View allAll Photos Tagged Unsolved

12 x 16 in. edition of one. the curious anomaly of blue area (which doesn't appear when negative is scanned -- only in this traditional wet print) remains unsolved. my guess is light + rust + negative = blue)

I recently finished reading 'The Gardner Heist' and remember Grandma taking me there when I was younger, so a stop was a must.

It was just as pretty and overwhelming and interesting as I remember.

Due to the construction on the new addition, some of the artwork had been moved temporarily, and there was only one empty frame to see and give home.

www.amazon.com/Gardner-Heist-Worlds-Largest-Unsolved/dp/0...

The Heart Has Its Own Memory In honor of the spirit of the people murdered in the Downtown Eastside. Many were women and many were native aboriginal women. Many of these cases remain unsolved. All my relations.

 

— Portside Park memorial, DTES

Maria Ridulph was kidnapped on a street corner in Sycamore, Illinois, on December 3, 1957. She was 7 years old at the time. Her body was discovered in a field 5 months later. The case went cold for 55 years until Jack McCullough, formerly John Tessier, was arrested in July 2011. It is believed that the case involved the oldest unsolved murder resulting in an arrest in the United States.

 

McCullough, then John Tessier (17 years old at the time), befriended Ridulph in Sycamore, Illinois when she was 7 years old. She disappeared from a street corner in Sycamore on December 3, 1957. According to the prosecutors in his case, McCullough choked Ridulph with a wire and stabbed her. The case received nation-wide interest; the FBI was involved under J. Edgar Hoover and it reportedly received attention from Dwight D. Eisenhower.

 

The case was reopened when Janet Tessier, McCullough's half sister, believing McCullough was involved, asked the Illinois State Police to look into it. Janet Tessier made the decision to come to the police after spending time as the caretaker to the mother of author Mark Lemberger, who wrote "Crimes of Magnitude," a story of an unsolved murder of a seven-year-old girl. Mark Lemberger, upon hearing her speak of her mother's deathbed confession, encouraged Tessier to try to contact a law enforcement agency one more time. Tessier did just that, contacting the Illinois State Police via e-mail. McCullough was arrested in a retirement community in Seattle where he lived and worked as a security guard in July 2011. Ridulph's body was exhumed that same month

 

At the trial, Kathy Chapman, a childhood friend who was with Ridulph on the day of her disappearance, testified against McCullough. She said that a man, who called himself Johnny, had walked up to them and had given Ridulph a piggyback ride. Chapman went home briefly to get mittens, and upon her return both Johnny and Maria were gone. Based on a 1957 photo, she identified McCullough as the man who had walked up to them. McCullough was convicted of the crime in September 2012 and later received a life sentence with the possibility of parole after 20 years. He was 73 at the time he received his sentence. Although his request for a new trial was denied at the time of sentencing, his appeal continues, as of 2013.

 

You can watch the documentary on Maria Ridulph case ' 48 Hours Mystery Cold As Ice The Abduction and Murder of 7 Yr Old Maria Ridulph Case' and there is a CNN story on Maria. RIP little girl it's horrible how someone can murder a innocent small child.

The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie in Scotland

 

The Loch Ness Monster is a creature that lives in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. Popular interest and belief in the animal was brought to the world's attention in 1933. The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving 'lizard' plesiosaurs.The scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as a mix of hoaxes and wishful thinking.Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology. The legendary monster has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie since the 1950s.

 

On October 22nd 2012 Theresa Irene Wolowski, and Ryan Janek Wolowski, took a boat ride through Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands looking for Nessie, who's presence was felt.

 

Fore more on The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie visit

www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/legend-loch-ness.html

 

Photo

Scotland, Scottish Highlands, UK United Kingdom, Europe

10-22-2012

This one I edited in gimp to increase the brightness, it was very dark before. I also changed the colour slightly, it is really a darker shade of this same colour.

The most beautiful women in TV and Movie History now become Barbie Collector Dolls created by acclaimed re-paint Artist Donna Brinkley.

 

Jacquelyn (Jaclyn) Ellen Smith has been known as the world's Most Beautiful Woman, she was born in Houston, Texas, the daughter of Margaret Ellen and Jack Smith, a dentist. She attended Trinity University in San Antonio.

 

After college, Smith moved to New York City with hopes of dancing with the ballet. Her career aspirations shifted to modeling and acting as she found work in television commercials and print ads, including one for Listerene mouthwash. She landed a job as a Breck girl for Breck Shampoo in 1971, and a few years later joined another popular model/actress, Farrah Fawcett, as a spokesmodel for Wella Balsam shampoo.

Charlie's Angels

 

On March 21, 1976, Smith first played Kelly Garrett in Charlie's Angels; the show was aired as a movie of the week, starring Smith, Kate Jackson and Farrah Fawcett (billed as Farrah Fawcett-Majors) as private investigators for Townsend Associates, a detective agency run by a reclusive multi-millionaire whom the women had never met. Voiced by John Forsythe, the Charles Townsend character presented cases and dispensed advice via a speakerphone to his core team of three female employees, to whom he referred as Angels. They were aided in the office and occasionally in the field by two male associates, played by character actors David Doyle and David Ogden Stiers. The program earned a huge Nielsen rating, causing the network to air it a second time and okay production for a series, with all of the principal characters save the one played by Stiers. The series formally debuted on September 22, 1976, and ran for five seasons. The show would become a smash success not only in the U.S. but, in successive years, in syndication around the world, spawning a cottage industry of peripheral products, particularly in the show's first three seasons, including several series of bubble gum cards, two sets of fashion dolls, numerous posters, puzzles, and school supplies, novelizations of episodes, toy vans, and a board game, all featuring Smith's likeness. The Angels also appeared on the covers of magazines around the world, from countless fan magazines to TV Guide (four times) to Time Magazine.

 

Fawcett departed at the end of the first season, and Cheryl Ladd was a successful addition to the cast, remaining until the end of the series. Jackson departed at the end of the third season, and proved harder to replace, as first Shelley Hack and then Tanya Roberts were brought in to try re-igniting the chemistry, media attention and ratings success enjoyed by the earlier teams. Smith played her role for all five seasons of Charlie's Angels until 1981, also portraying the Garrett character in a guest appearance in the 1977 pilot episode of The San Pedro Beach Bums, and in a cameo in the 2003 feature film Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle. Christina Chambers portrayed Smith in the television film Behind the Camera: The Unauthorized Story of Charlie's Angels.

 

Smith's first acting venture outside the Angels mold was the CBS-TV movie of the week Escape from Bogen County (1977). Then came a leading role in Joyce Haber's The Users with Tony Curtis and John Forsythe in 1978. In 1980, Smith starred with Robert Mitchum in the suspense thriller Nightkill. She then starred in the title role of the television movie Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy in 1981, receiving a Golden Globe Best Actress nomination for her performance but lost to Jane Seymour. In 1983, Smith starred as Jennifer Parker in the TV movie Rage of Angels, based on the novel by Sidney Sheldon. The film was the highest rated in the Nielsen ratings the week it aired. Smith reprised the role in the 1986 sequel, Rage of Angels: The Story Continues.

 

In 1988, she appeared with Robert Wagner in Windmills of the Gods. That same year she was offered the chance to star opposite Richard Chamberlain in the adaptation of Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Identity. Smith was Chamberlain's first choice as his leading lady but she had just wrapped up with the Windmills of the Gods shoot and declined the part. The role was offered to Lesley-Anne Down who wanted her husband to photograph the film. Producers refused and again offered the role to Smith, who then accepted.

 

In 1989, Smith starred in Settle the Score. This film again proved her Nielsen ratings clout. Other television movies and miniseries in which Smith appeared include George Washington, The Night They Saved Christmas, Florence Nightingale, Sentimental Journey, Lies Before Kisses, The Rape of Dr. Willis, In the Arms of a Killer, and several TV versions of Danielle Steel novels, including Kaleidoscope and Family Album. Smith starred in the 1985 feature film Deja Vu, which was directed by her then-husband Tony Richmond. In 1989, she played the title role in Christine Cromwell, a mystery television series based in San Francisco, but which only lasted one season. That same year, she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

 

From 2002 to 2004, Smith had a recurring role as Vanessa Cavanaugh in the TV series The District, which starred Craig T. Nelson. She reprised her role as Kelly Garrett for a short cameo in the 2003 Charlie's Angels feature film. Her appearance at the 2006 Emmy telecast led Bravo TV’s producers to cast Smith as the celebrity host of Bravo’s weekly competitive reality series, Shear Genius, which began airing in March 2007. Shear Genius (Season 2) began airing on June 25, 2008.

 

In March 2010, Smith returned to acting after a five year absence with a guest role on the NBC television drama Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. In February 2012, it was announced that Smith would be guest-starring on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, as the mother of David Hodges (played by Wallace Langham).

 

In 1985, Smith entered the business world with the introduction of her collection of women's apparel for Kmart. She pioneered the concept of celebrities developing their own brands rather than merely endorsing others. A season 15 episode of The Simpsons (The Fat and the Furries) lampooned Smith's many business successes, portraying her as having her own line of axe heads. In May 2009, Smith allowed a documentary crew to profile her home life, design philosophy and relationship with Kmart in an online video series sponsored by Kmart. Her foray into home furnishings was extended to Kmart stores in the fall of 2008, with the chain's introduction of its Jaclyn Smith Today product line of bedding and bath accessories.

 

Smith has been married four times. Her first marriage was to actor Roger Davis (1968–1975). She married Dennis Cole, an actor who had appeared on Charlie's Angels in 1977 and 1978. Cole appeared on the show two more times before the couple divorced in 1981. Cole's son from a previous marriage, Joe Cole, with whom Smith had maintained a relationship after her divorce from his father, was murdered in 1991 during a robbery; the case remains unsolved. Smith married filmmaker Tony Richmond in 1981, with whom she had two children, Gaston (born 1982) and Spencer Margaret (born 1985), before divorcing Richmond in 1989. Smith has been married to Houston cardiothoracic surgeon[12] Brad Allen since 1997.

 

Smith battled breast cancer in 2003. In 2010, Smith was featured in 1 a Minute, a documentary about breast cancer.

 

On September 22, 2009, TMZ.com picked up a Honduran newspaper's false online report that Smith had been hospitalized in a private medical center there; TMZ later retracted the story, reporting that Smith was well and at home in California. Smith posted on her Twitter page, denouncing the Honduran newspaper story as false— Jaclyn is safe and home with her family. She is not in Honduras. It is a lie.

 

* A number of style mavens and magazine polls have attested to Smith's popularity and declared her one of the most beautiful women in the world. The difficult-to-please Mr. Blackwell once named her "The World's Best Dressed Woman". In 1979, McCall's ran a poll of "Whose Face Most Women Would Like To Have"; Smith topped the list. Smith has had more #1 acting projects than any other actress in Hollywood, and she has often been called the "Queen of the miniseries".

 

* In 1985, McCall's named her as one of "America's 10 Best Bodies;. People named Smith twice in its annual list of the Most Beautiful People in the World In the April 1984 issue of People, Smith was voted as one of the Ten Great Faces of Our Time. In 1985, Ladies' Home Journal sampled 2,000 men and women in 100 different locations in the United States to determine America's Favorite Women; Smith came in the top of the list as the Most Beautiful Woman in America, with actress Linda Evans coming in second. TV Guide magazine readers voted Smith as the Most Beautiful Woman On Television in 1991.

 

* Comic strip artist Sy Barry modeled the luscious Diana Palmer, wife of The Phantom, after Smith.

 

* The French band Air was inspired by Smith's Charlie's Angels character Kelly Garrett to record the song Kelly Watch the Stars for their critically acclaimed 1998 album Moon Safari, and the track was released as a single.

 

In 2012 beauty critics around the world voted Jaclyn Smith as the Most Beautiful Woman of all time along side Grace Kelly.

This photo was shot w/a APS film, no light leaks possible. Do you see anyone in the mirror, I was ALONE when I took this. The bar was too my left as I took this, but I was alone, this looks like a man leaning against the bar w/ one arm hanging, fully extended. I was alone, the current owners of the house left me alone downstairs to take photos because this was where Rob was living when he went missing. He was living here because his cabin had been burned down. The man in this reflection does NOT look like my uncle Rob, he does appear to be pointing down, OR holding a firearm pointed down with his trigger finger extended. I attribute the two bright lights moving upward to the flash, however, it's a single flash no double flash, still strange. Probably a reflection from the mirror. However, why two equal reflections going straight up with that inverted teardrop shape. Please show me examples of similar reflections if you have any. Another man did die in this house, however I think he was elderly when he died, I don't know what he looked like.

She might be happy because it’s Friday or maybe it’s because her grandma just changed her diaper.

 

Didn’t do much today, watched Unsolved Mysteries, then got lunch after picking up Layla from school. Then mostly watched tv until work lmao

 

I got my new case in! So I can use my eevee pop socket :D

 

Work was easy, minus the woman that was there and she just kept talking. Even when no one answered her. She just kept. on. TALKING.

 

(279 out of 365)

October 6th, 2017

Steve Ipsen and Marcella Leach stand with Lawanda Hawkins who received the 2006 Robert Leach award. LaWanda Hawkins founded Justice For Murdered Children in 1996 when her only child, Reggie was murdered. She is a leader in the victims rights movement with a mission to reduce the number homicides, reduce the number of unsolved homicides and to assist families that have lost loved-ones to homicide.

 

An afternoon visit in Oxfordshire to the National Trust property of Buscot Park.

 

Buscot Park is a country house at Buscot near the town of Faringdon in Oxfordshire within the historic boundaries of Berkshire. It is a Grade II* listed building.

 

It was built in an austere neoclassical style between 1780 and 1783 for Edward Loveden Loveden. It remained in the family until sold in 1859 to Robert Tertius Campbell, an Australian. Campbell's daughter Florence would later be famous as Mrs Charles Bravo, the central character in a Victorian murder case that remains unsolved to this day. On Campbell's death, in 1887, the house and its estate were sold to Alexander Henderson a financier, later to be ennobled as Baron Faringdon.

 

Following the death of the 1st Baron in 1934, the house was considerably altered and restored to its 18th-century form, by the architect Geddes Hyslop, for his grandson and successor, Gavin Henderson, 2nd Baron Faringdon, during this era, the art collection founded by the 1st Baron was considerably enlarged, although many of the 1st Baron's 19th-century works of art were sold immediately following his death.

 

The house and estate was bequeathed to the National Trust in 1956. The contents (which include works of art by Rembrandt and Burne-Jones) are owned by the Faringdon Collection Trust. The house is occupied and managed by the present Lord Faringdon. The mansion and its extensive formal and informal gardens and grounds are open to the public each summer.

  

Grade II* listed building

 

Buscot Park

 

Details

BUSCOT SU29NW Buscot Park 1/23 10/11/52 GV II* Country house. Built about 1780 for Edward Loveden Townsend, altered in the 1860s, altered and extended in 1889 and finally reduced in size and given E and W Pavilions (q.v.) in 1934-6. No architects are recorded for the first 2 phases of building, but the 1889 extensions were made by Sir Ernest George whose partner, Harold Peto, was landscaping the grounds at that time, and the final phase of reconstruction was directed by Geddes Hyslop. This reinstated the restrained classical lines of the original 1780 design. Finely jointed ashlar, rusticated base, dentil cornice and a hipped slate roof with E and W and ridge stone stacks. 3 storeys and attic, 9 bays. S front of 9 bays with 2 dormers. The 3 centre bays have slight projection and a pediment with carved floral enrichment, a wide flight of steps to central glazed doors with cornice head at first floor level. Modern sashes and blind boxes to all windows. The N front has 3 central bays flanked by segmental bows of 3 windows each the whole height of the building. 7 dormer windows. E and W fronts have 3 bay projections and pediments with lunettes. The interiors were all redesigned and redecorated in the 1934-6 reconstruction in a mixed neo-Classical manner incorporating wine very fine original C18 chimney-pieces. A series of paintings entitled 'the Briar Rose' by Edward Burne Jones that were acquired for the Drawing Room by Alexander Henderson in 1890 were installed under the artist's direction and in specially designed frames in the Saloon where they still hang. Country Life, 18, 25 May 1940; National Trust Guidebook to Buscot Park.

 

Listing NGR: SU2430696829

  

West Pavilion

 

Grade II listed building

 

Buscot Park: West Pavilion With Attached Terrace Walls and Gatepier

 

Details

This list entry was subject to a Minor Amendment on 12/09/2012

 

SU29NW 1/104 10/11/52

 

BUSCOT Buscot Park, West pavilion with attached terrace walls and gatepier

 

(Formerly listed with Buscot Park)

 

GV II

 

Pavilion (part of country house). Circa 1935 by Geddes Hyslop for 2nd Baron Faringdon. Limestone ashlar. 7-bay range running parallel with main axis of mansion (q.v.) has both ends porticoed with 4 Tuscan Doric columns in antis and roundels in pediments. Longer sides have an additional basement storey, to east opening to a sunken service court; middle bay, which is wider and breaks forward below triangular pediment, has an arched carriage entry rising through both storeys. Ashlar ridge stacks flank central bay. Stone retaining walls, punctuated by low piers with vases and by flights of steps, extend around the west and north sides of the north terrace, curving around a stone basin and statue, and to south ramp up to a raised balustrade adjoining the panelled northern pier of the south-west gateway to the forecourt. The walls form part of an elaborate formal landscape scheme surrounding the mansion. (q.v. also east pavilion and south screen.) (Country Life, 18, 25 May 1940; National Trust Guidebook to Buscot Park).

 

Listing NGR: SU2426796849

- Rainer Maria Rilke

 

"You can do better than me, but I can't do better than you."

The Bullock Hotel has been the subject of the popular TV show Unsolved Mysteries and is believed to be haunted by the ghost of Seth Bullock, among others. This photo was taken in Bully bar inside the Bullock.

 

Free Bloody Mary's at Bully's every Saturday morning!

 

633 Lower Main Street

June 2008

From www.neverforgetsandyg.com/ Sandra Galas, 27, born in Japan, raised on Kauai, died amidst many unlived dreams and hopes for an exciting future.

 

This stunning, vibrant, young mother of two died before her time. Her murder remains unsolved, leaving family and friends wondering how and why this could have happened to someone so beautiful and promising.

 

Galas who was found murdered in her car, in her garage on Jan. 25, 2006 at 549 Lei Papa Place, Eleele Nani, died of strangulation with a cordlike object and blunt-force to her head, according to her death certificate.

 

At the time of her death, she was going through a bitter custody battle and divorce.

 

Sandra's ex-husband, Darren Galas, was arrested and held for 48 hours following her murder. He was released pending charges.

 

Police are still hoping anyone with information on her killer will come forward, either anonymously or otherwise.

 

Sandra's parents are offering a $10,000 reward to anyone who has information leading to an arrest and conviction.

 

Putting an end to violence against women might seem like a large goal, but it's something the family is hoping will be addressed, one family at a time.

 

To help put an end to violence against women, make a donation to:

 

YWCA Kauai

3094 Elua Street

Lihue. Hawaii 96766

E-mail ywcakauai@ywcakauai.com

.

The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie in Scotland

 

The Loch Ness Monster is a creature that lives in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. Popular interest and belief in the animal was brought to the world's attention in 1933. The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving 'lizard' plesiosaurs.The scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as a mix of hoaxes and wishful thinking.Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology. The legendary monster has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie since the 1950s.

 

On October 22nd 2012 Theresa Irene Wolowski, and Ryan Janek Wolowski, took a boat ride through Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands looking for Nessie, who's presence was felt.

 

Fore more on The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie visit

www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/legend-loch-ness.html

 

Photo

Scotland, Scottish Highlands, UK United Kingdom, Europe

10-22-2012

An unsolved Rubik cube - never did get the hang of these things !

About 200 feet from the entrance of these woods, On Oct 18, 1955 the body of three young boys were found dead in a ditch. The murder went unsolved for years. Finally 40 years later police got a lead on a man named Kenneth Hansen-a stable owner. He was convicted and sentanced to 200-300 years in prison.

Maria Ridulph was kidnapped on a street corner in Sycamore, Illinois, on December 3, 1957. She was 7 years old at the time. Her body was discovered in a field 5 months later. The case went cold for 55 years until Jack McCullough, formerly John Tessier, was arrested in July 2011. It is believed that the case involved the oldest unsolved murder resulting in an arrest in the United States.

 

McCullough, then John Tessier (17 years old at the time), befriended Ridulph in Sycamore, Illinois when she was 7 years old. She disappeared from a street corner in Sycamore on December 3, 1957. According to the prosecutors in his case, McCullough choked Ridulph with a wire and stabbed her. The case received nation-wide interest; the FBI was involved under J. Edgar Hoover and it reportedly received attention from Dwight D. Eisenhower.

 

The case was reopened when Janet Tessier, McCullough's half sister, believing McCullough was involved, asked the Illinois State Police to look into it. Janet Tessier made the decision to come to the police after spending time as the caretaker to the mother of author Mark Lemberger, who wrote "Crimes of Magnitude," a story of an unsolved murder of a seven-year-old girl. Mark Lemberger, upon hearing her speak of her mother's deathbed confession, encouraged Tessier to try to contact a law enforcement agency one more time. Tessier did just that, contacting the Illinois State Police via e-mail. McCullough was arrested in a retirement community in Seattle where he lived and worked as a security guard in July 2011. Ridulph's body was exhumed that same month

 

At the trial, Kathy Chapman, a childhood friend who was with Ridulph on the day of her disappearance, testified against McCullough. She said that a man, who called himself Johnny, had walked up to them and had given Ridulph a piggyback ride. Chapman went home briefly to get mittens, and upon her return both Johnny and Maria were gone. Based on a 1957 photo, she identified McCullough as the man who had walked up to them. McCullough was convicted of the crime in September 2012 and later received a life sentence with the possibility of parole after 20 years. He was 73 at the time he received his sentence. Although his request for a new trial was denied at the time of sentencing, his appeal continues, as of 2013.

 

You can watch the documentary on Maria Ridulph case ' 48 Hours Mystery Cold As Ice The Abduction and Murder of 7 Yr Old Maria Ridulph Case' and there is a CNN story on Maria. RIP little girl it's horrible how someone can murder a innocent small child.

For Our Daily Challenge - Fences

 

This is one of those pieces of art that spring up where people walk and find things. This is the fence of lost soles, a place where your missing shoe ends up. No one has discovered the place where missing socks wash up. This is still a great unsolved mystery.

"LaMartina's movie has to do with a mysterious book that details local unsolved crimes, most of them of the distinctly icky variety, such as the kidnapping and murder of babies, people with their eyes gouged out, etc."

 

Read More:

alternativecinema.blogspot.com/2010/05/chris-lamartina-an...

i have no idea how this happens, but every now and then when we freeze ice cubes one of these spikes will grow out of the tray. they melt super fast, but i managed to snap a photo. any ideas how it formed?

Couldn't figure out how this one happened. I just left my bike in the shed overnight and took it out in the morning and left it in the sun while I was getting ready and came back to be greeted by a flat rear tire.

LSN's own Brilliant Idiots (Andrew Schulz & Charlamagne Tha God) Host a screening for USA Network's Unsolved, Followed by a talk with the series' own Bokeem Woodbine.

Chevonne Small with a family photograph of her cousin, James Murchison, in her Highland Falls, NY home on Friday, June 13, 2008. Murchison, 16, is the Newburgh teen who was stabbed to death last month. Small and other family members are planning a series of fund raisers to offer a reward for information in Murchison's killer. Times Herald-Record/CHET GORDON

o meu ipod proporcionou-me em modo shuffle:

 

nouvelle vague - guns of brixton

nick drake - at the chime of a city clock

björk - karvel

explosions in the sky - day one

animal collective - unsolved mysteries

bat for lashes - the wizard

venus hum - soul sloshing

Emphasized perspective of a coin slot. Why "quarter" rather than "quarters?" I suppose that's a question that will remain unsolved.

The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie in Scotland

 

The Loch Ness Monster is a creature that lives in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. Popular interest and belief in the animal was brought to the world's attention in 1933. The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving 'lizard' plesiosaurs.The scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as a mix of hoaxes and wishful thinking.Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology. The legendary monster has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie since the 1950s.

 

On October 22nd 2012 Theresa Irene Wolowski, and Ryan Janek Wolowski, took a boat ride through Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands looking for Nessie, who's presence was felt.

 

Fore more on The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie visit

www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/legend-loch-ness.html

 

Photo

Scotland, Scottish Highlands, UK United Kingdom, Europe

10-22-2012

The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie in Scotland

 

The Loch Ness Monster is a creature that lives in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. Popular interest and belief in the animal was brought to the world's attention in 1933. The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving 'lizard' plesiosaurs.The scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as a mix of hoaxes and wishful thinking.Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology. The legendary monster has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie since the 1950s.

 

On October 22nd 2012 Theresa Irene Wolowski, and Ryan Janek Wolowski, took a boat ride through Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands looking for Nessie, who's presence was felt.

 

Fore more on The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie visit

www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/legend-loch-ness.html

 

Photo

Scotland, Scottish Highlands, UK United Kingdom, Europe

10-22-2012

The injustice of an unsolved murder of a child.

The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie in Scotland

 

The Loch Ness Monster is a creature that lives in Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. Popular interest and belief in the animal was brought to the world's attention in 1933. The most common speculation among believers is that the creature represents a line of long-surviving 'lizard' plesiosaurs.The scientific community regards the Loch Ness Monster as a modern-day myth, and explains sightings as a mix of hoaxes and wishful thinking.Despite this, it remains one of the most famous examples of cryptozoology. The legendary monster has been affectionately referred to by the nickname Nessie since the 1950s.

 

On October 22nd 2012 Theresa Irene Wolowski, and Ryan Janek Wolowski, took a boat ride through Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands looking for Nessie, who's presence was felt.

 

Fore more on The Loch Ness Monster, Nessie visit

www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/ancient/legend-loch-ness.html

 

Photo

Scotland, Scottish Highlands, UK United Kingdom, Europe

10-22-2012

yoo...thats the car, with lots of mysteries unsolved...for more details contact Sapan!!...hehe

Velma Howard, 50

Found strangled in alley, 2/21/2014

622 N Homan

Arlis Perry - 'ritualistic' murder and sexual assault at Stanford. Murder at Memorial Church remains unsolved 40 years later from www.pinterest.com/pin/368310075766383907/

Photo By: CharmAttack

Model: Me

Edit By: Me

For a collection of photos about the Huron River Spill, look here: www.flickr.com/photos/ahknaten/collections/72157626327597...

 

On July 19, 2010, the Huron River in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a pollution spill. The case is unsolved but closed. Booms were setup, the pollution flowed for hours and I witnessed it. Yet no one was ever charged. Someone was able to spill something and get away with it.

 

20 Days after the spill, I went for a walk around Gallup Park. Here are the photos that I took that day.

 

After the booms failed the pollutants presumably went downstream and dispersed. The boom failure was due to a rain event, but the initial spill was not. There is a considerable amount of press related to phosphors from fertilizers that focuses on the average citizen, and Gallup Park had an algae bloom that can be caused by pollution from phosphors. Remember, the AAFD report stated an 88% confidence of phosphoric acid in the spill (a DPS report states that the AAFD report with the acid reference may be inaccurate). Also, some reports stated that petroleum was mixed in as well. I know that I could smell something, so the reports that state that it was 'non-odorous' are not complete. I'm not saying that this spill caused all of the algae in Gallup, but unless Ann Arbor tells me that petroleum and acid is allowed to be dumped legally, then this spill could not have helped the environment, and as there were no accident or permit reports, I presume it must have been illegal?

 

According to the City of Ann Arbor, "A Resident's Guide to Clean Water", Spring 2010 edition:

www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/...

 

"Dumping waste into storm drains, ditches, or waterways contaminates drinking water supplies, recreational areas, and wildlife habitat. Plus, it is illegal"

 

"In Ann Arbor, an ordinance prohibits the use of fertilizers containing phosphorus unless a need is demonstrated through a soil test"

  

According to the HRWC

"nuisance algae blooms that can result from excess phosphorus entering our freshwaters"

www.hrwc.org/2010/12/michigan-protects-rivers-lakes-with-...

 

For documents relating to this case, look here:

a2docs.org/doc/289/

and here

a2docs.org/doc/290/

I was shocked that there wasn't crime scene tape. The scene was brutal, vicious... The victim was found in the nude, decapitated. Her head lay several inches from her naked body. Her one arm was still extended into the air in a silent plea for help. Her body was deposited close to the road but she still went unnoticed for days. There was no blood at the scene so it seems like it is a body dump rather than where the actual murder took place. I think this will probably be an unsolved case. Such a careless loss of life. Truly a tragedy.

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