The first person to get a report of the Corina Saebels case was HBCCUFO director Brian Vike. What riveted his attention was the fact that he was in the middle of investigating an extensive series of UFO sightings in the area when she called him, but these sightings were not yet public knowledge.

Listen as Anne Strieber explores this and his many other cases from UFO hotbed British Columbia with him. This is an unforgettable and completely unique look into one of the most powerful of all abduction cases–and beyond!

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

On Friday, Feb. 22, Dreamland science reporter Linda Moulton Howe will be on Coast talking about the Stephenville, Texas UFO flap.

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

The female quest for sexual orgasm has led to some strange research. Now scientists say they have finally found the first evidence of the existence of the elusive "G spot"–but only in some women. The G spot is supposed to control women’s ability to have orgasms. Italian researchers examined the vaginas of 20 women with ultrasound and found a thickened area of tissue in those who said they had vaginal orgasms. This area of thickness was absent in those who said they did not. A second way to have orgasms is through the clitoris, which is removed from young girls in some countries. Sigmund Freud, the father of psychotherapy, claimed that women have vaginal orgasms, but most researchers have dismissed this, saying that all female orgasms are due to stimulation of the clitoris.read more

There’s the kind of breathalyzer test we all dread, when we’re stopped by traffic cops for erratic driving. But now there’s ANOTHER kind of breathalyzer, that diagnoses diseases we may not realize we have.

Our breath can tell doctors things they want to know. BBC News quotes researcher Masood Yousef as saying, “For example, the odor of ‘pear drops’ and acetone in relation to diabetes, ammonia in relation to hepatitis, and dimethyl sulphide to cirrhosis. There are also certain compounds that seem to mark out particular types of cancer?Breath samples are much easier to collect than blood and urine, for the patient as much as for the person collecting the sample.”

For those of us who hate needles, this is good news.

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