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K'Nort
07-18-2006, 05:46 PM
Man fights aliens, then pops the question

Mon Jul 17, 5:10 PM ET

Ross Savedra fought aliens to rescue his girlfriend, then popped the question in an out-of-this-world proposal. Savedra, 32, staged his elaborate proposal Sunday afternoon for Ariana Ash, 23, with the help for family members and Roswell's UFO Museum.

Savedra and Ash were touring the museum when a silver-suited, masked alien from an exhibit called "alien autopsy" suddenly abducted Ash from in front of a group of tourists. Savedra dashed through the crowd, fought two aliens and rescued her.

Then he dropped to his knees, presented her a ring and asked her to marry him.

They embraced in a cloud of shiny colored confetti tossed by onlookers and were applauded by tourists who had been tipped off by the aliens — Ash's brother-in-law and stepfather.

"By the way, everyone, she said yes," Julie Shuster, the museum's director, announced over the sound system.

Savedra, a Roswell native, chose the museum for his proposal because of its uniqueness. Shuster said it was a first for the museum.

"She's always calling me her alien man," Savedra said of his fiance.

Savedra and Ash, of Albuquerque, have been seeing each other for about three years.

Ash's family traveled secretly to Roswell to witness the proposal after a month of planning beforehand.

Her mother, Margie Farrar, and sister Naomi sneaked through the museum behind the couple, waiting for them to get to the alien autopsy display, and working to keep Naomi's young daughter from getting a glimpse of Ash and yelling for her.

"It was fun," said alien Nick Caffey, Ash's brother-in-law.

"It was great," said the other alien, John Farrar, her stepfather.

Ash had celebrated her birthday in Roswell, but her family couldn't let her know they were in town, Farrar said.

"We had to call her on our cell phones, even though we were in the same hotel, upstairs," he said.

Ed Cunard
07-18-2006, 05:48 PM
Wow. That's beautiful, nerdy, and elaborate.

Jack Zodiac
07-18-2006, 05:54 PM
Beautifully, nerdily elaborate? Nerdily, elaborately beautiful.

That guy's a nerd. :p I hope they enjoy a wacky marriage with an even more colorful reception.

K'Nort
07-18-2006, 06:10 PM
The vows will probably be in Klingon.

Michael P
07-18-2006, 06:13 PM
This guy is my hero.

Spike-X
07-18-2006, 06:18 PM
We can stop the whole marriage thing now. Nobody's ever gonna top that one.

Charles RB
07-18-2006, 06:20 PM
He's the hero of every right-thinking human being, Mike.

Jack Zodiac
07-18-2006, 06:24 PM
We can stop the whole marriage thing now. Nobody's ever gonna top that one.

No way. See, I'm gonna' propose to my girlfriend by breaking into the house in a ski mask, binding her, blinding her, gagging her, throwing her in the trunk of a rental car, and driving her out to the woods for a Texas funeral. If she says no after all of that, she doesn't really love me.

Noah Johnson
07-18-2006, 07:15 PM
Honestly, while proposals like that appeal on an aesthetic and dramatic level, I still pretty much disapprove of them.

Any kind of big major public proposal like that is backing the girl into a pretty serious corner. She has no option other than to say yes. I mean, suppose she's not sure she wants to marry you? She's supposed to say "no" or "I'll think about it" after a huge production like that in front of two hundred people? Sure, there's some women who have that kind of guts, but there's a lot more who'd prefer not to destroy a guy's ego in front of a huge audience.

So yeah, while proposals like that are awesome, they're also kind of emotional extortion.

Spike-X
07-18-2006, 07:18 PM
It might have been one of these deals where the couple have pretty much agreed they're gonna get married, but there's been no formal proposal yet?

Noah Johnson
07-18-2006, 07:41 PM
It might have been one of these deals where the couple have pretty much agreed they're gonna get married, but there's been no formal proposal yet?
Well, in that case, it just plain rocks.

My caution, unromantic as it sounds, results from hearing about multiple cases where a guy proposed in front of the entire family, in front of a whole restaurant, or whatever, and the girl said yes and then subsequently had to extricate herself from the engagement. No fun for anyone.

You're entirely right, though, that there are cases where you can be 100% sure of the answer to the question, at which point asking the question with some style becomes an awesome idea.

Spike-X
07-18-2006, 07:47 PM
My caution, unromantic as it sounds, results from hearing about multiple cases where a guy proposed in front of the entire family, in front of a whole restaurant, or whatever, and the girl said yes and then subsequently had to extricate herself from the engagement. No fun for anyone.


Sure. I totally see your point. I'd hate to be on either side of the equation in that case.