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- 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."
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- Copyright 1987 by the Associated Press. All rights reserved.
-