Whitley Strieber’s first interview about the Key will be on KENS radio’s “Clear Talk” program with Constance Clear on Friday, January 12 from 7PM to 9PM Central time. You can listen to the show on the internet and call in nationally with questions. The call-in number is 1-800-896-5107, and will be open for the entire program.

Constance is a psychotherapist and the author of the remarkable book Reaching for Reality, the only book ever written by an abductee group about their experiences.

To listen to Constance interview Whitley, click here during the program. (The station does not archive its shows. It is only possible to listen live.)
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The invention has the code name “Ginger,” and was developed by 49 year-old scientist Dean Kamen, who says that Ginger will change the world.

Kamen is an eccentric inventor who commutes to work by helicopter. He?s out of touch with popular culture, and once sat next to Shirley MacLaine and Warren Beatty at a White House dinner, and didn?t know who either of them were. He invented an off-road wheelchair called the iBot, that can climb stairs and move freely on sand and gravel, as well as rise up on two wheels.

Harvard Business School press has just paid journalist Steve Kemper a large advance for a book about this invention, even though they don?t yet know what it is about.
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A listener alerted us to a mysterious green or yellow substance that fell from the sky in Syracuse, New York over the past few days. Syracuse television station WSTM has carried out laboratory analysis and the substance has found not to be a de-icing chemical falling from planes.

Our listener says, “They have been covering this story on TV for the past three days. The local ?experts? insist that it?s bird droppings. Yeah, from BIG BIRD. They showed video of these houses on the evening news, and there?s no way that it?s bird waste unless a huge flock of birds all relieved themselves at the same time. We have a ton of snow here and these houses have yellow-green icicles hanging off their roofs.”
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According to U.S. government researchers, just walking by a whirlpool that was on display at a store in Virginia was enough to give 23 people Legionnaires? disease, and to kill 2 of them.

In 1996, Virginia health officials noticed a higher-than-usual incidence of the disease in the area, and after interviewing the sick people, they were able to trace the infection to its source, which was a display model of a whirlpool in a local store.

“If I saw a spa, I wouldn?t take a big old sniff,” says Denise Benkel, who at that time was with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

For more information, click here.

NOTE: This news story, previously published on our old site, will have any links removed.read more