According to several eyewitnesses in Chile, twenty-four people had an interdimensional travel experience during an international UFO congress. The event, which took place in the Cipreseses River National Reservoir, in Rancagua, Chile, was predicted by Peruvian ufologist Sixto Paz.

During a recent UFO expo in Chile, Paz announced that Chileans would soon have contact with extraterrestrials and said, ?What is about to happen this month will resonate worldwide.?

Chilean ufologist Camilo Valdivieso says that on Saturday night, March 29, many eyewitnesses saw lights in the sky. According to one, ?they were as bright as giant light bulbs.?
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The Washington Post reports that Cynthia McKinney (D-Ga.) is calling for an investigation into whether President Bush and other government officials had advance notice of the terrorist attacks on September 11 but did nothing to prevent them.

McKinney says, ?Persons close to this administration are poised to make huge profits off America?s new war?We know there were numerous warnings of the events to come on September 11th?What did this administration know and when did it know it, about the events of September 11th? Who else knew, and why did they not warn the innocent people of New York who were needlessly murdered??What do they have to hide??
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If you?re a high school student studying astronomy and your local skies are too polluted with light for star gazing or if you can?t afford a good telescope, let your computer do the skywatching for you.

Ryan Hannahoe punches coordinates on a keyboard, then waits for a telescope under the New Mexico skies to swing toward the dramatic dust cloud marked on astronomical charts as B33, the constellation Orion. Where he lives in Pennsylvania, city lights make such observations impossible.
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A light tap on the side of your head could one day restore your eyesight, according to Mohsen Shahinpoor and his team at the University of New Mexico. The tap would tighten a band of artificial muscle wrapped round your eyeballs, changing their shape and bringing blurry images into focus.

The researchers call their artificial muscle a ?smart eye band.? It will be stitched to the sclera, the tough white outer part of the eyeball, and activated by an electromagnet in a hearing-aid-sized unit fitted behind one ear.
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