SUBJECT: LOCAL CITIZEN TELL'S ABOUT SEEING UFO's             FILE: UFO2846



BY GENE BELEY for Country News


A leading Morgan Hill California citizen who is a CPA and a Director of the
Chamber of Commerce is seeking to make contact with people whom have seen
UFO's or alien beings from other worlds. He's likely to even take their call
during the busy tax season if they have a legitimate story to tell.

Jose Mendoza, a partner with ex-Mayor and present Morgan Hill City Councilman
Joe Martucci of Martucci, Mendoza & Associates at 17600 Monterey in Morgan
Hill saw a UFO when he was seven years old (1963) that has made a profound
impression on him. It has also led to him being a novelist who is working on
his fourth book--all yet unpublished, but the subject matter is fascinating,
with a lot of philosophical questions revolving around alien beings. In all
four books, he's dealing with spirituality, God, man, and love, but in his
latest work, he focuses on aliens from unknown worlds coming to Earth. One has
to admit, no matter what you believe, that there aren't many accountants
around with this kind of creativity in their pen or computer keyboard.

Undoubtedly, a lot of you may be laughing at this point, but this writer is
also a true believer that this subject will become the biggest news story of
our lifetime or the next generation's and believers today are just ahead of
their time as much as Columbus was when he had a theory that the world wasn't
flat and everyone laughed. Mendoza's credibility is strengthened even more by
the fact he once worked in Oxnard at PtMagu Naval Air Station as a civilian
air traffic controller and recalls several incidents involving UFO's that
never got officially reported. "One pilot was screaming at the top of his
lungs about a UFO coming at him. "Here it comes again--We're on a collision
course!

"We're going to collide!" the pilot screamed.'

"When he landed in Los Angeles we called him and asked if he wanted to file a
UFO report, and he said no. So I know there are a lot of unrecorded stories
out there."

Mendoza spent two years as a child in Puerto Rico in the boondocks with no
electricity or running water--his father's idea of returning to nature. Jose's
father was the son of a wealthy rancher but, when the father died, he left
everything to his daughter, and Mendoza's father decided to acquire some land
cheaply and fend for himself. One night he called to Jose and his two sisters
to come outside and see the strange, bright lights.

"The lights had a Saturn ring effect and we could hear engines approaching
like airplanes, but there were no airports around. When they came close, they
would just disappear. The next day, the newspapers published photos of UFO's
making low passes over the local beaches.

"I remember intense silence. We were accustomed to a lot of night activity
like noises of the birds and I can still remember my father calling attention
to "how silent it is."

"I'm currently working on a novel about UFO's. I know there are many others
out there who have had experiences like mine. Some have a good experience,
some bad, some even get ill. I want to get in touch with people who will
relate their experiences to me as I'm trying to answer questions in my mind
like 'Why are these alien beings visiting our planet Earth?' before I continue
my book. I'm stuck on a chapter where the main character is taken aboard an
alien vessel. I've got writer's block in just trying to figure out, what is
their mission? What are they doing here? Why the cat and mouse game? Why are
some people captured and some not? Are we some kind of scientific experiment?
Are they transplanting our DNA to modify their own makeup? Until I can answer
those kind of questions, I can't go forward in this book. Another factor is
the God factor. There is order in the Universe. You have to obey the Universal
laws which say that you can't walk through glass, or defy gravity without
modifications.

This fourth book has a working title, One Hundred Pages on Love, it is about a
man who loses his wife, whom he loved very much. After she died of a bacterial
infection from drinking bad water, he goes off to Mexico to find inner peace.
He runs into a young boy who hands him a golden box with a map. This will lead
him into a cave with hieroglyphic scrolls that are the 100 Pages on Love. It
becomes even more interesting because each time he looks at them, the are
signed by a different signature, like RAMA, Thanksgiving, Christ, Buddha, and
"they just keep changing," Mendoza continues.

"The gist of it is aliens are trying to prevent the man from getting into the
cave. The story line is first how the aliens try to prevent him from reaching
the cave to see the scrolls."

One thing that fascinates Mendoza is why a lot of the public refuse to believe
the evidence from credible people on the UFO subject. "You could take two
PhD's and have them sight a UFO, and very few will believe them. I even have a
theory that there could be genetic engineering that took place a long time ago
that keeps this thinking alive. In the evolutionary process, a baby doesn't
know what a chair is until we teach him. Even religion has to be taught or
learned. We create our own illusions."

Where Rainbow Ends, his third book, is about the illusion that man doesn't
have to die "because it is an illusion we created for ourselves back in the
time of Atlantis.

"When you die, you come back in a whole new existence," Mendoza continues
telling about his third novel, dealing with reincarnation.

Noted author Ruth Montgomery claims President Dwight D. Eisenhower was playing
golf in Palm Springs when aliens requested a meeting with him and he went and
toured their spacecraft. He reportedly talked to them about sharing technology
but Eisenhower said Americans were not ready for it yet. And, since that was
the Leave it To Beaver days and the Age of Innocence, he was probably right.
But it was during that era that many significant sightings were logged for
history from Great Falls, Mont. to Roswell, New Mex. One significant factor
now is television producers have been busy interviewing earthlings who have
either been participants in government cover-ups or seen crash sites where the
government told them to keep their mouths shut. Somehow television gives more
credibility when one can see the person being interviewed. Frequently, these
people are educated or highly respected people in their community, just like
Mendoza.

Mendoza's second novel deals with a man who has been seeking God all his life
and leaves his job to do it. He encounters many people along the way and
that's the vehicle that promises to make the book interesting. His first book,
which he admits is still the roughest, since it was the practice vehicle, is
called Triumphant Voyage and is about a child abducted by a group going around
the country kidnapping children and exporting them as a commodity.

"I like to write in a crescendo form to grab the reader and not let him go,"
summarized Mendoza.

Mendoza, a 1984 accounting graduate of State University of New York in Old
Westburg, also did postgraduate work at Golden Gate University in San
Francisco. He is on the Board of Directors of the Morgan Hill Chamber of
Commerce and the National Heart Association. When he got up in front of the
Chamber and announced his desire to talk to people who'd had encounters with
UFO's. We were even given a lead on one local person who saw alien beings on
Mt. Madonna at rather close range, but were unable to contact her before we
went to press.

Is there anyone out there who is a candidate to talk to Jose Mendoza about UFO
or alien being experiences? If so, he urges them to call him at 408-776-0383
or write him at 17600 Monterey Road, Suite B, Morgan Hill 95037. If there is a
publisher out there reading this that might be interested in the books, or a
TV-movie producer, call now. There just might be a goldmine in this
accountant's books.



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