Zac Miller
>>BTW, I'd love any ideas for stops on our "Wierd America" tour!!
>>So far we have (in order): The Smithsonian
>> Grand Canyon
>> Grand Canyon Caverns
>> Las Vegas :)
>> Rachel Nevada (Area 51)
>> And Coral Castle on our way home.
>
>How well-documented do the phenomena have to be? If you want to go on
>speculation alone, Montauk might be good :)
>
>Then there's the Aurora, Texas, alien grave (if the stone with the flying
>saucer on it is still there -- it might've disappeared.)
>
>The Denver International Airport has some bizarre artwork. We've all seen
>Masonic keystones in buildings, but this is completely over-the-top. I'll
>find the web address of a site with pictures of it all if you're not
>familiar with it.
>
>How about cell #17 in the old Carbon County, Pennsylvania, jail? There's a
>handprint on the wall that was placed there by a man who was about to be
>executed who swore he was innocent. They painted over the handprint. It
>reappeared. They replaced the plaster. It reappeared. I haven't visited
>it yet, but it was still there a few years ago when it was on a TV program,
>I'm not sure which one. It should still be there -- they don't let people
>try to destroy it anymore.
>
>Further north in the coal region, there's another Smithsonian connection. A
>man claims to have found petrified human remains in 3-million-year-old
>strata. I don't think they're terribly convincing, and neither does the
>Smithsonian, but you can check it out for yourself at
>http://www.sunlink.net/~edconrad
>
>--
>"Withdraw in disgust is not the same thing as apathy." --R.E.M.
>