SBSAW SAUCERSEVEN people re polled seeing a flying saucer «ver the Sydney area and at Parkis, 180 miles by air west of Sydney, yesterday. They said il was a cigar-sha|H.'d object, well lit, which flew silently and very fast. R.A.A.F. and Civil Aviation officials and meteorologists at the Sydney Weather bureau coul not give an explanation. The “flying saucer was reporter over: PARKES at 6 a.m. (by one man); ENFIELD, western Syd ne« suburb, eight miles from the city, at 6.10 a.m. (by three men); BELFIELD, adjacent to Enfield, at 6.10 a.m. (by one man); BEROWRA, seven miles north of Hornsby, at 6.17 a.m. (by two men). Mr. L. Bailey, of the Parkes radio station. 2PK. said he saw a white object, flat at one end and pointed at the other, flying over the town at 6 a.m. It was about 4000 feet up and travelling at 450 miles an hour. Mr. Bailey said he was on his way to conduct the station’s breakfast session. He watched the “saucer for at least two minutes until it disappeared into cloud. It travelled silently. Mr. G. McKenzie, of Linda Street. Belfield, said he was on his way to work about 6.10 a.m. when he saw a “flying saucer”. “I thought I was seeing things and could hardK believe my eyes, but the abject passed overhead at about 600 miles an hour and travelling at around 25,000 feet,” he srid. “Sydney Morning Herald, May 4, 1952.