| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Five, Issue Forty-Five, File 12 of 28 | |
| **************************************************************************** | |
| "Quentin Strikes Again" | |
| In the Fall of 1992, "NBC: Dateline" aired a show on computer hackers, | |
| interviewing Erik Bloodaxe, Doc Holiday and a person named "Quentin." Half- | |
| way through the show, Quentin is shown with his back to the camera, text | |
| scrolling across his screen. Dateline seemed oblivious: on closer inspection, | |
| Quentin was displaying a file which listed various MIL and GOV sites which | |
| allegedly had "autopsies of extra-terrestrials on record", information about | |
| UFO crash sites, detailed governmental research on alien beings. | |
| By December, that Dateline episode had created quite a stir within the | |
| hacker community. Who was Quentin? What file was he displaying? Was this an | |
| elaborate hoax, a joke which failed to gain the attention of NBC? At HoHoCon | |
| '92 in Houston, Bloodaxe and Holiday explained that the file did exist and the | |
| information it contained was in fact true. Lending some credence to the | |
| story, well-placed sources indicated that the White House had requested a copy | |
| of the episode from NBC. | |
| Bloodaxe and Holiday refused to name the people involved, but explained | |
| that a relatively unknown group had formed to pursue a project they referred | |
| to variously as "Project ALF" and "Project Green Cheese", searching government | |
| computers for any evidence which might verify a UFO cover-up. Apparently they | |
| struck pay dirt. | |
| By the Summer of 1993, at least one member of Project Green Cheese had | |
| "disappeared." White House aide Vincent Foster turned up dead after an | |
| apparent suicide; among documents found in Foster's office possibly linking | |
| President Clinton to a failed Arkansas Savings & Loan, a videotape was also | |
| found: the Dateline episode on Hackers. | |
| Apparently buoyed by their success, the Green Cheese group began scanning | |
| an unpublished prefix in the 202 NPA toward the end of the Summer. They were | |
| surprised to learn that nearly every number in that prefix was answered by the | |
| same authoritative voice asking, "Who is this?" Not to be discouraged, the | |
| group continued until they happened upon a lone DEC Server. | |
| There they uncovered documentation suggesting a covert action of a | |
| different kind: a cover-up instigated by the three-letter agencies and NASA, | |
| perpetrated upon the public with the unwitting aid of the media in the early | |
| 1970s, beginning with the death of three astronauts. | |
| What follows is an excerpt of their discovery. | |
| -- The Omega White Knight | |
| cDc / RDT cDc / RDT | |
| DDDDD OOOO CCCC VV VV AA XX XX | |
| DD DD OO OO CC CC VV VV AAAA XX XX | |
| DD DD OO OO CC VV VV AA AA XXXX | |
| DD DD OO OO CC ---- VV VV AA AA XX | |
| DD DD OO OO CC ---- VV VV AAAAAA XXXX | |
| DD DD OO OO CC CC VVV AA AA XX XX | |
| DDDDD OOOO CCCC V AA AA XX XX | |
| DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY | |
| DOCUMENT REPOSITORY | |
| W A R N I N G: | |
| This computer system is operated by the United States Government and is | |
| protected under provisions of USC Title 23, Section 67. Unauthorized access | |
| is STRICTLY FORBIDDEN. | |
| ENTRANCE: | |
| USERNAME: FIELD | |
| PASSWORD: | |
| $ SET ACCOUNTING/DISABLE | |
| $ SET LOGINS/INTERACTIVE=0 | |
| $ SHOW USERS | |
| VAX/VMS INTERACTIVE USERS | |
| 23-JUL-1993 09:37:15.54 | |
| Total number of interactive users= 6 | |
| Username Process Name PID Terminal | |
| BRUNO BRUNO 0000026B TTD3: | |
| FIELD* FIELD 00000FF2 TTC2: | |
| JOHNSON _TTD5: 0000026D TTD5: | |
| LINCOLN LINCOLN 0000026A TTD2: | |
| SMITH SMITH 000001D8 TTD4: | |
| $ SET PROCESS/PRIVS=ALL | |
| $ STOP/ID=26B | |
| $ STOP/ID=26D | |
| $ STOP/ID=26A | |
| $ STOP/ID=1D8 | |
| $ SET DEF SYS$SYSROOT:[SYSEXE] | |
| $ RUN AUTHORIZE | |
| UAF> ADD BOVINE /PASSWORD=CULTEE /UIC=[099,900] /CPUTIME=0- | |
| /DEVICE=SYS$SYSROOT /DIRECTORY=[SYSEXE] /PRIVS=ALL /NOACCOUNTING | |
| UAF> EXIT | |
| $ DIR *.* | |
| [DEATH_STAR] [ECDYSIAST] [IPSUM] [KIMOTA] | |
| [LOREM] [MAGIC] [PPYRUS] [TOC] | |
| ^Y | |
| $ SET DEFAULT <PPYRUS> | |
| $ TYPE *.MAI;1 | |
| DL 433-54-3937 | |
| 10/28/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| TO: Thomas J. Kelley, Director, PPYRUS Section | |
| FROM: Bill Brown, PP Deputy Chief | |
| SUBJ: Preliminary Briefing #1 | |
| Special Projects, PPYRUS | |
| Pursuant to reg. 3-2638-A, it is my responsibility as Deputy Chief, this | |
| section, to inform and apprise the incoming Director of all special projects | |
| planned or currently underway, as well as incidental or related projects. | |
| PPYRUS projects, this Administration, include: | |
| Project Inception | |
| ------- --------- | |
| MAGIC 5/69 | |
| SKY-HOOK 7/69 | |
| ARAGON 11/69 | |
| ANTIGONE 1/70 | |
| KILO 9/70 | |
| ORACLE 4/71 | |
| DPULTRA 8/71 | |
| PPYRUS related projects, this Administration, include: | |
| Project Inception | |
| ------- --------- | |
| UMENSCH 2/63 | |
| CAPRICORN 7/68 | |
| Of these projects, DPULTRA (and two related projects, UMENSCH and | |
| CAPRICORN) require your immediate attention and approval. | |
| (1) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3937 | |
| 10/28/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT CAPRICORN | |
| ---------- ------- --------- | |
| By 1965, NASA's public relations machine was in high gear, advertising | |
| amazing (and non-existant) advances in American space technology and setting | |
| an ambitious schedule for the Space Agency's top priority: a manned space | |
| flight to the moon by the end of the decade. | |
| Despite the few successes NASA and the Air Force had had with rocketry, | |
| in a memo to the President, dated 11/13/67, NASA reluctantly expressed some | |
| doubt that a moon mission could be accomplished even by 1973. The President | |
| made it clear that the moon mission was, by now, more of a political mission | |
| than one of science, and its success was of the utmost national priority. | |
| World sentiment at the time favored the Russians, their flawless successes a | |
| seeming vindication of the power and motivation of the Communist system. | |
| Further, the President felt that a success could deflect attention from the | |
| Vietnam war and re-invigorate public sentiment in the United States toward the | |
| nation, the Administration, and the ingenuity of American technology. | |
| As a contingency for failure, CAPRICORN was instigated, its final | |
| approval to be decided by the middle of the following year in a meeting | |
| between the President, DIRNASA, DIRCIA, DIRNSA and attendant adjutants. The | |
| President summed CAPRICORN up in these words, "If we can't be heroes, we can | |
| damn well act like heroes!" | |
| CAPRICORN's mission was a relatively simple one: covert deception of the | |
| public and media, under the guidance of PSYOPS and PPYRUS; a manned moon | |
| mission would be simulated and pre-recorded in a controlled environment, later | |
| to be broadcast "live." | |
| By June of 1968, CAPRICORN was recommended and Presidential approval | |
| given. | |
| (2) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3937 | |
| 10/28/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT CAPRICORN (cont'd) | |
| ---------- ------- --------- | |
| CAPRICORN was an unqualified success resulting in, among other things, | |
| later congressional approval for a large appropriation of funds to further | |
| NASA's successful research. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT UMENSCH | |
| ---------- ------- ------- | |
| In February of 1963, DARPA gained oversight of an ancillary NASA research | |
| project that began with the discovery of efficient micro-machines and light, | |
| extraordinarily strong alloys. These new discoveries implied the possibility | |
| for advance along a relatively new field of science: cybernetics. DARPA | |
| reacted enthusiastically by forming project UMENSCH. | |
| Most information on UMENSCH, DARPA is unwilling to share. But this much | |
| is clear: under the direction of DARPA, NASA got the opportunity to test this | |
| technology on a human subject with the crash of an experimental flying-wing in | |
| 1966. | |
| As his CLASSIFIED service record indicates for the years 1960 - 1965, | |
| Lieutenant Colonel Virgil Grissom (see Air Force files for Grissom, Virgil I., | |
| USAF 563-87-2981; CI DL 118-26-9069) had an exemplary record as an Air Force | |
| test pilot, including a stint as a U2 pilot during 1956-1959, performing | |
| reconaissance missions over Cuba and Southeastern China. In fact, it was | |
| Grissom's missions which confirmed the mass starvation of over 10 million | |
| Manchurian Chinese in 1959. | |
| Grissom barely survived an XF-17 crash at Edwards Air Force Base, | |
| September 17, 1966. His right arm was badly crushed during an emergency | |
| ejection shortly after take-off. | |
| DARPA offered Grissom a chance to regain the limb through risky, untried | |
| technology: a cybernetically-enhanced prosthetic implant. DARPA termed the | |
| marriage of cybernetic implants with biology, BIONICs. | |
| The surgery was successful well beyond UMENSCH's projections; not only | |
| did Grissom's BIONIC arm function as well as his original arm, but in | |
| conjunction with a BIONICly enhanced upper skeleture, Virgil's right arm was | |
| capable of lifting several hundred pounds and inflicting marked fatigue in | |
| steel objects. | |
| DARPA's investment of technology and secrets in Virgil Grissom in effect | |
| made Grissom UMENSCH property and necessarily privy to several sensitive | |
| projects. | |
| (3) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3937 | |
| 10/28/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT UMENSCH (cont'd) | |
| ---------- ------- ------- | |
| Colonel Grissom was an obvious astronaut candidate and by the following | |
| year was training for GEMINI. In fact, because of Grissom's access to a | |
| project as sensitive as UMENSCH, Grissom was later tapped to aid in the | |
| staging of CAPRICORN. | |
| THE APOLLO LAUNCHPAD FIRE; GRISSOM, YOUNG, & WHITE | |
| --- ------ --------- ---- ------- ----- - ----- | |
| You're already well aware of the fire this July on the Apollo launchpad, | |
| which reportedly killed astronauts Grissom, Young and White. | |
| What you are not aware of, however, is that Grissom managed, with the aid | |
| of BIONICs, to escape the space capsule just before Young and White were | |
| asphixiated. It is not clear why Grissom apparently made no attempt to rescue | |
| his crew-mates or why he used the ensuing confusion to leave Canaveral. | |
| For whatever reason, Grissom is now a loose-cannon. Despite a massive, | |
| but low-key manhunt, the officially-dead ex-astronaut's whereabouts are | |
| currently unknown, though we have reason to believe he may have made his way | |
| to California or Texas. | |
| We suspect dissolution with the American space program -- CAPRICORN, in | |
| particular -- may lead Grissom to go public and compromise UMENSCH and | |
| CAPRICORN. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT DPULTRA | |
| ---------- ------- ------- | |
| "The most convincing lie is the one that's half true..." | |
| -- Samuel Butler | |
| DPULTRA is a damage-control project of utmost priority. Its goal is to | |
| desensitize the American public to the potential existence of a BIONIC-enabled | |
| man and secondarily, any allegations concerning CAPRICORN, the ludicrous | |
| portrayal of the first discrediting the second. | |
| PSYOPS' proposed project involves the production of a network television | |
| show, produced in part with Company funds, Pro-US propagandizing, which will | |
| lionize the American Intelligence Community and plant the seed in the public's | |
| mind that projects like CAPRICORN and UMENSCH are impossible -- due to the | |
| inherent silliness of the show's plotlines, week after week. | |
| (4) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3937 | |
| 10/28/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| BACKGROUND, PROJECT DPULTRA (cont'd) | |
| ---------- ------- ------- | |
| DPULTRA's success is directly related to the Nielsen ratings it can | |
| garnish and to ensure its success, PSYOPS personnel will be involved in | |
| writing the scripts. | |
| PSYOPS suggests peppering the show's plots with psychological archetypes | |
| -- symbols from Jung's collective unconscious -- and possibly even subliminals | |
| (if need be). The story line will, nevertheless, be played straight but also | |
| utterly implausibly. | |
| I would like to discuss DPULTRA further with you in person at our next | |
| Monday-morning meeting. | |
| (5) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3958 | |
| 11/07/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| TO: Thomas J. Kelley, Director, PPYRUS Section | |
| FROM: Bill Brown, PP Deputy Chief | |
| SUBJ: DPULTRA | |
| PROJECT DPULTRA OUTLINE | |
| ------- ------- ------- | |
| Following our meeting Monday, this is an update on DPULTRA. | |
| In keeping with our RMD objectives, we've begun working on ideas this | |
| week. Much progress, although finished scripts are probably a month or two | |
| away, depending on the final series terms from American Broadcasting. | |
| Weve settled on character names and sketches: | |
| DRAMATIS PERSONAE | |
| Dr. Rudy Wells, An otherwise unremarkable man, the genius behind BIONICs | |
| Oscar Goldman, Director of a secret governmental intelligence agency, OSI | |
| Steve Austin, Astronaut/Test Pilot/OSI Agent; renowned as the | |
| first Man on the Moon. Similarity to the name | |
| Sam Houston results from the necessity to attract | |
| Texas viewers particularly (as well as Californians). | |
| Following is a list of show ideas for the first season, along with input | |
| from the PSYOPS officers. PSYOPS wants us to plant collective archetypes and | |
| possibly subliminals in order to carve the show's subtext into the mind as | |
| deep as possible, and to generate the largest market share possible. | |
| These psychological implants will be joined with or disguised under | |
| ephemeral pop culture references, such as UFOs, Aztecs, Bigfoot, Cold Warrior, | |
| Earthquakes, the mystique of the American Indian, and the paranormal. | |
| (1) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3958 | |
| 11/07/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| PROJECT DPULTRA OUTLINE (cont'd) | |
| ------- ------- ------- | |
| SUPPORTING CHARACTERS | |
| Venus Probe, Earth-launched probe mistakenly returns, wreaking havoc | |
| Sasquatch, Otherwise known as "Big Foot"; a UFOnaut with BIONICs | |
| Farrah Fawcett, Reporter/Journalist foil for Steve Austin | |
| Aztec Warrior, _Chariots of the Gods_ to its ultimate conclusion | |
| Bionic Boy, Temporarily BIONIC-enabled | |
| Gary Savin, Heretofore unknown, rogue $7 million man | |
| William Shatner, ...and dolphins. "Something Wonderful..." happens to | |
| astronaut Bill on one of his space-walks | |
| Fembots, Female grotesques; "All this, and BIONICs, too!" Evil | |
| androids created by an unnamed, nefarious agency | |
| Abridged list of possible episodes include: | |
| Sasquatch | |
| --------- | |
| During an OSI science investigation of the San Andreas fault in the wilderness | |
| of Northern California, Steve encounters Big Foot. Steve later learns that | |
| Big Foot is the product of extra-terrestrial genetics and cybernetics, but his | |
| purpose on Earth is never clarified. In a later episode, Steve re-visits the | |
| heavily forrested area and initiates a friendship with Sasquatch, eventually | |
| saving his life. | |
| Venus Probe | |
| ----------- | |
| An interplanetary probe (like the planned Viking probes) destined for Venus | |
| slingshots through the alien atmosphere and returns to Earth. Its computer | |
| program doesn't realize that anything's wrong, so it begins its collection | |
| routines. Unfortunately, it has returned to our planet with an extremely | |
| tough armor plating (resulting from a chemical reaction with Venus's | |
| atmosphere) and it's zigzagging its way through Southern California. It | |
| possesses wicked collection equipment which in this environment are effective | |
| weapons. Anyone who gets near it is in great danger. Eventually, Steve and | |
| the national guard defeat the device by luring it into an open pit filled with | |
| very caustic acid. | |
| (2) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3958 | |
| 11/07/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| PROJECT DPULTRA OUTLINE (cont'd) | |
| ------- ------- ------- | |
| Amnesia | |
| ------- | |
| As the result of a head injury, Steve is stricken with amnesia. Consequently, | |
| forgets that he possesses bionic powers. He ends up living out an alternate | |
| possible life -- moves in with a woman and gets a job as a construction | |
| worker. Everything is fine until Steve happens upon a woman and her child, | |
| pinned inside a wrecked car. He tears away the metal and extricates the | |
| people, who are grateful but become frightened when they see wires sticking | |
| out of a tear in his flannel shirt. Eventually, OSI catches up to him before | |
| anything too out of hand occurs, and Steve regains his memory by episode's | |
| end. | |
| If this show is a success in its first season, PSYOPS would like to | |
| consider a spin-off involving a second BIONIC character. The spin-off would | |
| include: | |
| ADDITIONAL CHARACTERS | |
| Jamie Sommers, Substitute Teacher/ex-Tennis Pro; an unlikely OSI agent; | |
| A love-interest for Steve, Jamie obtains her BIONICs | |
| after a parachuting accident | |
| Max the Dog, Formerly a laboratory subject, horribly burnt in a fire; | |
| Now BIONIC-enabled. Psychologically traumatized, Max | |
| goes berserk at the first sign of flame | |
| Jamie Sommers | |
| ------------- | |
| Jamie, a Junior Highschool substitute teacher and ex-Tennis pro, and Steve are | |
| engaged to be married. At this point, Jamie knows nothing of Steve's | |
| involvement with OSI or his BIONIC abilities. On a vacation parachuting trip, | |
| Jamie is injured, paralyzed. Steve pleads with Dr. Wells to restore her limbs | |
| through BIONICs. Wells accedes. Except that Jamie has amnesia and has no | |
| idea who Steve is. | |
| Jamie is instructed in her new BIONIC abilities, and begins to exercise | |
| them, when her body rejects the BIONIC implants, physically and emotionally | |
| traumatizing Jamie. OSI eventually solves the implant rejection problem, but | |
| Rudi cautions Steve that if he tells her of her past, it may induce the trauma | |
| of the BIONIC rejection. Steve lives with the pain of knowing that Jamie is | |
| his first love and that, for fear of her safety, can never tell her. | |
| (3) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3958 | |
| 11/07/71 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| PROJECT DPULTRA OUTLINE (cont'd) | |
| ------- ------- ------- | |
| Aztec Warrior | |
| ----- ------- | |
| Investigating an abandoned WW II bunker along the California coast which seems | |
| to be emitting powerful radio-frequencies, Jamie discovers that an ancient | |
| Aztec pyramid lies below the bunker's foundation and is now accessible through | |
| a hidden tunnel. In the pyramid, Jamie is confronted with an 800-year-old | |
| Aztec warrior bent on protecting the contents of the pyramid and repelling | |
| intruders. In an allusion to CHARIOTS OF THE GODS, extra-terrestrials are | |
| receiving from the pyramid's beacon the electronic version of an invitation to | |
| re-visit the planet. Jamie learns, however, that chemicals seeded into the | |
| atmosphere as part of a NASA project to end continental drought will | |
| ultimately interfere with the propulsion system of the alien craft. Fearing | |
| the accidental destruction of the aliens will bring extra-terrestrial | |
| retaliation, Jamie thwarts the Aztec guard and destroys the beacon. | |
| (4) | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| [CONTINUE] ^M | |
| DL 433-54-3958 | |
| 12/10/73 | |
| Central Intelligence Agency | |
| Internal Memorandum | |
| PPYRUS SECTION | |
| This memorandum is VIOLET and SENSITIVE; Do not circulate in paper or | |
| electronic form outside of your section. | |
| TO: Bill Brown, PP Deputy Chief | |
| FROM: Thomas J. Kelley, Director, PPYRUS Section | |
| SUBJ: DPULTRA | |
| Nearly two years into the project, I congratulate you on DPULTRA's | |
| success; the show has consistently rated high in the Nielsens, topping | |
| "Starsky & Hutch" and occasionally beating out "M*A*S*H*". | |
| However, there seem to be several problems and the show requires a nearly | |
| intolerable suspension of disbelief. To wit: | |
| 1. Running at 60 mph, why doesn't the Bionic Man's sneakers ever | |
| wear out? | |
| 2. Steve Austin never received a Bionic heart, spine, respiratory | |
| system, musculature or skeleture. How is it that his body | |
| doesn't collapse when he lifts objects that weigh tons? | |
| 3. Most of Steve's body seems to be metallic; how does he make | |
| it past airport metal detectors? | |
| 4. How can Steve's Bionics defy principles of physics, like inertia? | |
| 5. Steve's Bionic implants are nuclear-powered -- an energy source | |
| potentially capable of generating more heat than the sun. How | |
| can Steve's Bionics slow down and even fail, when exposed to cold? | |
| 6. Steve Austin's Bionics cost $6 Million -- a sum that seems | |
| laughably inexpensive. Why is the Bionic Woman's pricetag | |
| Classified? | |
| 7. How can a world-famous, instantly recognizable astronaut make | |
| a "perfect undercover agent"? | |
| 8. A bionic dog? What's next? A bionic earthworm? A bionic | |
| tarantula? | |
| 9. Jamie Sommers' cover includes continuing her vocation as a | |
| substitute teacher; how does she make time to be a secret agent? | |
| 10. Where do the Fembots come from? Are they important to the show? | |
| 11. Re: The Venus Probe episode -- why is a probe whose purpose is | |
| to collect soil samples, heavily endowed with weapons? How can | |
| that probe not realize it's not on Venus? If it's armored enough | |
| to withstand the atmosphere of Venus, how was Steve able to | |
| destroy it in a pit of acid? Why was it malevolent? | |
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| J /ƿ=߮~ _^?ξ<=~|\H | |
| + | |
| θ1rG-x^PWOV2/߹3-AF".Ht s`m}yN|h .x]i | |
| NO CARRIER | |
| ------------------------[ END OF FILE ]---------------------------- | |