It may not be blue, but it’s THERE: At the border between our solar system and the rest of the galaxy, NASA’s new Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) spacecraft, launched in October, has spotted a band of mysterious high-energy emissions.

On the Skywatchers website, Clara Moskowitz quotes IBEX investigator David mcComas as saying, “The IBEX results are truly remarkable, with emissions not resembling any of the current theories or models of this never-before-seen region. We expected to see small, gradual spatial variations at the interstellar boundary, some 10 billion miles away. However, IBEX is showing us a very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky.”
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First, Linda Howe interviews Derek Bridges of Overton, Hampshire, England about a videotape he made of a water buffalo ascending into a UFO and disappearing. This interview with this straightforward 69 year old man, intimately familiar with the location, is among the most convincing and amazing accounts in the history of this radio program. Includes an AMAZING interview about a close-up UFO observation.
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Is Osama bin Laden dead or alive? Many experts, from former CIA agent Robert Baer to Oliver North, have said that he is certainly dead. And yet both George W. Bush and Barack Obama have promised to hunt him down. So where does the truth lie?

David Ray Griffin has done amazingly careful research into this question, and has come up with an answer that will shock you. Should we be hunting Osama bin Laden? Find out once and for all!

NOTE: This show summary, previously published on our old site, may contain broken links.read more

And how to succeed at free throws – It’s not occult magic, it’s straight science: Lots of interesting things have arrived and one of these is the basketball season. Two engineers have figured out the best way to shoot a free throw, a frequently underappreciated skill that gets more important as the game clock winds down.

Chau Tran and Larry Silverberg say, “To get a swish rather than a brick, you need the best possible conditions for releasing the basketball from your hand.” They used hundreds of thousands of three-dimensional computer simulations of basketball free-throw trajectories to arrive at their conclusions. After running the simulations, Tran and Silverberg arrived at a number of major recommendations to improve free-throw shooting.
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