, Fry reported. After a conversation of about 20 minutes the visitor got back in his craft and took off. Fry hasn't said a great deal about the contents of that 20-minutc conversation with A-Lan, but from that point on he began making frequent trips to Merlin. He acquired more property and went about making it known thai he hoped to establish a planned community at Mer lin, one where "the niche a person will occupy is engi neered for him even before he arrives." Merlin could be used as a survival area in event of a nuclear disaster. Fry said, but he was principally interested in developing a largely self-sufficient, well planned community of people with widely diversified talents and backgrounds but with a common interest in developing a deeper understanding of the universe about Ihcm. Perhaps Would Develop Advice Or perhaps what Fry is really after is a community that will follow some of A-Lan's advice and give its at tention lo developing the social and spiritual sciences al well as the material science. About 10 families who might otherwise never have heard of Merlin, Oregon are living there today. More are planning lo move in. Fry's plans also include the erection of a radio station dedicated to broadcasting information along the lines of what he has gained from his experiences. Several new businesses have opened in the town, and Fry himself has taken over the Merlin Trading post, where - in testimony to the sort of man he is - he may frequently be seen behind the counter or out front pumping gas. 4 y -"SS i, i 1 " r r -- mm r t'l- rt-trTF' $ .WiYi ' irt 'Mfc-M Ha nit'l W t ry mow operates the Merlin Trading poft, where ho nmy frenuent I v be seen behind I lie srocery eon liter or out pumpim: s.is S A