8b401984dbd1c1d0
28938778.pdf
NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-1·pdf·11.8 MB·3 pages
Scores
0.5
Document value
0.0
Cross-references
2.0
Provenance
0.0
Info density
0.0
Topic relevance
0.0
Anomalousness
OCR'd text preview (3 of 3 pages)
Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%
page 1
PROOF OF 19073 RECORD DA 776 ATIC NO. --- AF NO. --- REPORT NO. --- DATE OF REPORT --- TIME OF SIGHTING --- SHAPE --- SIZE --- COURSE --- NO. IN GROUP --- SOUND --- PHOTOS --- SKETCHES --- DATE OF 9 Dec 1950 LOCATION London, England SOURCE Newspaper Rpt DATE IN TO ATIC --- COLOR --- SPEED --- ALTITUDE --- Extrinsified Measure -- Retinal -- LENGTH OF TIME OBSERVED --- TYPE OF OBSERVATION --- MANEUVERS --- REMARKS: Unexplained chunks of ice dropping over Britian. Temporary ATIC Form 329 (2 Jan 52) CONTINUED
page 2
UNCLASSIFIED 30 November 1950 CONFIDENTIAL 34 J. J. Rodgers MCIAXA-1a TCB Recent news broadcasts state that small transparent objects resembling bricks have dropped from the sky in Great Britain. It was stated that several of these objects were found but an investigation revealed that the objects had nothing to do with experiments being conducted by any branches of the military services. In conclusion, one commentator stated that "it looks like more flying saucers." It is suggested that the British be contacted for further details on this incident. Nov 7 1950 5012.16 DOWNGRADED AT 3 YEAR …
page 3
DAILY NEWS SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1950 # Heavenly Ice “Bombs” Hot Subject In Britain BY ROBERT MUSEL LONDON, Dec. 9.—(UP)—The case of the heavenly ice cubes was reopened today, just when the British air ministry was congratulating itself on averting another flying-saucer scare. For the last few months, chunks of ice have fallen from the skies on various areas of Britain. One sliver hit and killed a sheep. The ice bombing coincided with serials in two Sunday newspapers hinting that visitors from another world were watching the earth from flying saucers. Hundreds of readers of the pseudo-scie…
Full text and original imagery available on Internet Archive →