Von Braschler will be on Dreamland June 1st to tell us how time can be slowed down and even ?frozen? and how athletes, healers and remote viewers have learned how to manipulate time.

According to fundamental laws of physics, time is the 4th dimension. Our minds perceive time as an moving in one direction, from past to future, but this is not necessarily true. Mark K. Anderson reports in wired.com that 50 scientists met in Slovakia for a four-day workshop to explore this issue.

Metod Saniga of the Slovak Academy of Sciences combines mathematical models and pathology reports of schizophrenic, drug-induced and other abnormal perceptions of time. Studying patients with a disjointed sense of time can reveal how it really works.
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Murry Weiss writes in the New York Post that cops in New York had to free a suspicious gang of illegal Middle Eastern immigrants because the INS “didn’t want to be bothered” on Memorial Day weekend. The police couldn?t figure out if they were the hard-working immigrants they claimed to be or a terrorist cell, so they had to let them go. They all admitted they were in the U.S. illegally and some of them had phony IDs. They could have been held if agents from the Immigration and Naturalization Service had shown up.

“What’s the point of stopping vans and risking your life when the one agency with power blows you off?” says one of the cops. “And this is after September 11.”
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Eighteen days ago, 70 drums of cyanide were stolen at gunpoint from a truck in Mexico. Every since, people in the states close to the Mexican border have been nervous about terrorists possibly using it to poison their drinking water.

Now their worries are over?most of the cyanide drums have been found near a dirt road in central Mexico. A policeman discovered them in the early morning hours outside the city of Honey, Puebla, 80 miles north of Mexico City, according to the city’s secretary, Juvencio Miranda.
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Prospective parents can now “feel” a baby in the womb with the aid of a computer system that converts ultrasound images into a tactile virtual picture. A 3D ultrasound image of the baby is generated by layering successive 2D pictures on top of one another. The computer then traces the features of the fetus and allows the 3D shapes to be felt using a device which resembles a robot arm.

“When the cursor touches a virtual object, the motors in the device kick in and that’s what lets you actually feel it,” says Tom Anderson of Novint, the New Mexico-based company that invented the system. “It’s a pretty amazing experience. You can feel the nose and reach down and touch the lips.”

To learn more,click here.
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