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10/8/04  #283
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Don't touch that dial!  We control your television. We know what you watch. We have control of your computer - We have your email - We know what you want to read - And that is Conspiracy Journal!  Yes, once again it is time for your favorite email newsletter of the world of conspiracies, UFOs, the paranormal and everything else weird and strange.

This week Conspiracy Journal brings you such vein-throbbing stories as:

Resisting the Politics of Fear by John Mack, PhD -
- Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr., Astronaut, UFO Believer, Dies -
Air Force Pursuing Antimatter Weapons
UFO, Balloon Or A Spy Satellite? -
AND -  Georgia Girl Says Bones Belong to Ghost -

All these exciting stories and MORE in this weeks issue of
CONSPIRACY JOURNAL

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  * NEW SUMMER 2004 ISSUE! *
CHECK OUT Tim Swartz's new column - UFO DATABASE - on the Amethyst
Moon website. www.BeyondInfinityMagazine.com
 
Men in Black- Who are They? What are They?
http://www.beyondinfinitymagazine.com/SS2004/SS24ufodata.htm

~ And Now, On With The Show! ~

 - CONTROLLING THE MASSES DEPARTMENT -

Resisting the Politics of Fear by John Mack, PhD

* This editorial was originally written for the Boston Globe by John Mack, PHD, who was tragically killed on September 27, 2004. *

Senator John Edwards and many other Americans believe that Vice President Cheney "crossed the line" when he said that if we chose John Kerry instead of George Bush "we'll be hit again and we'll be hit in a way that will be devastating from the standpoint of the United States." But I believe that line was crossed many months ago when President Bush and his administration chose to manipulate the minds of our people by relentlessly threatening us with the danger of terrorist attacks. Because the terrorist danger is real, it is especially important that our capacity to assess the risk we face not be distorted for political gain.

There is nothing new about this strategy for gaining and holding power. Writers from the ancient Greek historian Thucydides to Baron de Montesquieu to Herman Goering in the twentieth century have told us that all national leaders need to do to retain power is to focus on an external threat and accuse those who won't go along with their plans of a lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. What may, perhaps, be unique is the systematic, virtually scientific, way that the current administration has used fear to control dissent and titrate the amount of fear we are supposed to feel.

At a conference on "Fear: Its Political Uses and Abuses" sponsored last February by the New School University in New York the organizers noted that "This may be the only time in our history when we are not only warned that we should be afraid, but told exactly how afraid we should be (red, orange or yellow alerts), and yet, regardless of how afraid we should be, we are given no advice about what to do, except perhaps to be wary of strangers, and stock up on duct tape and bottled water."

Terrorism is, of course, an authentic threat. But the ceaseless use of the rhetoric of terror, violence and danger that has accompanied a growing number of false alarms numbs our minds and robs us of the power to tell truth from lies and discriminate genuine dangers from those that are held before us for domestic political purposes. Hollow bombast and threat become confused with strength, and silly macho talk of girlie men or derision of "sensitivity" may cover ignorance and weakness. Fear of this kind can, as it has in the past, lead to unwarranted acts of aggression being committed in our name.

There are other harmful consequences of the politics of fear. It can and has been used to take away our liberties while we preach about freedom and democracy for others. It brings about a kind of national psychological regression, reducing our minds to primitive oversimplified ways of thinking, what conservative columnist Charley Reese called the "comic book world of American heroes and foreign evil doers"

The leaders themselves become, in the end, convinced of their own threatening projections and succumb inevitably to the atmosphere of fear they have helped to create. Their judgment then becomes impaired, and they fail to address genuine dangers while inflating, as in the case of Iraq, threats to our national security that do not actually exist. As this regression affects those in the political chain of command, it may be shocking but should not be surprising that atrocities like those at the Abu Ghraib prison would be committed, even in some instances, by women.

Worst of all perhaps is what the politics of fear has done to our values as a people. Poet Michael Blumenthal, returning to the United States last month after three years living in Europe, found here "a frightened and frightening nation, a nation filled not with generosity and humanity and decency and charity," a nation "that seems unable to find any deeper reason for its patriotism than a profound, and cynically manipulated atmosphere of anxiety and fear." And former assistant to President John F. Kennedy, Theodore Sorenson, in a commencement speech in Nebraska last May warned of the damage being done to the "very heart and soul of this country" as it moves "toward a mean-spirited mediocrity in place of a noble beacon."

Some of us are awakening to the danger of the politics of fear. Voices are being raised in opposition. Catharine Gamboa of Baltimore writes to the editor, "I refuse to allow myself to be terrorized and blatantly manipulated by these ominous drumbeats," and Steve Mavros of Philadelphia declares he is "sick and tired of living in fear" and of "alerts telling me whether or not I can walk outside (New York Times September 9, p. A32). Kasey Hrehocik, a senior at Poteet High School in Texas wrote a paper opposing the "fear mongering" to which she had been exposed. "When we allow fear to override societal defenses that hold our ideals and values together," she warned, "we allow our home, America, to become a garbage-littered swamp filled with manipulations and lies."

But scattered voices like those of these brave people must be joined by a swelling tide of resistance. The misuse of fear to control our minds should become a central focus of our national consciousness, and students at every level of our educational system need to be taught to recognize the signs of this corrosive strategem. Only in this way, I believe, will we be able to preserve our national values and integrity, and make the intelligent choices upon which genuine security and fulfillment depend.

Source: unknowncountry.com
http://www.unknowncountry.com/mindframe/opinion/?id=171 

- OBITUARY DEPARTMENT -

Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr., 77; One of Mercury 7 Astronauts
 
Leroy Gordon "Gordo" Cooper Jr., one of the most colorful of the Mercury 7 astronauts, whose exploits and foibles were made famous in the book and movie "The Right Stuff," died Monday at his home in Ventura. He was 77.

The cause of death was not announced, although friends said he had been in failing health in recent years.

"As one of the original seven Mercury astronauts, Gordon Cooper was one of the faces of America's fledgling space program," said NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe. "He truly portrayed the right stuff."

It wasn't always thought so. An iconoclast given to speaking his mind with little concern for the prim public image the government was trying to foster about the original astronauts, the Shawnee, Okla., native was nearly bypassed for the history-making flight of Faith 7, the last of the Mercury missions.

But he proved so cool under pressure that he nodded off while awaiting blastoff on May 15, 1963. And he was such a good "stick-and-rudder man" that he overcame a series of problems to bring the capsule down manually ??” and so close to the aircraft carrier sent to pick him up that they didn't need the helicopter to bring him in.

The Mercury program was the United States' first manned space venture and the first step in the country's journey to the moon. All the flights were solo. Cooper, who was slightly built and thus fit well into space capsules, was the last American to fly alone in space.

Cooper's second spaceflight was with Charles "Pete" Conrad Jr. aboard the suspenseful, and even more troubled, eight-day Gemini mission in August 1965. Among the flight's problems were ones that caused the craft to roll. Yet it stayed in orbit for 191 hours and traveled 3.3 million miles, establishing a space endurance record.

NASA said space program veterans remembered Cooper as a man who "always had a smile on his face." In "The Right Stuff," actor Dennis Quaid played the cocky astronaut.

"He never said, 'You can't do it.' He was gung-ho on everything," said Norris Gray, a NASA preparedness officer during the Mercury program in the early '60s.

O'Keefe said that Cooper's efforts and those of his fellow Mercury astronauts ??” Alan Shepard, Virgil "Gus" Grissom, John Glenn, M. Scott Carpenter, Walter Schirra Jr. and Donald "Deke" Slayton ??” "serve as reminders of what drives us to explore."

Of the original seven, only Glenn, Schirra and Carpenter are still alive.

Cooper was born March 6, 1927, the only son of Leroy Gordon Cooper Sr., an Air Force colonel who befriended Amelia Earhart, according to accounts of Cooper's life. The younger Cooper, an admirer of the science fiction character Buck Rogers, was taking the controls alone by the time he was 7. He served in the Marine Corps, then became a fighter pilot after World War II.

In the late 1950s, Cooper was a test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert before being selected from 110 volunteers to join the new space program in 1959 ??” a couple of years after America had been humiliated by the Soviet Union's launch of the Sputnik I satellite. He signed up out of "plain curiosity," he said later.

To his disappointment, the Gemini flight was Cooper's last venture into space. He served as a backup command pilot for Apollo 10 in May 1969 but never went to the moon. He left NASA and retired from the Air Force in 1970.

In his 2000 autobiography, "Leap of Faith: An Astronaut's Journey Into the Unknown," he recounted, in his typically unabashed way, a visit with President Kennedy in the Oval Office. After hearing some of Cooper's buddies kidding him about his relationships with women, Kennedy, he claimed, got up from his rocking chair and approached him. "You and I have the same problem," Kennedy whispered, Cooper reported.

In the book, Cooper also embarrassed some of his old NASA colleagues with tales of UFO encounters and conspiracy theories. Claiming that film that he shot from Gemini 5 had been confiscated, he quoted President Johnson telling him, "Son, I ordered it classified."

In 1978, he asked a U.N. panel to coordinate data on UFO encounters "to determine how best to interface with these visitors in a friendly fashion."

Cooper had a wide range of interests; a NASA biography listed his hobbies as treasure-hunting, archeology, racing, flying, skiing, boating, hunting and fishing. In his later years, Cooper designed and tested aircraft and engine types in Southern California, NASA said, working out of an office at Van Nuys Airport.

Even many years after leaving NASA, Cooper never gave up his love for outer space. He continued to argue that America should go back to the moon and beyond, to Mars.

Asked in a Times profile in 1993 what he would say to people who say we can't afford the cost of manned flights to other planets, he replied, "Well, I think that's really a pessimistic attitude."

Among his numerous awards were the Air Force Legion of Merit, the Distinguished Flying Cross, NASA's Exceptional Service Medal, the Collier Trophy and the Harmon Trophy.

"Gordon Cooper's legacy is permanently woven into the fabric of the Kennedy Space Center," center director Jim Kennedy said Monday. "His achievements helped build the foundation of success for human space flight that NASA and [the Kennedy Space Center] have benefited from for the past four decades."

Cooper, who was divorced from his first wife, is survived by his wife, Susan, and four daughters.

Source: LA Times
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-me-cooper5oct05,1,
501394.story?coll=la-news-science

- NEW WAYS TO KILL EACH OTHER DEPARTMENT -

Air Force Pursuing Antimatter Weapons

Program was touted publicly, then came official gag order

The U.S. Air Force is quietly spending millions of dollars investigating ways to use a radical power source -- antimatter, the eerie "mirror" of ordinary matter -- in future weapons.

The most powerful potential energy source presently thought to be available to humanity, antimatter is a term normally heard in science-fiction films and TV shows, whose heroes fly "antimatter-powered spaceships" and do battle with "antimatter guns."

But antimatter itself isn't fiction; it actually exists and has been intensively studied by physicists since the 1930s. In a sense, matter and antimatter are the yin and yang of reality: Every type of subatomic particle has its antimatter counterpart. But when matter and antimatter collide, they annihilate each other in an immense burst of energy.

During the Cold War, the Air Force funded numerous scientific studies of the basic physics of antimatter. With the knowledge gained, some Air Force insiders are beginning to think seriously about potential military uses -- for example, antimatter bombs small enough to hold in one's hand, and antimatter engines for 24/7 surveillance aircraft.

More cataclysmic possible uses include a new generation of super weapons -- either pure antimatter bombs or antimatter-triggered nuclear weapons; the former wouldn't emit radioactive fallout. Another possibility is antimatter- powered "electromagnetic pulse" weapons that could fry an enemy's electric power grid and communications networks, leaving him literally in the dark and unable to operate his society and armed forces.

Following an initial inquiry from The Chronicle this summer, the Air Force forbade its employees from publicly discussing the antimatter research program. Still, details on the program appear in numerous Air Force documents distributed over the Internet prior to the ban.

These include an outline of a March 2004 speech by an Air Force official who, in effect, spilled the beans about the Air Force's high hopes for antimatter weapons. On March 24, Kenneth Edwards, director of the "revolutionary munitions" team at the Munitions Directorate at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida was keynote speaker at the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) conference in Arlington, Va.

In that talk, Edwards discussed the potential uses of a type of antimatter called positrons.

Physicists have known about positrons or "antielectrons" since the early 1930s, when Caltech scientist Carl Anderson discovered a positron flying through a detector in his laboratory. That discovery, and the later discovery of "antiprotons" by Berkeley scientists in the 1950s, upheld a 1920s theory of antimatter proposed by physicist Paul Dirac.

In 1929, Dirac suggested that the building blocks of atoms -- electrons (negatively charged particles) and protons (positively charged particles) -- have antimatter counterparts: antielectrons and antiprotons. One fundamental difference between matter and antimatter is that their subatomic building blocks carry opposite electric charges. Thus, while an ordinary electron is negatively charged, an antielectron is positively charged (hence the term positrons, which means "positive electrons"); and while an ordinary proton is positively charged, an antiproton is negative.

The real excitement, though, is this: If electrons or protons collide with their antimatter counterparts, they annihilate each other. In so doing, they unleash more energy than any other known energy source, even thermonuclear bombs.

The energy from colliding positrons and antielectrons "is 10 billion times ... that of high explosive," Edwards explained in his March speech. Moreover, 1 gram of antimatter, about 1/25th of an ounce, would equal "23 space shuttle fuel tanks of energy." Thus "positron energy conversion," as he called it, would be a "revolutionary energy source" of interest to those who wage war.

It almost defies belief, the amount of explosive force available in a speck of antimatter -- even a speck that is too small to see. For example: One millionth of a gram of positrons contain as much energy as 37.8 kilograms (83 pounds) of TNT, according to Edwards' March speech. A simple calculation, then, shows that about 50-millionths of a gram could generate a blast equal to the explosion (roughly 4,000 pounds of TNT, according to the FBI) at the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995.

Unlike regular nuclear bombs, positron bombs wouldn't eject plumes of radioactive debris. When large numbers of positrons and antielectrons collide, the primary product is an invisible but extremely dangerous burst of gamma radiation. Thus, in principle, a positron bomb could be a step toward one of the military's dreams from the early Cold War: a so-called "clean" superbomb that could kill large numbers of soldiers without ejecting radioactive contaminants over the countryside.

A copy of Edwards' speech onNIAC's Web site emphasizes this advantage of positron weapons in bright red letters: "No Nuclear Residue."

But talk of "clean" superbombs worries critics. " 'Clean' nuclear weapons are more dangerous than dirty ones because they are more likely to be used," said an e-mail from science historian George Dyson of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., author of "Project Orion," a 2002 study on a Cold War-era attempt to design a nuclear spaceship. Still, Dyson adds, antimatter weapons are "a long, long way off."

Why so far off? One reason is that at present, there's no fast way to mass produce large amounts of antimatter from particle accelerators. With present techniques, the price tag for 100-billionths of a gram of antimatter would be $6 billion, according to an estimate by scientists at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center and elsewhere, who hope to launch antimatter-fueled spaceships.

Another problem is the terribly unruly behavior of positrons whenever physicists try to corral them into a special container. Inside these containers, known as Penning traps, magnetic fields prevent the antiparticles from contacting the material wall of the container -- lest they annihilate on contact. Unfortunately, because like-charged particles repel each other, the positrons push each other apart and quickly squirt out of the trap.

If positrons can't be stored for long periods, they're as useless to the military as an armored personnel carrier without a gas tank. So Edwards is funding investigations of ways to make positrons last longer in storage.

Edwards' point man in that effort is Gerald Smith, former chairman of physics and Antimatter Project leader at Pennsylvania State University. Smith now operates a small firm, Positronics Research LLC, in Santa Fe, N.M. So far, the Air Force has given Smith and his colleagues $3.7 million for positron research, Smith told The Chronicle in August.

Smith is looking to store positrons in a quasi-stable form called positronium. A positronium "atom" (as physicists dub it) consists of an electron and antielectron, orbiting each other. Normally these two particles would quickly collide and self-annihilate within a fraction of a second -- but by manipulating electrical and magnetic fields in their vicinity, Smith hopes to make positronium atoms last much longer.

Smith's storage effort is the "world's first attempt to store large quantities of positronium atoms in a laboratory experiment," Edwards noted in his March speech. "If successful, this approach will open the door to storing militarily significant quantities of positronium atoms."

Officials at Eglin Air Force Base initially agreed enthusiastically to try to arrange an interview with Edwards. "We're all very excited about this technology," spokesman Rex Swenson at Eglin's Munitions Directorate told The Chronicle in late July. But Swenson backed out in August after he was overruled by higher officials in the Air Force and Pentagon.

Reached by phone in late September, Edwards repeatedly declined to be interviewed. His superiors gave him "strict instructions not to give any interviews personally. I'm sorry about that -- this (antimatter) project is sort of my grandchild. ...

"(But) I agree with them (that) we're just not at the point where we need to be doing any public interviews."

Air Force spokesman Douglas Karas at the Pentagon also declined to comment last week.

In the meantime, the Air Force has been investigating the possibility of making use of a powerful positron-generating accelerator under development at Washington State University in Pullman, Wash. One goal: to see if positrons generated by the accelerator can be stored for long periods inside a new type of "antimatter trap" proposed by scientists, including Washington State physicist Kelvin Lynn, head of the school's Center for Materials Research.

A new generation of military explosives is worth developing, and antimatter might fill the bill, Lynn told The Chronicle: "If we spend another $10 billion (using ordinary chemical techniques), we're going to get better high explosives, but the gains are incremental because we're getting near the theoretical limits of chemical energy."

Besides, Lynn is enthusiastic about antimatter because he believes it could propel futuristic space rockets.

"I think," he said, "we need to get off this planet, because I'm afraid we're going to destroy it."

Source: SF Gate
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/10/04/MNGM393GPK1.DTL 

- STRANGE CREATURES FROM TIME AND SPACE DEPARTMENT -

Giant Ape May be New Species

An elusive giant ape has been spotted in remote forests in central Africa, sparking theories that it could be a new species of primate - a finding that would be the most astonishing wildlife discovery in decades, New Scientist says.

In a report published in next Saturday's issue, the British weekly says the mysterious creatures have been seen in forests around the towns of Bondo and Bili, in the far north of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

From the rare eyewitness sightings, bone discoveries and a video recording, the animals have large, black faces, are up to 2m tall and weighs between 85-102kg.

That would put them in the size category of gorillas - but the region lies 500km from the edges of the known habitats of the western and eastern species of gorilla.

The creature's face is gorilla-like and has a sagittal crest - a long bony ridge - that is typical of gorillas.

But other aspects of the skull morphology are that of a chimpanzee, according to Colin Groves, an expert at the Australian National University in Canberra.

As for behaviour, the apes make nests on the ground like gorillas, whereas chimpanzees prefer to make their homes in the trees. But, unlike gorillas, which hate water and prefer to build a new nest every night, these primates make their beds in swampy ground and reuse them night after night.

Faeces recovered from the nest sites indicated an animal with a diet rich in fruit, which is typical of chimps.

Shelly Williams, a U.S. primatologist affiliated to the Jane Goodall Institute in Maryland, captured the apes on video in 2002 with the help of local people and was once briefly confronted by a group of four of them in dense forest.

This, along with other evidence, makes her think that there is a chance the animals could be a new species of great primate - in other words, an undiscovered genetic relative of humans.

Other possibilities are that it is a gorilla-chimp hybrid, or a new sub-species of chimp that would be 50 per cent bigger than its largest cousins.

Anecdotal evidence about the unusual apes dates back to photos taken by European hunters in 1898, when the region was the Belgian Congo.

The trail was then picked up in 1996 by Karl Ammann, a Kenyan-based Swiss photographer, who was intrigued by local tales that the forests were inhabited by large ferocious apes that could kill lions.

Unlike gorillas, which invariably charge when they see a threat, these apes turn around and silently slip away into the forest when encountered, says Mr Ammann.

The discovery of these apes "reveals just how much we still have to learn about our closest living relatives," New Scientist notes, expressing concern that animals could be "poached out of existence" unless conservation measures are urgently taken to protect them.

Source: The Advertiser
http://www.theadvertiser.news.com.au/common/story_page/
0,5936,10997667%255E1702,00.html
Photograph copyright Karl Ammann 
- EYES IN THE SKY DEPARTMENT -

UFO, Balloon Or A Spy Satellite?

NEW DELHI - A space scientist claims to have come across an unidentified flying object (UFO) during a scientific expedition in Himachal Pradesh.
 
Dr Anil V. Kulkarni of ISRO's Space Application Centre saw the object on the morning of September 27 while leading the expedition in the Samudra Tapu glacier region near Chandratal, about 14,000 feet above sea level. Other members of the team also witnessed the unusual object.
 
The sighting has been reported to authorities in Kullu-Manali and New Delhi and the Ahmedabad space centre is analysing the photographs.
 
While Kulkarni says it was unlikely that the object was a weather balloon (though it looked like one), a member of his team felt the 'UFO' could be an espionage device.
 
"We saw a bright white object moving towards our camp at about 7 am. It moved down the hilltop, towards the bottom. Eight persons from our party moved towards it but the object kept moving towards us. Then some porters made a noise and it started retreating in the same direction without turning around. After a while it turned and started to move towards the hilltop," said Kulkarni on his return from Manali.
 
He said: "The background was rocky, so we could see the white object very clearly. It was about 3 to 4 feet tall and balloons were attached to its head. One was red and the rest were white. It had what looked like two legs and looked as if it was floating a few inches above the ground."
 
Since it was early morning, there was mountain shadow in the region. "The moment, it came in contact with solar radiation, its colour changed to black. Then it took off vertically, and moved along the ridge for about 3-4 minutes in the southern direction. Soon, after, it its colour changed back to white and it moved towards our camp. It remained stationary overhead for 3-4 minutes and moved towards the northerly direction and disappeared," the scientist said.
 
Kulkarni rules out the possibility of the object being an experimental balloon. "The object moved in a slanting direction without touching the hill. It retreated the same way. It also changed colour and was moving in a direction different to that of the prevailing wind. All this suggests that the object could not have been a weather balloon."

Source: The Hindustan Times
http://www.hindustantimes.com/news/5922_1038857,0015002000000000.htm  
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- SAME STORY, DIFFERENT SOURCE DEPARTMENT -

Indian Scientists Mull Over Mystery UFO Photo

[Technology India] Ahmedabad: It has all the ingredients of a Harry Potter whodunit - was it a UFO or a spy device?

A group of Indian scientists here are pouring over a bunch of photographs they took in the northern Himalayas depicting a mystery object that could be either of the two but are nowhere near cracking the mystery.

"The object was about four feet in height with a red balloon and many white ones. It hovered around for about 45 minutes some 200 metres from us. We were curious to know more and took photographs," said Anil Kulkarni, a marine and water resources scientist with the city-based Space Application Centre (SAC) of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).

He was part of the team that spotted and photographed the object during a just-concluded study trip to the northern state of Himachal Pradesh, bordering China.

While camping in the Samudra Tapu glacier region, 14,500 feet above sea level, near Chandratal, Kulkarni saw the curious object at 7.00 a.m. Sep 27.

"There were balloons attached to this unusual object. It had 'legs' but we could not see the 'hands'. It was moving closer to the hilltop. The object started moving in our direction when we started walking towards it. But when our porters made a noise, it moved away towards the hilltop," he said.

The object remained stationary for about five minutes after reaching the hilltop, then moved away in another direction before it disappeared, he added.

"Interestingly when it was exposed to the sun, it turned black and in the shadow of the hill, it became white," the scientist said.

In all probability, he opined, it was not a balloon as it was moving against the wind.

It could also have been a spy device, a possibility that cannot be ruled out in a border region.

"It is too early to say whether it was an espionage device. The photographs have been submitted to ISRO and only a detailed analysis by experts can tell us what it was," Kulkarni felt.

Source: New Kerala
http://news.newkerala.com/technology-news-india/?action=fullnews&id=35029 
- MORE THAN SNOW IN ALASKA DEPARTMENT -

Alaska's Monstrous Mysteries

From lake beasts to murderous mud, Alaska has its share of scary legends.

There was no question that John Lee??™s skiff had seen better days. Still, each summer during the mid-1950s, he dragged the rickety little boat down from the village of Iliamna in Southwest Alaska to the shore of the lake that shares the village??™s name. While his father minded the family store, the Iliamna Trading Co., Lee??”with the sort of resolve often seen in eight-year-old boys??”aimed to explore Alaska??™s largest body of fresh water.

What he most wanted to see was the creature some called the Iliamna Lake Monster.

Alaska??™s vastness has all the makings of great tall tales??”untamed wilderness, rich and varied Native culture, exotic wildlife, colorful characters, jaw-dropping magnitude. There are many stories: whole herds of mastodons preserved in a glacier, utopias born of ice and snow, strange disappearances, tides that swallow men whole. Some are too fake to be real, others too real to be fake. The common trait of these myths and mysteries is endurance. The Alaska version

of the Loch Ness Monster is only the beginning.

???It was referred to as ???the big fish??™ or ???the mystery fish??™ by the locals,??? Lee recalled recently. ???It was seen (from the air) by several credible pilots. But a lot of them didn??™t like to talk about it much because they were afraid people would think they were crackers.???

But people did talk sometimes, like when they picked up supplies at the Iliamna Trading Co. The fish was huge, they said. Some claimed it was 10 feet long. It supposedly had a bulb-like head and a long, slender body, Lee remembered. It had a temper. And catching a glimpse of it was never a good thing.

???The old timers thought that if you saw the fish, you were doomed,??? Lee said. ???People were reluctant to look below the horizon when they were out in boats.???

In the early 1950s, tuberculosis was rampant in parts of rural Alaska, including Iliamna. People often died from the then-mysterious disease. Lee wonders if the mystery fish didn??™t play a part in helping villagers explain the many deaths. ???You might surmise that there was a mental effect as well as a physical effect going on at the same time.???

But even after tuberculosis was under control the rumors persisted. Newspaper articles from the 1970s and ??™80s describe tales of an ???enormous creature??? that ???can make the lake pitch until it is almost impossible to put a boat on it.??? The creature was prone to attack boats with red bottoms, people said. There are stories of helicopter pilots who claimed to have seen four??”four!??”of the mystery fish swimming together and ???looking like sharks,??? tales of dorsal fins frozen in the winter ice, and lore about a monster that devours caribou that try to swim across the lake.

The mythology of the fish is as long and wide-ranging as the lake itself. With a surface area of 1,000 square miles, Iliamna is the seventh-largest body of fresh water in the United States. Its often crystal-clear water reaches depths of more than 1,000 feet, plenty of room for monsters (and myths) to hide and grow.

In 1980, the Anchorage Daily News offered $100,000 to the first person who could provide conclusive evidence that the monster existed. The money was never collected. Yet, even today the Bristol Bay regional office of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game keeps an open file on the Iliamna Lake Monster, though Jason Dye, the area management biologist, says reports aren??™t very frequent anymore.

The persistence of the stories could stem from the countless rivers and streams that flow into Lake Iliamna like so many rumors. The mystery fish could be a freshwater seal, folks say, a beluga whale that lost its way, an octopus, a huge lingcod or??”perhaps the most popular theory??”a giant sturgeon. The sturgeon seems a likely choice, with its long, torpedo-shaped body, dorsal fin and prehistoric appearance. But there??™s still the burden of proof.

???There??™s never been any documentation that anyone??™s caught (a sturgeon) in the lake, or seen one, as far as I know,??? Dye said. ???But that doesn??™t mean they??™re not in there.???
Lee doesn??™t believe the sturgeon stories, but he never saw the big fish. And while his father was convinced the mystery fish were a few large lingcod, Lee wanted to see for himself and continued his boyhood search. Determined to make his ramshackle boat more presentable one spring, Lee perched his skiff upside down in the tall grass near Iliamna??™s shore. It was a sunny day, perfect for a little touch-up, he thought. Then two men from the village approached him.

???I was getting ready to paint the bottom of my skiff red. And they told me, ???don??™t do that or you??™ll be done for,??? Lee said. ???I was trained to pay attention to the old timers. If they said to do something, I??™d do it.???

He painted the bottom of his boat green instead.

Murderous Mud Flats

Drive down Turnagain Arm when the tide is out and someone is bound to mention the stories: Don??™t go out on the mud flats! You??™ll get stuck in the mud and die!

It??™s happened, they say. They offer proof. It was a newlywed. An old woman. A hunter. Sometimes the tale gets grisly. A man once got stuck once while the tide was rushing in. Time was of the essence. A rescue helicopter was called, the story goes, and they strapped him into a harness and tried to pull him free. That mud held him fast, they say, and the helicopter ripped him in half.

And it??™s all true. Sort of.

The mud flats along Turnagain and Knik arms aren??™t like the sandy beaches of the Lower 48. They may look inviting at low tide, but don??™t be fooled.

???Most people think of mud as dirt and water,??? Girdwood Fire Chief Bill Chadwick said. ???This is actually glacial silt mixed with water. So it??™s like powdered rock. It??™s a lot heavier.???

Stepping on the powdered rock dislodges water and allows the tiny grains to settle and gain stability, effectively suctioning an intruder in place. The silty goop holds objects and people in its grip with no regard for time or tide. And while dozens, even hundreds, of people find themselves temporarily immobilized by Turnagain mud each year, most lose little more than a boot or a bit of pride.

Most.

In September of 1988, Adeana and Jay Dickinson, a young couple married just a month, loaded an all-terrain vehicle and trailer with supplies for a mining excursion and set off over the mud flats for a destination ???on the other side of the inlet,??? according to Chadwick. A few hundred yards from shore, the trailer became stuck and Adeana hopped off the back of the ATV to shove it free. The Turnagain mud tightened around her legs.

Her husband tried to free her for more than two hours, according to media accounts, using a dredge from their mining equipment to pump water into the mud around her legs. He freed one leg, but then the dredge broke.

And the tide moved in.

Chadwick, who then worked for the Anchorage Fire Department, responded to the call. Other rescuers came as well, from the State Troopers and Girdwood. They toiled frantically as the water rose first to Dickinson??™s waist, then her shoulders. Unable to free her as the tide surged forth, they had to break off the rescue attempt and watch her drown, Chadwick said.

The tide showed no mercy in September 1961 either, when a Fort Richardson soldier named Roger Cashin suffered a similar fate. But it was not the Turnagain mud flats that caused his demise, it was the goop in Wasilla Creek near the lower end of Palmer Slough. According to accounts in the Anchorage Daily News and The Anchorage Times, Cashin, 33, was hunting when the mud fastened its grip around his legs. He tried to wriggle free but soon found himself mired to the waist. The tide advanced and rescuers, unable to free Cashin, removed the barrel of his shotgun for use as a breathing tube in a last-ditch effort. It was no use. Hypothermic but unusually calm, Cashin quietly drowned.

So the stories of the hunter and the newlywed are true, but what of the macabre helicopter scene? In the Cashin case, The Anchorage Times reported, a recovery crew tied a rope around his body and a helicopter tried to pull it free from the mud. The mud held so fast to its victim, the rope snapped.

???I??™ve been involved in emergency medical service since the early ??™70s and I??™ve never been able to confirm that,??? said Chief Chadwick of the torn-body tale. ???I think it??™s just an urban myth.???

To the best of Chadwick??™s knowledge, Adeana Dickinson was the last person to die on any of Alaska??™s mud flats, thanks in large part to new tools, warning signs along roads, and the mud flats??™ deadly reputation. Still, about six times a year the fire department gets a call??”a hunter, some tourists, hooligan fishermen??”someone is stuck and needs to be freed. Those, Chadwick said, are stories he can confirm.

???But there??™s always the possibility that someone goes out and gets covered in mud and we??™ll never know about it.???

The Hairy Man

When Donald watches the Discovery Channel, especially programs about the unexplained or mysterious wildlife, he sometimes gets the urge to call his brother-in-law, Frank. He and Frank talk, said Donald (who didn??™t want his last name or the name of his village used) and Frank gets somber and quiet. It??™s at those times they remember.

They remember the night more than 25 years ago, and the creature that stood a good four feet above their teenage frames in the early winter moonlight. They remember the long arms, the body covered in thick hair, the face with features that were somehow human, somehow not. They remember its strength.

???I remember watching when he was running through the alders in the moonlight,??? Donald recalled. ???And we have a lot of alders here. He was sweeping them aside and running at the same time.???

Donald and Frank saw what the village elders called Olak. It??™s the creature many Alaskans know as the Hairy Man: a solitary, vaguely malevolent, hairy biped with astonishing strength, near-human features and, sometimes, a penchant for stalking people.

???These stories have been around for hundreds of years,??? said Danny Seybert, a pilot who grew up in Chignik. ???My grandparents heard these stories from their grandparents. And when you think about it, when you go to Canada you hear those same stories from those people.???

In Canada and most of the United States, what Alaskans call Hairy Man goes by Sasquatch or Bigfoot. The Himalayan region has Yeti, or the Abominable Snowman. In Mongolia and China, it??™s called the Alma. So persistent and endearing are the stories that an entire field of science, cryptozoology, exists to study creatures like Hairy Man. A search for ???Sasquatch??? on Amazon.com turns up more than 1,000 books.

Most every region of Alaska has Hairy Man lore. The Dena??™ina Athabascans call him Nant??™ina and warn that he??™ll steal children and raise them in the wild. There??™s the story of a man who shot and injured a Hairy Man. The creature escaped, but left behind its blood, something akin to ???transmission fluid.??? In a 1981 publication from the school in English Bay, a student wrote of her summer in Port Graham and a mysterious figure in the dark that whistled and scared her and hid behind trees. While some dismiss believers as feebleminded, witnesses and their supporters speak without doubt. Donald is reserved when he speaks, but certain of what he saw that night.

The boys were maybe 16 or 17 years old, Donald said. It was the 1970s, and a typical weekend night in their Southwest Alaska village. They stayed up late and played cards at Frank??™s house. The dogs started to ???go crazy??? outside, Donald remembered, which usually meant there was a bear around.

When the barking didn??™t subside, the boys decided to investigate. As Frank reached for his rifle they heard someone??”or something??”toy with the door latch. A massive figure then moved to a broken window that had recently been patched with scrap glass. The creature tried to reach in, cut itself, and ran.

???At first we thought someone was playing around with us, so we decided if it came back we??™d run outside and chase it,??? Donald said. ???We thought it was just some stranger, coming up from another village to scare us.???

Donald and Frank eased back into their evening. Then the creature returned and again fumbled with the door latch. The teens rushed onto the porch, which was built on a foundation nearly four feet high, Donald said. ???And we looked up at him.??? The creature stood in the snow beyond the house. The teens gave chase toward a series of nearby hills.

???I remember going up the (first) hill. And when I got to the top, it was already on the third hill,??? Donald said.

There were a lot of Hairy Man reports from nearby villages for a while. Donald??™s grandmother, who lived in a neighboring village, told him a story of when she was younger and caught a Hairy Man.

???They trapped him somehow,??? Donald said. ???And brought him into the village. And they shaved him and found he was just a runaway from World War II. And the Army came and got him.???

The ???man gone wild??? or ???outside man??? is a common theory in Alaska Native culture, said Phyliss Morrow, professor of cultural anthropology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Morrow studied Yupik culture in western Alaska and found the phenomenon so common that a set of rules exists for encounters with a wild person.

???You can approach them,??? Morrow said. ???You can speak certain things to them in Yupik and you can draw them back.???

Again though, there??™s the burden of proof.

???I think it??™s just myths and stories,??? said Seybert, the pilot. ???I??™ve spent over 20 years flying all over and I look everywhere I fly. I love looking for animals. I??™ve counted (for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game) just about every kind of animal you can count out there from an airplane and I??™ve never seen anything I couldn??™t explain.???

The Outside Man and the Hairy Man, like the Iliamna Lake Monster or even the deadly Turnagain mud, may simply be cautionary tales or coping mechanisms??”colorful ways to explain the otherwise unexplainable, or tools to ensure respect for one??™s elders. Reports have certainly become more rare as technology has grown more sophisticated. When village parents can call from house to house to check on their kids, it might be less important to scare them with stories of the Hairy Man who may ???get them??? if they stray too far from home. How better to keep children away from water??™s edge than to have them imagine being torn apart by a helicopter or struck ill by a sea monster??™s gaze?

???The standards of truth in terms of documented evidence??”photographs, stuff like that??”you??™re not going to find it,??? Morrow said. ???These are cultural understandings of what happens. It??™s true in people??™s experience, and it??™s meaningful to them.???

So what, then, of the blood on Frank??™s window, and Donald, who saw tremendous footprints in the autumn snow?

Source: Alaska Magazine
http://www.alaskamagazine.com/stories/1004/feature_mystery.shtml 
- WHO HAS MY BONES DEPARTMENT -

Georgia Girl Says Bones Belong to Ghost

Investigators unsure how possible human remains got inside insulation.

A Russell County Georgia fifth-grader is convinced bones found in her home last weekend belong to a mysterious friend who told her about being chopped up years ago.

Investigators have few clues about how and when the bones got inside insulation under the living room floor of the mobile home on Jowers Road, near East Alabama Motor Speedway.

The 10-year-old, Stephanie Ogden, and her family have lived in the home since 1998. Her great-grandparents, John and Marion Stewart, own the home.

The bones were found Saturday as the Ogdens, who are renovating the home, pulled up boards in the living room floor. Russell County Sheriff's Lt. Heath Taylor said an initial analysis shows the bones are from the pelvis and leg of a child at least 10 years old, and the child has been dead at least 10 years.

Another bone was found Sunday, Marion Stewart said. The area where the bones were found had duct tape over the insulation, Stewart said.

"There's an odor there that doesn't belong," Stewart said.

The bones probably don't have enough marrow to do DNA tests, Taylor said. Because the trailer has been moved several times between Georgia and Alabama, investigators now are faced with the daunting task of trying to track down missing children from a wide area in two states.

Taylor said gnaw marks on the bones may indicate a rodent placed them inside the insulation. Dirt and plant material on the bones indicate they were outside at one time, Taylor said.

Stephanie said a black girl in a white dress started visiting her room when she was about 5 years old. The girl was friendly, but she told Stephanie a horrible story.

"She told me that somebody put her in the floor," Stephanie said. "She said he had a mask on, and that he chopped her up. She didn't know who the person was, because he had a mask on."

Stephanie, a fifth-grader at Dixie Elementary School, now thinks that the bones that were found in her home belong to her playmate.

"It's possible because that girl was a ghost," Stephanie said Monday. "Nobody knows about them."

Marion Stewart said Stephanie used to tell her family about the visitor, but the adults always dismissed the stories as being an imaginative child's fabrication based partly on horror movies. Stewart said Stephanie used to always ask for two glasses of soda when she would play outside -- one glass for her and one for her friend.

Stewart said the weekend's grisly discoveries have convinced her that her great-granddaughter's playmate is actually a tormented soul seeking peace.

"I'm not a psychic, and I don't believe in some of that stuff," Stewart said. "But I believe this is a soul who has not been put to rest."

Taylor said detectives can't base their work on ghost stories.

"Do you have any idea how hard it is to investigate a ghost?" he said Monday.

Investigators are looking through databases of missing children to find any links to the trailer's location, but Taylor doesn't hold out much hope of solving the case.

"It's just one of those cases where there's just not a lot to go on," he said.

Source: The Ledger-Enquirer
http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/news/local/9836697.htm 
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