06-02-2013, 10:40 PM
Jan, your examples are dramatic, enormous, obtrusive-intrusive.
Charles, your technology public-military/intelligence is very pertinent.
Reading now of the U-2 in use over Cuba and the pole, Anderson downed by two SAMs, the air-sampling straying over Soviet Union, pursued by six MiGs--yet the prototype was operative ten years earlier--and it was CIA.
Our friend reported his people reconnoitering a Washington DC church to protest LBJ in attendance, met by a suit on the stone stairs inquiring the time--who took the protestor-scout's photo with a watch camera.
Oswald's Minox (like Nagell's) too telling to leave in the DPD inventory.
Pitzer might've used something not publicly known, but the cameras which were publicy known were room-filling.
Our wiser brother the ad man reported some food stills taken with a room-sized bellows contraption for unparalleled clarity and appetite-inducing detail.
On similar track might involve any discussion of suppressors--with WerBell anywhere near I would not be bound by arguments of the limitations of the devices of the time.
The oft-repeated phrase is either need-to-know or I-could-tell-you-but-then-I'd-have-to-kill-you.
The body count is not insignificant already; we don't need to rush Pitzer onto the pyre.
The clarity is preferable to the heat.
Charles, your technology public-military/intelligence is very pertinent.
Reading now of the U-2 in use over Cuba and the pole, Anderson downed by two SAMs, the air-sampling straying over Soviet Union, pursued by six MiGs--yet the prototype was operative ten years earlier--and it was CIA.
Our friend reported his people reconnoitering a Washington DC church to protest LBJ in attendance, met by a suit on the stone stairs inquiring the time--who took the protestor-scout's photo with a watch camera.
Oswald's Minox (like Nagell's) too telling to leave in the DPD inventory.
Pitzer might've used something not publicly known, but the cameras which were publicy known were room-filling.
Our wiser brother the ad man reported some food stills taken with a room-sized bellows contraption for unparalleled clarity and appetite-inducing detail.
On similar track might involve any discussion of suppressors--with WerBell anywhere near I would not be bound by arguments of the limitations of the devices of the time.
The oft-repeated phrase is either need-to-know or I-could-tell-you-but-then-I'd-have-to-kill-you.
The body count is not insignificant already; we don't need to rush Pitzer onto the pyre.
The clarity is preferable to the heat.