?To the fascinating interviews on Dreamland in your car, in bed or in your living room, with your feet up and a cup of coffee by your side?instead of having to sit at your computer. Listeners have been asking to download Dreamland for years, but it uses up too much expensive bandwidth, so we couldn’t do it. But now you can download Dreamland if you click here and become a subscriber (or go to the new Subscribe tab at the top of every page). If you subscribe, you’ll also get 10% off everything in our store, as well as access to special discussions by Whitley about The Key, The Path and his personal UFO experiences, all for only $3.95 a month, payable automatically through our secure Paypal subscriber site.
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Al Qaeda is trying to get recruits in the Middle East to attack oilfields in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait if the U.S. attacks Iraq, according to U.S. intelligence. The recruitment campaign is looking for radical Muslims in Saudi Arabia and Yemen who are willing to conduct suicide attacks and sabotage. There are also signs that Saddam Hussein’s forces have planted explosives in Iraqi oil fields so they can destroy them rather than hand them over to us. While we may want a future where the West uses less oil, we’ll be dependent on it in the near future, and wide destruction of Middle East oilfields could plunge us back into the Dark Ages.
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We couldn’t figure out how the Mind Reader works, so a more mathematically adept reader from Canada did it for us: A double-digit number minus the sum of its digits is ALWAYS a multiple of 9. So all the Mind Reader has to do is to assign a unique symbol to all multiples of 9 under 90, and change that symbol for a new one every time you click your mouse button.
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Tourists who take home pieces of rock from Uluru, Australia’s sacred Aboriginal rock, may be jinxed. Rangers at the Uluru National Park say they’ve received thousands of pieces of the rock which have been returned to them because they brought the senders bad luck. “It’s just a weird phenomenon,” says park manager Brooke Watson. “They come from all over and they just keep coming every day.”

Uluru is a huge red rock in the middle of the Australian desert which is also known as Ayer’s rock. It’s an important religious site for Aborigines, who don?t like tourists climbing it, and it’s against Australian law to remove pieces of it. It’s visited by around half a million tourists every year.
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