karl 12
Noble
Thanks for the info.
I've already dug up 3 external light bending cases: Norwood, Burkes Flats, and Taize. But it would always be nice to find even more of them
No luck as yet mate but did see there were quite a few examples of 'solid light' where the beam appears to have been 'sawn off' or abruptly end.
The Big Study: SLOW LIGHT & UFOs
As for malfunctioning timepieces more below on the 1957 Santa Fe case where J. Martinez and A. Galegoz drove down the highway and witnessed a strange 'egg shaped object with red, green and yellow lights' approach them at a very low altitude.
Apparently the unknown object emitted a loud humming noise and came directly over their car illuminating the entire area with 'a great glow' - their car engine died and both their wristwatches stop working.
See 45:40
In the first week of November 1957, a series of dramatic and unusual UFO events occurred which caused great concern at the highest levels of government and changed the way many people viewed the UFO phenomenon. Sputnik 1 had been launched one month earlier, and the launch of Sputnik 2 was imminent. Then, in the first week of November 1957, a dramatic wave of UFO encounters struck the states of Texas and New Mexico.
The apparent primary target was a small town called Levelland. What happened in Levelland, Texas was unprecedented and had never occurred before, and has yet to be repeated. Dozens of people in Levelland and the surrounding areas reported UFOs disabling their vehicles, causing the electrical system to fail and the car engines to cease functioning.
In case after case, UFOs buzzed cars at low level, and often landed on the road, blocking their way forward. UFO car-stalling cases were well-known among UFO researchers, but this brazen and audacious level of activity had never been reported before. While the small town of Levelland, Texas and the surrounding area first appeared to be the target, the truth was much different. In fact, similar and often identical encounters occurred across the United States and the world, involving not only car-stalling cases, but many bizarre electromagnetic effects on a wide variety of machines.
Cheers.