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With a few years of perspective under his belt, Babka may be a little rusty but he's willing to give predicting 2009 a go. Besides, he needs the cash (who doesn't?). So here are his predictions for 2009, which surely can't be any worse than 2008. Isn't that hope what got Barack Obama elected president after all?
At a joint press conference on Warren Street, the management of the Hotel Syracuse will announce that they are becoming a Catholic parish, with hopes that the diocese will allow them to merge with Chrysler Magna New Process New Venture Gear to form a new parish to be known as Saint Echinacea's, the patron saint of those who will try anything rather than recognize reality. The diocese, impressed with the hotel's belief in resurrection, agrees to study the offer. "The Catholic chu...
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Randi talks about people's perceptions about psychics. He believes that perceptions may or may not represent reality; magic acts are the proof of that.
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In the mid-1980s, a serial rapist was creeping into the homes of elderly women in Homestead and attacking them in the middle of the night.
Police worked hundreds of hours, chasing leads and exhausting the limits of technology.
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The king of pop is dead, and people already are trying to capitalize on it.
When Jackson died, the conspiracy theories immediately started. He was very rich, but owed a ton of money to the IRS. He was a very private person who was constantly scrutinized by the media. He was allegedly mentally stable, but in many ways, naive and infantile. He was just the type of person who might want to fake his own death, but might not be able to.
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There used to be a psychic who claimed the ability to read the minds of animals.
The idea was that the psychic read her dog's mind while the dog was reading my mind, and she passed along its thoughts. I visited her one day in Simi Valley, but the dog was having an off day, and the psychic could only read "I'm hungry" and "I'm tired" in its mind.
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Homicide investigator Charlie McCormick had his doubts.
Two psychics wanted to come to Park County, visit the spots where two young women were killed 25 years ago and possibly shed some paranormal light on the unsolved double homicide -- all with television cameras rolling for a new Discovery Channel program called "Sensing Murder.
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The story's actually pretty good. Ben Kingsley plays Benjamin O'Ryan, a former FBI agent tapped for a secret program involving "remote viewing," wherein the participants were trained to develop psychic abilities to aid in (among other tasks) the apprehension of serial killers. His specific methods involve GPS coordinates and pencil sketches of the creepy visions he telepathically receives. On the edge of madness, O'Ryan has begun a lethal vigilante campaign against the killers whose minds he's touched. While investigating those murders, Mackelway is contacted by O'Ryan and comes to believe (against the cautionary pleadings of boss Harry Lennix and partner Carrie-Anne Moss) the two of them must join forces to tackle "Suspect Zero"--the ultimate serial killer, who leaves no crumbs for the...
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Despite the arrest of a state trooper in the 2006 slaying of Blairsville dentist John J. Yelenic, family and friends are continuing to search for answers about his death.
On Thursday, two psychics from Butler -- sisters Suzanne Kelley and Jean McKenzie Vincent -- were invited by friends of Yelenic into his South Spring Street home to see if they could "read" whether any others were involved in his April 13, 2006 death.
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By Tim McGlone
The Virginian-Pilot
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The last few weeks I have been so preoccupied with the things that need work in Glendora I temporarily forgot how nice it is to live and work here.
There really is a lot of diversity here and you can find just about anything you're looking for.