Owner: Rife Technology: Cancer Cure URL:http://rife-technology.cancer-cure.org/ Join Date: Sun, 04 Mar 2007 14:12:09 -0600 Rating:0 Site Description: Royal Raymond Rife, The Cancer Cure That Worked Site statistics:Click here
Movie New Eye of Microscope in War of Germs (part 1) 2007-03-04 17:28:16 Popular Science (June, 1931)
By H. H. DUNN
On a six-by-eight-foot screen in a darkened room appeared a spherical object. It resembled a gray indoor baseball, crisscrossed in all directions by fine threads of silk. Slowly and aimlessly it rotated.
“The spore of the bacterium that causes lockjaw”, came a voice from the loudspeaker of the motion picture apparatus. “Watch it!”
A dozen physicians and laboratory workers leaned forward. The sphere swelled. When it had become six inches or more in diameter on the screen, a dark line appeared across its middle. It parted. From it emerged a black bar, nearly as long as the diameter of the spore, spinning on its long axis—the cylinder-shaped germ of tetanus, or lockjaw. For what was probably the first time, a movie had shown the lockjaw spore hatching.
We were in the laboratory of R. R. Rife at San Diego, Calif. He is a pioneer in the art of making motion pictures of microscopically small. Once he took care of half Read more:Microscope
, Germs
Movie New Eye of Microscope in War of Germs (part 2) 2007-03-05 02:03:54
When come the actores in these strange movies? Rife propagates and rears all the microbes he studies, I learned, in a incubating plant of his own design. Deadly germs, housed in jars, are nursed as carefully as the frailest child. Delicate thermostats control the warmth of ovens in which the germs are kept active, or the coolness of refrigerators in which the germs are kept active, or the coolness of refrigerators in which they lie dormant. “If the electric current holds out”, Rife told me, “These microorganism will be alive a million years from today, without the interference of a human hand”.
When he is ready to make a movie, Rife places a small colony of disease germs on a quartz slide. Then he picks up one or more with a human hair, the fines obtainable, which is split lengthwise and mounted in a chuck beneath the lens of his microscope. Slowly he lowes this strange pair of tweezers onto the slide. Its halves part. Between them one or a few microbes lodge Read more:Microscope
, Germs
Movie New Eye of Microscope in War of Germs (part 3) 2007-03-06 00:11:26 Thus he has been able to record on one film the complete life story of he bookwork, from the hatching of the egg to the full development of the serpent like parasite. “I set the camera controls”, Rife explained, “and placed one egg of the bookworm in the center of the stage. When I returned, seventy-two hours later. I had a complete film record of the parasite.” The film takes only a few minutes to run off, but a research worker bending over his microscope would spend three days and nights, an all but impossible task, to see the same things happen.
Either as he makes the film or afterward, Rice records a lecture to accompany it upon a sound strip synchronized with the pictures. He explains too, the effect of special treatments administered to the germs under the camera’s eye, such as doping them with drugs, or testing the effect of heat and cold.
Weighing germs and timing the speed of their movement are some of Rife’s feats in microscope land. He sh Read more:Microscope
, Germs
New Found, Cannibal Germs, Hailed as Mighty Weapon in WAR on Disease (part 1) 2007-03-07 02:46:13
POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY
October 1931
Vol. 119, No. 4
New Found, CannibalGerms
, Hailed
as MightyWeapon
in WAR on Disease
By Clayton R. Slawter
Unknown to vast majority of his countrymen, an American scientist working quietly with test tubes, germs cultures, and microscopes in a mid-Western laboratory, has made a series of astounding discoveries that may give the medical profession control over a number of deadly diseases.
He is Dr. Arthur I. Kendall, professor of research backteriology in the Northwestern University Medical School at chicago. Made public in a few weeks ago, his findings have been hailed the world over as the greatest forward step in medical bacteriology since the days of the immortal Pasteur.
Kendall’s discoveries may be said to fall into two closely connected groups. First of all, he has succeeded in growing at will, from the blood of patients suffering from these diseases, the germs that cause influenza, measles, arthritis or inflammation of the joints,
Movie New Eye of Microscope in War of Germs (part 4/final) 2007-03-07 02:34:40 How various rays affect the lives and activities of disease germs was another thing that Rife wanted to find out. One day he rigged up an electric discharge tube. An instrument of which the X-ray and cathode ray tubes of laboratories are special forms, and shot through it the comparatively high current of sixty four miliamperes. He obtained a strange ray that casts a greenish glow on the surrounding atmosphere, and of a sort beyond the usual range of X-rays. It penetrates air so easily that it may be detected at great distance from the tube. Rife devised a liquid screen of salt solution and acid to protect his hands against injury from the ray.
While X-rays had no effect of lockjaw ferms, and ultra-violet or invisible light rays merely halted their development, Rife discovered that the green ray would destroy the microbes. Now he is making a movie of that operation.
Rife has devised a magnetic compass so delicate that it can be used to study the electricity and magnetism in living ger Read more:Germs
, Microscope