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ALIEN INTERVIEW - THE NEW EARTH - Earth Changes and The ...

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"General Roger M. Ramey was a major player in the Roswell Incident, but information on<br />

him is hard to come by. Even though he became a fairly important Air Force general in the<br />

early 1950s, for some reason the Air Force biographical Web page on their generals doesn't<br />

list him.<br />

Ramey was born in 1903 in Sulphur Springs, Texas, but grew up in Denton, Texas, about 40<br />

miles north of Fort Worth. He graduated from North Texas State Teachers College in<br />

Denton <strong>and</strong> wanted to study medicine. But he won a rodeo competition <strong>and</strong> "preferred<br />

working on a ranch to books."<br />

He was the mess sergeant in a local National Guard unit, <strong>and</strong> the captain insisted young<br />

"Cowboy" Ramey take the competitive examination for entrance to the U.S. Military<br />

Academy, winning the West Point appointment. He entered West Point in 1924.<br />

July 26,1946: Ramey wrote Roswell intelligence chief Major Jesse Marcel a commendation<br />

for his work during Crossroads, citing his important contributions to security, his h<strong>and</strong>ling of<br />

complex intelligence matters, <strong>and</strong> the perfection of his staff briefings. A year later, Marcel<br />

was to h<strong>and</strong>le the initial investigation into the strange crash debris found by rancher Mac<br />

Brazel near Roswell <strong>and</strong> fly the debris to Fort Worth for examination by Gen. Ramey.<br />

June 30, 1947: Ramey <strong>and</strong> his intelligence chief were giving press interviews <strong>and</strong><br />

debunking the new flying saucer phenomenon.<br />

July 6, 1947: Ramey spent all day attending an air show in his home town of Denton, TX<br />

(<strong>and</strong> probably visiting relatives). Meanwhile, back in Fort Worth with Ramey away from the<br />

base, his chief of staff, Brig. Gen. Thomas Dubose, said he first learned of the find at<br />

Roswell by phone from SAC acting chief of staff Gen. McMullen. According to Dubose,<br />

McMullen ordered debris samples flown immediately to Washington by "colonel courier," first<br />

stopping in Fort Worth. <strong>The</strong> whole operation was carried out under the strictest secrecy, said<br />

Dubose. McMullen ordered him not to tell anyone, not even Ramey.<br />

July 8, 1947: <strong>The</strong> infamous Roswell base flying disk press release <strong>and</strong> Ramey's subsequent<br />

debunking of it as a weather balloon. According to Dubose, McMullen ordered the cover-up<br />

in another phone call to Dubose from Washington. Both Dubose <strong>and</strong> Roswell intelligence<br />

chief Jesse Marcel said the weather balloon was not what Marcel brought from Roswell,<br />

being nothing but a cover story to get rid of the press.<br />

-- Reference: Wikipedia.org<br />

15 "... U.S. Women's Army Air Force..."<br />

"<strong>The</strong> Women's Army Corps (WAC) was the women's branch of the US Army. It was created<br />

as an auxiliary unit, the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in 1942, <strong>and</strong> converted to full status<br />

as the WAC in 1943. About 150,000 American women served in the WAAC <strong>and</strong> WAC<br />

during World War II. <strong>The</strong>y were the first women other than nurses to serve with the Army."<br />

-- Reference: Wikipedia.org<br />

16 "...Flight Nurse"...<br />

168

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