Professor of physics at the University of Colorado, and director of the study on UFOs (unidentified flying objects) commissioned by the U.S. Air Force and conducted by the University of Colorado in the late 1960s. The Condon Report, officially titled the Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects, was released by the U.S. government in 1969.
Edward Condon was born on March 2, 1902 in Almogordo, New Mexico. An outspoken and controversial figure, he spent two years doing research in Germany after obtaining a Ph.D. in physics from the University of California in 1926. He was assistant professor of physics at Princeton University (1928-29), professor of theoretical physics at the University of Minnesota, and associate professor at Princeton (1930-37). During World War II he was associate director of the Westinghouse Research Laboratories and participated in the development of radar and the atom bomb. After the war he became director of the National Bureau of Standards, U.S. Department of Consumers (1945-51), and subsequently headed the research and development division of Corning Glass Works (1951-54).
In the late 1940s Condon was attacked by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee for allegedly "consorting with communists." At the time he was a special adviser to the Special Senate Committee on Atomic Energy of the Congress. Following the "witch-hunts" of the period, and after clashing with Richard Nixon, his security clearance was revoked in 1953 and 1954. He resigned from Corning Glass Works and returned to an academic career. From 1956 to 1963, he was Wayman Crow Professor of Physics at Washington University, and he joined the University of Colorado faculty in 1963 as a professor in the Department of Physics and Astrophysics and fellow in the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics.
Condon's main conclusion was that further studies of UFO phenomena would not be of scientific benefit. He rejected the hypothesis of extraterrestrial origins of UFOs. Not surprisingly, he was condemned by many UFO enthusiasts as a debunker of the subject. He did not personally conduct field investigations while preparing this report. Condon retired after the report appeared and was named emeritus professor in 1970. He died on March 26, 1974 in Boulder, Colorado.
Sources:
Condon, Edward U. "UFOs I Have Loved and Lost." Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (December 1969).




