From: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG (Michael Corbin)
Subject: _Wired_ Magazine Article
Date: 4 Mar 94 22:22:01 GMT
Organization: FidoNet node 1:104/428.0 - <ParaNet(sm) , Arvada CO



 * Originally by Uucp, 1:104/422
 * Originally to Michael Corbin, 1:104/428
 * Originally dated 3 Mar 1994, 15:40

* Original: TO ... Michael Corbin of 1:104/422
* ReDirected Using ReDirect Version 1.00 (C)1989 David Nugent

>From  scicom!gaia.ucs.orst.edu!skunk-works-owner
From: joeh@towel.wpd.sgi.com (Joe Heinrich)
To:   skunk-works@gaia.ucs.orst.edu
Date: Thu, 3 Mar 1994 10:59:58 -0800
Cc:   joeh@towel.wpd.sgi.com


<Sorry for the broadcast; I'm not certain whom the individual ListKeeper is
nowadays>:

_Wired_ magazine recently had an article on Steve Douglass, Glenn
Campbell, and Groom Lake.  It's been disseminated on the Web (WWW)
with minimal redistribution restrictions, but it's also 24K ASCII,
so I hesitate to broadcast it too, unannounced.  Perhaps whomever is
keeping this list could send me their address, and I'll forward it
to them, leaving it to their discretion...?

Here's a sampling from the article:


---------cut here---


WIRED 2.02
Stealth Watchers
****************

Armed with Radio Shack scanners and PCs, Steve Douglass and a small group
of private citizens are unmasking the US Defense Department's black-budget
aircraft.

Phil Patton reports from Dreamland.


First Steve Douglass heard and saw familiar shapes - F-117s he had seen
many times since they emerged from the black-budget world; Stealth
fighters he had tracked and monitored when they were still secret. Then
came one that was slower, with a  different sound, a different shape.

Douglass's radio scanner crackled, the numbers churned on its readout. He
was at White Sands Missile Range, and the sky was filled with B-1Bs and
F-15s. He raised his video camera - and the battery warning light flashed.
He grabbed seven seconds of  video before the machine snapped off.

Douglass had gone that May weekend with his father-in-law, Elwood
Johnston, packing his Radio Shack Pro-2006 and other scanners, to cover an
exercise near Holleman Air Force Base in New Mexico. He received a tip
that something interesting would  happen.

Now, in the living room of his ranch-style home in Amarillo, Texas, the
country's top military monitor shows his tape. Beavis and Butt-head
disappear from the screen, and from a powdery mix of colors emerges a dot,
a dot growing larger, a dot  becoming a winged bat, a ray-shaped airplane
swooping overhead - then the image dissolves to gray grit. He flicks the
machine off. "Seven seconds," he says. "You live for those moments. You
listen all those hours for that kind of gold nugget."

The "bat" is a still-secret TR3A Black Manta, captured on video for the
first time by Douglass - the dean of a new culture of digital scanner
buffs who monitor military channels to find secret planes. The image is
published here (see page 83) for  the first time (the 5,000 or so
subscribers to Douglass's Intercepts newsletter got a sneak preview last
fall). The Black Manta operates in tandem with the F-117A Stealth fighter,
and although evidence suggests it was used in the Gulf War, the Air  Force
has yet to admit its existence.

With the help of a frame grabber, Douglass printed an enhanced view of the
bat plane after he returned from White Sands. Then, consulting with his
wide network of experts in the industry, the aviation press, and the
military, Douglass tweaked the  details to create a speculative image of
the airplane the government says does not exist.


...


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--
Joe Heinrich
Flatland: joeh@wpd.sgi.com   Rotary dial: 415.390.3437
Bureau of Land Management ID#:B8L    uucp:!meIIplease
SnailMail:MS/535, 2011 N. Shoreline Blvd., Mt. View, CA 94043

--  
Michael Corbin - via ParaNet node 1:104/422
UUCP: !scicom!paranet!User_Name
INTERNET: Michael.Corbin@p0.f428.n104.z1.FIDONET.ORG
======================================================================
Inquiries regarding ParaNet, or mail directed to Michael Corbin, should
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Michael Corbin
Director
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