Tuesday, 24 September 2019
UFO News Article:
“Valley contributed to ’73 UFO reports”
5 April 2008
(The Express-Times, Easton , Pennsylvania )
Sources: UFO Newsclipping Service, Bainbridge Island ,
The whole article (Page 7):
“SIGHTINGS AROUND WORLD. Bushkill Twp. police officer
reported three lighted objects in the sky.
The year 1973 was a remarkable year for sightings of unidentified
flying objects. There were sightings in Europe, South America, Southeast Asia
and in the United States .
Sightings were especially concentrated in Midwestern states such as Ohio , Indiana and Illinois .
In March and April there was a flurry of UFO reports
in Pennsylvania ,
including some in our region. On March 1 residents of the Saylors
Lake area of Monroe County
reported 42 objects with flashing lights in the sky. The objects were seen by
many witnesses over a three-hour period. A dozen witnesses, including a Pennsylvania state trooper, saw the UFOs passing over Saylors Lake . Before the evening was over one
witness counted 39. A
state trooper said he personally observed four objects pass over the lake from
west to east. The trooper described the UFO as ‘like a Christmas tree flying in
the air.’ He estimated the objects were about 1,500 feet in the air.
Most had white lights but others had lights that appeared to be blue and red.
Another witness, Mrs. Howard Pfeiffer, reported she
and 11 others observed about 40 UFOs, some in groups, pass over the lake at
intervals between 7:05 and 10:45 p.m. She described the UFOs as being circular
and about the size of a child’s wading pool.
‘The first one came so close I felt I could reach up
and touch it,’ Pfeiffer said. ‘There was no noise, no sparks, or anything. I
know it wasn’t any plane or balloon or helicopter.’
Later in March 1973 a number of sightings were observed over Bushkill Township . Most appeared to be oval or
round lighted objects. A Bushkill
Township police officer
reported seeing three objects. Numerous sightings were reported in the area of
Hoffman’s Grove, a popular picnic site in the northern part of the township.
Another rash of sightings occurred on March 15 at Milton , Pa. ,
where police were swamped with telephone calls about a giant ball which moved
across the sky from east to west. The UFO, which moved rapidly, resembled a
lighted helicopter dome, according to one witness. At one point the witness
said he saw the ball make a 90 degree turn to avoid a passing airplane.
Throughout the evening other residents reported seeing the strange object.
Later a spokesman at a nearby Air Force base, when asked about the sightings,
responded that none of the reports were recorded and that Air Force personnel
were not on alert for such incidences.
The bizarre sightings also occurred in the month of
April. On the evening of April 24 three adults at Spring Mills, Pa. , observed an
oval-shaped fluorescent white object traveling from the north. At one point the
UFO stopped and hovered over a house. It then sped off to the north and
disappeared. The UFO gave off an intense white light which also turned to green
and blue. A local police officer who interviewed the witnesses reported all
three were sober adults not under the influence of either drugs or alcohol.
On April 29, more than a dozen residents of the Ferndale section of Shamokin ,
Pa. , observed a UFO with flashing lights
actually land on nearby Burnside
Mountain . One witness, a
13-year-old boy, observed the UFO through binoculars. The boy said he could see
a large bubble shape on top of the object and a silver colored substance along
with the lights. Several witnesses said the UFO appeared to hover over the
mountain for several minutes before it landed. About 11 p.m. the UFO rose up
into the sky and beaded in a westerly direction.
Experts were at a loss to explain the rash of
sightings of 1973. Some postulated unusual weather phenomena that year, sun
spots, and even covert operations of our military as possible explanations.
Project Blue Book, the Air Force’s official inquiry
into UFOs, commenced in 1952.
In 1969, Blue Book was terminated after the conclusion
that there was nothing extraordinary about UFOs and the vast majority of the
sightings, though not all, could be explained by natural phenomena.”
Related posts:
UFO Article:
“INVESTIGATION OF UNIDENTIFIED
FLYING OBJECTS”
(PROJECT 1947, Canterbury, Connecticut)
Quote from the article:
“How does one investigate a transitory phenomenon
which appears suddenly to unprepared observers over a very small area, and
under conditions which are not understood? Various organizations and
individuals have wrestled with this question for the last 50 years.
There are many phenomena which are extremely
short-lived and cannot be readily reproduced in the laboratory, such as
fireball meteors, mountain lights, earthquake lights, unusual displays of
atmospheric electricity (ball lightning, sprites, superbolts, etc.). Most
reports of the foregoing examples depend predominantly on eyewitness testimony.
Analysis of such raw data poses many difficulties for the investigator.
Witnesses not only include descriptions of the phenomenon, but often
incorporate their impressions and biases into their accounts.
After more than three decades’ experience in UFO
investigations, Brad Sparks offers the following advice for obtaining the most
useful data …”
Related posts:
Brad Sparks ,
U.S. UFO
Lecturer & Researcher
(isaackoi.com image)
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