A special interview by Jim Marrs with Whitley Strieber, discussing Whitley’s new novel The Grays, is up on this web site as a Dreamland Special. To listen, click “Listen Now” on the masthead and scroll down to the last item in the list. Jim is the author of Alien Agenda, so he’s the PERFECT person to interview Whitley!

Is Whitley’s portrayal of the Grays based on what he has really seen and experienced? Is the secret craft described in the book real? Is one of the characters in the book based on Whitley? Be sure to listen until the end, to hear a special surprise message from Anne Strieber! To learn more about The Grays, click here. To read Anne’s diaries about Whitley’s book tour for The Grays, click here and here.
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We can save the lives of millions of infants every year in the third world. In the West, we can save the lives of their mothers as well?and also the lives of their children, especially their sons, when they grow to maturity. What is the magic that can achieve all these miracles? Breast feeding.

Andy McSmith writes in the Independent that studies have shown that, in poor countries, four million babies die every year before they?re one month old. One quarter of them (a million babies every year), could be saved if they were breastfed from the first hour of their life.

But a major problem with breast-feeding in Africa is mothers with HIV. The World Health Organization (WHO) warns that mothers can pass the virus to their infants through their milk.
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The world’s most powerful atomic particle accelerator will start functioning around 6 months from now. It’s capable of creating a black hole every second. Since black holes suck up planets, is this dangerous? Scientists reassure us that it’s not?but then, they’ve recently steered us wrong about other dangers as well.

The Large Hadron Collider is now under construction in an underground circular tunnel that is 17 miles long in the world’s largest physics lab, CERN near Geneva, Switzerland.Black holes can’t be seen, but astronomers can tell they exist because of what they do. Their gravity is so strong that they suck in everything around them. Not even light can escape, which is how they got their name. They form in nature when a dead star collapses.
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When your dog gets sick, you take him to the vet, where he’s given some medicine. But the drugs your dog is taking could be sensed by other dogs, and since dogs are pack animals that rely on their noses, this could turn him into a social outcast. In order to prevent this, we need to understand how animals think.
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