SUBJECT: UFO SHOCKER OVER THE ATLANTIC FILE: UFO3320 BY MIKE JONES of the SUN A fierce dogfight between UFOs in the North Atlantic is being blamed for 100- foot waves that battered the coasts of New England and CAnada. At first, meteorologists believed the monster waves were caused by changing weather patterns. Now they've reconsidered in the light of eyewitness accounts of a spectacular air and undersea battle between alien craft. The crews of three freighters and two fishing boats say they barely escaped with their lives as they were tossed about on boiling seas as the monstrous spacecraft battled. "It was like being trapped aboard the world's greatest roller coaster," says Pedro Alvarez, a doctor on the Spanish fish-processing ship Alhambra. "We rose and dropped so fast on 100-foot-high waves that we all became violently sea sick and some of the crew suffered broken bones." FIRING BEAMS According to Dr. Alvarez, the Alhambra and its crew were returning to port from fishing waters off Greenland when two spaceships suddenly materialized from a clear blue sky, firing at each other with beams of light. "Three more spacecraft appeared and joined in the dogfight," he adds. After almost 10 minutes of mind-bending maneuvers in the sky, the UFOs suddenly swooped down into the ocean, still shooting at each other. A Greek freighter blundered into the alien battle zone when the fighting was at its peak. "One second we were on a relatively calm sea and the next we were riding waves seldom seen even in the worst hurricanes," says Captain Stefan Klashna of the freighter Sparta. He says his ship shot straight up and then dropped like a stone. "It was really frightening, like being on a malfunctioning elevator," Captain Klashna says. A Portuguese ship was badly damaged after being hit by a misfired beam from the battling UFOs. "Metal melted and flowed on the deck like thick syrup," says Agusto Fuentes, the ship's first mate. 100-FOOT WAVES The battles took place in March 1993, when 100-foot waves battered the east coast from Rhode Island to Labrador. The violent northeaste has been dubbed by weather experts as the Storm of the Century. Waves produced by even the strongest of hurricanes seldom reach 70 feet, according to meteorologists. ********************************************************************* * -------->>> THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo <<<------- * *********************************************************************