1. DATE,. TIME GROUP 2. LOCA TIDH 1 5 Hove~er 64 15/22<X Z vTaldNick, He\'1 J ersey 10. CONCLUSION 3. SOURCE IBSU?FICIE~;T D-\TA FOR ~VALUATIO:J 4. NUMBER OF OBJECTS Insufficient Data far evaluation. T:i.I:le rr:otion s~guence and positional data lacking. . 5. LEI'lGTH OF OBSERVATION 11. BRIEP' SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS Uot Reoorted Light tha t looked like a Occasionally stationar,r. star roovi ng. Brighter than a ::;tar. TYPE OF OBSERVATION Ground- Visual 9. PHYSICAL EVIDENCE FTD SEP 63 0-329 (TOE) Prelw ecUu ... el W ,_ J' ~ unll. Disappeared arrl reappeared . TWO COUPLES FLEE A HOVERING LIGHT . Ot.JR Pescaderans Califor- F m> saw airl signal1 an un~ --idenritted flying light over the Butaoo Girl Scout CamponMooday But when It responded and moved toward them. they panicked The story was told to sheriff"s deputies by Rudolph Huizen, 30, a caretaker at cbe camp. He said at about 8:15 p.m.. be beard a dog barking. A frte:od, Duane Myers, 24, a Pescadero nurseryman, aod be weot outside to investigate. In the ooxcbest sky they saw a very bright light about the size of a halt dollar movirg en-atically. .. lt was way up ln the sky, .. aatd Hu.tzen axlay ... Just for ldcks I Dashed an SOS ..r lt with my flash- light. And that soo-of-a-gun c:une There waa no 901nld, be said. just a bright light ''11 came down and settled over the trees aoout half a mile away aod moved back and fonh. When I flashed my flashlight at It again it lit up the sky like a full moon. It was alx>ut as big 3.S a football.' Huizen and Myers ran into the house, fetched their wives, Henny Huizen, 29, aod Diana Myers, 20. The four watched the object for a wblle, s lg:nalled once more. Then it moved toward them. They fled Into the house. "If you were standing in my shoes, you would have nm roo: sald Hu.izen. The four peekedourofthedoor- way, saw the light back away, -nen it took off," sald Huizen ..No Jet or any plane could go that He called Butano Forest Ranger Raymond Cavallero, who called the sherUf"s office. Deputies who went out to the Girl Scout camp re- poned the object was gone, but tha.t the obseners were all quite sober. Inforrn..ation Only Source: :\ P R 0 Bulletin, ::overaber 64 Mystery Light Panics Couple At 8 :15p. m. on 3 November 1964, Ru- dolph Huizen, 30, caretaker, and Duane Myers, 24, a nurseryman, were alerted by a barking dog at the Butano Girl Scout Camp near Pescadero, Califoma. Both outside to investigate and im-: mediately saw a very bright light "about the size of a half d ollar" which was moving erratically in the northeast sky. Huizen said it was " high in the sky" and "just for kich" he flashed an sosl at it with his flashli~ht. The light be1 gan moving toward the men. It made noj sound, just became larger and larger. Huizen told deputies of the incident t he next morning a nd said that alter thej f ir st SOS the object came down and settled over the trees about a half a mile and moved back and forth. Huizen flashed his light at it again and it "lit up the s ky like a full moon. It was as big a football. At this point the two men ran Into the house and brought their wives out to The four watched for a while longer then s ig nalled the SOS again. The object Immediately responded and moved. to~ard them. All four fled into the house' and watched from the doorway as the obJect backed away and grew dim. ''Then it toook off," Huizen reported, "no jet or plane could go that fast." j Huizen called the Bulano Forest Rang er Raymond Cavallero, who called the> sherifrs oCfice. Deputies who went out to the Camp reported the object was Pescadero, California L"llb rc. t 0 :1 Only F'3TC ?Alll3ti.:l. Vol 2 . ;'j 1 .' ELECTION NIGHT JITTERS Baa. ObJo NoYtmbft' 3, 1964 .. Three teen-aged Jlrll found little lnterat In the electlona that night. Like most Amertc:.DI, Mr. and Mra. Lellgdon were ~;lued to their T .V. aets. Tbe double feature algbtlng of the aame or almUar object took place about 45 mlnutea apart. and waa by far more exciting to the girla. At approximately 6:45 P.M., Nancy ~eny, 13, wae walking wat toward the home of the Louw LelJgdona. Aa ehe neared her de.Unatloa. abe wae etartled by an extremely bright Ugbt which wu dHceodlng elowly down toward the taU maple tree ln Lellg n' back yard. The huge Ugbt teemed yellowwh whlte, and generally oval ln abape. Sbe watched juat 5 seconds before ex- citedly n11bJng up onto Lellgdon'a front porch, pounded o n the door, and exdtedly and lncomprebeMively tried to tell them about the phenomenon. By the tirue anyone got around to verilylng the sighting, the Ugbt wu DO longer vialble. Nanc:-1 In deacriblng its lnte01ity, aald that abe bad to equlnt to look at lt. It Ut up the whole area around the garage and pool Tbe g:trll pulodJcaJJy looked out the back window to ee 11 the Ught wu then. Alter about 45 minutes, one of the girla KrUmed that the Ught bad murned. AU three glrla were there In a Oaab. Thll time the huge Ugbt wu just above the level o f the garagt, andatatlooary. ltthenalowly atart.ed to rue vertJcaUy. One or two or the ,trw ran to the elder Lellgdo01 to get them to come look. Joan aaw It laet y,beo It wu about ten feet from the top o r the tree. but even abe dJdn' t aee It dwappear. In the excitement abe momentartly turned away from the o bject, when she looked ag&Jn. It wu gone. Nancy, who had llftn the previoua one, aaid It looked juat Uke the one she had seen com ing down. po11lbly larger. AU agreed It had a generally oval shape, but that the ahape waa not nec:aaarUy symmrlrical. Nancy said It wu y.Uowwh-wblte within the "ehape", b ut gave off intenso! white light around Ita "edga~". The Leligdon girls said It wu com p letely white and hard to look at, with fuzzy edges. 1 It encompa~ted a width comparable to the tree ltHlf which 11 about 40 feet, and vertJcally It varied from 8 -12 feet, with I the obeuven. Tbe eky above wae Ulumlnated, too, aa well as the fence, pool behind It, and neighboring tnes, etc:. No sbarcb of U1bt wen eetn llghtlniJ up the area o f the Lellgdon bouse. Tbe Ulht wae aUbouened by the tree, and according to the girla the light wae between the tree and the pool, a short distance north. AlWz a wbUe the pta wmt outdoors. and cautloaly went to the place when the llgbt wu llftD. Tbe out rnom1n1. the ~rt. deaded tn look around where the pbmommoa bad been obsuved. illey fouod a plact In the grua two fNt 1n diameter where the VIII was charred. Tbe epot wu vert.fted by Mr. and Mn. Lftl.rdon. One of the gtrltl eald, "How could auch a tar,. objen cauN such a small place to tM charnd ?" No aamplea wuw eaved and no check for radioactivity wru Aa:ompaoyln the aecond alghtlnr waa an unusual sound that penr:..nlated with M>mt abort breaka unUJ 10:00 P. M. They aaw aothln1 atrange. R.tmarlta mating to the eound foUow: There waa agreement that It wu a moootonoua, e ln1le pitch aound, with alight variation up or down due to a wavelike quality. It waa p la inly heard by Mn. Beleney and her buaband who live eeveral houses ea1t M.n. Lell!Jdon aald It wu a h igh-pitched aound. Mr. Lellgdon tried cbecldng the telephone poles and wine o n the street fo r Its cauae, but with nesatlve resulll. (The'" me night as the 3lgbtlnlf. ) Mn. a~eny 'aid the ~und that nlgh1 ~rmted UJI 1000 P.~r .. She aleo dded, and Suaan Lellgdon and Nancy agreed, that It wae beard for about a week after that, mostly at nJght. (AU a1ned o n this.) She aald that it was not completely continuous; then were aome ehort b ruka during ony one night. "Like the bualng of radar," eald Sunn Lellgdon. "Like the buulng of many bees," eald Nancy. On one m o rnJng, o n the way to echool, they heard It plalnJy. Mr. ~eny, an employee o f NAS A beard It too, but did no t ~aY9 an i!llplanat:lon. No exolAnallon thu~ rllr. r.d-.,rtaJ Commml:: It remlnda ua o f !he night o f February 17th, 1963, where almllar but much mort lntenee wave-like eounda wue beard by a woman. Lacey Moyers, and MUton Nice. In two placa m Uea apart. apparldooa of lllht appeared to the obterven. ln the one C8M the eouod teemed to be aaaoclated with It, but agllln as here_1 penllted Jon1 after the "gara1e of light" bad dwappeareo from 3 :cver.be r l/~4 J::;r~a, Ohio eight Moyere and Nice were tested by recorded aouod, and gucued at 10,000 and 8,000 cycles pee eecond. 'I'wo reportera from the Berea News visited the el(tbt and asked many questions. The Berea News published this story but Called to give a clear picture o f the girls' experien. They mentioned other aightings these girls have bad since the above described slgbling , nod the whole pictur e was well muddied by their treatment This excerpt Is taken from the same article: "Leo Sapienza, or thl' pape.r'e advertising staff, an authority on aircraft and racing cars. says be has seen the .. Berea Saucer" r ecently. " Yes, 1 a m sure the girls are correct," Sapienza says, " I have s~n it sev~ral Urnes In recent days whUe observing the starts." ??'!?? Sapienza, an amateur astronomer , says he be- Ueves Oylng saurs are real. "I don't claim they are fro m o u ter apace, but I do believe they exist," he says. Gary Davts and I both felt that Susan and Joanne Lellgdon were sincere and consistent ln answer ing the questions put to them. , Nancy ~emy wa1 juat as slnc:f're and even m ore enthusiastic I about bet experience. I admit that aubsequent slghtlngs claimed by these girls seem to distort the validity of this, their ftrat such experience. But It Is my expe.rlence that when any young person bas a sighting of such startJJng phenon.ena, they are enthusiastically and com o n th~ lookout? They ecan the skies constantly, and m any times misinterpret conventional aircraft and CamUiar nat ural phenomena. These girls, apedaUy Nancy, related ,that they are belng "ridden hard" by many rellow students and some teachers. But thes~: girls are not backing do wn for anybody, nd their lndlgna tlon w reaJ. Both the CUP, In the pereo n o f AJ Manak, and LawTence Blazey of the Cleveland UFO Society interviewed the girls. _or.le.ul.On v.u.y FSIC bulletin , Vol 2, ~ Nov nbao 4. lMt On that aame moml.Dr, ID Bath Towublp, aoothu alrbtlnr wu made. A doctor'a wUt wu drtv- ~ zut ou Bath Road. wbea abe ootJctd a abloy object In tht 1314* u sky, alJgbtly eouth. Sbe wuo't sure. but It attmtd atatJo n ary liD ber, orjuatalowmovlng. Tlmt8:05 A.M. No other detaUa. ('l1all a.na 18 15 mUM NW of JuMkle'l reeldeoce..) Da.th Township, Ohio :::>our ce: In!'ornation Only F:3I C Bulletin, Vol 2 , # 1 --llprtDtlleicf TowiUihfpr; Akron, Ohio Beraer Road Noember 4, 1964 . 8:30P. M .. Carl Juatictt looked lnto tbe NE sky. He thought be wu sedng the approach o( an air plne at blgh altitude. But the object wu not movlng. The object he saw wu l1ke a triangle with a flat top. Extending upward wen three Wumiaated alender extenslona. Two lights were situ ated-at Ita bue. (All Uabts white.) The object remained at Its 40 decaee elevation poeltion for a considerable time. When be retl.red It wu etW then. When be atarted for work (7:30 A.M. ), he louod the object juet .UgbUy eut of where It bad beeo. but lfadooery. 1t wu a abioy object tbora. No eouod (Tatimony Ill Lan7 Moyen.) 4 :Jovenber 1964 S~n"i.n.-5..eld Townsl:ip, . .kron, Info n::n.t.:i.on On].y FSIC Bulletin, Vol 2 , ; Olmted FDa, Oblo November 8. 1964 8:06 P.M.J !cbedy Road It wu dear and completelY dark when 1 the 4 obecrven' attention wu drawn to a brWlant object In thej ky to their 5. The object wu "rt1ht out to the moon," wbeo 8nt aeen, and their atlmale or elevation wa 40-45 degreee. The object which wu the apparmt elze or a quarter bUnked I completely o n and off. wu u bright u automobUe beadllgbta, eUvuy wblte In color, and bad a poor ouULne, (Blurred) I The object travelled N toward them and the nearby Turnpike, then turned watward. movtnr alongside the S elde of the Tum pike. Ita epeed wu dacribed u raater than aoy altcraft aeeo by them before. (Cleveland Hopklnl lnU. Airport la 2 mUtt SE of them.) Tbe object wu lD vi-for 2 mlnuta. No eound or trail, level 01gbL Oburva: Mr. and Mn. Allred Haa1. LuenM H ... 18.. and Jack Dovw l~l/2. OL1sted Fa: 1.s, Ohio Information Only Sourse: Saucer NeHs, Vol J2, #1, !!arch 1965 lake Hichi ;;a."'l 7 rroverr.ber 1964 On Nove~ber ?Lb. a large and extremely bright flash Jn the sky -too long in duration to be lightning -was reported on both sid~s or lake c-~jgan. The flash aas s~en by resident~ or 5oven Wis- consin counties, ahd it W3S rcportod by at least three pilots who ~re air- born~ at the ti ... local wealhe~. bureaus were una e.to ex~la the inc~den~J In:'or.12.tion Only F'3:C Bulletin, Vol 2, fl 1 ' U. S. SJGHTINGS Nonwber 7. 1964 HUll naab or light IMD over Lake MJchlp.n. Authorities aald it wu probably an exploding meteor ... (bollde) Lake ; :ichi,:_;:;n Infornation On.ly 3c u rse: Saucer .lie\.,s, Vol 12, /.D., H.'\rch 1965 Bayville, .1ew Jers~;r . . N~ PHYSICAL ~VI~E "a Dr. A. Kr~i1, ~ n~t~d p~ych~l ist ~n~ oarapsyct-~ologi l !nvesti')ator, has su~mi tte1 to S-'UC[q ~!'A.'S a ':'.lnsi1er;,blc quantity or a str~nge thre~d-like =ub~t~n:e ~hict-1 he discover ~hile drivin') his car along the-Carden State Park:a:ay, ncar 9 ctyy ille ... . N .A., on the morning of ~v~lllh~f -2 -The 111ntnr 1"1 w;,, nn t.r"l~ cre:lt of 3 ~111 a~out ):J reet cl-fro:nl th~ hlqhw3f ~nd 3~ lylnq ln ;, fluf~ bl;,nwet strio a~out three feut. 5i~e and ontt Mlle lon'), lnturru:Jtnd <~t lnlfl:v;,l' o' a~out lOa feet. 0:. . Oicy~n, ~ le~dln') ~ ... Ynr~ cheMlot, qlvcn n 5~mpla of the material by Cr. ~r,i~. He ~, unnbln to an~lyzo It, ftn~ 'J"vo lt t.~ ~r. uqcne Schw3rt~. one of c:ic~s outatan~lnq "uthnrltles on m~n- dP. fl~ers. Or. Schw~rtz is ~uoted having a..,lda fhla 1 a con~truct, but unknon to our technology. The .. terlel ls ra,.1niscnnt of anqal'~ h~lr, but is not the ~3me, alncn ""tl"l' hl'llr ls said to ~tP.lt whun touched. Here "t S~U~[q ;:::IAIS Hcad- qurtr, we h~ve not yet alte~toted to h~v~ tho fioer "nalyrad, thouqh ~e are enlou to do eo. Any reader who has .,cce5s to a chet ical la~oratory should' gel in touch wl\h us as soon s passi~la, and we will gladly send hiD some of thia lrange ater1al. I In:o nnati c!1 Only Farmer Observes Sphere At 8 p. m . on 9 November 1964 Trevor Foss of Kailoa Station, Gisbome, New Zealand, responded to his son John's call to watch a light in the northern sky. When Foss looked, he saw a ball of light brighter than any star traveling south toward him . The Foss homestead is in the hills 1,000 1 feet above sea level. Using his night I binoculars Foss, his son and another were able to view the object. It took 5 minutes I to go from its position when first seen in the north to the southern horizon. 1 Foss, in a letter to Harold Fulton who was inquiring on behalf of APRO, s aid that two minutes prior to "first sighting the space ship", they had seen a bright hall disappearing in the east over Gis- l:orne. The Frus farm is 22 air miles th of Gisborne. A quarter moon was the west behind the observers. 1 The "space ship," as Foss referred to it, did n~t pass directly over~ead, ~utI rather "shghtly away"-presentang a sade The object presented a spherical appearance, the leading edge was out- lined by a single dark line and it and the dark portion immediately behind were glowing hot with the major heat on the leading edge. The rotating li ght beams were a brilliant white and were projected downwards and toward the The binoculars afforded a view disclosed 6 jet-like objects at the I rear, the lining or inside of which was golden-colored. The jets gave off a bril blue flame. Mr. Foss was unable to clearly discern what linked the tail of the disc with the rea r jets but was able to get a clear view of the jets. Foss, his son John (15) and a worker sn w the object and Foss telf'phoned ncighoors who also saw it but not as clearly as th ey were not equipped witb binoculars. Kai1o~ Station , Gizuorne , :; e.-r Zeal .'ld D~'lL' Sirs: vil v'f':ll.t\:LlJ t:u:n hJ . At l.~JfH'JX1 .... .l.C~l.J -c:1~ 'J.bov~ tl..:B, \''~ t.lJt tn.d I't r~:ts!'l't '.l .'it~r o .iUS~ i--: was . bri_;n't~r. A't 't:tis ooi.nt wa ~C.'l~v it lU3e it 1ill1 't ffi0Vd. j S 3 il "";h~ first 1= i:. Llt~r I toJk 'tJ~ po~it~3