Saturday, June 2, 2012

Amelia earhart

  • A bit of a Saturday night palate cleanser, and a story which I believe many people will find interesting. (I know I did.) There are plenty of mysteries which we simply may never know the answer to.
  • (Hotair.com)
  • Dozens of previously dismissed radio signals were actually credible transmissions from Amelia Earhart, according to a new study of the alleged post-loss signals from Earharts plane.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • Dozens of previously dismissed radio signals were actually credible transmissions from Amelia Earhart, according to a new study of the alleged post-loss signals from Earharts plane.
  • (FOX News)
  • R.D. "Bo" McKneely's connection to Tennessee began in 1958 when he met prominent Rutherford County resident Sara McQuire Bell, widow of the late Ed Bell, former publisher of the Daily News Journal.
  • (The Murfreesboro Post)
  • MIDDLEBORO — The Middleborough Historical Association will introduce Amelia Earhart, portrayed by Linda Myer, on June 5 at 8 p.m. at the Elks Lodge.
  • (South Coast Today)
  • Seventy-five years ago, pilot Amelia Earhart went missing while attempting to fly across the globe. Recently, a possible clue to the details surrounding her mysterious disappearance and death was found on an uninhabited island in the Pacific Ocean.
  • (The Frisky)
  • Pieces of glass found on Nikumaroro Island in the southwest Pacific may add to circumstantial evidence that Amelia Earheart lived there as a castaway, researchers have announced -- but there are complications.
  • (AVweb)
  • Rare footage has been uncovered of Amelia Earhart making one of the most famous flights in aviation history exactly 80 years ago. She was the most famous woman in the world when she took off from New York on 21st May 1932.
  • (Utv)
  • JACKSON, MI – A little more than a year before her disappearance became a mystery that's captivated people for 75 years, Amelia Earhart soared into Jackson.
  • (MLive.com)
  • It is 80 years since Amelia Earhart touched down in a field at Ballyarnett in Londonderry. She took off from Newfoundland in Canada in a bid to become the first woman to fly across the Atlantic.
  • (BBC News)

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