When we asked German UFO researcher Michael Hesemann, who will be on Dreamland April 13, about a recent UFO wave in Germany, he replied, “I spoke to several eyewitnesses and there is no doubt it was indeed a meteorite.”

Now the meteorite has been found: A Bavarian farmer?s wife found a 3 foot wide crater in her vegetable patch with the meteorite lodged at the bottom. She took the blackened rock, which is about the size of a tennis ball, to the local police station.

The Munich Institute for Geology now has the meteorite which experts estimate hit the atmosphere at a speed of almost 125,000 mph.

See news story ?UFO Sightings in Germany?, click here.

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Remember Anthrax? What happened to the investigation? Where are the culprits? The answer is that the FBI appears to have put the case on a back burner. In this chilling article, Wayne Madsen of Counterpunch offers some insights into why that might be. Hitler burned the Reichstag, the German Capitol Building, and blamed it on a Jew in order to create an atmosphere of terror and make certain that a frightened populace gave him the dictatorial powers he wanted. Did elements within the U.S. government do something similar with the anthrax scare?

To read this Insight article,click here.

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

Hundreds of people report seeing strange light over Bavaria in southern Germany recently. Local authorities have received calls from people reporting a loud explosion and strange lights in the sky and the Bavarian interior ministry says hundreds of worried citizens called to report the UFOs, described as a series of flashes that looked like lightning. Panicked callers jammed police telephone lines seeking an explanation. Air traffic controllers at Munich airport also reported seeing the lights.
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The world?s first lip-reading cellphone is being developed by researchers at Japanese cellphone maker NTT DoCoMo. All callers will have to do is mouth their words silently, and the phone will convert them to speech or text. This could put an end to having to listen to the personal details of other people?s conversations in subways, restaurants and on the street.

DoCoMo?s prototype figures out which words are being said by using a contact sensor near the phone?s mouthpiece to detect tiny electrical signals sent by muscles around the user?s mouth. The signals are then converted into spoken words by a speech synthesizer, or into text for a text message or email.
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