Nexus - 0306 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 7 of 96

Page 7 of 96
Nexus - 0306 - New Times Magazine-pages

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LY DD © oF VEN? HERBAL CANCER CURE NEXUS was one of the first magazines to give international exposure to the research of Dr Hulda Clark (see NEXUS, vol. 2, nos. 22, 23). We thought readers might like to read one of many success stories that have resulted from using Dr Clark's treatments. "I used to practise medicine using unorthodox approaches in Scottsdale, Arizona, until I was set up by the authorities and lost my licence to practise there. I came to Ecuador, where there is freedom to treat as you see fit. "One amazing case I have is a five-year-old boy with Ewing's sarcoma, with tumours in his armpit and chest wall. He made the rounds from Miami Children's Hospital to Johns Hopkins Medical Center, where he was operated on and given the maximum doses of chemotherapy and radi- ation. Finally, he was sent back to Ecuador to die. "He arrived in my office with a catheter in one of the veins of his heart, where his mother could give him injections of mor- phine for his intense pain. "I started him on increasing doses of anti-parasite herbs, according to the recom- mendations of Dr Hulda Clark (The Cure For All Cancers; The Cure For All Diseases). It is hard to believe, but this child was off morphine and the oral painkillers within 24 hours. His appetite 4 THOUGHT-POWER -” Pilots are testing a revolutionary new system that will enable them to fly planes using thought-power. Dr Andrew Junker, a UK-based electrical engineer and neuro-physi- ologist, has spent 25 years working towards creating machines that can be controlled by the mind. The Cyberlinks Interface allows the user to send thought commands through a headband, and works by interpreting an assortment of undu- lating electrical pulses emitted by the brain. Dr Junker's company, Cyberlink Mind Systems, is planning to apply the device to commercial uses, such as wheelchair-steering for the dis- abled, and in aviation, with com- mercial and military pilots using the system to fly planes. A basic Cyberlink system for disabled people to operate a typewriter/computer keyboard will be on sale by Christmas 1996 and is expected to cost about AUD$1,500. A thought-powered wheel- chair, the Cyberchair, will be available within a year, with a retail price of around AUD$20,000. Test pilots using a flight simulator dome at the Wright Patterson Air Force base in Ohio, USA, have already demonstrated that commercial and military jets can be flown hands-free using the Cyberlink system. (Source: The Sunday Telegraph, UK, 11 August 1996) returned, and I took him off the junk food he had been allowed to eat. “Within two weeks, he returned to the activities of a normal five-year-old. His tumours are regressing and his blood levels have returned to normal. His only medica- tions consist of vitamins, herbs and enzymes. "Had I been confronted with this case in the USA, the program I put him on would have resulted in board action, media criti- cism and possibly a malpractice suit. “Saving one life was worth the misery I went through. (Signed) R. B., Ecuador." (Source: What Doctors Don't Tell You, UK, vol. 7, no. 4, July 1996) "SOUL CATCHER" IMPLANTS British scientists are developing a con- cept for a computer chip which, when implanted into the skull behind the eye, will be able to record a person's every life- time thought and sensation. "This is the end of death," said Dr Chris Winter of British Telecom's artificial-life team. He predicts that within 30 years it will be possible to relive other people's lives by playing back their experiences on a computer. "By combining this information with a record of the person's genes, we could recreate a person physically, emo- tionally and spiritually." Dr Winter and his team of scientists at BT's Martlesham Heath Laboratories, near Ipswich, call the chip "the Soul Catcher’. British Telecom would not divulge how much money it is investing in the project, but Dr Winter said it was taking "Soul ACCOMMODATION Spe fea UTA ————— WELLE ——_— 6 © NEXUS OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 1996