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ROUND ROBI N

A Factual and Non-Sectarian Publication issued in the interests of

BORDERLAND SCIENCES RESEARCH ASSOCIATES (BSRA)

Published by MEADE LAYNE, M. A., Director 3 5 2 4 Adam s Avenue, San Diego 16, California

Vol. XII

Janiiorij - Fcbruorij 1957

No. 5

ROUND ROBIN

JANARY-FEBRUARY 19 5 7 Volume XII - No 5

A P u b lic a t io n o f the Borderland S cien ce s R esearch A s s o c ia t e s CONTENTS : OFFENDERS AGAINST PEACE - from"Le C o u rriere In te rp la n e ta ire "EXTRAORDINARY M DIVINING AP - by A ssoc* Gaston Burridge THE DROSNES-LAZENBY CANCER TREATMENT - and - Psychotherapy ANTI-GRAVITY and SPACESHIP PR0PULSIQ& - by P h y s i c i s t C .F . K r a f f t - and - A L e t t e r of Importance THE INDISPENSABLE COM PLEM ENT "PRANA and SUB-ATOMIC ENERGY CONVERTERS - by A sso c. "Lindy M il l a r d 1 1 DANIEL FRY DISCUSSES SPACE-CRAFT SUPERMATTER by C .F . K r a f f t and PAGES; 1 - 4

5 - 8 9 - 1 0 11-13 - 13 - 14 15-18 18-19 20-21 - 22

LETTER from W. Gordon A llen MISCELLANEA INSERT page: *******

L e t t e r from ARTHUR CONSTANCE to BSR ASSOCIATES ******* <

Meade Layne, M.A.* E d ito r and BSR D ire c to r - with a s s i s t a n c e o f BSR A s s o c i a t e s . P ublished bi-monthly a t BSR H dqrs - 3524 Adams Ave*, San Diego 16, C a l i f o r n i a . S u b s c r ip t io n included with BSR membership: per y e a r , $5.00 - S in g le s # .5 0 . BSRA i s a n o n -p ro fit and n o n -se c ta ria n o r g a n iz a t io n , and se rv e s no s p e c i a l i n t e r e s t s *

OFFENDERS

AGAINST

PEACE

- from Le C o u rrier I n te r plane'ta ir e -

Experiments d e trim en tal t o the whole human race are going on, in s p i t e o f the p r o t e s t s o f the u n iv e r s a l conscience W have no e need t o w ait f o r a t h i r d world w ar, a thermo-nuclear one; f o r war a g a in s t l i f e , a g a in s t th e whole l i f e o f our p la n e t had a l ready been d eclared by men in 1945. I t has not c e a s e d , ever sin c e th en , to spread i t s ra v a g e s* Let us co n sid e r the m atter a g a in , a f t e r a l l t h a t has alread y been w ritte n on the s u b j e c t : P r o f e s s o r S t u r t e v a n t , of the I n s t , of Technology o f C a l i f o r n i a , has e s t a b l i s h e d the f a c t t h a t about one m il l i o n e ig h t hundred thousand c h ild r e n out of the nine hundred and ten m illio n s of our p lan e t are a lr e a d y showing sig n s o f changes which could be a t t r i b u t e d to nuolear e x p lo s io n s * These v a r i a t i o n s could be t r a n s l a t e d in th e course of s e v e r a l g en eratio n s in to d efo rm ities ( c h ild r e n with s i x f i n g e r s , club f e e t , e t c * ) , organ ic le s io n s ( d i a b e t e s ) or a b n o r m a litie s* The ra d io has produced evidenoe o f r a d i o a c t i v e r a in s by means o f which a co n sid e ra b le q u an tity o f r a d i o a c t i v e v e g e ta b le s have become u n f i t f o r consumption* P r o f . L assag n e, honorary d i r e c t o r o f the Radium I n s t i t u t e in P a r i s , wrote in Le Monde , of S e p t * 7 , 1955, as fo llo w s : *Carr ie d away into the atmosphere, t h i s r a d io a c t iv e dust which re p r e s e n ts a r a d io a c t iv e - e q u iv a le n t of hundreds o f thousands o f tons of radium, oould f a l l , acco rd in g to the p r e v a i l i n g atmos p heric c o n d it io n s , whether in the form of ashes or o f r a i n s , upon t e r r i t o r i e s s i t u a t e d s e v e r a l thousands kilo m eters away from the s i t e o f the e x p lo s io n . No p o s s i b l e p ro te ctio n could be de v ise d a g a in s t the contamination of li v i n g c r e a tu r e s in region s so powdered or so w atered. The r a d io elements would in e v ita b ly p en etrate into every human organ. Such a r a d io a c t iv e r a in f e l l over the south o f th e Japanese aro h ip e la g o some days a f t e r the explosjion of F arch 1, 1954. A gen eral contam ination was e s t a b lis h e d in t h i s r e g io n . R a d i o a c t iv i t y was discovered in the urine o f the population (more concentrated in t h a t o f young c h il d r e n ) , in p l a n t s , in the milk of cows, e t c * A fte r t h e exp lo sio n s of B i k i n i , r a d io a c tiv e f i s h were caught s e v e r a l thousand k ilo m eters away.

*One m illig ram o f radium i s s u f f i c i e n t t o k i l l an i n d i v i d u a l * , so we are to ld by P r o f* T e l l e r , head of American nuclear manu facture * The B av arian M in ister of A g ric u ltu re has re v e ale d (May 24, *55) th a t the r a d i o a c t i v i t y contained in the r a in s o f June and Decem b e r , was such as to comprise a c e r t a i n danger* This news caused a s e n s a tio n among the p o pu latio n (aocordin g to the 'F ra n c e -S o ir* o f Bonn)* One of th o se r e t r o s p e c t i v e r e v e l a t i o n s which they are kind enough to d ish out to us I From the AFP o f May 27, 1 9 5 6 "The sk ip p e r o f a Japanese f i s h i n g b o a t has suddenly become i l l , and i t is fe a re d t h a t he may be s u f f e r i n g from the e f f e c t s of atomic r a d i a t io n fo llow in g upon the e x p lo sio n of the H-bomb o f May 27th , l a s t * The boat was working, however, a good d is ta n c e away from the danger zone, as marked out before the e x p lo s io n * The eru p tio n which broke out over the whole body o f the s a i l o r i s considered as symptomatic o f atomic m a la d ie s . The f i r s t submarine ex p lo sio n took p lace a t B i k i n i , 1946* The second ( t o speak only o f American c n e s ; the R u ssian s have kept q u ie t about t h e i r s ) , was exploded on May 18, 1955, o f f t h e c o a s t of C a l i f o r n i a * Each of th ese was e q u iv a le n t to f i v e thous and tons o f T .N .T . I t i s known th a t no means e x i s t of p revent ing the contamination of e d ib le f i s h , even when the bombs are launched f a r away from the f i s h i n g a r e a s and maritime ro u tes ( P r o f * F o n ta in e ). B efore h is d ea th , P r o f* Debierne, who was D ire c to r of the Radium I n s t i t u t e , thus d escrib ed what he c a l l e d the grad u al p o i soning of our atm osphere:- r,A bomb o f 50 k i l o s produces 50>000 tons o f n i t r i o a c i d . One charge of 50 k i l o s can induce in the atmosphere enough oentres of condensation to give an average co n ce n tratio n o f 25 m illio n s per cubic cen tim etre in a la y e r of f o r t y k ilo m etres depth over the whole s u r f a c e o f th e e a r t h . These o en tres could p e r s i s t f o r y ears b e fo re being e lim in a t e d * W ell, the f i r s t hydrogen bomb had a power o f f i v e m illio n tons of T.N.T. and the l a s t , a power o f f i f t y m il l i o n t o n s l A fte r the exp lo sio n of the R u ssian bomb in 1955, an in crease of r a d i o a c t i v i t y in the atmosphere was observed on a l l s i d e s * The Observatory of Fukacaa in Japan declared th a t ra in -w a te r, f a l l i n g afterw ard in the south o f Jap an , contained 28,000 Geiger u n its per l i t r e and per minute* The Japanese M inistry of Health had s t a t e d not long b efo re th a t l i f e was a c t u a l ly in danger in the middle of an atmosphere o f more than 100 Geiger u n its 1 On December 21 , 1954, Dr* Leyton, o f London, rep o tted a dangerous inorease in oases of m igraine due to e l e o t r i o charges produced in the atmosphere by atomic and thermo-nuclear bombs;

and in In dia in 1955, a stra n g e malady1 was under o b se rv a tio n , b e lie v ed t o be due to H-bomb e x p l o s io n s . W are in a good p o s i e t i o n , a c t u a l l y , a t the AMI, to know and to a f f i r m , th a t a large number of people have been attac k e d by dangerous r a d i a t i o n s , producing v a rio u s t r o u b l e s , p a r t i c u l a r l y , s t e r i l i t y or even death without warning* In 1955 r a d i o a c t i v i t y a t Chicago was in cre ase d by 100$. On the 10th o f F ebru ary , 1955, a red t id e k i l l ed m illio n s o f f i s h on the c o a s t of T rin id a d * R ad io activ e ra in and snow have f a l l e n on s e v e r a l l a r g e towns, amongst o th e r s . The percentage o f mongol1 i d i o t s born a t Hiroshima and Naga s a k i i s e ig h t times g r e a t e r than normal. B e sid e s t h i s , many monsters have a lre ad y been born in Ja p a n * Doctors h av e*destro y ed them, so th a t the publio should not be informed, and s c i e n t i s t s have c o ld ly s t u d ie d , s c r u t i n i z e d and d i s s e c t e d them (inform a tio n comes from the Brotherhood o f F a i t h , O n ta rio . *A lso con firmed by member of S o c ie t y of M eta p h y sician s, L t d * , who was an a s s i s t a n t a t suoh post-mortem o p e r a t io n s *) Dr* Harold Pambelbon, well-known American s c i e n t i s t (atom ic) and n a t u r a l i s t , was able to show, two months ag o , to h is c o l l eagues of Ogden (U ta h ), mosquitoes of the s i z e of dangerous hor n e t s , peacook b u t t e r f l i e s s c a r c e l y out o f t h e i r c h r y s a l i s e s but as larg e as t o m - t i t s , and two g ig a n t ic i n s e c t s which he had cap tured in h is neighborhood with the a id o f a b u t t e r f l y n e t* "At f i r s t , " s a i d Dr Pambelbon to r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s o f the P r e s s , 1 thought t h a t r a d i o a c t i v e rays produce r e s u l t s only i n the course of s e v e r a l g e n e r a tio n s , but I new know t h a t the same sample t i s sue from an egg ca n , i f i t i s subm itted to r a d i a t io n s which would be dangerous to man, and i f i t i s maintained in a con s t a n t temperature o f 3 0 cen tig rad e # becomes in s e v e r a l months the monster which you have under your e y e s * The g r e a t e s t b i o l o g i s t s and g e n e tio ia n s admit th a t the do main of p e rtu rb a tio n s caused in the human organism by atomic r a d i a t i o n is f a r from bein g f u l l y explored - " I t w i l l not b e , p erh ap s, f o r another h a lf ce n tu ry *" However, enough i s known to have i t s a i d , in the c o r r id o r s o f the Atomic Conference in Geneva, th a t t h i s i s a d is a g r e e a b le s u b j e o t , fo r i t contained the r i s k of spreading panic amongst the crowds o f people who understood nothing about i t " (R e v e la tio n by Charles-N oel Martin in the fF ia g r o L i t t e r a i r e * o f A p ril 28, 1956)* "What we fin d awkward about t h i s a f f a i r i s pu blio opin ion , but pub l i c opinion can be moulded; i t i s f o r us to make i t c le a r t h a t a f t e r a l l , every s t e p forward in p ro gress c a r r i e s i t s in conveniences, and th a t a l i t t l e r a d i o a c t i v i t y spread through out the immense world oannot cause much harm*" Y e s, that is what i s being whispered behind the f i n e facade o f Atoms fo r Peace I*

P r o f e s s o r Axel Helleriborg, c h i e f o f Swedish m eteorology, con s i d e r s t h a t atomic e x p lo sio n s charge the atm osph eric'C urrents with c e n tre s o f i c e . fThe North P o le i s today 18$ h eav ier than the South P o le . The r e s u l t of t h i s phenomenon oould be the up s e t t i n g of the e q u ilib riu m of our p l a n e t . 1 I t i s not I who have s a i d i t t h i s time* *The p r o g r e s s iv e i g n i t i o n o f the atmosphere i s now a p o s s i b i l i t y capable o f producing t o t a l atomio d e s t r u c t io n * ( J . J . W illiam son, P re sid e n t o f the S o c ie t y o f M eta p h y sician s, who h as, a l a s , re aso n fo r say in g th a t *o a ta cly sm has begun ). The cause i s e a s i l y understood* W are in the presence of e CRIME AGAINST THE LIFE OF THE PLANET, crimes which have been going on fo r eleven y e a r s . The R u s s ia n , American and E n g lish le a d e rs r e sp o n s ib le fo r th ese ignoble e n t e r p r i s e s are a c tin g without concern fo r the common w e l f a r e . The only E x te n u a t in g circu m stan ce1 fo r the Americans i s th at of having always an nounoed t h e i r e v i l i n t e n t . The only exte n u atin g c irc u m sta n c e s1 f o r the R u ssian s i s t h a t o f having proposed, s e v e r a l tim e s, and a g a in q u ite l a t e l y a t the l a s t s e s s i o n o f t h e i r Disarmament Commission, the su p p re ssio n of the H-bomb experiments (and t h is a o t is in the shadow of bad m o tiv e s *) The American and E n g lish once ag ain re fu se d such a c tio n s no doubt due t o knowledge of i l l - m o t i v e * The E n g lish are a g g ra v a tin g t h e i r oase by p re p ar ing fo r next y e a r , experiments on the f i r s t B r i t i s h H-bomb. - end Note: IE COURRIER INTERPLaNETAIRE i s e d ite d by P r o f e s s o r A. Nahen, a t 25 Avenue Denantou, Lausanne, S u i s s e . The B r i t i s h e d i t i o n , in E n g lish , i s i s s u e d by the S o c ie ty of Metaphysiciams, L t d ., A rc h e rs Court, H a stin g s, England. S in g le c o p ie s , U .S.A ., .2 0 ; 12 co p ie s $2.00. E it h e r the French or E n g lish e d itio n should be i n t e r e s t i n g and u s e f u l to American r e a d e rs, since i t s u p p lie s inform ation from European so u rce s not e a s i l y o b tain a b le in t h i s country. The i s s u e o f Le C ou rrier P la n e ta ir e quoted above in c lu d e s an open l e t t e r to P resid e n t Eisenhower, p a r t o f which reads as fo llo w s: "One hundred e x p e r ts on atomic q u e stio n s grouped un der the a e g i s o f the N ation al Academy o f S ciences have recen t ly p ublish ed a re p o rt, o f which the co n clu sio n fo llo w s: Atomic r a d i a t io n s are p u tt in g the whole human race in p e r i l . The pur s u i t of thermo-nuclear experiments i s capable o f rendering the e arth u n in h a b itab le . One m illio n 800 thousand ch ild ren are a lre ad y showing sig n s o f changes which could be a t t r i b u t e d to n u cle ar e x p l o s i o n s .. V egetab le s, f r u i t , f i s h have been shown to be r a d i o a c t i v e . B ird s die suddenly. Monsters have been bom in Japan. . . A new malady h as appeared in S a ls b u rg . . . The north p o le i s today 18$ h e a v ie r than the south . . . Ig n itio n of the atmosphere i s now a p o s s i b i l i t y . . .

5
extraordinary map d i v in in g

(A s s o o . G. B u rrid g e)

Few ROUND ROBIN re ad e rs would deny th ere e x i s t s a type o f human mind capable o f lo c a t in g h id d e n -fm m -sig h t m a te r ia ls . I f ask e d , many o f i t s re ad ers might even look out over t h e i r g l a s s es and r e p l y , "Huh, kid s t u f f i " Dowsers, d i v i n e r s , r a d i e s t h e s i s t s or rhabdcmancers are hardly "c h ic k s j u s t out o f the s h e l l to th e se f o l k * H istc ry is f u l l o f d iv in e r - le g e n d , and legend i s f u l l o f t h e i r h is t o r y I W do not w ish to sharpen an old saw h e re . But once in a e while a man w i l l use h is w its in such a way as t o tu rn the tables on h is s c o f f e r s so n e a t ly , while p la y in g t h e i r game, t h a t we can not help wishing to sharp the word o f i t . Such a " t a b l e tu rn er" i s Emmuel C a r r o l l * C a r r o l l came up the d iv in in g path the lo n g , hard way* I f his has been a bed o f r o s e s , t t e o the q u i l t s have had many a thorn between* Seme y e a r s ago we w ro te, " P e r s is t e n c e is a name f o r C B r r o ll* Time has proved us r i g h t . C a r r o l l was div in in g b e fo re he knew what he was doing - b e fo re he knew he co u ld i He toct: h is b rid e t o Wyoming t o hunt jade on t h e i r honeymoon. They began the se arch by walking the h i l l s and canyons, th e ir eyes "glued to the ground" - in the ordinary way. They had not done t h i s very long b e fo re C a r r o ll stopped ab ru p tly ore morning, turned h a l f way around, looked back a c r o ss the canyon t o a clump o f bushes on the other s i d e , and s a i d to h is w if e , " I think i f we look over t h e r e , (p o in t ing) we l l fin d some." They cro ssed the canyon and olimfced t o the b u sh e s* Beneath them they found a jade boulder as la r g e as a man s head I The boulder p aid for the honeymoon* Fin ding t h a t stone made Car r o l l r e a l i z e he d id n t n e c e s s a r i l y need t o look fo r th in g s as eth ers did - t h a t he had something. But i t took him years t o le arn hew t o use t h a t something* I t may w e ll be he has not yet reached the f u l l r e a l i z a t i o n of h i s t a l e n t s . W would l ik e t o b rin g forward here an account o f h is l a t e e s t s u c c e s s e s in "map d i v i n i n g " * Map d iv in in g i s not uncommon among people lik e C a r r o l l . How e v e r , such an accomplishment i s d is b e lie v e d by most ther p er so n s* Even those who do not deny a d iv in e r can fin d u n d e r ground water when ever i t , or nearly s o , shake t h e i r heads v i o l e n t l y , back and f o r t h , when confronted w ith map d iv in in g .

W do not wish to d isc o u rse on how map d iv in in g may be done e - or how C a r r o ll says he does h is R ather, we would lik e t o p resent an account coverin g some 300 s e p a r a t e , but oonseoutive map d iv in in g s fo r o i l , processed by C a r r o l l . These have been proved and found t o be b e t t e r than 95$ accu rate I And m o r e astou ndin g, they are o f p u b lic record t o prove the p r o o f . Part of the proof and the p u blic record were bein g recorded while other p a r t s of the d iv in in g were in p r o g r e s s . Anyone m a y look up the back i s s u e s of the p u b lic a tio n s we w i l l name and see the f a o t s f o r h im s e lf * No one need take anyone's word fo r anything* There i s only one way t o prove d iv in in g o f any s o r t * D ig, and fin d the s t u f f I Such procedure i s a lo n g, slow , expensive m atter* A d iv in er must be a r i c h man t o prove any number o f sep arate lo c a t io n s during a y e a r t h a t way* Map d iv in in g i s the king o f time and money consumers - i f you wish p ro o f* $25-*000 i s a stcall c o s t to d r i l l a p ro sp e c tiv e o i l w ell s i t e * Anyone wishing to prove h is " g u e s s " th at th e re i s o i l "d o w n th e re " would have to spend seven m i l l i o n , f i v e hundred thousand d o l l a r s on 300 se p a ra te s i t e s I But C a r r o l l proved h is map d iv ining on more than 300 s e p a r a te s i t e s and d id n 't spend $1001 Yes Mam and S i r , every divined s i t e was d r i l l e d - some deeper than a mile - a t l e a s t one more than two m iles I How, j u s t how does one go about g e t t i n g Tj- m illio n d o l l a r s worth of underground inform ation f o r l e s s than a $100? I t s a good t r i c k i f you can do i t - and C a r r o l l did i t . This i s how* In C a l i f o r n i a - and in many w estern and southwestern s t a t e s a l s o b e fo re any o i l or gas w ell can be s t a r t e d , th o se sponsor ing the d r i l l i n g must obtain a " r e l e a s e " from the S t a t e fs De partr&ent of O il and G as. One of the requirem ents in obtaining a r e l e a s e i s an exact reoord of the new s i t e ' s lo c a t io n - Range and Township numbers, Sectio n number, and p r e c i s e p o sitio n of the s i t e in th a t S e c tio n * A ll t h i s beoomes a re c o rd * The re cord becomes " p u b lic property" as soon as the r e l e a s e i s g ran t ed, j u s t as knowledge o f a w i l l or a deed t r a n s f e r beoomes publ io property as soon as recorded* This prevents "c laim jump i n g " , but a l s o washes away a l l se cre cy from the proposed lo c a t i o n , so u n le ss one has surrounding land under l e a s e , he might have company I E s t a b lis h e d in 1919, and published r e g u l a r l y s i n c e , i s a n o ilm a n ^ paper kncwn as Hunger's Oil-O-Gram. The Oil-O-Gram is issu ed f i v e tim es a week* I t c a r r i e s a l l news and items o f i n t e r e s t to oilmen* Among th ose items is a d a ily l i s t o f the " r e l e a s e s " granted the previous day from a l l o f f i c e s o f the Depart ment o f O il and Gas in C a l i f o r n i a , and many other s t a t e s a s

w e ll* This l i s t covers "Wild C at" w ells as w ell as those in known and developed f i e l d s * I t was from t h i s d a i l y l i s t which C a r r o ll chose h is s u b je c t s f o r map d iv in in g and p r e d i c t in g . The locations were a c c u r a t e * They were o f p u b lic record with e s t a b l i s h e d d a te s . Baok i s s u e s of Mungerfs Oil-O-Gram may be consu lted in la r g e pub l i c l i b r a r i e s , in the l ib r a r y a t the Hunger o f f i c e , in the f i l e s o f o i l companies, in the l i b r a r i e s o f t e c h n ic a l c o lle g e s o f f e r ing cou rses in petroleum geology* In a d d it io n t o a complete l i s t o f r e l e a s e s g ran ted , is oar r ie d inform ation re g ard in g th o se w e lls which have a lr e a d y been d r i l l e d * I f th e s e w e lls are good - " h i t s " - the number of b a r r e l s per day of crude i s given along with i t s t y p e , th e g ra v ity o f the o i l , the amount o f gas and water which may be is s u in g from the w e ll* I f the w ell i s " a m i s s " , that inform ation i s a l so given * A ll th e se w e lls were r e l e a s e s l i s t e d in some e a r l i e r is s u e of the paper* Thus* Munger s Oil-O-Gram p ro v id es a com p l e t e pu blish ed r e p o r t , e n t i r e l y independent o f C a r r o l l s a c t i v i t i e s , and over which he had no p o s s i b l e in flu e n c e * T h e s e re p o r ts are based on inform ation fu rn ish ed by each in d iv id u a l owner of th e d r i l l e d w e lls to the Department of O il and G as, and checked by the Department, thus can be co n sidered h igh ly ac cu r a t e * Here a g a in , C a r r o ll could have no in flu e n c e , whatever* Mr# C a r r o l l has a p r iv a t e l ib r a r y of some $ 3 ,0 0 0 worth of stan dard U*S* G eo lo g ic a l Survey s u r fa c e maps and a e r i a l photo graphs* He does not have a l l the maps or photographs published by any means - nor has the G e o lo g io al Survey mapped and pub lish e d a l l the are a o f the S t a t e of C a l i f o r n i a . This i s t r u e of most w estern S t a t e s . There are many " h o l e s " of t h i s S t a t e s s u r fa c e not a c c u r a t e ly recorded on any so rt of sm all s c a le map* But C a r r o l l knew t h a t i f he was t o make h is p art o f t h e scheme as w a t e r - t ig h t as the r e s t , he must fin d ireans fo r pub li s h i n g h is p r e d ic t io n s b efo re the w e lls were completed. H e a l s o knew t h i s p u b lic a tio n must be o f pub 1 ic r e c o r d , and o n e which could be e a s i l y r e f e r r e d to a t any fu tu re d a t e . H e found such a p la c e in the newspaper, "The Huntington Beach News", in i t s weekly column c a lle d " O i l Round Up". T h u s , fo r many w eeks, "O il Round Up" c a r r i e d from two t o foiar inches of "C arro ll P re d io ts"* Because our space i s lim ited we w i l l show only one example o f the complete cyole of C a r r o l l f s p r e d i c t io n s * T h is one can be matched many, many tim es by c o n su ltin g baok is s u e s of the "Huntington Beach News", Huntington Beach, C a l i f o r n i a , and Munger s Oil-O-Gram.

8 To make our record f u l l y complete, however, i t should be noted th a t the News is published on Thursdays* C a r r o l l ' s p re d ic tio n s had to be in the o f f i c e s of the paper *he Monday b e f o r e . Allow ing p o s t a l time from C a r r o l l s home, where tbs map d iv in in g was done, i t ireant he had t o have h is work fin is h e d and in the mail by Saturday morning b e fo re the Monday, b e fo re the T hursday's pub l i c a t i o n This ireant C a r r o l l was p r e d ic t in g n early a week before p o s s i b l e p u b lic a t io n . In many c a s e s , d r i l l i n g of the p r e d i c t ed v;e 11 s i t e was continuing during t h is i n t e r v a l * But in only one case was a w ell s i t e " spudded in - (begun) - d r i l l e d , capped and abandoned, and the r e s u l t s p u b lish ed in M unger's, b efo re Car r o l l s p r e d ic t io n s of i t would have been publish ed in the 'News". A h urried phone c a l l by C a r r o l l t o tbs "News to s t r i k e the item, prevented any p o s s i b le q u estion " m arring the whole p r o c e s s * C ar r o l l had p red icte d " a m iss" for th a t p a r t i c u l a r s i t e . I t was I As our exemple of the c y c le through which C a r r o l l ' s 300 map d iv in in g s went, from inception t o f i n a l d i s p o s a l we p resen t the fo llo w in g : Hunger's pu blished a n o tic e t h a t Humble O il a n d R e fin in g Company had obtained a r e l e a s e and were spudding in a v;e 11 on Rancho Santa C l a r a , March 8 th , 1956. C a r r o l l had maps oovering t h i s a r e a and he divined t h i s s i t e * In the "Huntington Beach Hews" fo r Thursday, March 15, 1956, " C a r r o l l P r e d io ts " sa id t h i s w e ll would be " a m is s " * Again, on March 20th, 1956, Munger's rep o rted the w ell had been abandoned and capped a f t e r d r i l l i n g some 8,335 f e e t t While t h i s was " a m iss" f o r Humble, i t was " a h i t " f o r C a r r o l l i Thus did C a r r o l l carry out a l ik e p a t t e r n fo r more than 300 tim e s* While the above item was only one in a l i s t o f s e v e r a l others published cn the same d a t e , in the same column, i t w i l l serve as a good guide fo r a l l the o th e r s * Considered in the lig h t o f the above inform ation , anyone may r e a d ily see there could be no p o s s i b l e c o l l u s i o n among any of the v ario u s sec t io n s in t h is arrangement, and no way C a r r o l l could have come by before-hand inform ation reg ard in g the s i t e except through h is own p e c u l i a r l y o utstan ding a b i l i t y f o r d iv in in g such th in g s. Emmuel C a r r o ll has caused much "gnashing cf te e th " among petroleum engineers and g e o l o g i s t s - a s may w ell be imagined* They h aven't a th in g to say back* Perhaps they f e e l much the same as the Harvard s c i e n t i s t s with whom we have had some c o r respondence re g ard in g d iv in in g . When we pointed out t o him t h a t g e o l o g i s t s made many errors t o o , and nothing was ever sa id about them, our correspondent r e p l i e d , "Y e s, g e o l o g i s t s d o make e r r o r s , but they have a s c i e n t i f i c b a s i s on which to work." Mr* C a r r o l l , we r e g r e t you have been so r i g h t , so o ften ,w ith so l i t t l e of t o d a y 's s c i e n t i f i c b a s i s on which t o workl
- e n d -

9 THE DROSNES-LAZENBY CANCER TREATMENT

(The BSRA p u b lic a tio n s have long supported - and continue to support - a t l e a s t two other ty p e s o f cancer treatm ent b e s id e s the one named above. Both the Koch and the Hoxsey t r e a t ments have worked n ear-m iracles in thousands of c a s e s * T h e Drosnes-Lazenby method u sin g muoorhicin has a s i m i l a r h i s t o r y , so f a r as p e rse c u tio n and abuse are concerned, but has s t e a d i l y gained ground and i s f a r p e s t the experim ental s t a g e . I t deserves the w idest p o s s i b l e p u b l i c i t y , and we quote in tro d u c t ory paragraphs from Pi t t s b u r g h 's Cancer Weapon. W urge a l l e A s s o c ia t e s t o w rite Drosnes-Lazenby C lin ic a t 4774 Lib erty A v e ., P itts b u r g h 24, penna. , and ask fo r t h i s p u b lic a tio n and any other m a t e r ia l re le v a n t to the C lin ic - and i f p o s s ib le see t h a t any s u f f e r e r from cancer known t o you a t l e a s t g e ts the n ecessary in fo rm atio n .) MUCORHICIN is the name of the substan ce used in the DrosnesLazenby cancer treatm en t. Muoorhicin i s an a n t i b i o t i c - indeed, i t i s a combination of seven a n t i b i o t i c s includin g tforo s t r a i n s of p e n i c i l l i n . Muoorhicin i s a mold s u b s t r a t e co n tain in g generic forms o f Mucor, Rhizopus, and P e n i c i l l i n . r A 6|r year experiment was conducted with Muoorhicin under medi c a l s u p e r v is io n , to determine what e f f e c t t h i s substan ce has on p rolon gin g l i f e and a f f o r d i n g symptomatic r e l i e f in advanced can cer. C l i n i c a l records were kept on approximate 2,000 o a s e s . P a tie n ts were of both sexes and of a l l a g e s ; presented a l l types of m a lig n a n c ie s. P re v io u sly th ese p a t ie n t s had had su rgery X -ray , radium, or a l l t h r e e . They had been se n t home to die as in cu rab le with only p a l l i a t i v e therapy t o e ase t h e i r s u f f e r ing u n t i l death ensued. 1 C l i n i c a l records show t h a t some o f th e se s o - o a l l e d incurable cancer p a t ie n t s are li v i n g as long a s almost seven years beyond t h e i r l i f e expeotanoyj others from one to alm ost seven, f r e e from pain and other symptoms, and leadin g normal liv e s # 1 Percentage of symptomatic r e l i e f , such as a l l e v i a t i o n o f p a in , a b i l i t y to s le e p without d ru g s , in creased a p p e t i t e , and b e t t e r d i g e s t i o n , in the p a t i e n t s who did not s u r v iv e , was t r e mendously h igh , No to x ic r e a c tio n or sid e e f f e c t s were found in a s i n g l e in st a n c e * D iag n o sis of malignanoy had been e s t a b li s h e d in a l l oases by a c c r e d ite d h o s p i t a l s and p h y s ic ia n s . The r e s u l t s o f t h is experiment e s t a b l i s h beyond a doubt t h e value of Muoorhicin a s an an ti-o a n o e r a g e n t. 1

10 ( E d i t o r 's Note: This s e r i e s of a r t i c l e s i s p re se n te d in the pub l i c i n t e r e s t * The a r t i c l e s are w r itt e n by a proponent o f t h e Drosnes-Lazenby Cancer C l i n i c * The s t a f f o f the C l i n ic f e e l they have been g r o s s l y m istre a te d by the medical p r o f e s s io n a n d g r o s s l y m isrep resen ted by our fr e e p re ss in re cen t y e a r s . The P ittsb u rg h e r Magazine tak es no s i d e s but merely wishes to provide a forum fo r f u l l , f r e e d i s c u s s i o n from both s i d e s * R e p lie s to th ese a r t i c l e s from the m edical p r o f e s s io n or the p re ss w i l l be welc omed ) In q u ire rs should re c e iv e not only the broohure mentioned i n the f i r s t paragraph above, b u t another by Frank Edwards, o f seven p rin ted p a g e s, and another 2-page item by Alma K line Eokard. An e x c e lle n t a d d itio n i s the six -p a g e r e p r in t o f a r t i c le s in the Youngstowner, by E d it o r Bud J * F a r e s , of Youngstown, Ohio. Our own current in fo riratio n was forwarded to us by A ssoc. P h i l i p Friedman, R.A.# o f F lo r e n c e , A rizo n a, who has been ao tiv e fo r s e v e r a l y ears in h is support o f the Muoorhioin treatm en t. - e n d PSYCHOTHERAPY THE HEALING OF THE BODY BY MENTAL M EANS

The mind has a body". This i s the b a s ic axiom o f the "new" therapy - which of course i s not 'new1 at a l l , but o ld a s the r a c e . The converse p r o p o sitio n , invented oy modern m ate rialism , that the brain s e c r e t e s thought a s the l i v e r s e c r e t e s b i l e has jo in e d many other solemn f u t i l i t i e s . W caui h ard ly proclaim a s e yet any age o f Enlightenment, but we are a t l e a s t d isc a r d in g some of the smug sapience o f the near p a s t . In i t s is s u e o f Ja n uary 27, 1957, the American Weekly p r i n t s a lengthy a r t i c l e by Will O u rsler, t i t l e d Dealing with F a i t h , and summarizing the r e s u l t s o f a year and a h a l f o f i n v e s t i g a t i o n o f mental and r e l i g i o u s h e a lin g among many c u l t s and denominations. "I can r e p o r t " , he w r i t e s , th a t churches o f a l l f a i t h s are in the midst o f a tremendous reawakened concern with t h i s su b je c t. The f a m i l i a r argument th at only fu n c tio n a l (not o rg a n ic ) d is e a s e s are cured does not seem to hold tru e . Weekly h e a lin g s e r v i c e s are common in many churchcs, and m in is te r s o fte n have the f u l l cooperation of m edical and p s y c h i a t r i c le a d e r s who a ls o are e x p lo rin g the new r o le o f s p i r i t u a l and psychosomatic h e a l ing. . . . Cures o f term inal c a s e s o f k i l l e r d i s e a s e s such as cancer are r e l i a b l y re p o rte d , by w ritte n statem ents in reply to s p e c i f i c q u e stio n s. A ll th ese f a c t s are o f immense importance and s ig n if ic a n c e to humanity. One comment o f a c r i t i c a l mind might be, that any r e a l or seeming m iracle cannot be construed a s p r o o f of any t h e o lo g ic a l or s e c t a r i a n dogma - a s has been done f o r may cen tu rie s p ast. (acknowledgment to Assoc. Dorothy Costa fo r c lip s). M L

11

ANTIGRAVITY by

AND SPACESHIP C .F . K r a f f t

PROPULS ION

There have been many a p p a re n tly genuine UFO s i g h t in g s whioh cannot be r e a d i l y e xp lain ed on any other b a s i s than t h a t they are sp ace sh ip s of unknown o r i g i n * This immediately b r in g s up the question o f how they o p e r a t e . W are confronted here with e two main problems, namely the problem o f overcoming g r a v ity and the problem o f pro vidin g adequate p r o p u lsio n . A tru e a n t i g r a v i t y device would have to s h ie l d or n e u tra liz e the fo rce o f g r a v i t y and not merely overcome i t with an opposing f o r c e * As I s a a c Newton h im se lf r e a l i z e d , the immediate cause of g r a v it y must be a push r a th e r than a p u l l , and fo r e x e rtin g such a push th ere must be an ever p re se n t e t h e r . In order to diminish t h is push, the e th er t h a t i s above a body would have to be brought down below a body. A ring-shaped c lo se d core mag net should be capable o f doing t h i s , because i f we are co rrect in our assumption that the flow o f e th e r in a magnetic f i e l d i s c ir c u m f e r e n t ia lly of the a x is of the magnet, then i t n e c e s s a r i l y fo llow s th a t i f the magnet has the form o f a ring-shaped c lo se d c o re , th ere w i l l be a flow o f ether from one s id e of the rin g to the other sid e t h e r e o f . The c i r c u l a r rim t h a t u su ally surrounds a UFO o f the sauoer type is s u g g e s t iv e o f such a c lo se d oore > m g n e t* Sometimes the rim has been observed to r o t a t e , but thqt may be f o r g y r o s t a t i c s t a b i l i z a t i o n , or i t may be merely the r e c o i l from a c e n t r a l s t r u c t u r e t h a t is being kept in some d e sire d an gular p o s i t i o n . I f s u b s t a n t i a l ly a l l o f the c i r c u l a t i n g ether is in the magnetic m a te r ia l of the o o re , then i t may be p o s s ib le t o b r in g i t in to the open middle portio n of the rin g by p o s it io n in g an e le c tro d e a t the oenter of the rin g and keeping t h i s e le c t r o d e and the ring a t a d iff e r e n c e o f p o t e n t i a l * I f the c e n t r a l e le c tro d e i s charg ed p o s i t i v e l y and the magnetic r in g n e g a t iv e ly , then i t seems th at the ether c u rre n ts which are linked with the ele o tro n s of the rin g would have t o c o n s t i t u t e both the e l e c t r o s t a t i c f i e l d and the magnetio f i e l d beoause th ese are not d i f f e r e n t f i e l d s but d i f f e r e n t a s p e c t s of the same f i e l d . I f the magnetio f i e l d could never leave the magnetic m a t e r i a l o f the oore, then th ere could not be any electro m agn etic induction such as oocurs during the o p e ratio n of a tra n sfo r m e r.

12

Whether an a n t i g r a v i t y device o f t h i s s o rt would be operative can be determined only by experim ent, and we have no proof th at the UFOf s employ any a n t i g r a v i t y device a t a l l * The same force th a t must be used to giv e them the enormous a o o e le r a tio n s t h a t have been re p e ate d ly observed would be more than s u f f i c i e n t to keep them standing s t i l l in m id - a i r , but we do know from the ab sence o f conspicuous vapor t r a i l s t h a t t h i s fo rc e is not exerted by j e t or rocket motors of the types t h a t we are f a m i l i a r w ith. J e t or rocket motors would a l s o be inadequate f o r t h i s purpose because of the lim ite d amount of energy t h a t oan be obtained from chemical r e a c tio n s by therm al expansion* I t would be d i f f e r e n t i f ion ized p a r t i c l e s could be used in ste ad o f heated gas m olecules because the e l e c t r o s t a t i c r e p u l s io n between e l e c t r i c a l l y charged p a r t i c l e s can be much more powerful than thermal expansion* A s i n g l e alph a p a r t i c l e fo r example e x e r t s a r e c o i l fo rc e o f about ten pounds, but r a d i o a c tiv e m a t e r i a l s do not produce suoh p a r t i c l e s in s u f f i c i e n t q u a n t i t i e s fo r t h is purpose* The use o f a r t i f i c i a l l y produoed ionized p a r t i c l e s fo r o p e ra tin g j e t or rocket motors has been p re v io u sly su g g e s te d , but the d i f f i c u l t y has been t h a t the energy n ecessary f o r e x p e llin g them a t a high v e l o c i t y would have t o come from e l e c t r o s t a t i c g e n e ra to rs c a r r ie d by the s p a c e s h ip , and th e se would add so much to the weight o f the sp acesh ip th at l i t t l e i f anything would be g ain e d . However, in the scheme t h a t w i l l now be p re se n te d , the ionized m a t e r ia l could be prepared in condensed form at the la r g e h y d ro e le o tric p la n ts where power is p l e n t i f u l , and could then be fed into je t or rocket motors fo r r e l e a s e of the entrapped energy. For a proper understanding o f such a p r o c e s s , the stru c tu re o f the atom w i l l f i r s t have to be c o n sid ere d * Under the p re v a i l i n g nu clear theory n early a l l o f the mass o f an atom i s concentrated in a tin y c e n t r a l reg ion o a lle d the " n u c le u s " , but r e c e n tly i t has been shown th a t what was once considered t o be a true nucleus is r e a l l y a sta r- sh a p e d oore reaching f a r out toward the p e r ip h e r a l p o rtio n s of the atom* Such an atom oan ion ize by e i t h e r of two methods e it h e r by the l i b e r a t i o n of complete e l e c t r o n s , or by exposure o f the fr e e ends of the core s t r u c t u r e which ca rry p o s it i v e charges a t t h e i r outer ends* The l a t t e r mode of io n i z a t io n occurs in the in e rt gas atoms which ion ize qu ite r e a d i l y , but do not form arty valence bonds because a valen ce bond must always be a b ifu r c a t e d stru ctu re * There i s , however, another form of bond th a t should be pos s i b l e between ionized i n e r t gas atoms# In 1936 a c e r t a in a t t r a c t i v e or cohesive fo rce between protons a t c lo s e range was d isc o v e r e d . This f o r c e , which i s often r e f e r r e d to as "su p e r g r a v i t a t i o n " , is b e lie v e d t o be the fo rc e t h a t keeps the atoms

13 i n t a c t . I f in e rt gas atoms in the ionized co n d itio n could be join ed to one another d i r e c t l y through t h e i r cores by means o f t h i s f o r c e , and without the use of valen ce bonds, then an en t i r e l y new kind o f m atter would be produced e x a c tly what would be needed fo r sp ace sh ip p ro p u lsio n . The b e s t m a t e r ia l t o use fo r t h i s purpose would appear to be argon, but molecular n itro g en and many other m a t e r i a l s should a l s o be t r i e d beoause in e r t gas atoms are not the only ones t h a t oan ion ize in t h i s manner. The m a te r ia l would have t o be brought t o a very low tem peratu re, put under extrem ely heavy p r e s s u r e , and su b je cte d to a stro n g p o t e n t ia l grad ien t fo r removing th e n egative e l e c tro n s t h a t would be s e t fr e e by t h i s p r o c e s s . I f such a condensed form o f ion ized m atter could then be caused t o d i s i n t e g r a t e by one method or an o th er, the p o s it i v e gaseous ions thus r e le a s e d would c re a te a tremendous expansive fo rce due to t h e i r e l e c t r o s t a t i c r e p u l?io n from one anocher and from the p o s i t i v e l y charged j e t or rocket motor which should be mounted on high v o lt a g e i n s u l a t o r s 30 that i's w i l l acqu ire a p o s i t i v e e l e c t r o s t a t i c charge during u s e . E v e n tu a lly the e n t ir e spacesh ip w i l l a l s o acqu ire a p o s i t i v e ch arg e, which accounts for the p e o u lia r corona th at u s u a lly surrounds a UFO, and i t may a l s o e x p la in why UFOf s do not m elt or burn up during t h e ir r a p id movement through the a i r . A j e t o r rooket motor powered in t h i s manner would not produce any conspicuous vapor t r a i l but only a b lu e flam e , such as has o ften been observed behind UFOf s , and i t would probably a l s o be l e s s n o is y .

-end
LETTER OF IrJPORTANCE; Admiral Delmer S. Fahrney, Chairman o f N a tio n al I n v e s t i g a t i o n s Committee on A e rial Phenomena: 1536 Connecticut Ave. N.W. Washington 6, D .C .- TO BSR A ss o c ia te E.w.H. o f Norwalk. Admiral Fahrney1s l e t t e r r e p o r t s that " the P o licy Comr.itte e in Washington i s h oldin g o f f on any p u b l i c i t y or a r t i c l e s u n t i l they are b e t t e r organ ized to handle the inform ation that i s flo o d in g in . Also there i s the m atter of funds to handle t h i s lo ad . At the moment Major Keyhoe i s a c t i n g a s D ir e c t o r u n t i l a permanent Dir e c t o r i s named. W are tr y in g to in c r e a se the Board of e Governors from ten to f i f t y names o f some consequence in n a t io n a l a f f a i r s who are i n t e r e s t e d in our venture and who can giv e us a hand f i n a n c i a l l y . I f you know o f any who can h e lp , l e t us know.
a

THE BSR DIRECTOR CALLS THE ATTENTION OF ALL ASSOCIATES T 0 THIS IMPORTANT AN RESPONSIBLE PROJECT AND ITS NEED FOR FUNDS. D (Meade Layne)

14 THE INDISPENSABLE COMPLEMENT

A CRISIS IN SCIENCE NEW ENIGMAS IN PHYSICS REVIVE QUESTS IN METAPHYSICS: 1 Under the double heading j u s t quo^ . te d L i f e Magazine f o r January 28, 1957 p r in ts one of the most s i g n i f i c a n t e d i t o r i a l s o f recen t y e a r s . What the LIFE e d i t o r has to say i s not iiew in su bstan ce. I t has been in the minds and w r itin g s o f many workers in the 'b o r d e r la n d s 1 o f scie n ce ,a n d long b e fo re that in the t e x t s o f m etaph y sics. But here we have an e x p l i c i t and s i m p l i f i e d statem ent in a p u b lic a t io n o f n ation a l c i r c u l a t i o n . To quote b r i e f l y : "At a recen t m eeting o f the American A ss o c ia tio n f o r the Advancement o f Science there was sober t a l k o f s c i e n t i s t s aban doning t h e i r t r a d i t i o n a l i m p a r t i a l i t y toward the e f f e c t s o f t h e i r - d i s c o v e r i e s and o f p ro v id in g p r o f e s s i o n a l to s o c ie t y on how t o co n tro l the re v o lu tio n a ry p o t e n t i a l s scie n ce i s c r e a t la g . . Yet co n d itio n s within sc ie n c e i t s e l f are changing so f a s t - a a to b a f f l e i t s p r a c t i t i o n e r s . . . "Experiments r e c e n t l y announced destroyed the p r in c ip le o f p a r i t y 4 w hich has been a cornerstone o f subm icroscopic phy s i c for th irty years There may be d i s t a n t g a l a x i e s whose atomic s t r u c t u r e i s j u s t the re v e rse o f ours ( 'a n t i - m a t t e r ) . The- volume o f known space has been en larged 50 tim es in the l a s t decade . . . Some s c i e n t i s t s are argu in g the likftlJthodd of l i f e on o th er p l a n e t s , perhaps even on m illio n s o f p l a n e t s . . . There i s even concrete planning o f a space v e h ic le . . . Yet ever v a s t e r are the a r e a s o f ignorance which seem to o p e n ... the " s t r a n g e " p a r t i c l e s . . . v a s t jum bles o f new numbers with an i n s u l t i n g la c k o f meaning". But the more scien ce p r o g r e s s e s THE LESS DOES IT PROMISE US a theory o f the u ltim a te nature o f the u n iv e rse and o f l i f e . 'Two f a c t s s t r i k e the layman a s s i g n i f i c a n t . One i s , that the o ld -fa sh io n e d m a te ria lis m i s now even more o ld -fa sh io n e d . I t s b a s i c assumption i s i r r e l e v a n t to an agewhich has proved th a t m atter i s in terch an geab le with energy. The second conclue-; ion i s , th a t o ld -fa sh io n e d m etaphysics i s s c ie n c e s INDISPENSABLE COMPLEMENT f o r a f u l l view o f l i f e . . . Set f r e e o f m aterialism , m etaphsyics could w ell become man's c h ie f preoccupation of the next century com patible with scie n ce but not confined to scie n tists A ll th ese c o n s id e r a tio n s (to r e p e a t ) are not new; our 3SR A s s o c ia t e s w il l have heard them many tim es. For a p r a c t i c a l a p p l i c a t i o n l e t u s a g a in p o in t out how deeply the problem of the space s h ip s i s a m etaphyaical-~and-physical one - and that te x t books o f scien ce have no s o lu tio n and w il l have none, un t i l the two a s p e c t s o f t h i s approach are in t e g r a t e d . Almost alone and f o r a decade now, the BSRA have m aintained t h i s th e sis. (tckn toA&soc.J.H.Bruening)

15

" PRAM

AND SUB-ATOMIC ENERGY-CONVERTERS *>y BSR Assoc "Lindy M illa rd "

In Theosophioal books th ere appears a quasi-onomatopoeio term: " P r a n a " By v ir t u e o f i t s c o n te x t, t h i s term seems to mean"pangamutuous hash of f r e q u e n c ie s , r o t a r y and undulatory, microcosmic in amplitude but u b ia u ito u s in d i s t r i b u t i o n so as to pervade both space and m a t te r *" Although t h i s e t h e r io en ergy i s s t i l l impalpable to s c i e n t i f i c in stru m en tatio n , w e know i n t u i t i v e l y t h a t Prana must e x i s t , because there is no b e t t e r way to account fo r the u ltim a te o r ig in o f the mat>s energy o f sb-atomic p a r t i c l e s than th a t energy in seme form has always e x i s t e d a t every point in sp a c e * At 0 K elvin (Absolute Zero) frozen m atter has no atomic or m olecular mo t io n w hatever, but th ere s t i l l must remain some "background f l u c t u a t io n s o f unquenohed energy, c a l l e d "z e ro p o in t f l u c t u a t i o n s " , which have nothing to do w ith the h y p o th e tic a l mo tio n o f the e le c t r o n s in s o - c a l l e d " o r b i t s " sin ce the back ground energy belongs to "empty" space i t s e l f . As t o the energy-conversion pro cess whereby some o f the energy o f Praca becomes m ass-energy, there may be s e v e r a l s c a t t e r e d c lu e s in books on o ccu lt t o p i o s , but only a few sc h o la rs could s p o t them They would have t o know o e r ta in f a o t s , such as those o f a c o u s t i c a l e n g in e e r in g , e t c , in order t o s i f t the u s e f u l d u e s from a maze of other p o s s i b l e s u g g e s t io n s * Some c lu e s may be gleaned from th e se books: P hylos, "A Dweller On Two Pl a n e t s " , Ch* 17 ( 1 8 9 4 ) ; J * How ard Cashmere, "''lost In The Bottom less P i t " ( 1905) ; The S e cre t Book o f Dzyan; the K a b a lla h ; The Book of Job j Oahspe; and The Book of The S e c r e t s of Enoch* Some o f th ese may be quot ed where they seem t o throw some l i g h t on t h i s t o p i c * The c lu e s often hide behind m etaphors, terms which not be taken to o l i t e r a l l y o u tsid e of t h e i r in t e r p r e t iv e co n te x ts* Here i s one: * * * "And from the rock I cut o f f a g r e a t f i r e , and from the f i r e I created the orders of the incorp oreal ten troups of angels and t h e i r weapons are f i e r y and t h e ir raiment a burning flam e, and I commanded t h a t each one should stand in h is o rd e r*" * * * (From The Book of the S e o re ts of Enooh, XXIX: 2 *) The "ro c k " here mentioned is c e r t a in ly not m in e ro lo g ic a l and l i t h o s p h o r i c , nor i s i t n e c e s s a r i l y com b u s t i b l e lik e sulphur and a n t h r a c i t e * That " f i r e " could be

16 non-chemical and u ltra - su b -a to m ic in form, lik e an e n e rg e tic b u rst of resonant v i b r a t i o n s , as though p a r t i c l e s of the rook were resonant s i n g u l a r i t i e s which can occur in many ranks o f s i z e or s p e c i a l i z e d potency* Each s i n g u l a r i t y need not be co m p licatedj i t may be a hollow b a l l with a tin y o r i f i c e in i t , or perhaps two a n tip o d a l o r i f i c e s . In Dzyan, S tan za I l l s 3 o f Cosm ogenesis, one fin d s t h i s : " * * the Ray ca u se s the e t e r n a l Egg t o t h r i l l , and *" I f we give im agin ation f r e e r e i g n , untrammelled by commentar ie s w ritte n by o t h e r s , we could d isc e rn here a m etaphorical refe re n ce t o a c a v ity re so n a to r (the Helmholtz k in d ) , which can " t h r i l l " (respond t o Prana s e l e c t i v e l y ) so a s to gener ate a f i e l d o f Akasic ( ? ) o u tp u t, thus accounting f o r the " f i r e " from the " r o c k " . A gain, the energy outputs of the re so n a to rs may i n t e r a c t , so a s j o i n t l y t o s e t up " s t a t i o n a r y waves" with v e l o c i t y - loops (sw ish in g a c tio n ) and quiescen t zones or v e lo c ity -n o d e s wherein p re ssu re f l u c t u a t io n s may occu r. I t may be claimed t h a t P h y lo s, who used F re d e ric k S * Oliver as h i s amanuensis from 1883 u n t i l 1886, had p redicted the q u a n tiz a tio n o f energy p r io r t o i t s d isco very by Planck in 1900. See pg 64 of the 1940 r e p r i n t . P h y lo s, on pg 62 (1 9 4 0 ), seems to have a llu d e d to frequenoy-resonanoe i t s e l f , rath er than t o p o s it io n s of e q u ilib riu m in station ary-w ave nodes between o s c i l l a t o r y lo o p s , so th a t here the One Sub stan ce could play the ro le o f the a c t iv e r e so n a to rs ra th e r than o f p a s s iv e p a r t i c l e s . The K a b a lla h , which d e sc rib e s D eity in anthropomorphio metaphor, has very l i t t l e to say about energy and m atte r* Job 38 7 s a y s : " . * the morning s t a r s sang t o g e t h e r . * " The Authorized V ersion o f the B ib le has a unique nomencla ture o f i t s own, whose hidden meanings may be d iscern ed from a complete t a b u l a t io n o f contexts f o r a given term, gathered from a l l p la c e s o f oocurenoe t h e r e i n . Among the code words of the B ib le are t h e s e : " p a t h " , "way", "high arm" , " d s y s p r i n g " , e t c Let us examine c l o s e l y the function o f a c a v it y reso n a t o r * During the i n f l u x phase o f p u ls a t io n a t the o r i f i c e , the gaseous a sp e ct o f the e th er behaves lik e a sh ort-ran ge f l a v from a l l d i r e c t io n s of a g r e a t hemisphere ( a v e lo o ity f i e l d with poinb-symmetry) and t h i s h a l f o f the cycle is e n t i r e ly impalpable t o the environment, so as t o im itate what Ramon N a t a l l i c a l l s the "time vacuum" (R*R. X :4 , Nov.D ee*, 54, pg 2 2 ) . But the oppo site phase o f the p u ls a t io n a t the r e s o n a t o r 's o r i f i c e i s much l ik e a cough or j e t p u ls e . Consequently, the e n e r g y - fie ld near the o r i f i c e has a d e f i n i t e saw -tooth ( "p u sh -p u sh ") type of flo w . N a t a l l i

17 say s th at sub-atomic r a d i a t i o n (gamma) is of t h i s c h a ra c te r * In connection w ith p ro to n s, the g e n era to rs o f the g r a v i t a t i o n a l f i e l d ( i n d i r e c t l y ) , a saw -tooth v e l o c i t y f i e l d in the ether a l so co rro b o ra te s the g r a v i t a t i o n concept o f H . J . Cashmere ( s e t fo rth a t the back of h is book Lost In The Bottom less P i t , pgs 157-165)* The range of frequency fo r g r a v i t a t i o n must be so exceedingly high th at every proton must o a s t i t s own shadow in to s p a c e , r i g h t through the c i r c u l a t o r y e th e r-o u rre n ts which are maintained near i t s oore* On the b a s i s of the in flu x phase of the p u l s a t i o n , Cashmere had prepared a t h e s i s o n g r a v i t a t i o n ( i n h is bo o k ), which almost resem bles the b a s i s of the theory o f O.C. Hilger.Jv.rg, but he did not fo r e s e e t h a t c a v ity re so n a to rs oause the p u ls a t i o n * I t seems h igh ly probable th a t c a v ity re so n a to rs occur in v ario u s s iz e s and sh a p e s, and t h e i r o r i g i n is not d i f f i o u l t to derive l o g i c a l l y from F r i c k e * s theory of primary and secondary e t h e r s * Frioke assumed th a t the secondary eth er c o n s i s t s of v o r t e x - b a l l s or spinning d r o p le ts of primary e t h e r , as has been exp lain ed in R.R. XIs 1 (May-June, * 5 5 ) , pg 13# Were th ese v o r te x - d r o p le ts to become packed s o l i d l y t o g e t h e r , a s o l i d s t a t e o f the secondary ether would r e s u l t . A random o r i e n t a t i o n o f spinning moments seems to be more probable s t a t i s t i c a l l y than a n ea t a rra y of a lt e r n a t e d moments a checkerboard arrangement of clockw ise and counter-clockw ise moments* The l a t t e r would e x i s t as an i n d e s t r u c t i b l e "n o tcut" substance o f D em ocritus, as "plenum or "adam ant"* But in the former, more p r o b a b le , form, the s o l i d eth er oould e v e n tu ally erode and undergo c a v i t a t i o n . The two c l a s s e s of plenum may c o e x i s t in the same lump. I t i s th e r e fo r e not a t a l l incon ceivable how c a v ity re so n a to rs oould have been formed a f t e r eons o f tim e, during the primeval "Olam s". Clouds o f them could have been regrouped by r a d ia t io n - p r e s s u r e a n d s e l e c t i v e l y re d isp e r se d s e v e r a l times over during p a s t e te rn i t y . This may throw some lig h t on both Dzyan and Enoch r e v e l a t io n s * I t has been a lle g e d by many s o u r c e s , in clu d in g W. R u s s e ll and even P h y lo s, th a t a gamut of fre q u e n c ie s (P rana) keeps the atoms of m atter in e x i s t e n c e , th a t the chemical elements are as tones in the octqves of t h i s gamut. Let us se e . I f an a s t e r i s k denote the h igh est p o s s ib le frequency of P ran a, we have f o r i t v i b r a t i o n a l p erio d T * and the f r e quency f * , each a r e c i p r o c a l o f the o th e r. I f f * be "high do" and i f the seventh tone down from t h i s be "do" a l s o , then we have the f i r s t o c ta v e . The n-th tone o f the gamut w i l l t h e re fo re have a frequency that i s given by: f S 2~n/ 7 f *

18 This i s th e "law o f o c t a v e s " * But the p eriod o f the same tone i s given bys T = 2 n/ 7 T *

However, the law o f v i b r a t i o n a l p eriod s whereby a o a v ity re s o n a to r must respond t o some sub-harmonic of f * , i s given by* T = (2n plus 1) T * . This may be c a ll e d the "law o f odd m u l t i p l e s " . C avity re so n a t o r s obey t h i s law, but not the law o f " o c t a v e s " under the oon ditio n t h a t a l l Prana waves have but one speed of propa g a tio n in common* The only way to re c o n c ile the two laws with each o th e r , i s t o abandon E i n s t e i n ' s dogma about the speed o f lig h t . . . U S e lah . ("L *M .") n d -

DAHIEL FRY DISCUSSES SPACECRAFT (Daniel Fry i s the author of two volumes concerning space c r a f t : The White Sands I n c id e n t , and Alan s Message to Men of E a r t h . His s c i e n t i f i c t r a i n in g i s e x t e n s iv e , he i s fav o rab ly regarded by se r io u s stu d e n ts o f the UFO phenomena, and i s so widely known that no d e t a i l e d in tr o d u c tio n i s n e c e ssa ry . The fo llo w in g e x c e r p ts are from a tape reco rd in g of a le c tu r e de li v e r e d by Mr* Fry in S e a t t l e , in June 1956. The f u l l t r a n s c r i p t runs to seven l e g a l - s i z e p a g e s, much too long fo r t h i s p u b l i c a t i o n , but b r i e f qu o tatio n s may induce our A ss o c ia te s to turn to the books mentioned, and to the forthcoming Steps to the S t a r s . W quote from the qu estion and answer s e c t io n of e the l e c t u r e . Question: What so rt o f m otivatio n do these c r a f t have?

FRY: They are p r o p e lle d by a f i e l d , and I might say that within ten y e a r s a t the most we w i l l have a d u p lic a tio n of t h i s on e a r th . W would have had these some time sin ce i f e i t h ad n 't been f o r three s p e c i f i c 'thought b lo c k s ' th at are produced a c c i d e n t a l l y by the means th at are used to explain the mathematics o f r e l a t i v i t y . I say there i s nothing wrong with the mathematics o f r e l a t i v i t y today, but there are a number o f th in gs wrong with the a n a lo g ie s th a t are used to e x p la in these mathematics. They make th in g s appear to be im p o ssib le th a t are not b a s i c a l l y so a t a l l . There are much sim pler e x p la n a tio n s than have been given the p u b lic up to t h i s time. Some o f th ese I am p u b lis h in g in a small monthly p u b l i c a t i o n c a l l e d "Understanding" . . . I t i s u s u a l l y sta te d

19

th a t they are 'm a g n e tic a lly p ro p elled .1 and t h i s i s co rre ct a s f a r a s . . i t goes. The f i e l d i s produced by the i n t e r a c t i o n of two magnetic f i e l d s . But t h is in i t s e l f i s not a magnetic f i e l d in the u su al sense of fe rro -m ag n e tic. W u s u a l l y think e of some f e r r o u s m a t e r ia l that has been p o la r iz e d . U nfortunately, iro n or any o th er f e r r o u s m a te r ia l has a co m p a ritiv e ly low s a t u r a tio n p o in t and i s n ' t very good m a t e r i a l fo r s e t t i n g up a p ro p u lsio n f i e l d . But a f i e l d can be produced by the i n t e r a c t ion o f two r o t a t in g magnetic f i e l d s which are e s s e n t i a l l y iden t i c a l to a g r a v i t a t i o n a l f i e l d . I t can a l s o be made c o n tr a te r r ene - i . e . , n eg a tiv e with r e sp e c t to the g r a v i t a t i o n a l f i e l d of the e a r th . You then have a tendency f o r the two referen ce p o in t s to se p ara te r a th e r than to approach. B a s i c a l l y , the a t t r a c tio n o f g r a v i t a t i o n becomes p ro p u lsio n . I t d o e sn 't do any thing to the g r a v i t a t i o n a l f i e l d o f the e a r th i t s e l f ; i t i s in i t s e l f , a f i e l d which, i s in o p p o sitio n to i t . . . Consider a permanent magnet and a s o f t iro n bar. W note th a t e the p r o p e r t i e s o f these o b je c t s are t h e i r inherent a t t r a c t i o n and i n f e r th a t t h i s p ro p e rty would e x i s t no m atter what i s done. Of course we know th at i f we wound a^conductor around the s o f t iro n , inducing a flow o f e le c tro n s in t h i s winding, we could cause these o b je c t s to e x h ib it e i t h e r a t t r a c t i o n or re p u lsio n , one a s e a s i l y a s the oth er. In other words, we could a ls o p o la r iz e the s o f t iro n b a r. Note th a t in t h i s c a s e , while we are pro ducing a r e p u lsio n between the two, we are not d e stro y in g the f i e l d o f the magnet - not s h ie ld in g i t nor overcoming i t . W e are simply producing a f i e l d which i s in opposition, to i t . This i s a s u b je c t in i t s e l f , t h i s p ro p u lsio n o f the c r a f t , and i t can be gone in to f o r f i v e o r s i x hours and becomes more c le a r and understandable a s i t g e t s down into b a s i c fundament a l s . There i s nothing p a r t i c u l a r l y com plicated about i t , but i t does re q u ir e time.

(in re p ly to many i n q u i r i e s : W can supply the 30-page e M ORANDA OF TEE M EM ARK PROBERT SEANCES ( a l s o c a l l e d seance re p o r t s ) in the fo llo w in g numbers, a t $1.25 each: NOS. 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 7 ^ 1 0 -12-13

A lso: SPACEm EN, FRIENDS AND FOES, by Trevor James: a 36-page brochure in two p a r t s . Also: THE GREATEST PUZZLE OF ALL, by Clarkson Dye ( an approach to s p i r i t i s m ) @ $1.00. (The p r i c e o f the SPACEMEN brochure j u s t mentioned i s f o r both p a r t s - t o t a l p r i c e ) . $2.00

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S UP E R MAT T E R by C. F* Kr aff t

Ever sin ce the time o f Dalton and Higgins i t has been thought th a t m atter always c o n s i s t s o f atoms d i s c r e t e mat e r i a l p a r t i c l e s which may e x i s t s e p a r a t e ly or in chemical com b in a tio n with one another t o form mfcleoules* V ario u s th e o rie s have been advanced as to how th e se atoms are c o n s t i t u t e d , but u n t i l now the e x is te n c e of the atom as the n ecessary s t r u c t u r a l un it o f m atter has never been q u e stio n ed . A ll modern t h e o r ie s o f atomic s t r u c t u r e , in clu d in g the new v o r te x th e o ry , have considered the atom as a c e n t r a l i z e d s t r u c tu re in which a l l p a r t s are firm ly bound t o a t in y c e n t r a l r e g io n , u s u a lly r e f e r r e d to as the nucleus or oore o f the atom* U n til re c e n tly the nucleus was co n sidered as a t in y hard k er nel a t the c e n ter o f the atom, but i t i s now quite c l e a r l y r e a l i z e d t h a t the n ucleus is not as w e ll-d e fin e d and s e l f oontained *.n e n t i t y as i t was formerly thought t o b e * On the c o n tra ry , i t is now considered by many a u t h o r i t i e s as being a r a d i a l s t r u c t u r e extending f a r out in to the region o f t h e e le c t r o n s so as t o c o n s t i t u t e a oore ra th e r than a tru e nu c l e u s , but even i n t h i s r e v is e d s t r u c t u r e o f the atom, the p o si t i v e protons are s t i l l c lu s t e r e d around the cen ter of the atom while the n egativ e e le c t r o n s are mainly in the p e r ip h e r a l p o r tio n * When two such atoms c o l l i d e , they w i l l e ith e r rebound or w i l l become chem ically attach e d t o each other by means of t h e i r v a l ence bonds, which w i l l then hold the two atoms a t a fi x e d d i s tance from each o th e r* When two in e r t gas atoms c o l l i d e , they can only rebound, a t l e a s t t h i s i s a l l t h a t can happen in na tu re where tem peratures are never very c l o s e to a b so lu te zero* A r t i f i c i a l l y however, we can produce tem peratures very d o s e t o a b so lu te z e ro , and i f in e rt gas atoms can be s u f f i c i e n t l y quieted down therm ally so th a t they w i l l no longer rebound, and i f t h e i r p e r ip h e r a l e le c t r o n s can be removed by methods sim ila r to e l e c t r o l y s i s , then i t seems th a t i t should be p o s sib le t o brin g the cores o f th e in e rt gas atoms in to d i r e c t contact with one an o th er. Their exposed co re s w i l l of course oarry p o sitiv e charges which o r d in a r ily r e p e l one an o th er, but a t very d o s e range protons a t t r a c t each other by a fo rc e known as "super g r a v i t a t i o n * Hence i f the oore o f one atom can be brought

21

in to d ir e c t contact w ith the core o f another atom a t s u f f i c i e n t ly low tem p eratu res, then the two atoms should become permanent ly attach ed t o each o th e r , not to form a m olecu le, but a su p e r atom* By a continu ation o f t h i s p ro cess i t should be p o s s ib le t o form long s t r i n g l i k e polymers o f atom s, s i m i l a r to sy n th e tic r e s i n s , but w ith t h i s d if fe r e n c e th a t in sy n t h e tic r e s i n s the atoms are join ed t o one another by chemical v alen ce bonds while in such atomic polymers they w i l l be merged with one another into long s t r i n g l i k e atoms and \v ill thus lo se t h e ir s e p a ra te id e n titie s In order to produce such superatoms we would have t o use in e r t gas atoms without valen ce bonds. The most s u i t a b l e mat e r i a l to work with would be argon which i s p l e n t i f u l in our atmosphere much more p l e n t i f u l than any other in e r t gas# Argon furthermore has the advantage over neon in being more e a s i l y li q u e f i e d and in having longer r a d i a l brahcnes on i t s core s t r u c t u r e * N eedless to s a y , such superatoma would c o n s t i t u t e not merely a new chemical elem ent, but a completely new kind o f m atter# I f such superm atter oould be produced, then i t would not only open up new i n d u s t r i e s , but would introduce a new e r a of c i v i l i z a t i o n , which may s u rp a ss our w ild e s t dreams. - e n d -

W take t h i s opportu nity to announce th at the new book, e THE INEXPLICABLE SKY, by Arthur Constance, a lre ad y published in England by v/erner Lau rie ( 1 Doughty S t . , Lon. w .C .l,$ 3 .5 0 ) w ill s h o r tly be is s u e d in t h i s country by The C ita d e l P re ss, 222 - 4th A v e ., N.Y. 3. About tw o -th ird s of t h i s book i s de voted to astronom ical phenomena o f the most s t r i k i n g s o r t , and the remaining t h i r d to the ' v i s i t a t i o n ' of the UFO. As to t h i s s u b je c t ,t h e author docs f a r more than merely r e c i t e a long s e r i e s o f remarkable s i g h t in g s . He i s a 'c o n str u c tiv e i c o n o c la s t * with l i t t l e p atie n ce with smug; sc ie n tism , and w e e s p e c i a l l y recommend h i s books to our A s s o c ia t e s , sin ce he i s very fa v o ra b ly d isp o se d toward the in t e r p r e t a t io n of the aeroforms (UFO) which the BSB has been p r e s e n tin g fo r n ea rly ten y e a r s p a s t . There i s a slow but steady movement o f opinion in t h i s d i r e c t io n , and Arthur Constance i s well in the vanward of a d is tin g u is h e d group.

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E x cerp ts from l e t t e r , t"r. W. Gordon A l l e n, of KGAY, Salem, Ore and other s t a t i o n s o f the network: To the BSR D ir e c t o r : " I was much impressed by T . Jam es SPACEMEN brochure* I mentioned the other night t h a t in the d i s c u s s i o n of Newton in the 4 v o l * work on the H isto ry of Mathematics j u s t published by Simon and S c h u s t e r , which has had e x c e l l e n t re v ie w s, i t was in d ica ted t h a t most o f Newton's u tte ra n o e s on b a s i o scien ce in his P r in o ip ia were o f psychic o r ig in and not p a r t i c u l a r l y brought about through experim ent* I was amused to n ote, in re a d in g about Newton in the Enoyc* B r i t t a n i o a t h a t t h i s m atter was not even h inted a t * * * In the a r t i c l e by James one notes t h a t the su b je ct of l i g h t i s s a id t o be much in e rro r when used as a co n stan t by p h y s i c i s t s * The phenomenon c a ll e d the Zimmer E f f e c t * * * shows that we can never b e c e r t a i n of a source of l i g h t th at oomes t.o us from 'o u te r s p a c e * . I f l i g h t goes through a stro n g magnetic f i e l d no e a r th ly observer can be c e r t a i n o f j u s t what the s i t u a t i o n i s a t i t s sou roe* * * W s t i l l are t r y in g to determine how e to p resen t t h is m a t e r i a l to the p u blic on our r a d io s t a t i o n s ** W.G*A* (T his a c tiv e and w ell-inform ed i n t e r e s t by a man in Mr* A l l e n ' s p o s it io n -note the l a s t sentence in the paragraph above* i s a source o f encouragement to BSR A s s o c i a t e s * ML)* W c a l l a tte n tio n again to the CHARTS compiled by BSR A ssoc. e KEZIAH, a t 916 S o * 21 st S t * , A r lin g to n , V a * , and s o l d by him a t f? 1,00 each . These c h a rts measure about 2 f 10" x 1*9 and are packed with c l a s s i f i e d d a ta on the su b je c t of the aeroform s* Good fo r and a g a i n s t doubting Thomases* B .S .R . Hdqrs* has 50 co p ies on hand fo r r e s a l e , of fo llo w ing b lc lts: (two p o c k e t-siz e d ) " S p e c u la tiv e S u g g e s t io n s ( p a r t s I and I I ) s and " S e le c t e d Pass a g e s"(fro m the Farraday communications)* These are o ffe r e d by the oom piler, F*R* Bartholomew, &1.00 for the two* ORDER FROM: B .S .R * Hdqrs* or from: F . R . B . , 2501 Irv in g Ave*, M in n eap olis Minn*These sm all p u b lic a tio n s co n tain muoh v alu a b le m a t e r i a l . A fte r a long s e r i e s of delays we expect to f i l l a l l stan d ing orders f o r the COMING CP THE GUARDIANS some time t h is month. About 100 pgs* Statem ents of the Probert C o n tro ls concerning the aeroform s* This i s a mimeo book* P ric e - $3*00 S p i r i t i s m and the Beginnings o f C h r i s t i a n i t y : by J a s * R*L* M o r r e ll* Pocket-ize brochure, admirably done and a popular item . "Thy Kingdom Come" i s an a d d it i o n a l item included a t the $1*00 p r i c e * Pub. by the author a t Remington, I n d .- OR: BSR HDQRS* has 50 copies here for r e s a l e ($1*00 e ach )*
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