• UFOs IN WYTHEVILLE FILE: UFO1264

    From Ricky Sutphin@RICKSBBS/TIME to All on Sat Jul 19 03:56:41 2025
    NEWS CLIPPING SERVICE

    DATE OF ARTICLE: February 24, 1989
    SOURCE OF ARTICLE: Daily Telegraph
    LOCATION: Bluefield, Virginia
    BYLINE: Charles Boothe ========================================================
    THIS FILE WAS PROVIDED BY THE UFO NEWSCLIPPING SERVICE
    AND PREPARED BY PARANET ALPHA -- PARANET INFORMATION
    SERVICE
    ========================================================

    ANOTHER VIEW

    UFOS IN WYTHEVILLE: AUTHORS STILL SEEKING ANSWERS

    Credit: D. Gordon

    About 75 people gathered at Fincastle Motor Inn in Tazewell
    on a recent snowy Friday night. What they saw and heard left
    many with a new, or renewed, interest is strange things that are
    seen in the sky.
    Everyone was there to hear and meet Danny Gordon and Paul
    Dellinger, who recently co-authored a book on the UFO sightings
    in Wythe County.
    I read the book a few weeks ago and wrote about it in this
    column, but I wanted to hear Gordon and Dellinger tell their
    stories first-hand. It was well worth the trip, despite the bad
    weather.
    Gordon, news director of radio station WYYV in Wytheville,
    is a skeptic and initially hesitated to get involved with the
    story after two area policemen reported seeing a strange object
    in September 1987. Gordon read the story on the air, with tongue
    slightly in cheek, and he was quite surprised when his phone
    started ringing off the hook. People were calling to tell him of
    other sightings in the area.
    After many reported sightings from people, who, he was
    convinced, had no reason at all to make the stories up, Gordon
    decided to go look for himself. That was the beginning of a
    series of events that Gordon could not have imagined, or
    believed, would ever happen.
    Gordon, a newsman with 10 years experience, soon saw a UFO
    and eventually saw many more, about 40 in all.
    But the sightings came with a price.
    He was constantly bombarded with phone calls about UFOs, not
    only from people in the Wytheville area, but calls and letters
    came from many states as the story gradually broke around the
    country.
    In fact, the calls, letters and visits by people who had
    seen or wanted to see UFOs were almost more than Gordon could
    handle. It soon turned into a wide-awake nightmare that left him
    exhausted.
    His life was threatened, someone broke into his apartment
    and stole the negatives of the photos of UFOs he had taken (he
    has some color prints he still carries with him at all times),
    and he's convinced his phone was, and is, tapped.
    Gordon finally decided to enlist the help of Dellinger,
    Wytheville bureau chief for the Roanoke Times and World News, to
    record what had happened. It's a fascinating story, and anyone
    who hears them speak or reads their book, Don't Look Up!, will be
    absolutely convinced Gordon and many people in the area saw some
    very bizarre aircraft in the sky.
    Gordon is still a skeptic, he's also now somewhat of a
    cynic. Because everywhere he turned for help -- the news media,
    the U.S. Air Force, a private UFO investigation organization --
    he got nothing but flack, deception and, sometimes, ridicule.
    And that doesn't sit well with Gordon, who is obviously an
    honest man, a straight-shooter who likes to cut through the bull.
    Maybe the response from that famous king of yellow
    journalism, The National Enquirer, best sums up what has happened
    in Wytheville.
    When the sightings were at their peak during late fall 1987,
    they sent a reporter to Wytheville to cover the story. But he
    didn't write a word.
    The reason: People who witnessed the UFOs were not weirdos,
    they didn't have any wild stories to tell. They were down to
    earth folks who saw some unusual, and unexplained, flying objects
    -- not the sensational type of stuff tabloids use.
    Unfortunately, few respectable newspapers or television
    stations did much with the story either, just a few articles and
    spots about the sightings -- nothing investigative.
    But Gordon is sticking to his guns. He's not in it for the
    money or the attention. That's not his style. He just wants
    some answers.

    Charles Boothe is city editor of the Daily Telegraph

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