SETI public: Philip Klass, 85, Dies; Aviation Journalist, UFO Debunker

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Aug 12 2005 - 12:51:14 UTC

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    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/10/AR2005081002167.html

    Philip Klass, 85, Dies; Aviation Journalist, UFO Debunker

    By Claudia Levy
    Special to The Washington Post
    Thursday, August 11, 2005; B05

    Philip J. Klass, 85, an aviation journalist who investigated UFO sightings
    and wrote books debunking reports of visits from outer space, died Aug. 9 at
    a nursing facility in Cocoa, Fla. He had cancer.

    Mr. Klass lived in Washington for more than 50 years before moving to
    Merritt Island, Fla., in 2003.

    He had retired as senior avionics editor of Aviation Week & Space Technology
    in 1986 but continued to contribute to the magazine for a number of years.
    He is credited with coining the term "avionics," a blending of aviation and
    electronics. His work, which included one of the first books about spy
    satellite technology, "Secret Sentries in Space" (1971), won him honors in
    the field of aeronautical journalism and engineering.

    He was more widely recognized as an authority on unidentified flying
    objects. He was reviled as a "disinformer" by believers in alien beings,
    particularly those who insisted they had been abducted for scientific
    testing.

    Mr. Klass, an electrical engineer by training, said he based his assessments
    on methodical research and visits to the field.

    "While some people gaze at the sky and see flying saucers or bright balls of
    light," one biographer observed, "Klass sees atmospheric phenomena,
    celestial bodies and airplanes trailing advertising banners."

    In a 1993 debate on "Larry King Live" with David Jacobs, a Temple University
    professor who wrote a book suggesting that more than 1 million Americans had
    been abducted and taken aboard UFOs for study, Mr. Klass observed:

    "If aliens are invading our bedrooms, impregnating our teenage girls; if
    they're abducting little children, cutting flesh samples out without even
    putting Band-Aids on; if you're not safe anywhere on the face of the
    Earth -- then it is something that this nation needs to mobilize."

    His first investigation, in 1966, was of a sighting two years earlier near
    Socorro, N.M. He found that it had been a hoax perpetrated in an attempt to
    bring tourism to the economically depressed town.

    Mr. Klass went on to write seven books, including the well-regarded "UFOs
    Explained" (1975). He was interviewed on news broadcasts that included the
    "CBS Evening News" and for television programs devoted to space phenomena.

    "In nearly 30 years of searching, investigating famous cases, I have yet to
    find one that cannot be explained in down-to-earth prosaic terms," Mr. Klass
    told interviewers for the PBS program "NOVA."

    "Therefore, if somebody says to me, 'I have been abducted by strange-looking
    creatures that do these dreadful things to me,' I'm quite confident that
    they could not possibly be extraterrestrials. . . . I am quite confident
    that there is no scientific, credible evidence to show that we've had alien
    visitors, let alone that they're doing these dreadful things."

    Mr. Klass wrote about extraterrestrial issues in his own Skeptics UFO
    Newsletter and appeared on talk shows and lectured widely. His investigative
    findings were routinely criticized by people and organizations who took
    seriously UFOs and alien abductions.

    He once told an interviewer: "I've found that roughly 97, 98 percent of the
    people who report seeing UFOs are fundamentally intelligent, honest people
    who have seen something -- usually at night, in darkness -- that is
    unfamiliar, that they cannot explain."

    He said the sightings were often of objects such as reentering satellites,
    meteor fireballs and hot-air balloons.

    His books included "UFO Abductions: a Dangerous Game" (1988) and "The Real
    Roswell Crashed-Saucer Coverup" (1997). In the first, he promised $10,000 to
    any victim whose abduction by aliens could be confirmed by the FBI. No one
    ever collected.

    Mr. Klass was born in Des Moines and raised in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. After
    graduating from Iowa State University, he worked for a decade at General
    Electric as an electrical engineer. He joined Aviation Week in 1952 and
    later wrote extensively about surveillance satellites for that industry
    publication.

    He was a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and
    a founder of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the
    Paranormal. He was awarded top honors of the Aviation/Space Writers
    Association, the Lauren D. Lyman Award of the Royal Aeronautical Society and
    the Boeing Decade of Excellence Award for lifetime achievement.

    His investigative papers form the Philip Klass Collection of the American
    Philosophical Society. An asteroid discovered in 1983 was named in his
    honor.

    Before he took on UFO debunking as a full-time avocation, Mr. Klass was a
    Civil War buff. He designed and built animated electronic battle displays
    used by the National Park Service at the Gettysburg and Antietam
    battlefields. His other interests included skiing and sailing.

    He was a member of the National Press Club and the National Aviation Club.

    Survivors include his wife of 25 years, Nadya Ganev Klass of Merritt Island;
    two stepchildren, Anton Ganev of Olney and Diana Dryden, both of Merritt
    Island; a sister, Rosanne Klass of New York; and three grandchildren.


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