Via Newspapers.com |
This Australian tale of a strange--and possibly deadly--light appeared in the "Kingston Whig-Standard," April 12, 1966:
MELBOURNE (Reuters) Police are studying a motorist's claim that a mysterious "magnetic" column of light in the sky may have led a driver to his death.As far as I can tell, this was the last word about the story. I assume the police's "studying" of the mystery amounted to them shrugging and saying "We dunno."Ronald Sullivan, 38, a steel constructor, claimed he was driving one night when his headlights suddenly swerved right, as though drawn by a magnet.
"I braked as hard as I could and glanced over to the right," he said.
"There in the middle of the field was a column of colored light about 25 feet high and shaped like an ice cream cone."
The column rose from the ground without a sound but at tremendous speed and the car's headlights returned to normal, focusing back on the road, he said.
Three days later, last Thursday, Gary Taylor, 19, died when his car swerved sharply at the same spot and crashed into a tree.
A shrug and don't know sounds about right
ReplyDeleteAnd no repeats anywhere else that we know of. Strange...
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