Fascinating. Thanks for sharing.
Paul
On Mar 22, 2011, at 3:29 AM, Joseph McAllister wrote:

> 
> I wasn't doing a lot of shooting that year, but I did have my black 
> Spotmatic, half a dozen lenses for it, fisheye to 300mm, a Pen FT with four 
> lenses, and a Pen S that I kept in the car. As explained in the rest of this 
> message, I couldn't take a camera anywhere near work, and hardly ever went on 
> a vacation. what I do have is mostly half-frame B&W of the pool-parties at 
> our house. Color full frame was reserved for the race track and pictures of 
> our Porsches at Summit Point Raceway in W. Virginia.
> 
> In March of 1976, I was spending 5 days a week in what was called "The 
> Colony" in basement office space in Arlington Virginia while various agencies 
> did everything they could to find some dirt on me. Took them ten and a half 
> months before they could pronounce me worthy of a clearance high enough to 
> work on a "special project". Probably took that long because of the years I 
> spent in the Haight-Ashbury from 1966~1972 while attending college, following 
> four years in the Navy.
> 
> By late October I was cleared and read into the project, which turned out to 
> be working at the business end of a bank of 5 watt laser powered used to lay 
> optical data one line at a time being downlinked from a satellite about the 
> size of the Hubble in low earth orbit,  but pointing down instead of up.
> 
> The whole job, as over the next ten years I filled almost every position 
> available, consisted of keeping at least four of these laser image 
> reconstructors (LIRs) ready at all times, loading and downloading the 500 to 
> 1000 feet of film that they output every 45 to 90 minutes, depending on if 
> two birds were imaging, or just one. The film, 9" the first few years, 5" 
> later on as resolution and accuracy ramped up, was run through one of six EK 
> made stainless steel monster 100 FPM processors that were 32 feet long, 10 
> feet high, and from 2 feet at the stop, fix and wash to 12 feet deep at the 
> dry box. The leader rolls were 1000 feet as well.
> 
>> From there a set of transparent positives were made, then a set of dupe negs 
>> from them, on 100 FPM drum contact printers. After those were processed, 
>> they were cut, packaged and addressed to be sent all over the world to U.S. 
>> intelligence agencies. Our allies were sent either 70mm magnetic tapes of 
>> the original downlinked data, but dumb'd down by from 1 to 7 levels of 
>> resolution.For the highest resolution, the data was encoded and transmitted 
>> back up to a satellite or two and back down to special portable or fixed 
>> sites.
> 
> Google KH-11, Talent, Keyhole, and Itaclese. Spelling may be wrong on that 
> last one, as my laser-engraved walnut commemorative pencil holder is still 
> packed, somewhere.
> 
> We received from 3 to 5 loaded plain white unmarked semi-trucks a week from 
> various supply depots around the country who had received shipments from 
> Kodak, either trucked in or in some cases flown in for re-delivery to our 
> site. Even our paychecks were cut in Texas and flown in using varying routes. 
> All film, chemicals, and spare parts were delivered this way. All our 
> effluent had to be pristine so our work there was not detectable. It was 
> passed through many layers of filtration, dilution, and a day in our 24 foot 
> diameter "rotating biological contactor" which was inhabited by "bugs" that 
> had an appetite for what we wanted to disappear.
> 
> That was my more than full-time job for 11 years, until I pissed off my 
> supervisor's supervisor one too many times by correcting him when he uttered 
> something incorrect that would have hurt our timeline. It had to be done…     
> :-)
> 
> P.S. - Don't mention a word of this to anyone! But do read "The Falcon and 
> the Snowman" if you've time.
> 
> 
> 
> Joseph McAllister
> [email protected]
> 
> THE SENILITY PRAYER : 
> Grant me the senility to forget the people
> I never liked anyway, 
> The good fortune to run into the ones I do, and 
> The eyesight to tell the difference. 
> 
> 
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