Wednesday 13 April 2011

Between 1967 and 1972, 147 skyjackers took
flight: Dan Cooper (an officer described him to the press as "D.B.") paid $20
for a one-way flight from Portland to Seattle aboard Northwest Orient Flight 305
on Thanksgiving Eve in 1971. Aboard, he handed the flight attendant a note that
said, "I have a bomb," and demanded $200,000 and 4 parachutes. His demands were
met; the plane was emptied and took off again. Flying at 10,000 feet, wings
flapped at 15 degrees and in virtual landing mode, the plane was low enough for
an easy jump.

At around 8:05 p.m., the captain asked, "Is everything okay back there?
Anything we can do for you?" Cooper yelled, "No!" Jumping into a storm, he was
never heard from or seen again. No one saw Cooper jump, whether his chute opened
or whether he got his money. Some wonder why he did not ask to fly a precise
route, request warm clothing or at least a helmet. To this day, Cooper pulled an
anti-establishment move in an era of Vietnam, remaining, according to some, the
one man who beat the established order, slipping past the feds and managing not
to physically hurt anyone, although others would claim he ultimately hurt
himself.




The Black Dahlia's murder
Imagine finding the naked body of a woman who had been
cut in half at the waist, lying on her back with her arms raised over her
shoulders, her legs spread eagle, her face and body slashed viciously, rope
marks on her ankles, wrists and neck, suggesting a very nasty scene before she
died. The victim of this brutal murder was a 22-year-old woman named Elizabeth
Short a.k.a. The Black Dahlia -- an aspiring actress who often dressed
completely in black. Like most pretty faces in her day, she was trying to break
into the movie business, which meant that she had to get her break by meeting
the right person at the right time.

The murder of the Black Dahlia was about as high-profile a crime as you
could get at the time. Considered a sex crime, the cops rounded up the usual
perverts. The detectives failed to capture tire tracks and shoe prints, thus
further hindering the investigation. While some suspect that the Dahlia's fate
was related to that of socialite Georgette Bauerdorf a few years back --
claiming that both were murdered by Jack Anderson Wilson a.k.a. Arnold Smith --
this was never proven, thus leaving the mystery of the Black Dahlia unsolved.











The 20th century saw dozens of ships and aircrafts
fade into oblivion in Devil's Triangle a.k.a. the Bermuda Triangle, a.k.a. the
Hoodoo Sea. Most disappeared without a trace, without even a distress call or
any sign of debris left over. Vincent Gaddis put the triangle on the map in his
1964 Argosy feature. Sizes of the areas described ranged from 500,000 to 1.5
million square miles. They say size does not matter after all: some inexplicable
force within it causes ships and planes to vanish.

Man's knowledge of magnetism is not as profound as it could be, making a
conclusive analysis difficult. Others attribute this to extraterrestrial
activity. Many blame it on human error. The absence of bodies might be explained
by the fact that the waters are infested with sharks.
Historically, man has explained odd incidents thanks to mythology, demons,
monsters, or extraterrestrial invaders. When mankind is willing to set aside its
preconceived notions, look at facts and draw up a conclusion, then answers will
rise to the (water's) surface. But, before you think conspiracy, the area is
notorious for unpredictable weather, so extreme, in fact, that it could
annihilate any mass in the area.





Loch Ness
Loch Ness is the largest of three lochs located in the Great Glen, dividing the North
of Scotland along a line from Fort William to Inverness. Its depth is about 750
feet. Now the juicy part: for over a century, man has been fascinated by
reported sightings of the Loch Ness Monster, or Nessie. Much has been written on
the matter, and while proof of Nessie's existence or supposed sightings have not
to date been proven conclusively, the mystery remains: does Nessie really exist?

In October 1987, 20 cruisers swept the loch with sonar equipment bouncing
sound waves from the surface down to the bottom, electronically recording all
contacts. While the cruisers caught enough salmon to feed an army, there was no
sign of Nessie. And while most scientists would bet that there is no monster,
they do seem to hedge themselves and keep an open mind: they are awaiting
conclusive proof in the form of skeletal evidence or the capture of the monster
(they wish).





One of the most glamorous, scandalous and
riveting unsolved mysteries of all-time must be JFK's assassination. Most
Americans accept that more than one man killed the President. Yet not a single
journalist, historian or government investigator has come up with the killers.
Was it really the "Military Industrial Complex?" Or was it the Mob that was
trying to get back at Kennedy for his involvement with the glorious Marilyn?
Perhaps, it was Cuban assassins that were upset about the Bay of Pigs incident?










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