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- From PsychoSpy@aol.com Sun Sep 4 02:26 EST 1994
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- Date: Sat, 03 Sep 94 12:26:23 EDT
- Subject: Article: Groomstock '94
-
- [Supplement to "The Groom Lake Desert Rat," Sept. 3, 1994.]
-
- TITLE: SPECTATORS GATHER AROUND FOR PEEK AT SECRET AIR BASE
-
- SUBTITLE: 'Groomstock' takes place to protest the Air Force's
- larger restriction zone keeping folks away.
-
- PUBLICATION: Las Vegas Review-Journal
-
- DATE: Aug. 29, 1994
-
- AUTHOR: Susan Greene
-
- [Reproduced without permission.]
-
- More than 60 campers gathered on a Lincoln County mountaintop this
- past weekend for a typical tent-fumbling, fire building, weenie
- roasting kind of campout.
-
- Except for a few minor details.
-
- Like the view 12 miles to the west of a secret air base that
- doesn't officially exist. And the camouflaged security police
- monitoring the group from nearby ridges with high-tech telescopes
- and night vision cameras. There were also signs, just 1,000 feet
- from the campsite, warning "use of deadly force authorized" should
- one of the campers have accidentally wandered across the base's
- border while searching for some firewood.
-
- Faced with such obstacles, where else but on a ridge overlooking
- the military's secret Groom Lake, Area 51, or "Dreamland" testing
- facility would aviation buffs, government watchdogs, alien
- abductees, conspiracy theorists, filmmakers, reporters, marijuana-
- smoking slackers, card-carrying anarchists, socialists and
- libertarians, a Lincoln County commissioner and a conch-blowing
- religious zealot and his second cousin so peacefully come together
- on a craggy peak for a weekend in the great outdoors?
-
- "Only on Freedom Ridge," said Groom Lake gadfly Glenn Campbell of
- the public high ground he christened two years ago that offers the
- best vantage point of the secret base.
-
- Campbell, the author of "The Area 51 Visitor's Guide" and
- publisher of "The Groom Lake Desert Rat" newsletter, organized the
- weekend-long "Groomstock" as a protest and last hurrah before the
- Air Force extends the base's restricted zone by 3972 acres to
- prevent gawkers like himself from stealing glimpses of its seven
- mile runway and haze of buildings and hangars.
-
- Last September, Air Force officials filed to withdraw Freedom
- Ridge and nearby White Sides Mountain from public lands, citing a
- need to protect the safe and secure operation of the 3.5 million
- acre Nellis Air Force Range complex. The range includes the
- secret base, which the federal government has never acknowledged
- exists.
-
- A decision by Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt on whether to lock
- up the additional land is at least six months away, Bureau of Land
- Management officials said Friday.
-
- During this weekend's campout, opinions about the withdrawal
- varied as much as reasons that led campers to the mountain ridge
- in the first place.
-
- A few who believe the military uses the secret base to hide alien
- spacecraft or conduct genetic tests on abducted children opposed
- the withdrawal on grounds that it would keep them from monitoring
- clandestine activities.
-
- For most, however, viewing the base is less important than
- answering questions about it. Although Campbell and his minions
- have resigned themselves to the likelihood of the withdrawal, they
- question the government's need for absolute secrecy in this post
- Cold War era.
-
- "If they would just act like responsible adults and fess up to
- what they're doing out there, that would satisfy most of the
- curiosity," said Tom Mahood, a civil engineer from Irvine, Calif.
- "The military doesn't have to treat civilians like we're the
- enemy, especially when it's our tax dollars paying for it."
-
- Originally built in the early 1950's to test the Lockheed U-2, the
- Groom Lake base has been used to test high-altitude, high-speed
- spy planes and other military aircraft, including the F-117A
- Stealth fighter, according to aviation industry sources and
- witnesses who have observed the installation.
-
- The base has sparked particular controversy this year, including
- two citizen action lawsuits filed earlier this month on behalf of
- workers who allegedly suffered from illegal and unregulated open-
- air burning of toxic materials. Also in three incidents since
- March, Lincoln County sheriff's deputies have detained news crews
- suspected of illegally filming the installation.
-
- In snubs to base officials, the campers directed phony cameras at
- the base, organized a stadium-style wave for the military police
- observing them from opposite ridges and posted signs along the
- road to Freedom Ridge where guards placed covert road sensors.
-
- Then, on Saturday evening, when the sun went down and their
- protests were over, the campers kicked back around the campfire to
- toast marshmallows, gab about "black world" spy planes and UFO
- abductions and gaze into the clear night sky, transfixed,
- searching for a glimpse of something, anything inexplicable.
-
- [End of text]
-
- PHOTO CAPTIONS:
-
- #1: A woman who did not want to be identified looks at the secret
- Groom Lake base through a telescope. The Air Force is extending
- the base's restricted zone to prevent gawkers from stealing
- glimpses of its 7-mile runway.
-
- #2: Glenn Campbell's camper has a special sign that indicates his
- interest in the secret base. [Bumper sticker in photo says, "AREA
- 51 VISITORS PERMIT."] Camouflaged security police monitor the
- group from nearby.
-
- #3: A sign warns visitors that the area is not open to the
- public.
-
- #4: Glen Campbell aims his phony camera at the secret facility.
- Campbell, the publisher of "The Groom Lake Desert Rat" newsletter,
- organized the weekend-long "Groomstock."
-
- ###
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