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"He was a danger to himself,'' the sheriff said

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Robert Hettinga)
Fri Aug 20 09:26:32 1999

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Date: Fri, 20 Aug 1999 08:57:47 -0400
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From: Robert Hettinga <rah@shipwright.com>
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--- begin forwarded text


Resent-Date: Thu, 19 Aug 1999 16:06:11 -0600 (MDT)
From: gkm@substance.abuse.blackdown.org (glen mccready)
To: 0xdeadbeef@substance.abuse.blackdown.org
Subject: "He was a danger to himself,'' the sheriff said
Date: Thu, 19 Aug 1999 18:06:40 -0400
Sender: gkm@HSE-Toronto-ppp68682.sympatico.ca
Resent-From: 0xdeadbeef@substance.abuse.blackdown.org
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[Programmers... sheesh. :-) -glen]

Forwarded-by: "Matthew W. Miller" <mattm@infinet.com>

http://www.dispatch.com/pan/localarchive/cavenws.html

    Another day, another man hiding from meteor in cave

    Tuesday, August 17, 1999

    By Mike Lafferty
    Dispatch Staff Reporter

    CALDWELL, Ohio -- As odd behavior goes, Noble County Sheriff Landon T.
    Smith said finding a Kennedy Space Center computer programmer in a
    cave awaiting the destruction of Earth by a meteor last week was
    within local norms.

    The encounter with Lloyd L. Albright, who fled Florida for the rural
    county 80 miles southeast of Columbus, didn't surprise Smith. He has
    seen plenty of unusual cases during his career.

    In the latest case, residents near Wolf Run Lake reported seeing an
    unfamiliar car parked in the area north of Caldwell off I-77.

    "This vehicle was completely loaded down with stuff. There was room
    for only one person. There were 16 guns -- rifles, shotguns, handguns
    of all makes -- and ammunition to go with all of them,'' Smith said.
    He also found camping equipment and a large quantity of dried food,
    including 200 pounds of wheat.

    A NASA identification card found on the car's front seat belonged to
    Albright, a 47-year-old computer programmer from Satellite Beach, Fla.

    The space agency confirmed Albright's employment but said he worked at
    the center as the employee of a NASA contractor.

    After hearing about the car and fearing Albright might have injured
    himself, Smith led deputies through trampled grass along a road and
    into heavy woods.

    A rope tied to a tree led down the embankment, and another rope led
    down an even steeper embankment.

    Albright was at the end of the second rope -- in a cave that went into
    the rock about 20 feet.

    "He was lying there trying to cook an egg over a fire, but he wasn't
    having much luck,'' Smith said.

    That's when Albright told Smith a giant meteor was to strike the earth
    at 4 p.m. last Wednesday. Despite Albright's credentials, Smith didn't
    believe him.

    "He very sincerely thought there was a meteor that was going to come
    and hit the Atlantic Ocean and cause a tidal wave 200 feet high,''
    Smith said.

    "He was trying to hide from this meteor. It was going to go up the
    coast, take Florida for sure and there would be water all over
    Georgia. The peach trees were going to be covered up.''

    The man took vacation for his trip and picked Ohio because he had
    visited once before. He determined it would be high enough above sea
    level to avoid becoming beach- front property.

    He wanted his family to come along, Smith said, but they didn't want
    to leave Florida. He also said he had been under marital stress, Smith
    said.

    Albright was sleeping on a cot, drinking water that dripped through
    the cave roof, and keeping food cold in a pool of water.

    Smith arrested Albright under a charge of disorderly conduct.

    "He was a danger to himself,'' the sheriff said, adding that he didn't
    file the paperwork.

    A night in the new county jail and a meal gave Albright a new
    perspective on the future, Smith said. He released Albright, escorted
    him to nearby I-77 and pointed him toward Florida.

    "He was real apologetic,'' Smith said.

    "He was real sorry for causing all this trouble.''

    Albright, back at the space center where he works on space shuttle
    data processing, said he is thankful for Smith.

    "Sheriff Smith did me a favor getting me out of there,'' he said
    yesterday, adding that he would like to visit Ohio again with his
    family.

    Albright said the meteor strike, from fragments of Comet Lee, could
    occur any time within nine years.

    According to NASA's official Web page, the closest Comet Lee will come
    to earth is 77 million miles by the end of September.

--- end forwarded text


-----------------
Robert A. Hettinga <mailto: rah@ibuc.com>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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