On Dreamland this week, Jim Marrs hosts the most amazing time travel program you will ever hear. First, a mind-bender of an interview with famed UK anomalies researcher Jenny Randles on the fact that many prominent scientists now think that time travel is not only possible, but that it’s happening. Then Whitley Strieber comes in as Jim’s second guest and tells what is, very simply, the most amazing of all time-travel stories. As if that’s not enough, Linda conducts a phenomenal interview about a face- to-face contact with a gray! For subscribers this week, we continue our series of fascinating lectures by Whitley.
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New research shows that farmers who used agricultural insecticides in the last decade experienced increased neurological symptoms, even when they were no longer using the products. According to another study, the rate of new illnesses associated with pesticide exposure at schools increased significantly in children from 1998 to 2002.

Data from almost 19,000 North Carolina and Iowa farmers linked use of insecticides to reports of reoccurring headaches, fatigue, insomnia, dizziness, nausea, hand tremors, numbness and other neurological symptoms. Some of the insecticides named in the study are still on the market.
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Wacky weather caused by global warming continues. Consistent with predictions that this would be a stormy summer, July has set a record for the number of tropical storms spawned in the Atlantic. It was also the second hottest July on record, and a month that saw some of the greatest extremes of drought and flooding ever recorded. The Indian city of Mumbai experienced a massive 37-inch rainfall in July, while the US Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, Spain, Portugal, and parts of France, China and Australia experienced some of the worst drought conditions ever recorded.
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Would you like to be able to hear Glenn Gould, the genius pianist who died in 1982? A company has invented a way for us to be able to do just that. The same thing was done many years ago with the creation of piano rolls for player pianos. Artists like Scott Joplin played tunes that were “recorded” on the rolls and can still be listened to today.

A software company called Zenph Studios has discovered a way to take a recording from a record and convert it into a live performance played by a real piano. Gould is a perfect candidate for this process, since during his lifetime, he gave almost no live concerts, preferring to make records instead.
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