ID | #1538399654 |
Added | Mon, 01/10/2018 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Research
|
Initial data
13-year-old bill Tomini of 410 West fourteenth Street doesn't understand why almost everybody in Norfolk didn't see a flying disc that "was much more than a car."
When he came with a photograph in a newspaper, he told the reporter "I thought your photographers fast".
Bill said that at about noon on Tuesday when he stoeln the porch, he saw a large object, "rocking and spinning like a football (American football)" and moving from the South-West.
He had just returned from classes in Summer school in Moree. Because of the talk about "flying saucers", he went out with the camera to see if he sees anything.
I don't understand why they call them "flying saucers", he said. I took the picture. He didn't look like a bowl.
The boy adhered to his football comparison, explaining that the object was more oval than the disk. He was a little hesitant, moving in the North-East at a speed of about 600 mph.
He suggested that the altitude of this object about 5,000 feet (just below the clouds). The object was "gray, almost black" and looked like "burned", or maybe like a stone. While its edges shone. He was not accompanied by traces or sound.
Bill said that he was not very surprised to see him, and making shots with your camera mounted on 1/100 of a second.
He called his 18-year-old sister, Josephine, to come and see, but apparently she didn't believe him.
Bill said he made three shots, but only one negative came out well enough to play.
He showed the reporter a picture that he printed himself. To publish in the newspaper the image was enlarged and processed by the firm Photo Craftsmen.
The experts of this company are convinced that the boy did good with the old camera he used. After thoroughly examining the negative, they said the only downside is the frame has not revealed enough details. They noted that the photograph of bill was certainly the best since about the mysterious drives the first reports came in.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
Original news
By George Hebert
Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch
July 9th, 1947
The flying disc “was lots bigger then an automobile” and 13-year-old Bill Turrentine of 410 West fourteenth Street doesn’t understand why almost everybody in Norfolk didn’t see.
In fact, when he came to the ledger-dispatch with a photograph he had taken of the object, he wanted to know why the newspaper hadn’t already taken a picture of it. “I thought your photographers were fast,” he told a reporter.
However, Bill said he had done some fast moving himself shortly between noon Tuesday, when he stood on his front porch and saw the large object, “rocking and spinning like a football” and coming from the southwest.
He had just returned from Summer School classes at Maury, he said, and with all the talk about “flying saucers,” had gone out with his camera to see if he could see anything.
I don’t see why they call them “flying saucers,” he said. “The big one I took a picture of and the two little ones that became behind it a few seconds later didn’t look anything like saucers.”
Looked Like Football
The boy stuck to his football comparison, explaining that the object was sort of rounded, more oval then disc-like, and though it wobbled in it’s northeastward flight it was traveling rapidly, about 600 miles an hour.
He guessed that the altitude of the thing was about 5000 feet, just below the clouds. In color it was “gray, almost black,” and looked like a “burned crisp,” or maybe as rock or stone. The edges glittered, he said, and seemed to be trailing dust. Neither it nor the two which followed made any sound.
Bill said he wasn’t very surprised when he saw the community, but “almost killed myself” getting shots of it with his camera, set at 1/100th of a second.
He called his 18-year-old sister, Josephine, to come and look, but apparently she didn’t believe him.
As the “flying football” passed over, Bill said he took three shots of it, but when he hurriedly developed the film, after legging it to Olney Road for a vial of developer, only one negative came out well enough for reproduction.
He showed a reporter a contact print he had made himself, and the picture reproduced here is an enlargement made by Photo Craftsmen.
Photo experts of this firm are convinced that the boy did a fine job with the old camera he was using. Having closely examined the negative, they said the only flaw was in the kind of film, which perhaps didn’t bring out enough detail. They pointed out, that this wasn’t really a flaw, in view of the fact that Bill’s photograph, with the comparison afforded by the front porch rail and the trees, was certainly the best one taken since the mysterious discs were first reported.
Hypotheses
Investigation
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