UFO Sighting

 ÿ   \RBBS\DL\BELLE720.UFO                                                                                                         20-Jul-87 16:11 MST

Sb:  APwi 07/20 0231  UFOs-Wis



By RICHARD EGGLESTON Associated Press Writer 

   MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Thea Hefty and police officers Kevin Plendl and Scott

McElroy may discover in the weeks ahead that they have far more in common with

strangers than they had imagined. 

   Hefty did something unusual when she saw a strange, bright object hovering in

the sky over Waunakee early Tuesday. She called the police. 

   When Plendl and McElroy arrived at her home and spent an hour watching the

unidentified flying object hang in the sky, they also did something out of the

ordinary: they filled out a report on the incident. 

   Lavonne Freidig of Belleville said friends and strangers alike have confided

similar experiences to her after reading of the sightings she and other

residents reported. 

   She described the object she spotted from her back door last March as a

cigar-shaped object with three spheres attached to it, hovering just above the

tree-line in the afternoon sky. 

   "A reasonable estimate is that only one in 10 sightings are reported," Mark

Rodeghier, a sociologist at the University of Illinois Chicago Circle campus and

scientific director of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies, said in a

telephone interview. 

   "Very few policemen go public with their sightings," he added. 

   "I was stunned," was how Plendl described his reaction to the glowing object

with red and blue flashing lights, from which an egg-shaped object separated,

then flew off at high speed. 

   "I have to admit I have never seen anything like that," police chief Frank

Balistreri chuckled the day after the sighting. "I don't know if I would admit

it if I did." 

   The sighting, which prompted some Waunakee wags to dub their community "The

Land of Milk and Martians" is one of about 30 reported in Wisconsin so far this

year. 

   That doesn't come close to constituting a "wave" of UFO sightings, which

Rodeghier defines as hundreds or thousands of reports of sightings. 

   The UFO scene actually has been pretty quiet for 14 years, he said. The

Waunakee report also is unlikely to provide many clues to the mystery of UFOs,

he added. 

   "It's a typical light-in-the-sky case," Rodeghier said. "Lights in the sky

aren't that interesting. The reason is they aren't of research value." 

   Nevertheless, Don Schmitt of Milwaukee, the center's Wisconsin coordinator,

was planning a visit to the area over the weekend. 

   Schmitt also investigated the Belleville sightings, and concluded there was

no ready explanation for the objects people reported seeing -- they were genuine

UFOs. 

   Rodeghier is more intrigued by UFOs that leave behind physical evidence.

While no piece of metal or alien form of life has been recovered from a UFO

sighting -- which would pretty well pin down its origin as extraterrestrial --

he said there have been inexplicable marks left on the ground where UFOs are

reported to have landed. 

   "Those traces don't mean extraterrestrial spacecraft," Rodeghier said. "They

do mean phenomena that can't be explained." 

   But there are a lot of things that Rodeghier can't explain about UFO

sightings, even the sporadic attention that news media pay to the phenomena. 

   His own theory on UFOs? 

   "I'm scientific enough not to go out on a limb," Rodeghier said. But he

added, "The best evidence is not inconsistent with the hypothesis that some

sightings are indeed alien spacecraft." 

   


Copyright 1987 by the Associated Press.  All rights reserved.


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