Another one..
Did Meteorite Strike Central Florida?
POSTED: 10:53 am EDT July 16, 2004
UPDATED: 11:35 am EDT July 16, 2004
CASSELBERRY, Fla. -- Speculation about a July Fourth meteorite strike in Seminole County has many area residents searching their yards for answers.
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Meteor May Have Struck Casselberry Area
From Oviedo, to Maitland, to Casselberry, witnesses claim to have heard a large boom and saw bright flashes of light across the evening holiday skies, WESH NewsChannel 2 reported.
It's creating a meteorite buzz on local radio stations, WESH NewsChannel 2 reported.
"I saw this crazy light, and it was really bright," said Casselberry resident Diana Felise. "The entire house was rattling. We thought the pictures were going to fall off the wall."
If a meteor did strike the area, it is believed to have hit somewhere around Red Bug Road and state Road 434, but Casselberry police officials said they're convinced it was nothing more than a big bolt of lightning since there was a severe storm in the area that night.
"Lightning, thunderstorms, welcome to Florida," said Lt. Dennis Stewart of the Casselberry Police Department.
Many residents, however, still believe it was a meteorite. Rick Wega shot video of the bright lights and remains convinced it was not a storm-induced effect.
"The way it shook the ground isn't like no other lightning," said Wega, "Ive been around a lot of lightning."
Experts, on the other hand, said that until someone finds a piece of a meteorite in the area, it will remain an unsolved mystery.
A meteorite is a small particle of matter that falls to Earth, and the last one to reportedly strike the area hit in Lake County in 1918. Because of such rarity, meteorites are very valuable, and in some cases, one gram of a meteorite can be valued at $10,000.
Global currency supporters to meet
Monday,July12,2004,11:04 AM
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International Monetary Fund
World Bank Group
BRETTON WOODS, N.H. (AP) -- Sixty years after the Bretton Woods International Monetary Conference, supporters of establishing a single global currency are gathering Friday at New Hampshire's Mount Washington Hotel.
Back in 1944, delegates from 44 nations met at the hotel to establish the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
Now, the hotel will be the host of the Single Global Currency Association's first convention. Led by Morrison Bonpasse of Newcastle, Maine, the group says switching to one currency around the world would save hundreds of billions of dollar each year.
Bonpasse says the change would eliminate currency trading and currency-related investment risks.
http://www.wmtw.com/Global/story.asp?s=2018094
Sure seems like an increased meteor phenomena to me!