The Turkish Prime Ministry Inspection Board is suggesting in a report that three engineers working on a sensitive air force automatic foe recognition system may have been killed using telekinesis to induce them to commit suicide. The report was prepared for the Ankara Public Prosecutor as part of the ongoing investigation of the 2006-2007 suicides. It claims that the victims could have been induced to commit suicide by some psychic means such as telekinesis, citing the findings of a neuropsychology expert.
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The Kansas City Star reports that a priest appeared at the scene of a car accident in Missouri, reassured the trapped victim and rescuers that she would be all right, then disappeared. Rescuers were mystified because the highway was blocked and the priest would have had to walk over a quarter of a mile across the flat terrain in order to leave the scene. They are at a loss as to how he disappeared, and are requesting that he come forward and identify himself. Some are calling it a miracle, but it’s also possible that the rescuers were too busy with the effort they were making to notice his departure. He came with anointing oil in hand, reassured the victim and the rescuers, exerting what witnesses are calling a ‘calming effect,’ then was gone.
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Drinking two cups of hot chocolate a day may help older people keep their brains healthy and their thinking skills sharp, according to a study published in the August 7, 2013, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

The study involved 60 people with an average age of 73 who did not have dementia. The participants drank two cups of hot cocoa per day for 30 days and did not consume any other chocolate during the study. They were given tests of memory and thinking skills. They also had ultrasounds tests to measure the amount of blood flow to the brain during the tests.
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Drinking two cups of hot chocolate a day may help older people keep their brains healthy and their thinking skills sharp, according to a study published in the August 7, 2013, online issue of Neurology, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

The study involved 60 people with an average age of 73 who did not have dementia. The participants drank two cups of hot cocoa per day for 30 days and did not consume any other chocolate during the study. They were given tests of memory and thinking skills. They also had ultrasounds tests to measure the amount of blood flow to the brain during the tests.
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