As the people on the ground watched they could first see the flame of the jet's afterburner disappear into the night. Then the jet's navigation lights faded out on a bearing of 300 degrees.
At the radar site they still had the target and there were many excited people watching the big pale, orange scopes as two little bright points of light began to close on a bigger blob of light.
Then the pilots gave the "Tally-ho"—they were in visual contact.
But the "Tally-ho" had no more been given than the big blob of light on the target began to pull away from the fighters and was soon off the scope.
The pilots kept visual contact, though, and the radio provided the details of the chase to the now blind crew in the radar room.
The two jets bored north, with afterburner on, and the needles on their machmeters passed the "1.0" mark. But still the UFO was just as far away as it had ever been.
The chase went on for a few minutes more before the pilots pulled their throttles back into the cruise position, turned, and came home.
Even before they landed, the people at the airbase saw the big, round and bright UFO rapidly begin to fade and then it was gone.
So ended the glamour and the dog work began.
Each man who had seen the UFO visually was carefully interrogated. Weather reports were collected. Radarscope photos were developed. The two pilots received special attention. The exact bearing of the UFO was measured and 300 degrees magnetic was correct.