Newyork Newyork Text — November 1965

Category: 1965  |  Format: PDF  |  File: 1965-11-8679228-NewYork-NewYork_text.pdf
Keywords: blackout, power, substation, lines, companies, generators, affiliation, northeastern, niagara, electricity, plants, diminished, whatsoever, generating, mechanical, channels, trouble, television, researchers, joined, remember, electrical, discovered, lightning, situation
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34* Dare you compUtod this quesfionnoir^: 35* InforiDotion which you fool perfinont ond which is nor odoquofely covered in the specific points of the questionnaire or o norrativa axplanotton of your sighting. U.S. AIR FORCE TECHNICAL INFORMATION Tnis qustionnoir has bean prepared so fhot you can give the US> Air Force as much informorion as possible concerning the unidentified cerial phenomenon that you have observed, please *ry to onswer as many questions as you possibly can. The informotion that you give will be uieo tor reseoreh purposes. Your name will not be used in connection with any statements, conclusions, or publications without your permission. We request this persona! information so thot if it is deemed necessary, we may contact you for further details. Time Zone; (Circle One): \ q. Egsterm. b. Central 4. Where were you when you saw the object? (Circle One): a. Doyllghr Saving be Standard a. Certain b. Folrly certain determined? 5.2 Wos object in sight continuously? 6. Whnt was the corcitlon of the sky? a. Bright o. Bright 7. IF you sow the object during DAYLIGHT, where wos the SUN located os you lool<*d of the object? (Circle One): a. In front of you In bock of you To your ri^t Th*lt i jf ,Ti ^uperr1r'< FTT> 1^4, Jul ftl, which i% 8. IF you sow rh object of NIGHT# what did you notice concerning the STARS and MOON? b. A fee d. Dont remember 8.2 MOON fCirc/e One); Bright moonlight Dull moonlight No moonlight ~ pitch dork Don't remember 9. What were the weather conditions at the time you saw rfte object? 0. Clear sky c. Scattered clouds d. Thick or heavy clouds WEATHER (Circle One): b. Fog mist, or light rain c. Moderate br'heovy roTn e. Don't remember 10. The object appeared: (CirciB One); b. Trcnsporert d. As 3 light e. Dont .'smember 11. tf it cpoeored os a light, wo.s it brighter than the brightest stors? (C/rc/e One): 0. Briefer b. Dimmer c. About the seme d. Don't know 11.1 Compare brightness to some common object; fC/rc/e One): F'jixy or blurred Like o bright star Sharply outlined Don't remember NORTHEASTERN remembered population concentrat- populated, mechanized breakdown, elevators* underground, automobiles placed because candle-lit Our Editor, Jamas Rosaley, was safely across the Hudson River in his Fort Lee apartment when the blackout came* He had the weird experience of watching the New York television channels fade away one by one, while the Philadelphia channels started coming in clearly for the first time in history* After midnight, whan the traffic situation had cased, Roselay and visiting saucerer Cray Barker from Clarksburg, W* Va*, made an expedition into New York to look over the unprecedented situation in Times Square* Thousands of people were sleeping in the subways, the bus terminals, and every available building lobby, in a scene reminiscent of the World U'ar II bomb shelters. A visit to the kCR studios at 1440 Broadway found a f lashllght-toting group of faithful employees keeping the station on the air, using gasoline supplied by a listener in New Jersey - most of which was unaffected by the blackout* The intrepid saucer researchers reached the UCR studio on the twen- ty-fourth floor by groping their way up the steps with matches! What had haopsned to cause all this confusion? Simple I The science-fic- tion movie plants supplying the region's electricity simply went out of commission. All these cower plants are joined together in a vast power system which northeastern electricity* electrical generating Pennsylvania, Twenty-throe companies, generators out-of-phase tnemselves can operate again. mechanical mechanical yoa.K \ Vt. 'll I CO|MN.':ft.t; circuit-breaker generators. Schenectady, ported that flickering oscillographs tions occurred simultaneously, indicating Tost of New Jersey kept its power, but there were scattered exceotlons, seme rather bizarre. A lady in Hillsdale, N.J. writes SAUCCR NCUS that at 5t30 p.m. on the fateful day of November 9th, both her television sets suddenly went out, as did the telephone. The lady sent her son for a look outside, and he resorted seeing a bright white object about ten times the apparent size of a star, moving slowly through the sky. The lady and her sen kept watching the object, which turned a slight greenish color and kept heading north, until in about twenty minutes it was out of sight. At that point, her telephone service According to letters and news clippings we have raceived, other sight- Bloomfield, and alsewhere, but our efforts to get mare details aoout these events have unsuccessful. PENNSYLVANIA THS PRINCIPAL POWEP. LINES: Forty-two electric-utiilty companies in eight azalea and two Canadian provinces hav'e joined a loose federaiion'' to supply power through an intertwined -network of transmission systems, shown by the heavy lines un the mao. Z'r.B companies use more than -100 generating units to deliver the service. blackout;' photograph I'ogazine, Manhattan! Journal-^merican page headline "International Government-affiliated Organization co-operating Government affiliation whatsoever A.P.fl.O.s well-known disagreeing investigatory Governmental affiliation! instructor attempting dent, when flame-colored circumference. Thereafter diminished disappeared. discovered Mr. Ross calculated that the fireball nopeared at a point whera the New York Power Authority's two 345 kilovolt power lines coming from Niagara Falls pass over the New York Central Railroad tracks bat'ween Lake Cneida and Hancock Field. This is the location of the Clay substation (marked on map an orevious page), which has seen pinpointed by some investigators as the source of the blackout trouble. The Clay substation is entirely automated. >'r. Pratt of the Niagara Mohawk Power Company has stated that the craws who Later checked these lines failed to uncover any trouble along them. Commissioner, diminished brightness. statements caforehand, sians. Or. son Dispatch ing saucers." super-secret incredibly artificial lightning, destroying as 'well as while unusual sources, had sredicted the guestioned foundation whatsoever. Deportment impractical. highly-advanced civilization, are craft aystsrious interruptions intersection momentarily. electrical appliances afterwards apparently windshield." phenomena, definitely lightning. Thus, there seems to be little doubt that the electromagnetic effects of UFOs come in many varieties and intensities. Although there are at least two ' formal investigations now going on, regarding the November 9th blackout, it is unlikely that the whole truth will ever be discovered; or, if it is discover- ed, it will not be revealed to the public. UFG researchers, like the rest of the public, can only wait and sea what strange events these alien machines have in store for us in the future! are Adll bother to auiara of same tyoe of pouier-draining effect that our scientists velop. In any case, most res