Scholar of the Strange and Mysterious
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Professor Hex
Scholar of the Strange and Mysterious
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Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Fish meals 'stop sunburn'  

Waiting for a Leader  

'Cowboy' Bush failed in Katrina evacuation - Chavez 

20 oil rigs missing in Gulf of Mexico: US Coast Guard  

Extra-virgin olive oil anti-inflammatory-scientists  

President's Poll Rating Falls to a New Low 

IRAQ WAR EXCEEDING COSTS OF VIETNAM WAR 

2 elections officials indicted in recount 

Strain of Iraq War Means the Relief Burden Will Have to Be Shared 

Dreams of Hollywood Disappear Along With Fake 'Real Rome'  

Archaeology from the dark side 


Tuesday, August 30, 2005

Freemasons in Space! 

Buffing Up The Image Of George Washington 

Did New Orleans Catastrophe Have to Happen? 

Medieval appetite suppressant could be new slimming aid 

Sorry, Troops Needed At Home Are Not Available 

Getting Agnostic About 9/11  

Brace for more Katrinas, say experts 

Poverty Rate Rises to 12.7 Percent  
Thanks George!

Police reject woman's Azaria claims 

New structure found at ancient Ohio site 

In Iran, Camera Traps Reveal Rare Asiatic Cheetahs 

Discs in night sky over Dryden 

Ex--special constable is latest to report UFO sighting 

Democrats Demand Probe of Demotion  


Sunday, August 28, 2005

Police puzzled by theft of Communion wafers from Lynn church  

Blood-sucking masterpiece 

Our herbal heritage  

In haunting photos, the medium is the message  

Former FBI agent continues hunt for Cooper 

Decatur man writes book on "Weird Illinois" 

Is "Stormfront" a hoax? 

Republican Statements When Clinton Went to War 

Police chief- Lockerbie evidence was faked 

Experts Warn Debt May Threaten Economy  


Friday, August 26, 2005

Poll: Many Back Right to Protest Iraq War 
Many? How's 90 percent grab ya?

Royal Servant George Smith Dies at 44 

Truly, It Was a Whopper, but Are There Bigger Fish?  
Giant catfish from the Mekong, with pic.

Before he headed out on May 1, one of the men who caught it, Thirayuth Panthayom, 29, made sure luck would be on his side. He said he prayed at the shrine of the God of Catfish and begged his boat to help him, "Please, Miss Boat, let me catch something today and I'll sacrifice a chicken for you."


Thursday, August 25, 2005

Hundreds Witness Flying Mothman in Serbia?  

The bizarre life of Mathias Rust  

Bush's Obscene Tirades Rattle White House Aides 

Haunted - by a snake with two heads 

Farmer May Have Caught Legendary 'Chupacabra' 

The Cannibal Sorcerers 

Spontaneous Human Combustion 


Wednesday, August 24, 2005

MOHAMED ATTA SENIOR IN U.S. BEFORE 9.11 ATTACK 

Rigorous Intuition: What do kids know? 
Absolutely terrifying.

Bush: Honor Dead U.S. Soldiers by Creating More Dead U.S. Soldiers  
Stay the course, Chimpy.

LA music producer missing after call to police 
LOS ANGELES Authorities report a Grammy-nominated music producer who has been missing since Sunday called a friend that day on his cell phone to say he was being chased by people with dogs.

snip

Irwin's sister, Sharon Riolo, says her brother got scared when he received a check for 50-thousand dollars in the mail from Nigerians.

Superman spotted in Serbia 
Serbian authorities are investigating reports of a real-life Superman after people claimed to have seen a cloaked figure flying over their houses.

Hundreds of residents in Ljubovija described seeing a cloaked person flying above buildings "as if he had an invisible engine on his back" and changing directions while in mid-air, local daily Blic reported.


And speaking of flying things, check out the Mothman Annotations, from where I retrieved the following quote:

Paul Stonehill, Director of the Russian Ufology Research Center in California, has kept in close contact with his colleagues in the former Soviet Union. In the early 1990s he received news about the legendary Letayuschiy Chelovek, the Flying Man of Vladivostok, from Alexander Rempel, a leading ufologist in the far eastern sections of Russia.

Most reports of the Flying Man describe only its strange call, a womanlike scream that ends in a drawn out howl. The cry is accompanied by sounds as if something large is approaching through the forest, but nothing is seen. Otherwise fearless hunting dogs flee the creature. The howls of the Flying Man were reported in the 1930s and '40s, and from 1989 on they have come again.


And let's not forget Charles Fort:

Louisville, Kentucky: Charles Fort writes in LO! (1931): "I found accounts in the Louisville Courier-Journal, July 29, Aug. 6, 1880 . . . The story is that, between 6 and 7 o'clock, evening of July 28th, people in Louisville saw in the sky 'an object like a man, surrounded by machinery, which he seemed to be working with his hands and feet.' The object moved in various directions, ascending and descending, seemingly under control. When darkness came, it disappeared." [Complete Books, p. 641]

Jim Brandon adds that "a tall and thin weirdo" appeared in the Louisville vicinity that very day:

He wore a sort of uniform, made of shiny fabric, and with a long cape and metallic helmet. On his chest under the cape was a large, bright light. His big thing seemed to be scaring people -- particularly women -- sometimes getting so familiar as to pull their clothing off. His favorite method of escape was by springing smoothly over high objects like haystacks or wagons, then vanishing on the other side. [Weird America, page 92]

Gary Webb's "Dark Alliance" Returns to the Internet 

UFO 'expert' speculates about strange lights 

Romans in China stir up controversy 

Ancient stone circle holds air of mystery 

Neo as Johnny Stomp? 

The Mystery of Hitler's Lost Art Collection 

Blog Round Up! Giddy-up! 
I've added some new links to my fabulous links bar:

Cannonfire offers great insights on a variety of political topics and I've been meaning to add this link for a while now.

Covert History is a new discovery with great information on the JFK assassination, among other things.

And Xymphora offers insightful analysis of current events.

Go read.

Church case documents say weapons confiscated  


Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Nasty Monkey Bites! Sneezing At Tigers! Stiff Upper Lips! (Crikey!) 
Profile of old-school explorer John Blashford-Snell.

. . . a few old-school explorers are still hacking their way through the brush, square-jawed envoys to the secret world - and Colonel John Blashford-Snell is the most vividly drawn of the lot. He is quite possibly the only expeditioner who has his gear tailored on Savile Row. Or to have hauled an 800-pound grand piano 350 miles through punishing jungle deep in Guyana as a publicity stunt to raise relief aid for the flood-beleaguered Wai-Wai village.

London Bombing ringleader, Haroon Rashid Aswat - double agent for MI6? 

The Marlowe mystery 

Captured Bigfoot? Coleman vs. Biscardi  

Republican Committeeman Accused Of Molesting Boy 

Troops' Gravestones Have Pentagon Slogans 
These Bush assholes have no shame. Just put "Died For a Lie" on there and be done with it.

"I was a little taken aback," Robert McCaffrey said, describing his reaction when he first saw the operation name on Patrick's tombstone. "They certainly didn't ask my wife; they didn't ask me." He said Patrick's widow told him she had not been asked either.

"In one way, I feel it's taking advantage to a small degree," McCaffrey said. "Patrick did not want to be there, that is a definite fact."


EDIT: On second thought, how about "My country went to war for no reason and all I got was this lousy gravestone"?

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Bill Moyer, 73, wears a "Bullshit Protector" flap over his ear while President George W. Bush addresses the Veterans of Foreign Wars. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac)

Pic found over at Eschaton.

Tarot Kit for Teens  
Review.

U.S. dodges Robertson comments on Chavez 
The Bush administration swiftly and unequivocally distanced itself Tuesday from a suggestion by religious broadcaster Pat Robertson that American agents assassinate Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, a frequent target of U.S. foreign policy.

Robertson's big mouth might be the best thing that ever happened to Chavez, but the Bushistas must be furious, because now they can't Wellstone him, or Carnahan him, or Colby him, or Baxter him, or Rice him, or Watkins him, or - well, you get the idea.

For some Rigorous Intuition on the subject go here.

The Vigilante 
At a glance, the office of Tijuana's weekly newspaper, Zeta, gives just a hint of the kind of publication that is produced inside. It sits on a residential street in a middle-class neighborhood, and only a small plaque seems to distinguish it from the rest of the block's modest family homes.

Look closer and a theme emerges: the building is set back from the street, with much of it obscured by a concrete wall; no first-floor windows are visible; and the front door has heavy grating.

Watching the paper's editor and publisher, J. Jesus Blancornelas, arrive for work dispels any doubts. A caravan of three vehicles pulls up, two Suburbans and a blacked-out Chevrolet Caprice. Out pile fourteen serious-looking men - soldiers in the Mexican Army - bristling with M-16 assault rifles, shotguns, copious clips of ammunition, and body armor. That level of protection would be surprising for a journalist in Baghdad, let alone for one in a quiet neighborhood thirty minutes from downtown San Diego.

The precautions are for good reason, though. According to the Drug Enforcement Administration, a significant majority of illegal drugs destined for the U.S. - marijuana, cocaine, and heroin - transit through Mexico. Tijuana, host to one of the world's most heavily traveled border crossings, is a strategic chokepoint. In the first four months of this year, there were 163 homicides in Tijuana, many drug-related.

Local journalists know how dangerous it is to shine a spotlight on the trade and the corruption it fuels among Mexican officials. Nine reporters have been killed in northern Mexico in the past decade, with the perpetrators enjoying what the Committee to Protect Journalists calls a "nearly perfect record of impunity." In such an environment, Zeta stands out, both for the work it has produced and the costs it has incurred.

Second Officer Says 9/11 Leader Was Named Before Attacks  

Why Casey Sheehan Was Killed 


Monday, August 22, 2005

Cracking the Case: An Interview With Sibel Edmonds  
Just read it.

Don't Prettify Our History 
Guess what? Gore really did win.

George W. Bush's Job Approval Ratings Drop 

Councilwoman Ranks Possible Cell Phone Health Risk 
Here's the article. I tried to find the link to the actual report but I don't think they've listed it on their website yet, thought it's supposed to go up today. The website is right here.

Also check out Skin Rash? Maybe It's Your Cell Phone.

Or CELL PHONE RADIATION MAY CAUSE VISUAL DAMAGE.

Or Cellphone hazards.

Sickert's nemesis returns to the scene 

New probe into PM's 1967 death 

US website names MI6 officers 


Sunday, August 21, 2005

Essential Resources for Google Maps 

The Heirs Of Rube Goldberg 

Cool alternative homes 
Boing Boing has some interesting links concerning alternative homes, including this Micro Compact Home and this groovy Cardboard House.

And while we're over at Boing Boing, check out this link to Parisian Book Vending Machines.

Soldier 'instructed' to abuse Abu Ghraib prisoners 

Unbelievable tales from London 

Marin filmmaker takes UFOs seriously, even if nobody else does 

Cheney's 'Spoon-Benders' Pushing Nuclear Armageddon 
Great article. A must read.

Crownpoint couple spots UFO twice 

Changing times defang snake charmers 


Saturday, August 20, 2005

Quote of the Day 
"The future is just like the present, only later, and more so."
- Howard Chaykin

Free Wi-Fi? Get Ready for GoogleNet. 

'Ripper' hanged in Dundee claim  

Ex-child actor, wife, charged in second murder  

OKBOMB case now open again, bombing documents ordered turned over to judge  

Police Wonder if BTK Committed More Crimes 

Army Planning for 4 More Years in Iraq  

Quebecer claims to have photos of lake monster 

Pulp and Adventure Heroes of the Pre-War Years  
A little bookmark for myself.


Friday, August 19, 2005

Talentless Morons sue Pathetic Idiots 

Mystery of Bloodless, Decapitated Kangaroos in Melbourne, Australia 

The Rocketbelt Caper  

Evangelical Scientists Refute Gravity With New 'Intelligent Falling' Theory 

A walk on the weird side 

Judge Crater Disappearance Possibly Solved 

The creature from the deep  

Flying Spaghetti Monster 

More Students Go Hysterical 

The Classic Crossbow: You Can Build Your Own! 
With detailed plans.

British Scientists Create First Pure Brain Stem Cells  

More Hawaiians Practicing Native Healing  

Mystery of 'Al Qaeda coupons' deepens in Kolkata 


Thursday, August 18, 2005

Tube shooting family inquiry call 

Voice of the White House  
I don't know how much stock I put in the Voice of the White House, but considering this packaged claptrap from CBS that I saw this morning, I thought it might be relevant.

Fishermen's observation re-stirs Champ debate 

Gurlesque Burlesque Brings Out Satan's Angel 

Kidsbeer proves hit suds for minors 

Weird Science on the Religious Right 

'Ghost writers' tell town's haunted tales 

Chinese experts: no such things as "lake monsters" 

Mystery creature surfaces in Lake Champlain 

Bush: Liar 

Crocodile blood may yield powerful new antibiotics 

Kansas Croc 

UFO Locator 

Hot stuff 
The latest research sheds new light on old Sol.

The outer two-thirds of the sun generates zero energy. "The light you see coming from the sun today was originally generated in the core, in the inner one third of the sun, through nuclear fusion a few hundred thousand years ago," said Bruce Twarog, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Kansas.

Mystery surrounds missing German pilot 

Investigation Into Jenner Double Murder Drags On A Year Later 


Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Court Overturns Judge's Order In Wicca Case 

Library Missing Roberts File 

Archeologists on trail of ancient warships