• FORMER TEACHER BACKS "BELIVERS" IN UFOs FILE: UFO1163

    From Ricky Sutphin@RICKSBBS/TIME to All on Saturday, May 17, 2025 03:43:16
    ARIZONA REPUBLIC, Phoenix, AZ-Sept. 4, 1990

    OBJECT LESSONS
    FORMER TEACHER BACKS 'BELIEVERS' IN UFOS
    By Arizona Republic

    The skies were moody and heavy with clouds about
    midnight on June 20, 1960, as Americo Candusso drove his red
    1957 Plymouth toward Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.
    Candusso, then a science teacher who was enchanted with
    the stars and the mystery of UFOs, looked up into the thick
    blanket of clouds and saw that night what he considers the
    "most impressive" of his dozen or so "major sightings" of
    unidentified flying objects.
    "To me, it was exciting because there were five of
    them," says Candusso, 68, retired and living in Fountain
    Hills.
    Candusso, who taught a course in "ufology" at the
    University of Akron in Ohio from 1974 to 1977, says he was
    attracted that night first by a silent "bulb of light"
    ambling at about 35 mph along the bottoms of the clouds.
    As the light dipped beneath the clouds, Candusso said he
    saw a "configuration of lights, bronze on the right and blue
    on the left."
    "Beneath that were two bands of red, white and green
    lights," he continued. "Those (bands of lights) were
    sparklers. They looked like diamonds. Scintillating."
    Using his knowledge of angles and landmarks, Candusso
    calculated that the lights overhead outlined a 200-foot-long
    oblong about 4,100 yards away.
    Over the next 35 minutes, Candusso said, he saw five of
    the unexplained objects meander out of the clouds, hover
    overhead and disappear.
    Excited, Candusso left his post for five minutes to race
    to a phone to call friends and find out whether they had seen
    the lights.
    They hadn't.
    When he returned, he said, he followed the last object
    for a few hundred yards before it faded away.
    "Between the trees, I saw a round object," he recalls.
    "It might not have anything to do with what I had seen
    before."
    Candusso, who said "I can still remember it like it was
    yesterday," is convinced that the brilliantly lighted shapes
    he saw that night were unlike any aircraft he had ever seen.
    An astronomy enthusiast, weather observer and
    cryptologist for the Army Air Forces in North Africa during
    World War II, Candusso said it is unlikely that he mistook
    the shapes of airplanes or heavenly bodies for UFOs.
    "I am used to what is out there," he said. "I know how
    to look at the sky."
    A field investigator for an international UFO group, he
    moved in May to a sunny home in Fountain Hills from Medina,
    Ohio, where he taught at an elementary school. He was
    attracted to Fountain Hills, northeast of Phoenix, by the
    desert and the promise of good golfing.
    But he said the skies over Fountain Hills, illuminated
    by surrounding city lights and commercial aircraft, are "the
    worst place in the world to see UFOs. It's all lit up like
    Christmas trees."
    Although he hasn't had a sighting for several years,
    Candusso is clearly convinced that UFOs exist.
    He is in respectable company.
    In the 1960s, Gen. Douglas MacArthur warned of the
    dangers of "interplanetary war."
    The late Dr. James E. McDonald, senior physicist at the
    University of Arizona, and astronomer Carl Sagan told a House
    panel on July 29, 1968, that they believed the existence of
    UFOs should not be discounted.
    Although McDonald said his two years of study did not
    provide "Irrefutable proof," he added that he believed "UFOs
    are probably extraterrestrial devices engaged in something
    that might be very tentatively termed surveillance."

    SOME ARE SKEPTICAL

    There also have been respectable skeptics over the
    years.
    A two-year study commissioned by the Air Force at the
    University of Colorado and published in 1969 concluded that
    there "is no evidence to justify a belief that
    extraterrestrial visitors have penetrated our skies and not
    enough evidence to warrant any further scientific
    investigation."
    More recently, UFO enthusiasts have been intrigued by
    reports of hundreds of sightings during the past few months
    in Belgium.
    In a sighting reported in July, Belgian F-16 jet
    fighting used their radar screens to track an object that,
    according to a military official, "exceeded the limits of
    conventional aviation."
    Belgian Air Force Col. Wilfried de Brouwer said at the
    time that the UFO dived from about 10,000 to 4,000 feet in
    two seconds. At the same time, it increased its speed from
    600 to 1,100 mph, according to news accounts.
    Although Candusso is sure of the existence of UFOs, he
    does not talk about them with the fervor of an evangelist
    seeking converts.
    Instead, he speaks in the careful tones of a scientist,
    pointing to tables and bookshelves in his airy study laden
    with hundreds of reports and newspaper clippings detailing
    sightings. And he has tape recordings of law-enforcement
    officials, motorists and others who believe they saw UFOs.

    INVESTIGATING 'FRAUDS'

    Candusso acknowledges that reports of sightings have
    diminished since the 1960s and that some of the accounts "are
    frauds."
    As a field investigator for the Texas-based national
    Mutual UFO Network, Candusso has probed hundreds of reported
    UFO sightings. He is convinced that at least 10 percent of
    them were actually vehicles from outer space.
    He was one of the investigators who taped an interview
    with Deputies Dale Spaur and W.L. Neff of Portage County,
    Ohio. On the tape, the pair recount with a certain sense of
    wonder a 100-mph chase of a brilliantly lighted, dome-shaped
    object at dawn on April 17, 1966.
    They raced 86 miles from Randolph to Conway, Ohio, in
    pursuit of the object, which eventually "rose straight up
    until it was lost in the sunny morning sky," according to a
    1977 story in the Sunday magazine of the Akron Beacon
    Journal.
    Attempts by The Arizona Republic to reach Spaur and Neff
    were unsuccessful.

    SIGHTINGS FROM AGE 10

    Candusso said he saw what he now believes was his first
    UFO during recess at Liberty School in Alliance, Ohio, when
    he was 10.
    "It was a white ball of light, very brilliant, like a
    star," he said. "It was moving."
    Skeptical, his teacher ordered him inside.
    One of his early encounters as an adult occurred April
    6, 1959, at 10:45 p.m., when he saw what looked like a
    fluorescent tube headed northwest near Twinsburg, Ohio.
    "It looked like a ball point pen with the bigger part
    going south," he said. "It looked like the fuselage of a B-
    19, all light, no openings."
    The object disappeared 10 or 15 minutes later, he said.
    Despite diminished reports of sightings today, Candusso
    continues his studies, talking with others in meetings held
    the third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Valley
    National Bank in Fountain Hills.
    He is buoyed by the enthusiasm of others and his own
    belief.
    "There is no doubt UFOs exist," he said.


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