UFO landing strip gets mayor's support

Wednesday, September 28, 2005; Posted: 11:12 a.m. EDT (15:12 GMT) 

LAJAS, Puerto Rico (AP) -- People in this sleepy hamlet are so sure they have 
been receiving other-worldly visitors, they want to build a UFO landing strip 
to welcome them.

A bright green sign along a lonely country road in southwestern Puerto Rico 
proudly displays a silhouette of a flying saucer and two words: 
"Extraterrestrial Route."

Most Puerto Ricans laughed when a horse farmer installed the sign on his 
property at the request of Reynaldo Rios, a local elementary school teacher who 
says he's been communicating with alien visitors to this U.S. territory since 
he was a child.

Rios, a 39-year-old with a goatee and a shock of dark hair, won't be ignored. 
With the blessing of a local government desperate for tourist dollars, he's 
dedicated himself to building the UFO landing strip.

"I can't say exactly when they will come, but I know it will happen," Rios 
said. "I want to keep believing in my dreams."

Lajas Mayor Marcos Irizarry's support for the idea has provoked outrage among 
islanders who complained it would be a waste of money at a time when the 
government is encouraging thousands of employees to shorten their work week to 
cope with a staggering fiscal deficit.

"What nonsense," said Luis Arocho, 47, sipping coffee with friends in a cafe in 
historic Old San Juan. "This country is in crisis, and since politicians are 
incapable of creating jobs, they create fantasies."

Irizarry quickly clarified that his municipal government would not invest in 
the project. Instead, he has promised to help Rios get the proper building 
permits.

UFO beliefs widely held
The mayor insists his goal is to attract tourists to his small town.

But he is also among Lajans who believe they have seen UFOs in the area.

"It's a very mysterious place," said Irizarry, who says he once saw red lights 
zigzagging above the hills. "A lot of people have seen things."

Francisco Negron, the farmer who put up the sign and allows UFO watchers to 
gather at his ranch, volunteered his property for the landing strip. He and 
Rios estimate the project could cost up to $100,000 and are looking for money 
from private companies.

Negron, a soft-spoken grandfather, has applied for a permit to build a road to 
Indian Hill, the chosen site for the strip. Negron and others say a UFO crashed 
on the hill in 1997. They claim they heard a boom and saw the hill go up in 
flames.

Rios, who leads a group called "UFO International" that holds nighttime vigils 
to search for signs of alien life, lets Negron worry about details like 
investment costs and permits while he envisions the design. The landing strip 
would be 80-feet (24-meters) long and have pyramids as control towers because 
aliens are attracted to the shape.

The mayor hopes that UFO enthusiasts will flock to Lajas as they have to 
Roswell, New Mexico, the site of a supposed UFO crash in the 1940s. Hundreds of 
visitors have come to check out the Extraterrestrial Route since the sign went 
up, Irizarry said.

Puerto Rico is known for its Arecibo Observatory and its 1,000-foot (304-meter) 
parabolic receiver that astronomers really do use to search for 
extraterrestrial life. The huge dish, in northern Puerto Rico, made a cameo 
appearance in the 1997 film "Contact," starring Jodi Foster as an astronomer 
who picks up a signal from extratraterrestrials.

What's blimp looking for?
But it's a little-known aerostat off the Extraterrestrial Route that inspires 
UFO lore in Lajas. The U.S. military uses the aerostat, a tethered blimp with a 
radar system, to detect low-flying drug smuggling planes.

But many Lajans don't believe that. Even Irizarry has suggested that the 
aerostat's true purpose is to detect UFOs.

A paved road leading to the blimp curves out of sight between two hills. Two 
signs warn against trespassing. Rios claims he was once briefly detained while 
trying to see the aerostat.

The school teacher says he first encountered aliens at 13. He says white lights 
burst into his bedroom, entered his body and cured him of a back injury he had 
received during a basketball game.

In Lajas, people who have grown up hearing reports of UFO sightings seem more 
open to his scheme.

"If we have the technology to reach the moon, there could be others who have 
the technology to come here," said Ronaldo Barea, 26, a sandwich shop owner.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not 
be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Original: 
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/americas/09/28/ufo.strip.ap/?section==cnn_latest


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