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- SARB.TXT - Text file typed in by <<UFONET I>>, transcript of
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^ conversation between Stanton Friedman and Dr. Sarbacher
- ======================================================================
-
- Note: What follows is the unedited transcript of a cassette tape
- that came into my possession some time back . The transcript is
- accurate and complete. Words that were difficult to understand in
- the recording have been indicated by "(?)".
-
- Grudge 13 & the DULCE PAPERS are of great interest to me. If
- you have any information to share on these topics I would be
- most interested in corresponding with you. I can be reached
- via the UFONET BBS network.
-
- Harvey S. Stewart (02/01/90)
- ======================================================================
- S: Hello.
-
- F: Dr. Sarbacher.
-
- S: Yes sir.
-
- F: Hi; Stan Friedman up in Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
-
- S: Oh for heavens sake.
-
- F: Fact I (?) (cut off by s:)
-
- S: How's it doing?
-
- F: I'm doing fine keeping busy I, as a matter of fact I, I,m
- just going through my files there. I tried to get you when
- I was just down in Florida on the 21st of September but you
- weren't there.
-
- S: No let's see, I was in the Washington state.
-
- F: Oh, that's pretty far from Florida.
-
- S: That's as far as you can get and still stay in the United States.
-
- F: Did you stop and see your old buddy in Texas I found for you?
-
- S: You know, I wanted so much to xxxxxxx xxxxx I was so pleased
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: when you located him. He's really. Did you see him personally?
-
- F: No. Only on the phone.
-
- S: He is the nicest guy.
-
- F: He sounded it. He was cordial.
-
- S: I really like Fred, but I haven't, I didn't get to see him in
- Dallas. I didn't get to Dallas.
-
- F: Ah.
-
- S: I skipped Dallas, I went from here to Atlanta and Atlanta to
- Portland.
-
- F: Aha.
-
- S: Usually they stop in Dallas.
-
- F: Ya.
-
- S: But the plane didn't, so I didn't see Fred, and I, He's a very
- good friend of mine we were classmates.
-
- F: Ya, ya that's what you has told me and that was my clue and that's
- how I found him
-
- S: But did you get some good information from him.
-
- F: Well, no, I .. he was most cordial but ah , it was so well covered
- up ess (????) he didn't know what was going on... I guess you knew
-
- S: Oh probably (???) enough... the only thing I .. was talking to
- one of the fellows.. in your business that work on UFO's,
- gee (???) I get lots of letters on it you know.
-
- F: I'll bet mine was the first.
-
- S: It might have been. I think it was, and the only thing I remember
- see I was what they call a dollar a year guy then.
-
- F: Ya. I remember.
-
- S: I had to run my own business, my laboratory and I couldn't go to
- all the meetings. Now they did have, at least I was told, that's
- when Karl Compton was down there.
-
- F: Ya.
-
- S: I was told that they had recovered a UFO with some people in it.
-
- F: Bodies, whatever.
-
- S: I don't know, that's what I think was told.
-
- F: Did he tell you where?
-
- S: Well we were having a meeting at Wright Field and I couldn't
- go.
-
- F: Oooohh
-
- S: But later on one of the fellows said to me that those guys, if
- they were people, were made like insects. They didn't have any
- skin on their bodies.
-
- F: Hmmm.
-
- S: So they were saying that's how they were able to accelerate and
- decelerate without being torn apart. You see if we were going
- a thousand miles a second and stopped in a minute well we would be
- squished.
-
- F: Ummmm, not quite but
-
- S: Well it's pretty bad
-
- F: Well you can, you can receive a hell of a jolt if the force is in
- the right direction and if the duration is sufficiently short.
-
- S: Yes
-
- F: Ah but that's with the Research and Development board or did it
- precede that when you found this out?
-
- S: I cant xxxxxx (?) remember and I'm not sure that they were right
- whether they were just guessing or something.
-
- F: No okay, uh ... well but it is the Research and Development
- board meeting that your talking about.
-
- S: Ya Ya
-
- F: Okay . well... who...did ya get any clue as to where the crash
- had occurred.
-
- S: Well it was somewhere out West.
-
- F: Okay, and do think that this ... any idea what year this was?
-
- S: Well ya, let's see if Freddy was there in Washington it was in
- the early 50's.
-
- F: Okay did they imply the crash had just happened or that this had
- happened sometime before
-
- S: Well ya, the conversation was that it had been recovered
-
- F: Ummm.
-
- S: It crashed, that's what they were talking about, we were going
- to have a meeting going out to discuss it xxxxx overload xxxx
- xxxxxx xxxxx (cant make out both speaking at once)
-
- F: Let's see early fifties now the notes that I sent you from
- Wilbert Smith, do you remember, you do remember talking to him.
-
- S: Ya vaguely
-
- F: The Canadian.
-
- S: Ya vaguely
-
- F: Okay, that, his notes were, ah 1950 and let me see exact date
- September 15th where his notes 1950. He asked you a question that
- you didn't answer at that time which was rather fascinating (??)
- maybe you've just given me the answer in a sense, ah he quotes
- you as saying " Yes it is classified two points higher even than
- the H Bomb. In fact the most highly classified subject in the US
- government at the present time." and
-
- S: I don't have the slightest idea why.
-
- F: Well
-
- S: It seems silly to me.
-
- F: Well, his next comment, that was supposedly what you said and
- then his next comment was ah "May I ask the reason for the
- classification" and you said " You may ask but I can't tell you."
- Well think that (cut off)
-
- S: Well probably cause I didn't know.
-
- F: Oh, okay not because of this crash, you see there is no mention
- of a crash persay in this note. Do you think it could have happened
- after this?
-
- S: I don't know there may have been several of them. Ah there was some
- talk that there were.
-
- F: Ah!
-
- S: The things, the things were the crople (???) around that time
- they are the (??) things
-
- F: Hmmm ya
-
- S: Eisenhower came in as President as I recall
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: And whenever the Republicans come in they usually stop the research
-
- F: Yep
-
- S: For some reason or other
-
- F: You remember Charlie Wilson (??) " Research is when you don't
- know what your doing" or something like that
-
- S: Well its rare(???) here I am with strong(???) Republican
-
- F: (loud laugh)
-
- S: xxxxxxxxxxxx can get in want to put me out of business
-
- F: Well you know I was reading, one of the reasons, one of the things
- that prompted the call is I had run across my colleague out in
- California Bill Moore and run across the ah Saturday Evening Post
- article about the boy genius that you were
-
- S: Oh yes, yes
-
- F: Which was a fascinating article and that that was 1950 also, ah
- do you know any clue as to what people were involved beside
- Van Bush which clearly
-
- S: Vannevar (??) (cough) excuse me just a minute (10 second pause)
- I caught myself a lulu of a cold
-
- F: In Florida??
-
- S: Well you know how it is air-conditioning, you walk into some of
- these stores and they keep em at about 30 degrees and the temperature
- outside is 90
-
- F: (laugh) or 95
-
- S: (laugh) lets say that once more
-
- F: Ah, who else was involved besides Vannevar Bush
-
- S: Well, xxx after Bush left somebody else came in now who was it
-
- F: Karl Compton or ah you(???)
-
- S: No no no no .. no wait a sec .. no Bush, Bush was the head of the
- ah the se(??) Scientific Advisory to the President.
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: His official job, he was also Director of the Carnegie Foundation
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: And in addition he headed up something else
-
- F: The JRDB at one point
-
- S: Ya JRDB
-
- F: And then they set up the Research and Development Board but then
- I guess Compton took over.
-
- S: Ya then Compton came down and from MIT
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: Compton left and then the other guy who was it , wasn't
- Killingham (????) there was a guy named Killingham
-
- F: Ya James Killingham
-
- S: He might have but I think it was someone else
-
- F: Not Kitjikowski (????)
-
- S: No
-
- F: Wasn't Doolittle involved in any
-
- S: No absolutely, that Fred would know, Fred would know who took
- over after uh ... after Compton
-
- F: Okay, Ah do you know if ah, when I, I'm very interested in the
- crash that happened in 47
-
- S: Aha
-
- F: Out in New Mexico ah and being New Mexico in 1947 one has to presume
- that probably Oppenheimer and Groves and those guys were involved
-
- S: Very likely.
-
- F: And maybe ah, the guy who headed Los Alamos, Hillbary, Norman
- huh, I think it was Hillbary(??sp) who was head at Los Alamos wasn't
- it
-
- S: I don't remember.
-
- F: Ah, but anyway ah ... the meeting let's go back to Wright Field
- for a minute ah that was the meeting you didn't go to
-
- S: That's right
-
- F: Okay you would have had a Top Secret clearance and it would have
- been required for that meeting, is that
-
- S: I suppose, whatever they gave us, I don't know who was doing
- the clearancing thing
-
- F: Do you know who else would have been at the meeting?
-
- S: No, I remember there was one guy, frankly I didn't like him very
- much he ah he had some company as I had. Seemed to me he was
- from Philadelphia and he was going to all the meetings. And acting
- very smug about it.
-
- F: Hmmm
-
- S: Ah, what the heck(??) his name was, I know he was .... shortly
- after that we were held(???) at site(???) I did go to the one
- meeting out at Hughs Aircraft
-
- F: Hmm
-
- S: In California, I went out to that meeting
-
- F: You know if Flying Disks were discussed there?
-
- S: No, that had more to do with the... that's when Raybull Wildridge
- (???????) was out there
-
- F: Oh ya
-
- S: At the time he'd come out I think from NRL working on diodes
- then they would then, they'd set up a production line at Hughs
- where the girls used microscopes. That was the first of the
- microscope lines as I recall.
-
- F: Oh
-
- S: And I think the object of going out there was to observe it.
- I forget I know they were having a, that the, that the Raimo (??)
- and Woodridge (???) where having some kind of fight with Hughs
- because there were a couple of important Generals out there from
- Wright Field and eh they eh eh eh anyway the boys wanted to keep
- the eh the eh cafeteria open for the General in case he wanted
- some coffee or pie or something and Hughs came in and he found it open
- and nobody in the plant and so he closed it.
-
- F: (laugh)
-
- S: And I heard that they were mad as the Devil, as a matter of fact
- that is what started the fight that led to the formation of Raimo(??)
- Wildridge backing from, from some product.
-
- F: Yes.
-
- S: That's what started it, (laughing) Yep I know the judge(???)
- because one of Hugh's men came to me, see I had a , in those
- days I had a much higher rating than Raimo, about the only
- thing we know about Raimo was that he had written some elementary
- book on radio. See whereas I had written the the bible on Radars
-
- F: Yes
-
- S: My rating was much higher than either of those guys and in those
- days the people that write the oven(???) and in the military
- gave contracts on the basis of the training of the people in these
- companies.
- e
- F: Ya
-
- S : But since I was better rated than Raimo or Wildridge at that time
- although they were both older than I ah I had been, had a higher
- rating and ah, ah, Hughs tried to hire me because then they
- couldn't take the contract away from him.
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: See when they left they took the contract with them. Hughs tried
- to talk me into taking the job, well I had a very good laboratory
- at the time.
-
- F: In Washington?
-
- S: Ya, I was really rolling along and that laboratory was really
- operating. We were building, General Electric got involved in that
- Arctic Radar System. See at that time everybody was afraid Russia
- was going to send planes over the Arctic
-
- F: Ya, the DEW Line I suppose
-
- S: So General Electric had been given a big contract to eh put in the
- Radar detecting
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: And eh, and Radar stations and nobody had done more xxxxxxxx how
- radar worked. So General Electric hired me and I sent some of my
- boys, I must of had 200 men up there. What I did (laugh) I hired
- telephone(????) retired men and gave them a course in eh high
- frequencies (laugh) you know, and then we, we, I gave them
- transmitters to take with them so that when they got a problem
- they didn't know, they could call me (laughing). We could work it
- out down in the lab see.
-
- F: You didn't have to get cold.
-
- S: No. So we did the job for General Electric xxxxx xxxxx got the
- contract but we were his sub contractor
-
- F: Well that's a...
-
- S: So we had a big thing going
-
- F: So who needed Hughs eh
-
- S: Ya I didn't need Hughs, no
-
- F: And his trouble
-
- S: That's right. Although I was a great admirer of Hughs
-
- F: He was a rugged individual
-
- S: Oh xxxx xxxxx that guy was smart
-
- F: Ya he was.
-
- S: He was a lot smarter than people give him credit for
-
- F: Well didn't he have a toolbit ... patents and stuff
-
- S: Ya he did. Not only that I'll tell ya the laboratories that
- he set up he hired very good men. I ah, well after all now
- Wildridge was the, was the top diodes, diodes in those days.
- That was before transistors.
-
- F: Ya, oh ya
-
- S: And eh, eh he was down at NRL the guy ah xxxxx xxxxx now Raimo
- was a lower group, although if you know Raimo personally, I don't
- know if he's still alive.
-
- F: Ya he is. He's written a book in the last couple years
-
- S: I'll tell you he's a very clever guy. Clever conversationalist
-
- F: Well I worked for TRW, for briefly way back 13 years ago
-
- S: Oh did you
-
- F: xxxxxxly TRW was booming at that time and is now.
-
- S: Well I could have had that
-
- F: I'll be darned
-
- S: Coulda had it. I could have still taken it if I wanted it. I
- didn't want it you see because Hughs ended up really. Hughs had
- one of his boys on the Thompson(??) Products board. But I found
- out about it
-
- F: I see
-
- S: See and when it came up, you know, that these guys could leave
- Hughs and swing a big contract with him if Thompson products was
- financing. And so he knew about it ahead of time.
-
- F: I'll be darned
-
- S: And he said well I'll tell ya I'll, I'll put you in and we'll
- just short circuit them. They'll be out of a job. You take it.
-
- F: Well I'll be damned.
-
- S: Ya, and I had no idea, well I don't know that I would want to
- get involved in that big business anyway ah it is really not a
- not a happy atmosphere to live in.
-
- F: All management and no excitement
-
- S: What?
-
- F: All management and no excitement
-
- S: Ya, ya, ya and I'm a laboratory man. I like the lab.
-
- F: Well let me go back a bit now ah when you say that eh you didn't
- go to the meeting at Wright Field but somebody there told you
- about it.
-
- S: No, some of the men back at the office, in the Pentagon
-
- F: Ah
-
- S: We had an office in the Pentagon
-
- F: Your office or..
-
- S: No, actually I think its ..
-
- F: You mean the Research and Development Board (cut off)
-
- S: Fred Wilxxxx, he was with the Pentagon at that time
- and he had gotten involved in it. See we were classmates
- Fred and I
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: And ah, Fred came to me and asked me if I would help him on the
- guidance and control
-
- F: I see
-
- S: For the missiles
-
- F: Ya he was the chairman for that subcommittee
-
- S: Ya that's right
-
- F: Or went on to be anyway
-
- S: That's right and I came down and I was in that, and worked on it,
- for a long time and I guess it was over a year, maybe a couple of
- years, I don't know, I don't remember. But I know it was during
- that time we had an office there that we all went to. You know.
-
- F: The Research and Development Board
-
- S: Ya the Research & Development Board. It was sorta like a little
- cabinet post.
-
- F: Ok so the guys there told you about the UFO's
-
- S: Ya it was among those fellows in conversation.
-
- F: Remember any of those guys?
-
- S: Not a one. Not a one. Fred would know them all. I should think
- that somewhere among his files he would have a list of all the
- men that worked there
-
- F: Oh ya. He did. as a matter of fact he had names at his fingertips
- so to speak
-
- S: Ya I know, Fred was right in the middle of it
-
- F: Ok so you think it was one of those guys that....
-
- S: It was somebody in that group, ya they were just yakking aloud
- around a water bottle or something
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: Whether they were talking facts or just, just be guessing
- because one of the big questions was if these damn things
- were actually not what you might call an optical illusion
- with some kind of light beam creating them. For they were
- accelerating at great speeds and they went in formation. They
- went you know like ducks.
-
- F: Ya and the question was how the heck they worked
-
- S: Ya how they worked and what are they made of and how can they
- go so fast, and go, speed they can go, well you could see one
- one minute and the next minute it was gone. I mean it was you
- could see it go.
-
- F: Were you guys talking about nuclear powered flight at that time?
-
- S: Oh, we were possibly, yes, but I held, had certain ideas see,
- one of the problems today we really don't know what gravity is
- we don't know and I had an idea, I'm willing to work on it in one of
- my theses but then my professor didn't believe me, but I had
- determined that bismuth(?????) did not obey the laws of gravity.
- So I thought that gee theres a leak I might be able to get
- nature to tell me something
-
- F: Hmmm
-
- S: But they wouldn't let me, they didn't believe me, well they
- believed me but he said hell that's a second order effect
-
- F: (laugh)
-
- S: Which is implying it was in the, in the area of, of the accuracy
- of the instrument.
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: Well it was, it was and it was clearly, god somebodies going to
- do something about it one day, as a matter of fact I was talking
- to someone not too long ago and right now I'm putting a public
- company together, on some batteries I just finished developing
- and they are unusually powerful batteries. And you'll be reading
- about it probably in the papers, at least you'll read about it if
- comes through. I was talking to the head of the Securities Exchange
- Commission on it in Washington a couple of weeks ago and he said
- that if I got the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx within the month of November
- that he'd have it out before Christmas.
-
- F: Well I'll be darned, What kind of, should I ask what kind of
- batteries
-
- S: Ya, well sure primary and secondary
-
- F: A lot more WATT hours per pound?
-
- S: More Watt hours per pound ya
-
- F: Hmmm, electric cars here we come
-
- S: Well it'll be a little while for that but certainly we can make
- a lot of electric generators for third world people.
-
- F: Ah
-
- S: And they of course would be financed by the international banks
- so it'll be a lucrative thing and the company will be able to make
- some money
-
- F: Sounds like a good idea, maybe I should buy some stock
-
- S: Well keep an eye out you'll see it
-
- F: What's the name of the company
-
- S: Well I was going to do it xxxxxxxx You know I developed, what
- is called used today the IOS System for aircraft
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: I did that when I was in school and I later sold it to IT & T
- they're building it now and you may know it's used all over
- the world
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: As a matter of fact they've mastered (?) it now so that it will
- land the airplane as well as ... you know without the pilot
- having to do anything .. and that's why were having such nice
- landings. But anyway, ah
-
- F: Let me ask you...
-
- S: I had set up a school to train pilots to use the IOS System
- and it was in Washington, I called it The Washington Institute of
- Technology.
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: So I still use that name
-
- F: Oh
-
- S: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Washington Institute of Technology
-
- F: A very witty kind of xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
-
- S: Well I tell you there is an advantage to having a name like that
- When you do project work for corporations and you have a name
- like that the IRS people in looking over the books think it's
- an educational institution so they don't bother checking it.
-
- F: That sounds reasonable
-
- S: You know less than they would if it were Joe Smith Company
-
- F: Let me get back to Wilbert Smith. How did he happen to wind
- up with you as opposed to anybody else on the committee. Do you
- know who referred him to you or...
-
- S: No.
-
- F: Or were there any other Canadians that you can think of that you
- had any dealings with.
-
- S: I don't remember.
-
- F: Like the military liaison man at the Canadian embassy was a guy
- named Arnold Wright(?) at that time I ... and I don't know if
- he was doing ... well there was a famous Canadian Omans Salant
- (????) who was sort of the Vannevar Bush of Canada if you will
- at that time.
-
- S: Uh hu
-
- F: Would would there have been liaisons between your committee and the
- Canadian ah Defence Research Board.
-
- S: I wouldn't be surprised again that would be in Frank's ??
- he'd know that for sure
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: I should think he would know
-
- F: Ok let me ask you a different sort of question ah since my
- initial contact with you have any government people bothered you
- about this
-
- S: I haven't, no there's somebody in California, Steinman
-
- F: Steinman, Ya
-
- S: Ah who has written a number of letters and I answered one just
- recently
-
- F: Oh,
-
- S: I think
-
- F: He's a strange man but ah judging by his letters to me (laughter)
-
- S: I know he generally has a letter in here every 15 minutes
- I look bad because I'm not here you know. I come back and there
- are two or three letters, some of them typed some of them long
- hand. I think god he's really xxxxxxxx???
-
- F: Well he's sort of a peculiar guy but...You would probably
- there was a guy well maybe he was doing it for a guy named Todd
- Zeckles(???) somebody in my travels mentioned of him. Todds a
- really a not to be dealt with.
-
- S: Where in the world did you ever find Fred Garland
-
- F: Well I contacted the Harvard University Alumni Association
-
- S: Well I tried a dozen times , they never had anything for me
-
- F: Well I pushed them a little and I didn't know his class of course
- but..
-
- S: I could have given you that
-
- F: I know... anyway it wasn't that much trouble. I sent them a
- letter and then I called them because I was out of town
- and they said they were sending me a reply and O said well could
- you give it to me over the phone since I wont be home for two weeks
- and they gave me an address and I called information and there he
- was in Dallas
-
- S: What a nice guy
-
- F: He sounded .. he sent me a copy of one of the letters at least
- that he sent you and you know .. what's the word I want..
- I can .. I can associate with him because I worked in industry
- big companies and all that kind of stuff, saw some of the same
- things that he had seen and uh, it's a crazy world out there
- Well ok, you know I would gather you don't have any records or
- notebooks from this period of time
-
- S: Unfortunately I don't.. I might of had some but I'll tell ya I have
- I've been looking xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx looking for certain types
- of enzymes that I have been using in some of the energy converters
- and ah ah when I pulled in here ah I had a yacht about 90 foot
- xxxxxxxxxxx and eh we took the xxxxxxxx I was trying to get xxxxxxx
- to get my microbes. You see a microbe is basically a bundle of
- enzymes.
-
- F: Ya
-
- S: And ah.. I was after the microbe... I was trying to extract from
- the microbes the enzymes I wanted Now when I came in here I
- ah .... sail boats have an awful lot of sails for different
- kinds of weather and I wanted to clean out my sail lockers which
- was loaded with things and I bought a house with a basement
- which is an unusual thing in Florida that we have basements
- because the closest I could get to store my sails was about ten
- miles away but my house with a basement .. could put the sails in
- in the basement. Well I ended up putting a lot of my records down
- in that basement about two years ago, about two years ago we had
- about eleven inches of rain in two hours. The basement was full
- of water. I got the water out as fast I could but boy I lost
- cabinets full of records that was a real sorry thing I lost a lot
- of instruments too. A lot of equipment.
-
- F: Ah.. Oh dear there goes the records down the drain, but anyway
-
- S: I tell you it was mess but the worst part were the books
- especially one of the things that I needed and I need it now
- I had one of the unabridged dictionaries you know of that onion
- skin paper so they weren't so thick xxxxxxxxxxxxx boy I lost that
- now that hurt me more than some of my notes
-
- F: Well thinking back to this same period of time , early fifties
- Was there anybody, you know a secretary at your company or
- anybody you worked real close with that's still around, that you
- might have talked to about this to
-
- S: I tried xxxxxxx xxxxx he died Let me see. I don't know where
- to reach xxxxx xxxxx but he was working in a different area
- and at that time I didn't work with him......My secretary is
- still around
-
- F: Hmmm.
-
- S: But I don't think that she would remember
-
-
- F: What's her name
-
- S: What's here name I have such a short memory it seems like
- I don't know I tried to get to see her when I was in Washington
- ...... (long pause) I have a lawyer I've become involved in
- a court appeal sometimes you can't remember for sure and it
- can mean a lot of money to me (pause)
-
- Freidman then comes on to say that is the end of the tape and he
- did get the name of the secretary. He called her and she said that she did
- not work for him in 1950 and didn't remember anything associated unfortunately.
- ====================================================================
-
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