Re: WIRED on "The AntiGravity Underground"
Posted: Sun Aug 03, 2008 3:54 pm
Thank you, MarkC. That was the same thought i had, but the interrelationhships of the wartime intelligence agencies were getting complicated by then. Stephenson's BSC came into effect (formally and openly) in 1941, and the O.S.S. was established in June of 1942. Conveniently for them, both worked out of Georgetown offices then.Mark Culpepper wrote:Rose,
I don't know if this applies but any time I see something like this
" Neither the two officers, the devices, nor the plans were ever seen again"
Where it says " two officers" I start getting the wierdest feeling that we are seeing the Caroline Group in action somehow.
Remember too that Adamski used that same phrase " Two officers" brought him information about his " scout ship".
Just .... wierd. Good work as always Rose. MarkC
From reading about Stewart Menzies I know that it wasn't until late in the war that his intelligence service felt the need for an inhouse physicist/scientist to help interpret the rocket-related data they were getting. Was this scientist the originating impetus for Dr. Brown's clandestine jump behind the lines? I presume that mission was, overtly at at least, sponsored by the O.S.S.
Anyway, I have wondered what the exact time frame of that mission was? Do you remember?
rose
rose