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Out there: Former Sen. Mike Gravel says White House suppressing evidence of ETs

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Yahoo.com - By Rick Klein, Olivier Knox, Richard Coolidge, and Jordyn Phelps | Power Players – Fri, May 3, 2013

ABC's Eric Wray, Betsy Klein, Melissa Young, and Bob Bramson contributed to this episode.

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Top Line

Even as most Americans wonder what planet politicians are from, is it possible that the government is squelching evidence of extraterrestrials visiting Earth? One former presidential hopeful says yes – and that the conspiracy goes all the way to the top.

Former Sen. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) says the White House has helped keep the truth about the “extraterrestrial influence that is investigating our planet” from the public.

Red tide, mysterious ailment killing Florida manatees

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ABC Action News - 3/18/13, AP

  • red tide injured manatee

MELBOURNE, Fla. - Even as a Red Tide algae bloom is wiping out a record number of manatees in southwest Florida, a mysterious ailment is killing off dozens more manatees on the state's East Coast. So far, state biologists have been unable to pinpoint what killed them.

Pat Rose, a former government manatee biologist who is now executive director of the Save the Manatee Club, said he could not recall another time when manatees were being killed under similar circumstances on both coasts at the same time.

Read more: http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/news/state/red-tide-mysterious-ailment-killing-florida-manatees#ixzz2NykyFSOF

Hottest Hobart summer on record

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WeatherZone.com - 3/01/13, ABC

ABC image
Hobart set a record high temperature of 41.8 degrees on January 4. - ABC

Hobart has recorded its hottest ever summer and the driest in more than a decade.
The capital city averaged 23.3 degrees, breaking the 2001 record of 23.2.
To read the rest of this story, visit WeatherZone.com.

Train passengers trapped in wild weather for 17hrs

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ABC News Australia - 2.22.13

Passenger train arrives after ordeal

Photo: The passenger train arrived back in Coffs Harbour after the ordeal. (ABC)

 

Following a destructive storm that brought heavy rains and high winds, 100 people were trapped on a train in New South Wales for 17 hours. First the train was stopped by fallen trees on the tracks, then it hit floodwaters and then it was stopped for a third time by a landslide.

 

To read this story, visit ABC News Australia.

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