06.01.2013 Views

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

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

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

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

In contrast, Pete Anaya said he knew the nurse he spoke to from the Officer's Club (his<br />

brother Ruben worked there as a cook), had danced with her once the previous Halloween<br />

at a party, said she resembled his wife Mary, <strong>and</strong> was a beautiful women with beautiful hair.<br />

He wanted to go inside the hangar to see what was going on, <strong>and</strong> she told him he didn't<br />

want to see anything. After that, he said he never saw her again. (Source: Tim Shawcross,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Roswell File, 1997)<br />

Former Roswell police chief L.M. Hall remembered Dennis telling him only a few days after<br />

the newspaper stories of the crashed flying saucer, about strange calls from the base for<br />

child-size caskets "to ship or bury those aliens."<br />

Another witness that recently came forth to corroborate parts of Dennis' story was S/Sgt.<br />

Milton Sprouse, then a B-29 crew chief with the 830th Bomb Squadron. Sprouse said he<br />

spoke to Dennis several years later while Dennis h<strong>and</strong>led a funeral for a friend. Dennis told<br />

him he had received a call from the base for five children's caskets for a crash that had<br />

happened 2 or 3 days before. Thus it seems that Dennis' story of the child casket call is not<br />

of recent origin but dates back to the original event itself.<br />

Sprouse said the bodies were taken to a hangar heavily guarded by MPs with machine<br />

guns. He also said he knew something about the autopsy initially described by Dennis. A<br />

fellow staff sergeant in his barracks, who worked as an emergency room medic at the base<br />

hospital, was called out there. When he came back he related that an autopsy on one or two<br />

of the "humanoid bodies" had been carried out by two doctors <strong>and</strong> two nurses. His friend<br />

said he had seen the bodies. Similar to Dennis' nurse, the sergeant was transferred the<br />

following day <strong>and</strong> nobody ever found out what became of him.<br />

Sprouse also heard that the doctors <strong>and</strong> nurses involved with the autopsy were also<br />

transferred <strong>and</strong> nobody found out what became of them either. Five members of his ground<br />

crew were also sent to the ranch to help clean up the debris field. <strong>The</strong>y told him the material<br />

was "out of this world," including foil that when crumpled returned to its original shape."<br />

-- Reference: (San Diego Union-Tribune story, 10/26/2007; North County Times story,<br />

9/30/2007 --San Diego, Riverside)<br />

22 "...prehensile..."<br />

"<strong>The</strong> word is derived from the Latin term prehendere, meaning "to grasp." It is the quality of<br />

an organ that has adapted for grasping or holding. Examples of prehensile body parts<br />

include the tails of New World monkeys <strong>and</strong> opossums, the trunks of elephants, the tongues<br />

of giraffes, the lips of horses <strong>and</strong> the proboscides of tapir. <strong>The</strong> h<strong>and</strong>s of primates are all<br />

prehensile to varying degrees, <strong>and</strong> many species (even a few humans) have prehensile feet<br />

as well. <strong>The</strong> claws of cats are also prehensile. Many extant lizards have prehensile tails<br />

(geckos, chameleons, <strong>and</strong> a species of skink). <strong>The</strong> fossil record shows prehensile tails in<br />

lizards (Simiosauria) going back many million years to the Triassic period .<br />

Prehensility is an evolutionary adaptation that has afforded species a great natural<br />

advantage in manipulating their environment for feeding, digging, <strong>and</strong> defense. It enables<br />

many animals, such as primates, to use tools in order to complete tasks that would<br />

otherwise be impossible without highly specialized anatomy. For example, chimpanzees<br />

have the ability to use sticks to fish for termites <strong>and</strong> grubs. However, not all prehensile<br />

organs are applied to tool use- the giraffe tongue, for instance, is instead used in feeding<br />

<strong>and</strong> self-cleaning behaviors."<br />

174

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!