Date:
May 23, 1971
Location: St. Lorenzen, Austria
On
May 23, 1971 at about 12:30 P M, one of the most convincing
photographs of a UFO was taken by one Rudi Nagora, a Munich
musician. Nagora, along with his wife, were vacationing
near St. Lorenzen, Styria, Austria.
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Source:
Michael Hesemann
On
May 23, 1971, at about 12:30 p.m., one of the most convincing
photographs of a UFO was taken by one Rudi Nagora, a Munich
musician. Nagora, along with his wife, were vacationing
near St. Lorenzen, Styria, Austria.
After
finding a suitable place to park his car, Nagora left
his wife inside the vehicle while he scouted the general
area before the two of them ventured out. Suddenly, he
heard a "whizzing" sound coming from
above. Looking up, he could clearly see a shining, silver
disc which was between him and the cloud plane. The object
was moving in a zig-zag pattern. He ran back to his car,
told his wife what he had seen, and grabbed his camera.
Pointing
his Agfa-Click camera at the object, he took a full roll
of 12 exposures, capturing several stunning images. Now
out of film, Nagora could see the object come even closer,
and then shoot straight up, disappearing through the clouds.
After
the approximately 5-minute sighting and film-taking session,
Nagora took his film back to Munich. UFO researcher Engineer
Adolf Geigenthaler heard about the photographs, and began
an investigation into the sighting. After careful examination,
Nagoras photos were deemed legitimate by several reliable
experts. The photos have never been debunked, and still
testify today that we are not alone.
(B
J Booth)
original source: Michael Hesemann
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case251.htm