Three people in the same family have seen strange creatures in Vancouver and one of them heard a strange howling in the forest. Arnold Frank and his nephew Patrick Frank saw bigfoot twice. The first time, they heard a crashing sound and glimpsed him through the trees. “We just saw some real big orange eyes, real high off the ground,” Arnold Frank says. A few nights later, they saw the same creature run into the woods, as they drove along the highway. “We both figured it was too big to be a bear,” Frank says. “And bears don’t walk on two legs.”
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Peter Levenda, author of the popular book “Unholy Alliance,” reports from the far east: “In a strange broadcast this evening (Tuesday-Wednesday) on ‘Nightline’ on Malaysian television station TV3, there were confirmed reports of a UFO?actually one in a series of UFOs?sighted over Kota Kinabalu, the capital city of Malaysia?s Borneo province of Sabah.
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For two years, residents of a suburb in Victoria, British Columbia, have had garage doors open by themselves, sprinklers that come when they’re not supposed to and radios that play several stations at once. VCRs and TV sets go on spontaneously and one person?s brass bed got warm. Chris Burke says his electrically-controlled bed has been folding up at night. “The legs start to come up and the head starts to come up,” Burke says. “That’s pretty scary when you are in the middle of a sleep.”

The Canadian government has appointed a retired university professor to investigate the strange electrical phenomena that began after two 200-foot transmitting towers went up 50 feet from a suburban neighborhood, without consulting with the local government.
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Before the Gulf War, some of Britain’s top microbiology labs were infiltrated by Iraqi scientists in order to gain expertise on germ warfare. The scientists, financed by grants from the Iraqi government, applied for and received research jobs in leading academic and medical institutions.

Dr. Joseph Selkon, an Oxford microbiologist, was working on a project to prevent bacteria from becoming more resistant to antibiotics. But antibiotic resistance is not a significant problem in Iraq, which made him suspicious. His suspicions grew when he questioned colleagues in other departments and found that Iraqis were only interested in microbiology, which could be applied to germ warfare.
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