Henry J. Franzoni III is a musician, computer scientist, and historian who
spent over 5 million dollars of other peoples money looking for Sasquatch while
serving on the Board of Advisors for the Bigfoot Research Project and the
Research Board of the North American Science Institute. He founded the
Internet Virtual Bigfoot Conference, the first bigfoot discussion group on the
Internet, and he made the first bigfoot web sites for notable researchers
including Rene Dahinden, Peter Byrne, Ray Crowe, Matt Moneymaker, Chris
Murphy, and Ron Morehead. He has contributed to books, articles and papers
about Sasquatch by authors including Jeff Glickman, Dr. Robert Pyle, Thom
Powell, Chris Murphy, and Loren Coleman. He has appeared in six movies
about Sasquatch. As a drummer he has appeared on over 15 CDs. As a computer
scientist, he has co-authored science papers on the subject of salmon survival in
the Columbia Basin, and has managed a regional biological data center on behalf
of 20 Indian tribes and agencies spread across the Columbia Basin. Henry lives
with his wife and cats in Oregon Coast Range., which Sir Francis Drake once
named “New Albion”.
Mr. Franzoni's web site is www.henryfranzoni.com if you care to check it out. Join us Wednesday night at 9 p.m. eastern time for the Sasquatch Triangle Show. You may phone in to the show at 310 984-7600 and then enter the show ID of 288192. You may go directly to the web site for the show at http://www.nowlive.com/desktop/default.aspx?id=100288192 and click the red ON AIR just below the You Tube screen on the right side of the page. Join us for this sure to be fascinating conversation with Henry Franzoni.
And as always, we encourage you to please tune in and support great research.
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GATORS IN THE SEWERS
What if one of the most famous and terrifying urban legends was not a legend but a frightening fact? History tells us that the idea of alligators lurking around in the sewers of New York City is based in truth. In the mid 1930s three teenagers pulled an eight-foot alligator from a storm drain. Reports persisted until a skeptical superintendant of sewers, Teddy May, was forced to investigate for himself. What May found shocked even him--swarms of alligators alive beneath the busy main street of Americas biggest city. Crews were sent in to kill the deadly reptiles, but the stories of the gators in the sewers lived on. Experts, however, are divided over whether it is scientifically possible for alligators to continue to exist in the sewers, so a MonsterQuest team sets out to search for modern evidence of these monsters. Herpetologists and underground explorers join forces and use the latest in remote-operated camera technology to delve into the depths of New York's sewers.9:00 EST/8:00 Central on History. Check local listings for time and channel.
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