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- RECENT SIGHTINGS "UNEXPLAINABLE"
-
- [Western Pennsylvania] Tribune Review, Sunday, Nov. 15, 1987
- by Dave Lester
-
- A metallic object twice the size of the Goodyear blimp hovers over
- an electrical power plant. Lights suddenly flicker at a nearby shopping
- mall.
- An incredibly bright light from an overhead object one evening is
- beamed at a woman in her back yard, leaving her temporarily paralyzed.
- Sound far out? Such occurrences may be closer to home than you
- think, say UFO investigators who have been deluged with reports of UFO
- sightings in recent months.
- By one account, a huge object was seen hovering over a power station
- near Greengate Mall in Hempfield Township. Its appearance coincided with
- an electrical disturbance at the big retail complex. In Southwest Greens-
- burg, a woman putting the trash out at her home was suddenly overwhelmed
- by a strange light that she says she was unable to move from.
- "These are definitely very significant sightings, says Stan Gordon,
- director of the Pennsylvania Association for the Study of the Unexplained.
- "What's been reported here is very similar to what's been reported around
- the country and throughout the world."
- As with previous reports of UFO sightings, Gordon says many of them
- can be explained as natural phenomenon [sic] - a bright planet, exhaust
- trails from a rocket launch, even a low-flying plane displaying advertis-
- ing signs.
- But Gordon says he has not been able to draw any quick conclusions
- about the latest sightings. Similar reports from a wide area of Pennsyl-
- vania have convinced him that what the observers witnessed are not iso-
- lated occurrences.
- "Something seems to be going on," says Gordon. "We have no definit-
- ive idea what this all means."
- Three off-duty policemen were among the four who could make out a
- large metallic shape at dusk near the mall. It travelled from west to east
- more or less crossing Route 30 near McDonald's Restaurant.
- Red lights could be seen on the front and back and white lights run-
- ning lengthwise, including a stationary white light.
- One observer said what struck him about the object was that it did
- not make a sound. Nor was there an exhaust trail.
- They observed it for five to six minutes, then drove to another area
- where they witnessed an even stranger spectacle. The oblong object ap-
- peared to pivot on its axis, executing a 90-degree turn before disappear-
- ing beyond the treeline. When it hove [sic] into sight again, it was a
- much greater distance away.
- "I've never seen anything like that before," said one of [the] of-
- ficers. It definitely was not an airplane.
- The object that reportedly directed a beam of light at a Southwest
- Greensburg woman also was described as noiseless.
- "It was above me and illuminated the whole yard, a huge object, with
- stationary pulsating lights," the woman said, recalling the incident one
- night in her back yard. "I was so scared I couldn't move."
- The lights from the platter-like object were arranged in a circular
- pattern and were pulsating rapidly. Despite the intense light, no noise
- other than what was perhaps a faint hum emanated from the object.
- "It took off slowly," she said. "That's when I screamed for Mom."
- Aside from the momentary paralysis that the women reported, both she
- and her mother complained of headaches.
- The object tilted somewhat as it took off over the treetops slowly
- in a northeasterly direction and then accelerated.
- PASU, a Greensburg-based clearinghouse for such reports, saw their
- number peak in May and June. That was followed by a "big wave" of reported
- sightings in July and August. In October PASU sent directives to federal
- and state agencies alerting them of the unusual amount of UFO activity.
- Warm-weather months generally bring more sighting reports, which
- Gordon says can be attributed to a greater number of people staying out of
- doors for longer periods. But what makes the reports unusual, Gordon says,
- is the number that cannot be easily explained. He says the objects were
- first reported being seen here in early August, though not publicized.
- That was followed by incidents in Virginia, which drew widespread atten-
- tion.
- Gordon also described them as "high quality." The objects were at
- low-level and clearly visible rather than distant lights in the sky. Even
- the reports of strange lights have been unusual.
- While PASU occasionally publicizes some of its reports, their sour-
- ces are kept confidential.
- "A lot of people are reluctant to talk publicly about it because
- they're concerned their reputations would suffer; they're afraid of being
- ridiculed and laughed at," says Gordon.
- Gordon decided to publicize the two unusual occurrences because they
- occurred in heavily populated areas and may have been observed by others.
- "We feel that other people did see these things and didn't call,
- possibly because they didn't know who to call," says Gordon.
- But PASU delayed the release of information to the media to see if
- other reports would come in.
- Reports of similar occurrences in western Virginia have generated
- great attention. Gordon has exchanged information with investigators there
- but again says he can draw no conclusions at this point. "I can't say its
- the same thing but a number of the reports from there seem to be very
- similar in description," says Gordon.
-
- ------
-
- The Pennsylvania Association for the Study of the Unexplained is a
- volunteer, statewide scientific organization for the investigation of UFO
- sightings and other phenomenon [sic]. Its members are for the most part
- drawn from scientific, engineering, and other technical fields. The PASU
- center can be reached at 412-838-7768. The address is: 6 Oak Hill Avenue,
- Greensburg, PA 15601.