Wreckage From Secret
1947 Mission Found
by Jack Penning, KGW Aviation Reporter
It was a
mysterious, secret government mission. It ended in a fiery plane
crash, and a crash site that was all but unknown. Almost 60-years
after that plane went down, a curious explorer has found the
wreckage, and is now trying to uncover its secrets.
Hundreds have searched the undisturbed
corner of the Cascade foothills, about 25-miles to the east of
Kelso, Washington. But for the last six decades, they found nothing.
Newspapers from August 1, 1947 describe the crash of the Air Force
B-25 bomber, as its left engine caught fire, and severed the plane's
left wing. But as the deep forests of the Northwest had grown, they
had hidden the crash site.
The real story, it turns out, wasn't
on the front pages of those newspapers from 1947. It was buried
deeper, where reporters said the plane's crew members were "flying
disk" investigators, searching for UFOs, and carrying a payload of
"top secret material." One newspaper reported that "material"
included pieces of flying saucers, being taken to California for
examination by the Air Force...
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here for the rest of the story.
First 2007
Crop Pattern in United States
by Linda Moulton Howe, Earthfiles
April 12, 2007 Chandler,
Arizona - The first unusual downed crop in the 2007
American season was discovered on March 25, 2007, by Michael A.
Polani, a resident of Chandler, Arizona. It is very similar to the
first American cases of randomly downed crop I investigated fifteen
years ago in the neighbor communities of Linfield and Limerick,
Pennsylvania, where odd patterns were found in different fields on
May 24, 1992.
The young Pennsylvania wheat had long,
straight sections that were scalloped along the edges as if a
pulsing energy had layed down the plants with methodical precision.
Some sections of the flattened crop were parted neatly like hair,
with each side going in opposite directions.
There were also woven layers of
overlapping 90-degree angles. As strange as it was, pilots flying
over said it must be wind damage. But according to a Ursinus College
scientist back in 1992 who collected plants for study, he found
stems bending at angles from growth nodes as Biophysicist Levengood
would also report over the following years from crop formations all
over the world. "Not wind damage," the scientists
concluded...
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here for the rest of the story.
Is Bigfoot Trouncing
Through Tobico? Probably not, But it is OneTheory Behind Mysterious
Tree Breaks
Staff writer,
Bay City Times
A bunch of trees snapped in two along
a trail at Bay County's Tobico Marsh has some wondering if it's the
handiwork of a bigfoot.
Lynn Conley, a Bay City artist, can't
think of what else but a hairy, man-like creature, or sasquatch,
could have done the damage.
Last month, about a quarter mile from
a parking lot for marsh visitors, Conley and friend Charles Robinson
of Sanford say they found a group of 15-20 live poplar and oak trees
that had recently been snapped off at a height of 2-10 feet.
''I looked at it really carefully,''
said Conley, 52. ''I thought at first it might have been a bear. But
there were no claw marks, just snaps.
''My first inclination was bigfoot.
Honestly, it was so weird. The air was eerie. It was something I
can't even hardly describe...''
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here for the rest of the story.
Swan Feeds Fish at
Zoo
Ananova
A swan in a Chinese zoo feeds its fish
friends every day to the amazement of visitors.
The swan picks up the feed and takes
it to the mouths of the waiting fish, reports Southern City Papers.
"They became close friends after three
years of playing together," say staff at Safari Park in Shenzhen
City.
"Every time I come to feed the swan,
all the fish follow him to the bank, with mouths open. And he takes
the food and puts some into each of the hungry mouths," says the
feeder.
"When everyone has eaten enough, the
swan goes back onto the water and plays with his fish friends
again."
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here for
picture.
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