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In The Beginning

What is Manna?

History of Manna

Who is David Hudson?

ORMUS

Tampa outline

Dallas Workshop

Portland Workshop

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Notes from Tampa outline, November 3&4, 1995

Notes from Tampa outline, November 3&4, 1995

1:38:50 - We injected 1 mg. into the dogs tumor and it went away. Was then given to HIV patient. 2mg. every other day.

1:40:25 - Treated Karposi Sarcoma. 2mg. per day for a month and the lesions were totally gone.

1:41:10 - We have since worked with cancers, ALS, MS, MD, pancreatic cancer, liver cancer. With brain cancer where there is a size limitation you don't want to use this material since it will cause the tumor to expand and open up at first.

1:42:00 - It is now being evaluated under the NIH alternative medicine division back in NYC. We are doing work in Ashland, Oregon. We're doing work in Atlanta, Georgia. We're doing work in Phoenix and Tucson developing data on the information.

3:24:55 - Platinum Metals Review, 1990, Volume 34, Number 4, page 235 - Biophysical Studies of the Modification of DNA by Antitumour Platinum Coordination Complexes. The modification of DNA by cisplatin has been examined. Anti-tumour active Pt compounds induce in DNA, at low levels of binding, local conformational alterations which have the character of non-denaturing distortions. These changes in DNA occur due to formation of inter-strand cause links...". Talks more about the things that pin high spin elements to a low spin state.

3:30:10 - Scientific American, May 1995 "The researchers examined the electrical properties of short lengths of double-helix DNA in which there was a ruthenium atom at each end of one of the strands. Meade and Kayyem estimated from earlier studies that a short single strand of DNA ought to conduct up to 100 electrons a second. Imagine their astonishment when they measured the rate of flow along the ruthenium-doped double helix: the current was up by a factor of more than 10,000 times-over a million electrons a second. It was as if the double helix was behaving like a piece of molecular wire.

For some time, chemists have suspected that the double helix might create a highly conductive path along the axis of the molecule, a route that does not exist in the single strand. Here was confirmation of this idea."

What they are measuring is really superconductivity.

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