Nexus - 1203 - New Times Magazine-pages

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Nexus - 1203 - New Times Magazine-pages

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Le Ribault Continued from page 74 approached by the FBI to test three blinded _ nally used in synthetic form as a nutrient sand samples, he was able to tell them the for stiff joints, but is now sold as the food approached by the FBI to test three blinded sand samples, he was able to tell them the exact location in the world from which they had been collected, that one sample had been gathered from the bonnet of a car and that another had been in the vicinity of an explosion in Beirut. 3. Carlisle, Edith M., "Silicon as an essen- tial element", Environmental and Nutritional Science, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles; "Newer Candidates for Essential Trace Elements", Federation Proceedings 1974 Jun; vol. 33, no. 6. nally used in synthetic form as a nutrient for stiff joints, but is now sold as the food supplement Supersulf. Dr Robert Hershier, who synthesised the compound, has always refused to deal with the pharmaceutical companies because he knows that the sub- stance would be withdrawn and subjected to lengthy trials, which would in turn increase the price of MSM. However, Dr Hershier has managed to get his therapy passed by the US Food and Drug Administration as a food supplement. Endnotes 1. Loic Le Ribault has a Bachelor's degree in Arts from the Sorbonne (1970), degrees in Oceanography, Ecology and Soil Science from Paris (1971), a Master's degree in Geomorphology from Paris (1971) and three doctorates, in Sedimentology, Science and Naturopathic Medicine. He has received many honours and awards and is the author of five books and over 100 published papers plus many articles. Between 1982 and 1991, Le Ribault gave evidence in over a thousand cases, helping to convict 800 defendants mainly of murder and other violent crimes. He introduced not only the electron scan- ning microscope to French criminal foren- sic work, but also the high technology mobile laboratory constructed in the back of a van. 7. Graille, Jean-Michel, Dossier Priore: une nouvelle affaire Pasteur?, Editions Denoel, Paris, 1984. During the Second World War, Antoine Priore, an officer in the Italian Navy, discovered by chance that certain forms of radiation were able to cure cancer. Following the war, Priore went to France and built a machine to generate radiation and with which he began to get good results on cancer patients. His work was watched, supported and verified with great interest and excitement by the French political establishment. But when an "inde- pendent" scientific report was made of his work by cancer specialists, its conclusions were falsified. Priore died in 1983. 4. Aubert, J.P., Magolon, G., "Silastic gel and elastomer in the cicatrisation of wounds in the rabbit", J. Chir. (Paris) 1993 Dec; 130(12):533-8. 5. Mishchuk, I.I., Nagaichuk, V.I., Gomon, N.L., Berezovskaia, Z.B., Ossovskaia, A.B., "Treatment of burn wounds and wounds healing with sec- ondary tightening using dressings with Aerosil", Klin. Khir. 1994; (4):21-2. 6. See, for example, the case of methyl sulphonyl methane (MSM), which has a remarkable similarity to the case of OSS. MSM is an organic sulphur found in meat, fish and fresh vegetables; it was was origi- 2. Le Ribault received his doctorate in geology and, as a result of his early work with electron microscopy, he got to know silica so well that he could determine the geological history of a grain of sand. In his first book, The History of a Grain of Sand, he told this very story. When he was first APRIL — MAY 2005 NEXUS #75 www.nexusmagazine.com