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'Battle Of Los Angeles'
Photographic Comparison
By Frank Warren
© 2002 Frank Warren
frank-warren@pacbell.net
7-18-2

It has recently been suggested that the picture which appeared in the Los Angeles Times on "February 26, 1942 that captured a "disc shaped object" surrounded by "exploding artillery shells" had been "doctored" in some manner. Below is a copy of a print of the photograph produced from the original negative, followed by a photocopy of the same, taken from existing available microfilm of the archives of the newspaper.
 
You be the judge:
 
Click Either Image For Full Scale Pics
From Original LA Times Negative
 
 
 
 
 
From LA Times Microfilm
 
 
 
Dr. Bruce Maccabee's Analysis Of The Object In The Photo
 
 

Katie Saw It All
 
By Jeff Rense
7-18-2
 
Pay close attention to the convergence of the searchlights and you will clearly see the shape of the visitor within the illuminated target area. It's a BIG item and seemed completely oblivious to the hundreds of AA shells bursting on and adjacent to it which caused it no evident dismay. There were casualties, however...on the ground. At least 6 people died as a direct result of the Army's attack on the UFO which slowly and leisurely made its way down to and then over Long Beach before finally moving off and disappearing. ___
 
In February, 1942, Katie was a young, beautiful, and highly-successful interior decorator and artist who worked with many of Hollywood's most glamorous celebrities and film industry luminaries. She lived on the west side of Los Angeles, not far from Santa Monica. With the outbreak of the war with Japan and the rising fear of a Japanese air attack, or even invasion of the West Coast, thousands of residents volunteered for wartime duties on the home front. Katie volunteered to become an Air Raid Warden as did 12,000 other residents in the sprawling city of Los Angeles and surrounding communities.
 
In the early morning hours of February 25th, Katie's phone rang. It was the Air Raid supervisor in her district notifying her of an alert and asking if she had seen the object in the sky very close to her home. She immediately walked to a window and looked up. "It was huge! It was just enormous! And it was practically right over my house. I had never seen anything like it in my life!" she said. "It was just hovering there in the sky and hardly moving at all." With the city blacked out, Katie, and hundreds of thousands of others, were able to see the eerie visitor with spectacular clarity. "It was a lovely pale orange and about the most beautiful thing you've ever seen. I could see it perfectly because it was very close. It was big!"
 
The U.S. Army anti-aircraft searchlights by this time had the object completely covered. "They sent fighter planes up (the Army denied any of its fighters were in action) and I watched them in groups approach it and then turn away. There were shooting at it but it didn't seem to matter." Katie is insistent about the use of planes in the attack on the object. The planes were apparently called off after several minutes and then the ground cannon opened up. "It was like the Fourth of July but much louder. They were firing like crazy but they couldn't touch it." The attack on the object lasted over half an hour before the visitor eventually disappeared from sight. Many eyewitnesses talked of numerous "direct hits" on the big craft but no damage was seen done to it. "I'll never forget what a magnificent sight it was. Just marvelous. And what a georgeous color!", said Katie.
 
--Jeff Rense
 
 

Bruce Maccabee's analysis of the Battle of LA photograph

http://brumac.8k.com/BATTLEOFLA/BOLA1.html

 
  
 
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