c3515b9934043843

28977413.pdf

NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-3·pdf·17.7 MB·4 pages

OCR'd text preview (4 of 4 pages)

Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%

page 1
PROJECT 10073 RECORD CARD

|  1. DATE | 10 Mar 58 | 2. LOCATION | N.Y. Roslyn Harbor, Long Island | 12. CONCLUSIONS | ☐ Was Balloon ☐ Probably Balloon ☐ Possibly Balloon  |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
|  3. DATE-TIME GROUP | Local GMT 11/0030Z | 4. TYPE OF OBSERVATION | ☐ Ground-Visual ☐ Air-Visual ☐ Ground-Radar ☐ Air-Intercept Radar | ☐ Was Aircraft ☐ Probably Aircraft ☐ Possibly Aircraft | ☐ Was Aircraft ☐ Probably Aircraft ☐ Possibly Aircraft  |
|  5. PHOTOS | ☐ Yes ☑ No | 6. SOURCE | Civilian | ☐ Was Astronomical ☐ Probably Astronomical ☐ Possibly Astronomical | ☐ Was Astronomic
page 2
Multi 11/0030
17424 14
3-4X2

BOND 7 120102 YDAM07 TYL21 TMB111XHA 33
RE RJEDDW RJEDDW RJEFH0 RJEPH0
DR RJEPH0 21
14 7
TH COMDR DSTN AIR DIV DET
TO RJEDDW/COMDRADS DET
SINCE ASSISTANT PERSONALIST
page 3
CENTRAL FORM OF INFO SEVCS H2 USAF
INFO ROUTINE/COMDR RADF

INCLUCTIONS FROM OLD B 2. SUBJ: UFO

DESCRIPTION:
(1) HOURS SPOT
(2) SMALL SPOT
(3) WHITE
(4) BRIGHT WHITE FLASHING LIGHT
Just a very small white light.
(5) ONE
Typical of A/C light
(6) NONE
(7) NONE
(8) NONE
(9) VERY SLOW MOVING

DESCRIPTION OF COURSE:
(1) BRIGHTNESS
(2) UNK - elevation, azimuth?
(3) 15-20 DEGREES - elevation or azimuth?
(4) NW-TO-NE STRICT
(5) OVER HORIZON
(6) 5 MI

MANNER OF OBSERVATION:
(1) NONE
(2) NONE
(3) N/A

TIME AND DATE OF SINGTING:
(1) 11 MAR 58 0030-5=1930
(2) NIGHT

ROSLYN HARBOR LI NY

IDENTIFYING INFO 
page 4
(2) NONE

(1) DARK AND CLEAR

(2) SURFACE 36° DEG 9 KT 20, 32° DEG 25 KT

(3) NONE DEG 10 KT 30, 25° DEG 35 KT

(4) NONE DEG 15 KT 30? 20° DEG 35 KT

(5) NONE

(6) NONE

(7) NONE

(8) NONE

(9) ONE A/C LOWER HEADING SOUTH SIGHTED BY OBSERVER

(10) MAJOR COC 26TH AIR DIV

OBSERVER OBSERVER IS FAMILIAR WITH A/C LANDING LIB -ND

ANALYZATION LIGHTS. HE STATED THAT SIGHTING WAS NOT ANY OF THEM

(1) NONE

(2) 14 42 MAR RJEPNY

The observer couldn't give the direction and elevation of the object when first sighted. However, there is no doubt the observer saw an A/C navigation light set high altitude.

Full text and original imagery available on Internet Archive →