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NORWALK3.UFO
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1989-12-31
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5KB
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87 lines
Greenwich Time, Sunday, May 3, 1987
_______________________________________________________________________________
UFOS:
RECENT SIGHTINGS IN NORWALK PROBABLY A STAR, EXPERTS SAY
Report to Galactic Command - Re: Fairfield County, Earth.
Captain's Log: Star Date 5387
The meteor shower encountered near Xoron 7 weakened the
ship's cloaking device.
For about one earth hour, 14 planetary revolutions ago, the
starship became visible to earth's inhabitants in the geo-
graphic quadrant known as Fairfield County.
Evasive strategy was undertaken and the ship was aligned
with the star Sirius. It was hoped the brightness of the
star at night would mask our vessel until the cloaking de-
vice became operational again.
While several earthlings from societal compounds known as
Bridgeport, Norwalk, and Darien did report seeing a UFO to
local authorities, monitoring of communications in the days
that followed has determined that the ploy was effective.
Earth scientists have attributed the sightings to the
star's twinkling.
Have complete exploratory mission and will return to base. -
end transmission.
Whether the circular object with blue, red and green lights that was seen
hovering over Norwalk on the evening of April 19 is a star or starship - will
probably never be known.
Several devotees of exploring UFOs, however, have said that the appar-
ition was probably the star Sirius - the brightest star in the sky - or an-
other star called Capella.
"Its my belief that they were seeing the two stars", said Philip Imbrogno,
astronomer and board member at the Bowman Observatory in Greenwich.
Imbrogno drew his conclusions after he interviewed Robert Cole, the
Norwalk custodian who saw the UFO, and his neighbors on Brookfield Street.
When stars are low on the horizon at this time of year, Imbrogno said they
can take on a spectacular appearance because of inversions in the atmo- sphere.
He said different layers of cold and warm air create a lens effect which
distorts the appearance of the star.
"It changes colors and flickers blue, red and green", he said. "It can
seem strange to someone seeing it for the first time, but this has been a fre-
quent culprit for UFO sightings in the past."
Jim Speiser, director of ParaNet in Arizona, a national network of com-
puter users who investigate paranormal occurrences like UFOs, agreed with Im-
brogno.
"These individuals saw a very large bright object in the southwest sky for
45 minutes and then it disappeared," he said. "Monday was cloudy and it wasn't
seen. But it was seen again on Tuesday when it was clear. I suspected it was
an astronomical body."
Speiser said he ran a computer program called "PC Planetarium" which can
chart the night sky on any day in the Western Hemisphere, and as he expected,
Sirius was right where the sightings occurred.
"I don't want to come out and accuse anyone of being myopic," he said.
"They may have seen something strange. I can't say for sure. But I suspect it
was the star."
Dr. Mel Goldstein, meteorologist at the Western Connecticut State Uni-
versity said that the atmospheric effect described by Imbrogno is common.
While Imbrogno, who has investigated 500 cases in the last 15 years, is
not ready to say that UFOs are visitors from outer space, he does believe that
in some cases people are seeing something extraordinary.
"The bottom line is that the UFO phenomena is real," he said. Dale
Goudie, head of the UFO Information Service in Seattle said his organization
has documented 300 cases in the United States since 1985.
"That's only about two percent of the total cases," he said. Imbrogno
said that even more UFOs than usual will be sighted in 1987. "I think its
going to be a big year for UFOs," he said. "(Steven) Spielberg will probably
do another movie and there will be shows on TV which will cause sightings to
increase. People will be looking to the sky more."
"While they maintain that UFOs are occurring all the time, several of the
experts said they believe the latest rise in UFO interest is because of books
like the best-seller "Communion" -- a purported true story of abduction by
aliens, and "Intruders", a scientific study of people who claim to have been
abducted.
Imbrogno and Speiser said they were pleased with those works. The less
scientific approach taken in the book and television movie made from Shirley
MacLaine's book "Out on a Limb," however, has disturbed some in- vestigators.
Whether Fairfield County will become a hotbed for UFO research is ques-
tionable. Still everyone agrees that interest in sightings can only grow.
"Its a very popular subject," Speiser said. "There will always be a
question mark: Are we alone?"
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