There’s the letter you’re supposed to get from the Klingerman Foundation. In it will be a little piece of foam, damp with deadly biological agents.

Not. It’s an old urban legend that was first discovered in April of 2000, resuscitated by vicious pranksters to make our lives just a little more miserable in this scary time. Or, just maybe, it’s psychological warfare perpetrated by terrorists.

Or, how about the picture above? Did you get it in your E-mail? It’s a hoax, of course. The jet is coming from the wrong direction, for one thing. For another, the plane is clearly a digital insert into the photo.

Or the story of the rescue worker who got a cellphone call from her husband trapped in the rubble beneath her feet. Never happened.
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Remember UFOs–those wonderful mysteries in the sky? And abductions? And crop circles? And what of the Disclosure Project?

It’s all still happening, and there’s one researcher who has not stopped searching the skies, George Filer of Filer’s Files. Throughout the crisis, he has continued to collect UFO stories, which turns out to be a tremendous service to everyone who is interested in mysteries. If we did not have access to this information, it would be like another light going out in our lives.

What are UFOs? Therein lies quite a tale. Where are they? Well, they’re right here with us, spreading awe from above and inspiring those wonderful questions that mean so much to us all.
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It is one month since the attack on America. When you readthis, we ask you to say a quick prayer for our dead and for the living they have left behind. The World Trade Center and the Pentagon were both staffed by young office workers, military personnel and executives. They have left an exceptionally high number of children and pregnant wives.

On Dreamland on September 15, Whitley Strieber read a two and a half minute comment about what America means to him. He received thousands of appreciative e-mails, and requests to hear it again.

We reproduce that statement here:
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A third employee who worked in the AMI publishing building in Boca Raton, Florida, has tested positive for exposure to the anthrax bacteria. The unidentified 35-year-old woman is being treated with antibiotics and is not expected to develop the deadly disease, Florida Health Secretary John Agwunobi says. One employee, Robert Stevens, died of the disease, and a second, Ernesto Blanco, also tested positive for exposure to it.
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