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 Post subject: Another trap
PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2011 3:52 pm 
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http://www.theonion.com/articles/30-yea ... recentnews

30 Years Of Man's Life Disappear In Mysterious 'Kansas Rectangle'

June 30, 2011 | ISSUE 44•19
Navy Admiral Considers Death Of Son Within Acceptable Loss Range
04.11.01

CHICAGO—The so-called "Kansas rectangle," a desolate and featureless region covering 82,277 square miles in America's mysterious Great Plains, has been a source of speculation among paranormal investigators for decades. Though the questions surrounding its existence have never been answered, one thing is certain: The life of former Chicagoan Kevin Corcoran suddenly vanished into the eerie region 30 years ago this week, never to return.

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The last time Kevin Corcoran was seen being active.

According to his friends and family, Corcoran, a bright and energetic young man of 18, was last seen driving into the Rectangle in a Plymouth Duster on the afternoon of May 8, 1978. Surveillance footage shows him stopping at a gas station near the border to buy fuel and snacks at 4:15 p.m. Although his trip was only supposed to last the summer, he was never seen or heard from again.

The last known communication from Corcoran was sent from somewhere within the Rectangle, and made reference to plans to marry a large blond woman and enroll in a local technical college. Records indicate the message was received from 37 degrees 42 minutes north latitude and 97 degrees 20 minutes west longitude—but when searchers attempted to investigate that location, they found nothing but a tiny town with zero signs of life.

"Who knows if my son will ever return to civilization," said Corcoran's father, Dennis, now 76. "Some have reported seeing a pale and dead-eyed specter of him, trudging to and from a small office-supply firm every day, but they could just be legends. We don't know."

Acquaintances of Corcoran say they warned him that once he entered the Rectangle, he would never make it back out, but he did not listen, and was drawn there to investigate tales of cheap tuition. It wasn't until Corcoran failed to show up in the summer of 1978 for an annual camping trip, however, that the reality of his disappearance began to sink in.

"I knew then he wasn't coming back," friend Craig Wilkins said. "He got sucked into this alternative reality, and he can't get out. I'll never see my friend again."

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The mysterious region has, according to some accounts, swallowed thousands of potentially interesting and active lives.

As haunting as his story may be, Kevin Corcoran is only one of hundreds of people who, for unknown reasons, have had years or even decades of their lives utterly fade away in the mystifying region. Still, most cases lack any hard evidence: The few known photos from inside the Rectangle show only a flat, blank emptiness, stretching unremarkably to the horizon.

What happens in the lives of those who venture within remains a mystery.

Matthew Hume, a researcher at the University of Chicago who studies the Rectangle, said the bizarre phenomena associated with the region might never be fully understood.

"As best we can tell, those who go beyond the area's borders for too long are knocked off course by the low external pressure to succeed," Hume said. "But after that, it's as if they fall off the face of the earth. There are cases of an entire Greyhound bus full of people entering the Rectangle and vanishing into obscurity."

Experts estimate that several million tons of consumer goods disappear into the region per year. Yet, almost nothing, save for the odd Sunday morning church broadcast, is ever detected coming back out.

Still, some travelers have returned to tell their tales. The most frequent occurrence reported by those who have survived the Kansas Rectangle is extreme disorientation and an unsettling perception of time distortion.

Boulder, CO resident Ned Frome entered the Rectangle in 2005 while en route to visiting family in St. Louis.

"I had been driving for hours, but it was as though I hadn't moved at all," Frome said. "I had no idea which direction I was going in. No matter where I looked, everything was exactly the same and before long, normal navigation was almost impossible."

"I'll never go in there again," Frome added with a shudder. "I felt like I was going insane."

Kyle Manheim, a photocopier salesman from Minneapolis who was once inside the Kansas Rectangle for two weeks on business, said he could not clearly remember any events from the time period.

"There isn't a single thing I can recall that would be worth mentioning," Manheim said. "I know I was there, but that's about it. It's like those 14 days never happened."

While many strongly believe in the eerie, soul-destroying powers of the Kansas Rectangle, the dearth of concrete evidence has drawn its share of skeptics.

"If you look at the statistics, there's nothing going on in that area that doesn't happen every day in the rest of the country," said Stephen Finney, a long-haul trucker who is familiar with the region. "What happened to Kevin Corcoran could have happened in Iowa, Indiana, or even Michigan.

"It's just a myth," Finney added. "This whole 'Kansas' place people talk about simply does not exist."

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2011 3:58 pm 
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I've been there. It was terrifying. We almost never made it back out, the weather was like nothing I had ever seen before.

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 Post subject: Re: Another trap
PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2011 8:39 pm 
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I lost a year and a half of my life in the Kansas Rectangle.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2011 9:53 pm 
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I grew up in the center of the rectangle (Salina and then Emporia). Some might consign it to be a lonely and desolate abyss, a purgatory of sorts if you will. However, there are far worse places like this odd Maryland zone which, from what I can gather by living within, is located within Dis, the Eighth Circle of Hell.

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PostPosted: Sat Jul 02, 2011 10:43 pm 
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Dis is the Sixth Circle, where the heretics suffer. Eighth circle is Malebolge, the circle of the fraudulent.

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PostPosted: Sun Jul 03, 2011 12:06 am 
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Kansas, where you can look further and see less than any place on the planet...


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PostPosted: Sun Jul 03, 2011 12:09 am 
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It's becoming harder and harder to come back each time I go there. Just want to lay down and rest and not worry about rolling off to anywhere...


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 Post subject: Re: Another trap
PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 8:21 am 
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Is this related at all to the 'Nebraska Hand Sweeper' area, to its north?

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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 3:23 pm 
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Micheal wrote:
Dis is the Sixth Circle, where the heretics suffer. Eighth circle is Malebolge, the circle of the fraudulent.


Dis encompasses every circle of Hell beyond the Fifth Circle in The Divine Comedy, Inferno.

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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 10:57 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
Kansas, where you can look further and see less than any place on the planet...


I thought that was Iowa.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 2:16 pm 
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Müs wrote:
Midgen wrote:
Kansas, where you can look further and see less than any place on the planet...


I thought that was Iowa.

I think southern Minnesota qualifies as well, but I really think of Kansas, when I think "pool-table flat."

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 3:17 pm 
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Heh, I remember coming down out of the rockies in Eastern Colorado... I was like "My god, its full of flat."

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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 5:37 pm 
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Müs wrote:
Heh, I remember coming down out of the rockies in Eastern Colorado... I was like "My god, its full of flat."


Eastern Colorado is spooky.. almost as spooky as southeast New Mexico, or West Texas from Del Rio up til El Paso. Every single one of those areas feels like if you stopped to piss beside the road you'd disappear like in a horror movie. When my wife and I drove through Nebraska and Colorado 2 years ago, we hit the Colorado line and it was like the twiglight zone. You'd go 6 exits between gas stations.. the other 5 had a road with no name, just a number, and if you were lucky a barn in the distance. I was damn glad we filled up right before crossing the state line.

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PostPosted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 9:32 pm 
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I was stationed in Colorado Springs for three years. Most of the locals jokingly referred to anything east of Denver/Springs/Pueblo as 'Kansas'.

I spent a week in tent in Eastern Colorado near Lamar on a crash detail (picking up pieces of a crashed B1). That is one boooooooring place.


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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Tue Jul 05, 2011 10:05 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Müs wrote:
Heh, I remember coming down out of the rockies in Eastern Colorado... I was like "My god, its full of flat."


Eastern Colorado is spooky.. almost as spooky as southeast New Mexico, or West Texas from Del Rio up til El Paso. Every single one of those areas feels like if you stopped to piss beside the road you'd disappear like in a horror movie. When my wife and I drove through Nebraska and Colorado 2 years ago, we hit the Colorado line and it was like the twiglight zone. You'd go 6 exits between gas stations.. the other 5 had a road with no name, just a number, and if you were lucky a barn in the distance. I was damn glad we filled up right before crossing the state line.


Along those lines... Funnily enough in the same road trip that took me to Kansas the second time, my friend Lu and I were coming back from Tahoe (Yes, we went to Kansas and Tahoe. It was a longass trip.) We decided to go through Cali instead of down through Nevada. The map we had said we could go across the mountains through a town called Bodi.

We drive for a bit, and get to Bodi, and its this little ghost town thing with a ranger hut. WWe pull up to the ranger hut, and I show the lady my map, and she tells me that the road *technically* exists, but its 45 miles of high clearance 4x4 off roadness. Well, since we were in Lu's brand new TrailBlazer (seriously, we left Vegas and it had like 600 miles on it.) He said "Lets go for it."

So we embarked on the adventure, and drove off into the barren wilderness with only a pair of barren tracks to follow. About an hour and a half or so, we come to a chain link fence running along a dirt road perpendicular to our path. We look at each other, say what the ****, and flip a coin. We ended up going right, and come to a house. I **** you not, in the middle of **** nowhere, a house. With a lady out front watering her lawn. We were 40 someodd miles from that ghost town, which was 40 someodd miles from anywhere remotely civilized and there's a goddamn house. We rolled down the window and asked for directions to civilization, and she pointed us down another semi graded road that led down a mountain for another 20 miles or so that took us to a state route in Nevada.

I guarantee you that if we went back there now... that house would be all burnt the **** out and had been since like the 40's.

Google maps is magic. How we got here from Bodie, and then made our way out to the freeway... I dunno.
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=bodie,+CA ... 3&t=h&z=18

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