-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/ACCandRoswell.html
<A HREF="http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/ACCandRoswell.html">ACC & Roswell</A>
-----
Reverse-Engineering

Roswell UFO Technology


Computer company chief Jack Shulman argues that the transistor could
never have been invented so suddenly at AT&T in late 1947 without the
input of alien technology.




------------------------------------------------------------------------



Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 6, Number 4 (June-July 1999).
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
>From our web page at: http://www.peg.apc.org/~nexus/


Edited from a lecture given by
Jack Shulman
President
American Computer Company
at the Global Sciences Congress
Florida, USA, 11&endash17 March 1999
(Audiotape transcribed by Ruth Parnell)




------------------------------------------------------------------------



Hi, I'm Jack Shulman. I'm the head of the American Computer Company.
American Computer Company is part of the Technology International Group
and Bell North America group of companies. I'm also one of the owners of
the group of companies. I've been in the computer industry for about 28
or 29 years. I've worked for IBM as a professional services management
consultant. I worked on the development of the personal computer in 1978
for FIT [Fashion Institute of Technology] and Simplicity Patterns, later
adopted by IBM. I developed something called the "pattern creator".
That's where we got the term "PC". Prior to that, I'd developed what you
might call the first windowing operating system in 1975 for Citibank,
and before that there were earlier versions I did for a company called
Vydec. I'm a serious computer person - very, very serious - and also
someone who's not generally inclined to leap to great predispositions
about any unusual subject.

Well, as it turns out, a few years ago I got my dose of reality. It was
in the form of a visit from a friend of mine. When I was very young I'd
got involved in technology, partly by virtue of the influence of a
friend's father. I grew up in central New Jersey, which is around where
AT&T and Bell Labs originated, and my friend's father was the head of
Bell Labs. I ended up at a private school and ended up living at the
household of the head of Bell Labs, going to that private school and
going to college with his son as a roommate, and I kind of grew up
around the various projects at Bell Laboratories in the late 1960s and
early 1970s.

I'd always held out that AT&T was this rather magnificent institution.
Anybody here worked for AT&T in the past? So, you know when I say Bell
Labs research, I'm speaking Holy Grail; and in certain parts of the
defence community and in government I'm also speaking Holy Grail. Anyone
here realise that AT&T and Bell Laboratories ran our nuclear arsenal for
45 years? Anybody who knows that, raise your hand. Not a one of you. I
didn't really even know until a little bit later in my career, but I
knew something strange was going on because it always seemed to me that
AT&T always had what it needed to make innovations in technology, and
subsequently such technology would migrate to an IBM or a Sarnoff
Research or to an RCA.

And I could never really figure out, in the course of my young life, who
were these magnificent, incredible scientists, other than that I
frequently met them...like a fellow by the name of William Shockley. He
was quite a frequent friend to Jack Morton's household, and I knew him,
and I knew some of the other folks that he knew, like a fellow by the
name of - well, I guess not too many people would know him - Bob Noyce,
and Jack Kilby who was an acquaintance of theirs, and so forth. These
names, if you've ever worked for AT&T or in the electronics industry,
are also Holy Grail names. These are Mount Rushmores of the technology
industry. Jack Kilby is credited with the invention of the integrated
circuit.

I was rather shocked when, about late 1995, a dear friend came to me. He
was at one time one of the very well known generals in the Pentagon, a
member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and is now a consultant. I'd known
him a very long time through the Morton family and Bell and when working
for IBM. He asked me to analyse some documents that he had in his
possession. He showed me some pictures. I kind of turned up my nose. I
said, "I don't believe this." He suggested they were pictures of an
alien craft. I said to him, "Well, why do you come to me and ask me
this?" "Because there are some documents that fell into my possession
that I would also like you to see, that go beyond these drawings, these
pictures, these photographs, that describe some technology; and I would
like you to analyse this technology and make a determination for me of
the veracity of these documents, help me to authenticate them." I said,
"Fine. I don't believe this is real. I'm sceptical. I don't believe in
aliens, I don't believe in UFOs, I don't believe in any of that." And he
said, "Okay, well, I'd still want you to take a look at them, Jack." And
I agreed.

I met with him at his home. I met a woman by the name of Mrs Jeffrey
Proscauer. That's not her real name, but it's the name she goes by; she
does not want her true identity revealed. And I got a chance to piece
and look through some 28 boxes of materials that had come from Western
Electric Laboratories in the late 1940s, 1947, early 1948 and beyond,
and some subsequent documents.

Now again, if you've ever worked for AT&T, you know that the
laboratories at Bell Laboratories are often quite distinct, and the
documentation from a laboratory is kept in an ongoing, growing tome
called a "Lab Shopkeeper's Notebook". It turns out that even in the
super-secret laboratories, the ones in the part of Western Electric or
Bell Laboratories that manage the nuclear arsenal, these notebooks are
kept, and they grow and they're ongoing and they become almost like a
living representation of what that laboratory did for a living.

Well, such as it is, I was rather shocked at what I had to see there in
these boxes of materials, and I convinced them to let me look at them
over the course of about three-and-a-half weeks. They were kept at the
consultant's house during that time period, and he actually kept a
security guard with them at all times because he was afraid that someone
might come and steal them. Now of course, I wasn't sure why he was
afraid, because at the time I didn't realise the full magnitude of what
I was looking at.

In any event, after about two or three weeks of looking at them, I came
back to him and we sat down over what turned out to be a Christmas Eve
dinner, and I said to him: "I've got to tell you something. I'm having a
real problem with this because what you're showing me looks like
technology that we have not yet developed, that humanity has not yet
developed, yet the documents you're showing me appear to be forty-eight,
forty-nine years old. This would put them in 1947, 1948, 1949."

I suggested to him that before I could proceed I would have to have
someone verify the age, carbon-date or come up with some other means to
verify the age of the documents, and he agreed. So, with the help of a
mutual acquaintance - a private investigator formerly with the Justice
Department - we were able to take fragments of the documents without
damaging them.

We sent them to an expert who formerly consulted for Scotland Yard; he's
a fairly well known forensic expert at...I believe it's the University
of Edinburgh in Scotland today; he was at a different university at the
time. He analysed these fragments of these documents for me, and came
back and told me that the ink, the paper, even the presentations were
valid; that this was in fact a book or series of books from the 1947,
'48, '49, 1950 time period. That took him about four and a half weeks of
analysis, and I was for four and a half weeks, as you can imagine,
holding my breath.

The things that I saw described in this Lab Shopkeeper's Notebook
consisted of things that today would be more powerful than the Intel
Pentium processor, for instance, or the Cray supercomputer. There were
communications devices that were described; there were ways to
sandwich-in very, very thin, micrometre-thin layers; special metals to
produce moving parts for things like...from the descriptions that I
read, the nearest thing I could describe...an anti-gravity propulsion
unit for a spacecraft. They included dynamic electronic and
power-control technology that even to this day we have not yet
developed. They included communications technology that was described
only as having been taken from an object of unknown or unearthly origin.
The documents were very carefully worded not to reveal what was, in
reality, in these boxes of materials.

I was sort of at a loss at that juncture, because even though we had
forensic information at the time from this particular forensic expert
that would date these boxes back to the late '40s, and even though they
said "Western Electric, Bell Laboratories", part of them said something
called "Z-Division" on them. We knew of the Z-Division: it was a segment
of the United States Army, formed in 1947 and 1948. The implications
were that this project was operating on the fringes of the nuclear bomb
development project - then known as the Manhattan Project Group.

It turns out that in 1947 - between '47 and actually late '48 - Harry
Truman decided he was going to grant a contract to AT&T to go through
the overseeing and management of our nuclear arsenal and the
commercialisation of derived product technologies from the nuclear bomb,
from the bomb project: the physics, the electronics, the control
systems, even the ballistics, the radar that was used, the ICBM
technology that was under development in the late '40s after we got a
hold of the V-series rockets from the Nazis, and so forth. The contract
was inked by Truman in early 1949, if I recall correctly, but during the
prior two-year period there was an informal relationship, during which
AT&T played a greater and greater role in the organisation of
super-secret military weapons-grade projects for the federal government
and eventually got pretty much control of what was then known as the
Z-Division.

Z-Division, believe it or not, originated in Roswell, New Mexico. I
guess the reason is, that is where the original nuclear bomb armada was
formed - the first bomber wing that carried the nuclear bomb - and it
migrated over to Kirtland Air Force Base during the time period when
Orlando Lawrence, the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories fellow, was called
in. He was called in by Teller, Oppenheimer...all those folks
responsible for the nuclear bomb...Leo Szwilard. Lawrence was called in
at the time because he could make accelerators, or "cyclotrons" as they
were known at the time. Those cyclotrons were capable of refining
uranium, refining plutonium...well, actually, back then, they weren't
working with plutonium but with uranium.

I guess you could imagine what it must have been like in the time
period. They were in the middle of a war when they were building the
nuclear bombs and they had to do everything secretly, so this Z-Division
was created with super-secrecy as its fundamental core.

Ultimately Lawrence was called in because they had to build enough of an
accelerator to refine enough uranium to make the bomb possible, and, in
spite of all the greatest minds of nuclear physics assigned to the
Z-Division in the Manhattan Project, none of them could figure out how
to refine enough uranium to make the nuclear bomb a possibility. This
was before the first bomb was exploded. So Lawrence was brought in
because he knew how to make a cyclotron; but his cyclotron, the biggest
one he'd ever created, was about the size of this white board over here,
and it could produce about a thimbleful of refined uranium - which would
have been about enough to make a nuclear bomb capable of blowing off
your left foot.

In any event, Lawrence one day is called in and he's asked: "How do we
build a cyclotron big enough?" He makes a few calculations and hands a
requisition order to Harold Ackerman - today a federal judge, and who
was the chief supply clerk for the Manhattan Project - to requisition
enough silver to build a big silver racetrack; something like 12 million
tons of silver. In fact, he took it to the United States Treasury,
handed it to the then Secretary of the Treasury - I guess it was
Morganthal - and Morganthal was asked to fill a 12-million-ton order,
which also necessitated the relocation of Z-Division to some place where
they could put all this silver and build this racetrack.

We decided one day at American Computer Company that we were going to be
brave. I talked with my board and I talked with some of the people at
the company and they agreed. "Yeah, we can try this; let's see what
happens."

We decided that we were going to take the story that had been conveyed
to me about this unusual Shopkeeper's Notebook with these unusual
technological artifacts in them, and naively and blithely put a panel on
the Internet, describing in black and white and colour what we had
found, and raise the question. However, the picture that we put up was a
picture of Testor's model of the so-called Roswell Lander. It's a
picture of what looks like a spacecraft with wings and a jet propulsion
system, with a pod in the front to hold alien occupants who were
piloting it. We superimposed the picture over an image from the Thunder
Range - of course, we picked the wrong place; the Plains of San Agustin
was the right place, actually - and we put a little bit of rhetoric on
this panel and just placed it right in the middle of our American
Computer Company website.

Now that probably was the stupidest thing we ever did. Here's this
picture of a Roswell alien lander sitting on a panel in the middle of a
computer company website, and on it it said something like: "Did AT&T
receive stolen alien technologies from the US Government in 1947 and
thereby invent the transistor, the laser, the integrated circuit,
and...on and on and on...different technologies?" Well, we figured the
reaction we would get from the public would be one of, "Oh gee, isn't
that cute? That's funny, X-Files, you know..." The reaction we got was
not one we had anticipated.

Three days after we placed the image onto our website, we received a
very strange series of military faxes to our tech support fax machine,
referring to a piece of hardware known as "Sky Station". Anybody ever
hear of anything called Sky Station? Never heard of it, have you? Well,
it's up there. It's an orbital platform of some kind. We were receiving
live messages from Sky Station for a day or two and we decided this
wasn't right; we were going to call the Pentagon and tell them about it.

So I picked up the phone and first I called Fort Monmouth; then I called
down to Langley Air Force Base. They wanted to know, "Why are you
calling Langley Air Force Base?" Well, where else would I call about a
satellite that's sending messages to our fax machine...talk about
sounding strange...that say this satellite is about to crash, it's
coming down, its communications systems are breaking down. Well, finally
we got to somebody who was of authority. It was Colonel James that we
got to, and he gets on the phone with me...I'm in my car, on my car
phone...and he says: "Mr Shulman, please secure these faxes. Do not let
anyone see them. We'll take care of it. We'll let you know what to do
with the faxes." It's like...the military goes silent.

That next day our offices were broken into. Our front door was smashed,
our glass was smashed to smithereens all over the place, and everything
was taken out of the file cabinets in our offices. My office was a wreck
when I got in there. It was awful. We came in the next day to work and
it was like: what happened, what happened?

I had these faxes in my briefcase. I'd taken them with me, home. So
apparently, by not leaving them there, I probably worsened the
situation. It might have been better if I'd left them there, to be
frank; if they'd found them and had just come and arrested us, taken us
away. They were top level, five-level clearance. We're not supposed to
even see or even know such a thing, but inadvertently, as a result, we
became aware of the fact that there's an orbital DSP [Defense Space
Platform], called Sky Station, which is nuclear-hardened and equipped to
carry nuclear weapons, because it was described in these faxes.

It is not a very pleasant place to be, to discover that now, here we are
at the end of the Cold War with an agreement that there will be no
nuclear weapons in space in orbit, and there is apparently a platform up
there that the United States secretly put up back in the '60s or '70s or
'80s, that's equipped; it's nuclear-hardened, it's one of the Star Wars
SDI series, based on Spacelab, equipped to handle and carry nuclear
weapons.

So now, not only did we have a picture of an alleged alien craft on our
website, talking about alien technologies being transferred to AT&T, but
we also were in possession of very high level, Level Five, Top Secret
security clearance military faxes describing something called Sky
Station.

That week we had visits from the Air Force Office of Special
Investigations. They came up and they interviewed us. They put me
through a day-long third degree. We didn't want it happening in the
middle of our customers coming in and seeing us or selling personal
computers and servers, so I took them to an out-of-the-way part of the
office, down the hall, down the elevator to a little office downstairs,
and I got a query about everything just short of...well, it included my
shoe size, when I was born, names of parents, names of grandparents,
when they entered the country, driver's licence number. They went
through a Q&A with me and with my staff, that just came short of asking
me the wrong question - if you know what I mean.

We were very startled, naturally. We weren't certain what in fact was
going on, but we're not ones to back down at American Computer so we
decided that instead of running for cover and taking the picture down
off of our website...because we kind of connected that the two things
might have something to do with each other...instead of backing down and
turning it all off, we would go the other direction. So we moved the
picture to a separate section of our website and created an entire
website within our website, called American Computer Company Special
Investigation. This is what happens when you grow up in New Jersey! Of
course, we couldn't have rubbed salt into a deeper wound: "Some have
claimed that alien technology was found on board a UFO crashed in
Roswell, 1947. Very dramatic. Is it true? Did the US military discover
something strange in the desert near Albuquerque, New Mexico? Did they
alter human history? Was the transistor one of those alien marvels?
Click here for the original story."

We tried to be a little cute. We put up a picture, and if you go to our
website it's still there. If you go to our main website,
http://accpc.com, at the bottom of the page is a nav bar with a pointer
in the middle of the corporate info products, catalogue, features, tech
support, Roswell 1947, help. You can go to that link and click on it and
it'll take you to this special page which, of course, has now grown
tremendously. It has something like, we estimate, about 9,000 messages
and articles now stored within it. We started off on one Internet server
and moved it to five Internet servers, and now we are on one of our
super-servers which consists of four groups of four Pentium XEONs and
three different service-provider carriers and a whole lot of
communications just to handle the load.

We get about, we estimate, three million to three and a half million
visitors a month to the site. And they're not necessarily people like
yourselves, open-minded, interested; they're kids from college, kids
from high schools, military people from countries like Iran...I'm
serious! I mean, we can track some of the addresses that show up in our
logs. I didn't even know Iran had Internet! We've got a very strange
reaction to our story.

What we did in the story was we isolated a few pointers, some of which
only I was privy to. One of them was that there was some relationship
between the government and AT&T that resulted in the transistor's
invention. I mentioned I grew up in the household of the head of Bell
Labs, so I knew that there was something strange about the transistor
because I knew Bill Shockley, and Bill Shockley was something of a
witless buffoon. There's no way he could have invented the transistor.

The symbol for the transistor is made up of three pieces: positive,
positive and negative; or negative, negative and positive...silicon
dioxide doped with arsenic and boron, in 1947. Now, in 1947, doping
things with boron was not easy. It required the sort of equipment that
even Bell Labs in 1946 did not possess. They had this type of equipment
at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories - but it would have taken thousands
and thousands and thousands of man-hours to invent the transistor.

If you look back at it historically, what AT&T was claiming was that one
day this "genius", William Shockley, was working with a rectifier; he
looked at it and he noticed it had unusual propensities, and there,
bingo, he invented the transistor! He figured it out right there! And to
verify that, the two other "geniuses" that they got to help work on the
transistor, Dr Bardeen and Dr Brattain, both said: "Oh yeah, I remember
a guy by the name of Case was [allegedly] talking about transistors in
1931, and I knew back then we were going to have them."

That is the history of the transistor at AT&T prior to 1948, other than
claiming it was invented in December of 1947 by Dr Shockley. Anybody
believe that story? Me neither. And I knew, because the administrative
head of the transistor project was Jack Morton - the man at whose house
I was staying to go to school and whose sons I was friends with - and he
often commented on the fact that it was really a shame that those three
idiots got responsibility for the transistor and he didn't. And I always
wondered, because he too didn't possess the scientific ability to
develop the transistor. He was a brilliant man who had invented the
radiobroadcast vacuum tube, the close-spaced triode, but it appears as
if he was brought in to head up the project to try to draw back the
transistor in time to radio tubes and the things that Shockley talked
about; and it was as if the whole thing was just a ploy and he might as
easily have been given responsibility and got the Nobel Prize as Bill
Shockley. Professional jealousy?

In any event, for most of my young life I believed that the transistor
had come from a government project and that they were just hiding its
origins. Which government project, I did not realise until I saw the
Shopkeeper's Notebook in the possession of my friend, the consultant.

Now, I'd heard a lot about Roswell in my life and I'd read the Project
Blue Book books and I'd read a lot of books like Berlitz's books and so
forth, but I was not someone who believed in Roswell, who believed that
a UFO had crashed at Roswell at the time, in any event. There I was,
stuck with all this information and having created this rather minor
scandal on the Internet...well, maybe not minor, with the Air Force
coming to visit us.

Next thing I know, radio talk show host Art Bell sends science reporter
Linda Moulton Howe to my office. She has to be there because she has to
see whether or not our offices were actually broken into. A beautiful
woman, very intelligent...she shows up at the office with a tape
recorder. I'm exhausted...the weeks have been going not so good lately,
and we're still picking up the pieces of glass out of the sofas in the
lobby. She sees the windows are broken in the front and we have a wooden
partition set up to try to keep the air out of the building, and she
records me answering questions about all this. I try to be as vague as I
can and answer the questions about what's going on here, and she talks
about the story. And next thing I know, she plays the tape on "
Dreamland", on Art's show. I swear to God, it was the strangest thing we
had ever seen happen!

That very next day we got well over 3,000 phone calls from people all
trying to get in to see me personally; they had to come to see me
personally, to tell me about Roswell. We received mail and e-mail by the
10,000 pieces. Our normal 2,000 visitors a day on our World Wide Web
site jumped up so high that one of our carriers refused to carry us
anymore.

At that point I realised there's more than just a casual interest on the
part of the public, so we decided we would carry the original ACC
Roswell story right through to its ultimate conclusion. We have been for
several years now.

So, we have publicised the fact that Dr Morton met his untimely death
and that Dr Morton was one of the few people who knew the true history
of the transistor at AT&T - aside from Bill Shockley who would never
have talked because that would have meant the end of his Nobel Prize,
along with Drs Bardeen and Brattain, and Dr Kilby who subsequently went
on to bigger and better things, and he's dead now.

It looked like Dr Morton was breaking camp with AT&T and was very, very
outspoken, very angry with AT&T over this whole thing. Professional
jealousy, I guess. One day in 1972, Dr Morton was found knocked
unconscious and set afire in his Volvo P18 sports coupé, devastating the
Morton household and family - my friends - and for reasons that nobody
seemed to know.

Well, we decided to see whether or not there might be any link, any
reason to link Dr Morton's possible migration to a Japanese firm, and we
tried to make an inquiry about it with the corporate security department
at AT&T. That's when we discovered that there are people working in
corporate security at AT&T who don't want to talk about Dr Morton's
untimely death. Now, you've got to understand, we're talking about
something which happened 25 years ago.

So we were investigating further, and I interviewed a member of the
Morton household who was talking about the transistor project and got
very, very teary-eyed when I talked about the transistor. I said, "Oh,
did you ever wonder where the transistor really came from?" It was as if
I had cut a jugular. The conversation ended right there. "Can't discuss
this further with you."

We looked into it a little bit further and it became clear to us that Dr
Morton was probably responsible for this Shopkeeper's Notebook working
its way outside of AT&T - probably, because he was the principal
investigator. Everybody knows what a principal investigator is. Involved
in any government project you have a principal investigator. They have
to name somebody to take the blame. When AT&T screws up, they have to
have someone to fire, and they're certainly not going to pick someone
important enough in their view; they're going to pick the one that
everybody doesn't like. He was a tough guy; very, very strong-minded;
and everybody didn't like him that much, so they made him the principal
investigator.

There were other people involved, apparently. There was a fellow by the
name of Ramey. He was a figure at the Department of the Army. He was
named in the documents. There were quite a few other people named in the
documents. We're not revealing all of the people at this particular
juncture because of Mrs Proscauer who won't allow us to give out certain
things. And in order to continue on an ongoing basis having access to
these documents and so-called Notebook, we're very cautious about the
information we give out.

In any event, we decided to depict in a series of pages on the Internet
the entirety of the story of what we'd been going through, going on the
theory that one of the ways you can protect yourself from, for instance,
being assassinated by having information in your possession that's
dangerous to others, is to publicise it as widely as you possibly can -
which is what we did. Of course, there's a certain drawback to that
approach. The drawback was that within no time the attacks, the
onslaughts, the assaults, the death threats, the credibility attacks,
the undermining of credibility, the public humiliation, pain and
suffering began.

We found ourselves besieged by what I can only describe as a
multilateral black project, which included death threats on myself and
my family, death threats on our employees, pictures of me with bullet
holes and blood dripping out, on the Internet, out of the blue...a
really, really strange thing to have happen. We had people come up and
claim they had been hired by us to verify the claims that technology
like this originated on an alien spacecraft.

And you've got to understand, we didn't say that it originated on an
alien spacecraft. We asked the question, "Did it originate...?" Would
you run around on the Internet saying this technology came from an alien
spacecraft? No. You'd ask the question. You'd say, "Let's put together
the evidence; let's find out."

We decided we would approach a higher authority, ask the question to the
higher authority and make it a matter of public record. So, who is a
higher authority, other than, say, Bill Clinton, that you might go to to
ask the question: Did the transistor and subsequent technologies fall
into the hands of AT&T from the Nazi Germans, the Japanese? Well,
neither of them had any of this stuff. Secret government project? Well,
the United States Government couldn't build any of this stuff. Half this
stuff that we saw in the Notebook...even today we don't even have some
of the minerals, some of the chemical materials, necessary to create
them.

We decided we would ask the Secretary of Defense, William Cohen. In
fact, we got William Cohen and then his administrative assistant on the
phone, and the head of the Air Force OSI instantly on the phone with us,
and sent them a kit and kaboodle of stuff to take a look at. We asked
them to come down, take a look at things that we wanted explained in
their original context. Well, we've never heard from them about it. We
haven't heard from the Air Force or OSI - we filed OSI 9001 pages,
demands, with them. We've never heard a single word back from the OSI,
the Air Force, the Pentagon. They've kept their distance, accepted the
requested requests and violated the law, because under the law, when you
give them these demands, they have 30 days to respond. Not a single
response. As if to say, "You're not influential enough to get us to
respond to these."

In any event, we got nowhere with them so we decided we might embarrass
them a little bit. Now, how do you embarrass the Air Force? I mean,
sometimes they do a pretty good job of embarrassing themselves! But how
do you embarrass the Air Force, how do you embarrass William Cohen, the
Secretary of Defense, particularly in a time period when we're in the
middle of an ersatz situation of war with Iraq, when the Cold War is
over? You publish your findings; you have to have findings.

I was invited to appear a total of 15 times on radio shows, including
Art Bell again, Sightings, the Mike Jarmus Show, ABC News, and finally I
turned down the Larry King Live show. I'd just about had enough. I was
on ABC News, though, about three weeks ago.

We built two of the devices we saw in the Lab Shopkeeper's Notebook. One
of them was a semiconductor device. This semiconductor device we called
the "Transfer Capacitor", and it has actually shocked the industry.
People called me "lunatic" and "liar" and every conceivable name in the
book for a period of 11 months as we described the transfer capacitor's
unusual capability. It can be made about the size of a molecule, it can
be controlled by microvolts of electricity, it produces no heat and it
switches at 12 terahertz.

Does anyone know what a terahertz is? Intel Pentium's transistors switch
at 500 megahertz or some small multiple thereabouts. This thing is
12,000 times faster than the fastest transistors we've ever built. We
tested it. We actually went out and got some silver alkane from a
company in Pennsylvania that makes semiconductor materials. We built
one, we tested it. We then realised that we could build it very dense.

We got some friends who operated a company called InMos, who had some
semiconductor materials, and over six months - this is two years ago -
we built an 8-gigabyte solid-state hard drive in a space about 'yay'
big...poker-chip-sized...operating at the same speed, 12 terahertz,
capable of replacing the memory of a PC. We subsequently built 2,500 of
them and sent them out in the form of test kits for people in industry
to evaluate - people who refused to believe that such a thing could
exist. We sent them to Rohm & Haas; we sent them to Intel. We got some
of them back. People didn't even want to look at them: "What is this
nonsense?" Motorola wouldn't take one, interestingly. Texas Instruments
took one.

In any event, for six months I had to put up with some of the most
obnoxious, insulting, nasty comments you could imagine, even when I was
at meetings of my own professional conferences. "The crazy alien guy
with his flying-saucer transistor" - that was typical.

Ultimately what bailed us out was that a friend of mine who used to work
for IBM, now for Lucent, managed to convince his private funding agency
to give Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories a grant to check us out at ACC.
He picked Lawrence Berkeley because they probably have the highest
integrity of all the physics laboratories in the world - the ones who
had the 10,000-foot racetrack, made out of 12 million tons of silver,
that in 1947 must have knocked Henry Morganthal right out of his leather
chair when it was requested. They tested using the same procedures, but
they had a much better laser than we did. We only had a little laser at
Princeton. They had a big laser with which they could watch the movement
of electrons, and they verified not only the function but the speed. So,
Lucent managed to double-check our work, even though it won't officially
admit it.

What the "T-cap" or Transfer Capacitor really is, is a metal-insulated
dielectric junction semiconductor based on silver alkane. It works on
the principle whereby electrons strike the bond in question, elevate its
energy level and, boom, what was an insulator becomes a conductor in a
half of a millionth of a billionth of a second! Very fast! It persists
for about two thousandths of those millionths of a billionths of a
second and turns itself off. We use two of them in a pair, one to
refresh the other, and they nearly never lose any electrons. Once we
charge them up, they stay charged for an hour. So we only need a tiny
bit of power to power them. They produce no heat. We can't measure heat
from these things because the heat, if it were there, is absorbed back
into the substance, the silver alkane, because of its unusual
propensities.

Now, everyone who has ever owned a PC knows how much heat today's
computer microprocessors generate. It's unearthly! And the faster they
get, the more heat they generate. The power they consume is being turned
into heat, like a toaster oven. That's why people call PCs "video
toasters". This thing, if it were used to replace the transistors, the
130 million or so throughout your PC, would produce no heat. Instead of
consuming 150 watts, it would probably consume one-thousandth of a watt.
And it's been sitting on the shelves for nearly 50 years!

In any event, we've got this story, and 9,000 messages and news items
about it. Really strange things and people that come on: a fellow by the
name of Wang on the private alleged web identities of two very public
figures; fraudulent publications about ACC; hackers who hack into our
website.

If you go to our website and read through it, you'll be truly amazed.
You'll be stunned, you'll be shocked. You will also walk away no longer
a sceptic, if you were. If you're someone who believed, you will now see
what I call "third party circumstantial evidence" that verifies that
something very unusual happened in New Mexico in 1947.

We recently received, courtesy of the Russian Federation, a transcript
of a statement on the subject by Leonid Alexiev. Leonid Alexiev, a
Russian General, chaired a blue-ribbon committee to look into this in
1997, when it was brought to their attention when Bill Clinton went to
Russia and some students stood up and said, "We saw this website called
American Computer, and there it was said that the Defense Department has
a UFO in the United States. Is this true, Mr Clinton?" Bill got up and
said, "I don't know. No, no, it's not true. But wait a minute. I tried
to ask the Defense Department, but they wouldn't tell me."

In any event, the Russians decided to put together this committee, and I
don't know if they spent the millions of dollars on our account; they
might have. They sent us a copy of the transcript of the report by
Alexiev, which was also carried on The Learning Channel, TLC, last week.
The Russians have decided there's an alien presence in our solar system,
based on all the evidence, on these things they've examined.

They've somehow got a hold of pictures of our transcapacitor from our
lab. I don't know how, because we've never taken any. Leave it to the
Russians! The KGB doesn't exist anymore; it's called the MSB now, right?
And Alexiev has gone public, as have the Russians, and as a result of
his report he has now been appointed by...what's the name of the head of
the Russian Republic, the drunken guy? Yeltsin...Boris has appointed him
head of the Russian Space Command.

As an aside, we thought we would solicit a few senators' opinions. We
solicited the offices of Senator Kennedy - another man who likes the
glass of wine occasionally. In any event, we got a very strange reaction
from the office of Senator Kennedy. They sent us a folio about a study
that was done on funding, that was publicised by the Senator's office.
In the middle of it they had yellowed out a section that talked about
the deep space probe series that NASA is sending out - the Deep Space 1.
I think they're naming them after that Star Trek show, Deep Space 9.
When they get to nine, I don't know what they'll do!

In any event, Deep Space 3 or Deep Space 4 is slated to receive a piece
of equipment called a "laser cannon". At Lincoln Labs there's a funded
project afoot to develop, on a rush basis, an offensive weapon based on
laser technology, because wherever this deep-space probe is going, they
believe they need it. Deep space is the space outside of the solar
system, or at the extreme ends of the solar system.

Apparently Senator Kennedy was one of the sponsors, but the senators and
congressmen do not hold the same opinion as the Defense Department and
the Air Force about whether there's an alien presence in or right
outside of our solar system.

So, right now, that's about where we're up to. We're starting to
commercialise the transfer capacitor and look at partners; we're going
to get it out there. We figured, why not? We've spent so much money on
the research investigation, we might as well see if we can sell these
things to people.

British Telecom has jumped in and stated they've placed a
letter-of-intent order with us. They're using it in a product they call
the "Soul Catcher" chip [see Global News, NEXUS 3/06, Oct&endashNov
1996]. We've had some preliminary discussions with a company called
Shipley, the world's largest manufacturer of semiconductor materials.

We've had discussions with Intel, IBM. Just in the last few months, a
guy from IBM said, "You should have been dealing with us all along."
"Well, why didn't you come to us?" "Well, I'm coming to you now." "There
are a lot of people who are interested." "Well, we're IBM." "So? You had
these in your lab all along and couldn't get them to work!"

We're not sure what direction it's all going to go in, but I just wanted
to end with this. This morning, as I was going up in the elevator, I
felt like I was hanging upside down, holding the world up with my feet.
The next time you get in the elevator out there, think about that.
That's how we feel at ACC.



Editor's Notes:
¥ For more details, visit American Computer Company's website at
http://accpc.com, or refer to Twilight Zone, NEXUS 5/02, Feb&endashMarch
1998.

¥ To obtain a copy of the audiotape from which this lecture was
transcribed, contact Backcountry Productions, 831 Alpine St, Longmont,
CO 80501, USA, telephone +1 (303) 772 8358.

¥ To find out more about the Global Sciences Congress (held each year in
Colorado in August, and Florida in March), contact the organisers by
phoning +1 (303) 452 9300 or faxing +1 (303) 457 8269.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance—not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to