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248 lines
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
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Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
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November 29, 1991
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DELAW1.ASC
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This file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of Sgt. Paul Carlson.
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From the June 1959 edition of The DelaWarr Labs
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Mind & Matter Journal.
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Radio Waves Found to Affect Cell Behaviour
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(This article which appeared in The New York Times on March 30,
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1959 is the first intimation, apart from the claims of various
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radionic operators, that radio waves can affect cellular
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behaviour. The information comes somewhat as a shock to all
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physicists judging by the remarks of the physicists and
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biologists visiting Dr. Heller's laboratory who say "I'll be
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damned".
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We would remind our readers that the method of critically
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tuning a radio frequency to produce a resonant effect with a
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specific cell group in the human body is a routine performance
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with the more advanced radionic operators..........The Editor
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Organisms line up in reply to High Pulsed Range
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The discovery that radio waves can influence the behaviour of cells
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has been reported by a team of scientists.
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It is believed that the discovery may have far-reaching effects in
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medicine and in the understanding of basic life processes, as well
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as in industry.
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The findings, published in two technical journals, have to do with
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the behaviour of many living and non-living substances in fields of
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radio energy.
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The scientists are Dr. John H. Heller, Dr. A.A. Teixeira-Pinto and
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Dr. John L. Cutler of the New England Institute for Medical Research
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in Ridgefield, Conn. They have found that a variety of substances -
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including carbon, silver, starch, polystyrene particles, red blood
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cells and several types of living microscopic organisms - can be
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oriented by pulsed radio frequencies.
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Perhaps the most significant factor in this work so far is the
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discovery that the new technique apparently permits the scientists
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to affect structures inside living cells. The use of the pulsed
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radio frequency of about twenty-seven megacycles on cells in the
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Page 1
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growing root tip of a garlic plant, for example, created some
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abnormal cells and killed others by interference with the heredity-
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carrying elements.
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At present the scientists cannot explain the phenomenon. The
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possibility that particles under an impressed radio frequency tend
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to line up SO THERE IS MINIMAL DISTORTION of the field as close as
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they can come to guessing how it works, but this leaves many
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questions unanswered.
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The scientists, however, are able to reproduce the effect
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predictably.
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For example, randomly swimming groups of tiny, cigar-shaped
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organisms known as Euglena can be made to swim together in an east-
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west direction, ALONG THE LINES OF FORCE in the impressed radio-
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frequency field.
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They all move in straight lines as though obeying the lanes in a
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swimming meet. This analogy is extended by the little "flip turns"
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the Euglena make when they reach the end of a "lane" and swim back
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along their original paths.
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Even more astonishing things happen when the radio frequency is
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increased a certain amount. The little organisms SUDDENLY FLIP
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NINETY DEGREES and all start swimming in a north-south direction.
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Dr. Heller said that this ability to "play these things like a
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piano" has so fascinated his team that lights have been burning in
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the laboratory practically every evening and week-end since the work
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began last November.
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"Visiting physicists and biologists usually don't believe it until
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they see it work," he said. "Then the first thing they say is 'I'll
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be damned!'"
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Dr. Heller and Dr. Cutler demonstrated the effect on several other
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things, including staphylococcus germs, amoebae and polystyrene
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particles (tiny synthetic particles of uniform size). All except
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the staphylococci behaved as predicted, lining up east-west under
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one radio frequency and north-south under another.
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Dr. Heller explained that each substance seemed to have a FAVOURED
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FREQUENCY for lining up with OR against the field. Euglena, for
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example, line up east-west at six megacycles and north-south at
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about fifteen megacycles. Staphylococcus north-south frequency,
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presuming it has one, appears to be one out of the range of the
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institute's present equipment, according to Dr. Heller.
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Radio signals in the medium frequency range are being used roughly
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between five megacycles and forty megacycles. The scientists are at
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work on equipment that will take them into radar range, or somewhat
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above 100 megacycles.
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The present equipment consists of a radio frequency source that
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permits pulsation of the signal at various rates and powers.
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Pulsing is necessary because a constantly applied signal would fry
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any living material.
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Page 2
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Wire leads from the power source end in electrodes of silver paint
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on the underside of the microscope slide that is covered with still
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another microscope slide on which the material to be examined is
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placed. In this way the experimental material is insulated from the
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electrodes by two thicknesses of glass and thus exposed only to the
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radio field and not directly to any current carrier.
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Preliminary results from work with this equipment are carried in
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NATURE, a British scientific publication, and the RES BULLETIN, the
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American journal.
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The New England team got into this work by being dissatisfied with
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explanations offered for the reported development of cataracts and
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germ-cell damage in persons WHO WORKED IN RADAR, a radio frequency
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considerably higher than that being used in the Ridgefield
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laboratory.
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Some investigators suggested that the alleged damage was caused by
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the heating of tissue in the radar beams. Dr. Heller did not like
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this theory and set out to explore other possibilities.
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Alteration of genetic material induced in plant test
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"Four reports of the peculiar behaviour of fat globules in radio-
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frequency fields had been made since 1927," he said, "and we decided
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to see if we could get similar reactions from other things."
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He added that a number of other substances that lined up AND STRUNG
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TOGETHER UNDER PULSED RADIO FREQUENCIES were soon found. One of
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their experiments stands out as an important turning point.
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Working with a microscopic animal known as paramecium they noted
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that a tiny particle within the cell of a trapped organism FLIPPED
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BACK AND FORTH according to the impressed field. This meant, Dr.
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Heller explained, that it was possible TO REACH INSIDE CELLS AND
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AFFECT MANY INTERNAL STRUCTURES.
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That new possibility led to an experiment in which cells in the
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growing tip of a garlic plant were exposed to the field for five
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minutes and then examined twenty-four hours later.
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The scientists reported finding several changes in the cells'
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chromosomes, the heredity-controlling structures. VIRTUALLY ALL
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the classical aberations known to be caused by ionizing radiation
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and certain poisons were noted, Dr. Heller explained. This finding
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suggests that radio frequencies appear to constitute a powerful new
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tool for studying the growth and genetic development of organisms.
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Work along this line has already resulted in the creation of both
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LETHAL MUTATIONS and VIABLE NEW STRAINS of vinegar flies and certain
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bacteria, the scientists said. They speculated that this research
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might find application in cancer treatment if it turned out that
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radio frequencies COULD BE USED TO SCRAMBLE CHROMOSOMES in malignant
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cells, thereby preventing their further growth.
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In addition, because each substance seems to have a PREFERRED RADIO
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FREQUENCY to respond to, MIXTURES OF DIFFERENT ONES might be
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separated with the new technique.
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Page 3
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In support of this possibility Dr. Heller cited experiments that
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showed how foreign substances could be made to flow over aligned
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polystyrene particles and how two different strains of penicillin
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spores WERE DIFFERENTIATED by the radio-frequency fields.
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Dr. Heller also remarked that interest in his experiments had been
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expressed by the oil industry. Behind this interest, he explained,
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is the thought THAT IF PARTICLES CAN BE ALIGNED before they are
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chemically strung together into fibres, EXTREMELY STRONG STRANDS of
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the material probably can be created.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
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as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
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Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
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Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.
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Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
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Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
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If we can be of service, you may contact
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Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
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