PLAYBILL- boring long Story Posted by dt on Tuesday, 13 May 1997, at 12:25 p.m.,
in response to Re: PLAYBILL- boring long Story, posted by Winston Smith on Tuesday, 13 May 1997, at 11:00 a.m. >

dt- Let me get this straight

> act 1 Scene 1
> You're at some Virginia intelligence school in 1967 and pull guard duty or something when you find yourself in a room with some "old file cabinets", that I must assume are not only accessible but also UNLOCKED. Well, not quite that easy; I over-simplified. The people that I associated with had access (they were USAF) and I (US Army). I had access to other files of no interest to this board. One day they showed me these old files (as I asked what was the Air Force doing here on what I thought was an Army post?). Nobody really cared about them. We were in a vault facility. The operation was run by DIA - at the time the Vietnam "conflict" was up front and on stage, not UFOs.

>inside them is information about one of the most secret and important events in all of HUMAN HISTORY that has until this day been successfully withheld from general knowledge, with nothing more than a few scraps of disinformation (a CIA coined word) leaking out to some UFOologists. Well, yes, why not? (I'll explain why later) "The information is out there" should be our motto. For example, Stan Friedman found a copy of the "U.S. Air Forces Project Blue Book Special Report 14" gathering dust in a library at the University of California, Berkeley (I wonder who was using it prior to Stan?).

>Act 1 Scene 2
>it's now about 1969 to 1972, and you are now in school where you meet your future wife who thinks you are crude or primitive or something! I have real problems with this scene dt. My wife is more intelligent than I.

>Act 1 Scene 3
>You get married and she reveals to you that her father messed up the family's Fourth of July holiday in 1947 because he had to go clean up some kind of crash site in New Mexico. He's dead now. Yes, this just didn't happen; it was after some years of being together. She never told me. It was the year that triggered her memory. Second note, my wife is older than I.

>Act 1 Scene 4
>A big old light bulb pops on in your head and you deduce that he, Sgt. Daddy, went to vacuum the Roswell site for saucer shards. Oh, and her Mom's dead too. Yes, I have no proof of where he was sent, but it was not very far from their Texas home. Yes both of her parents are deceased. I only surmised this from talking to my wife and looking at her father's available personal papers. You have to look at the times. Nobody did squat during the Fourth (this was a big holiday given its proximity to WWII ending). This is why forget balloons, special rocket projects with monkeys (they used very small Rh monkeys, not chimps at this time, but lets say they did their heads are not overly big, ears are very large, eyes are small, in-your-face-teeth, etc. They don't fit the descriptions that I read about.)

>The end of act one finds you in possession of the greatest secret in the world, and still alive, just itching to tell someone. Yes and no (explanation in story to follow). dt