: • PUBLCATIONSOF THE ORGONE INSTTUTE VOL. VI, NOS. 1 - 4 (cid:9) • (cid:9) JULY, 1954 .c OR E ( Cosmic Orgone Engfneering)^ ffj CONTENTS OROP DESERT by WILHELM REICH, M. D. Part 1 SPACE SHIPS, DOR and DROUGHT 0 RG ON E I N STITUTE ? RG:ON 0 N Rangeley, Maine, U.S.A. CORE .. is published 2 - 4 times per year. Subscription: $6.00 per year. Single issues priced according to size. Copyright, 1954, Orgone Institute, Orgonon, Rangeley, Maine. Printed in the U.S.A. and distributed through the Orgone Institute. All rights rcscrvcd. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without written permission from the Orgone Institute, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages. Editor: Wilhelm Reich, MI.D. CORE (cosi4Ic ORGONE ENGINEERING) continues the function of its predecessor, the Orgone Energy Bulletin (vols. IN, 1949-1953). CORE is the official organ of the ORGONE INSTITUTE which is devoted to Basic Research in the Realm of the Primordial Cosmic (Pie-atomic) Energy. ' CORE deals, among other things, with: Pre-atornic Chemistry (Oranur Chemistry) ; Drought and Desert Research; Removal of DOR Clouds, Rain-making and Fog-lifting with the Cloudbuster; Functional Orgonomctry; and the Bio-energetics of Human Emotion as far as human character reactions are involved with the above men- tioned cosmic functions. The responsibility for the contents of original papers and communications rests on the writer and not on the editor. This Journal grants free expression of opinion which is not always and not necessarily the opinion of the editing staff. Love, work and knowledge are the well-springs of our life. They should also govern it. ORGONE INSTITUTE Orgonon P.O. Box 53 Rangeley, Maine © (cid:9) Copyright renewed 1982 by Mary Boyd Higgins As Trustee of Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust PUBLICATIONS OF THE ORGONE INSTITUTE VOL VI, NOS. (cid:9) 4 (cid:9) JULY, 1954 COR E (Cosmic Orgone Engineering ) , CONTENTS OROP DESERT by WILHELM REICH, M. D. Part I SPACE SHIPS, DOR and DROUGHT , (cid:9) . ORGONE INSTITUTE?ORGONON Rangeley, Maine, U.S.A. COR E is published 2 - 4 times per year. Subscription: $6.00 per year. Single issues priced according to size. Copyright, 1954, Orgone Institute, Orgonon, Rangeley, Maine. Printed in the U.S.A. and distributed through the Orgone Institute. All rights rcscrved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without writtcn permission from the Orgone Institute, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages. Editor: WHl1elrn Reich, M.D. CORE (cosmic ORGONE ENGINEERING) continues the function of its predecessor, the Orgone Energy Bulletin (vols. I-V, 1949-1953). CORE is the official organ of the ORGONE INSTITUTE which is devoted to Basic Research in the Realm of the Primordial Cos,nic (Pie-atomic) Energy. CORE deals, among other things, with: Pre-atomic Chemistry (Oranur Chemistry); Drought and Desert Research; Removal of DOR Clouds, Rain-making and Fog-lifting with the Cloudbuster; Functional Orgonometry; and the Bio-energetics of Human Emotion as far as human character reactions are involved with the above men- tioned cosmic functions. The responsibility for the contents of original papers and communications rests the write; and not on the editor. This Journal grants free expression of 072 opinion which is not always and not necessarily the opinion of the editing staff. Love, work and knowledge are the well-springs of our life. - (cid:9) They should also govern it. ORGONE INSTITUTE Orgonon P.O. Box 53 Rangeley, Maine © (cid:9) Copyright renewed 1982 by Mary Boyd Higgins As Trustee of Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust CONTENTS INTRODUCTION TO OROP DESERT(cid:9) . (cid:9) v I. EXPANSION AND CONTRACTION IN THE AT- MOSPHERIC OR ENERGY Behavior (cid:9) smoke; Nature of fog; Dispersive quali- ties of energy; Distribution of rainfall; Where does OR the moisture come from? Clues to answer; The ring around the sun; Seasonal expansion and contraction Of envelope. OR II. SPACE SHIPS AND DESERT DEVELOPMENT (cid:9) 8 D011 and M elanor; Smog; Symptoms of DOR sickness; Quest for source of and Melanor; Functional DOR meaning of Melanor; Deterioration of forests; Scope of Cosmic Engineering; Clarification of the source of Melanor; Visitors from outer space; Space ships and Principle of Life on Earth challenged. DOR; III. DOR REMOVAL, CLOUD-BUSTING, FOG-LIFTING 28 clouds; Stillness and bleakness; Disappearance DOR of sparkle from the landscape; Human awareness of DOR; Geiger counter reactions to DOR; First DOR re- moval; " Cloud-Busting "; Use of OR potential; The lightning rod; Destroying and creating clouds; Lifting fog; The " spiral draw ". IV. OROP DESERT PROJECT (cid:9) 45 . (cid:9) . S Change from earthly to cosmic perspective; Danger of desert to life; Mass functions have developed from primordial energy functions; Mountains impede OR streams; Deserts can be made green; Blueprints for the fructification of deserts. ii (cid:9) . (cid:9) CONTENTS V. OROP RANGELEY, AUGUST 1 1952 (cid:9) 55 D0R-affected clouds; Dissipation of clouds and absence of thunder-storms over Orgonon; Dynamics of drought clouds; Breaking drought; Functions oppos- ing drought. VI. OROP ELLSWORTH, JULY 5-6, (cid:9) 61 Drought broken; Failure to draw from zenith; Protocol of drawing operation; Fog front rolls in from ocean; Gentle rain falls; Reports on OROP ELLSWORTH; Monitoring Oranu-r atmosphere; Plague activities. VII. OROP ORGONON, JULY 23, 1953 (cid:9) . 71 Development of a new drought; Dilemma resulting from drought; Failure of extended draws; Prolonged east to west • OR flow; " Backwash "; Heavy rain in New York; Tele-oRop; Destruction of thunderheads; Friendly activities on behalf of OROP DESERT. VIII. OROP CHILDREN'S PARADE, AUGUST 8-9., 1953 78 Request for rain-free day; Not promised - experi- mentation only; Problem of how to keep sky clear; Drawing from west with one tube; Rain prevented from falling over Rangeley. Ix. OROP BOSTON, SEPTEMBER 2, 195`3 (cid:9) 83 operator a trustee only of natural functions; CORE Severe heat in New York; Attempt to relieve cities; Weather Bureau • informed; Simultaneous three- Cloudbuster draw; Protocol of OROP BOSTON; Storm unpredicted hits Boston; Relief from heat; Desert is inevitable result of the immobilization of OR energy; Contradictions in Weather Bureau forecasts ; Founda- tions of Oranur Weather Control. CONTENTS X. OROP GALACTIC STREAM, HANCOCK, OCTO- BER 22, 1953 (cid:9) 91 The Galactic OR Stream is real; DOR removal near ocean; First report of a student operator; Nothing is unimportant in Cosmic Engineering; Drawing against Galactic Stream; Rain goes toward northeast while winds come from northeast; Chain reaction storms; Drought again broken;- Caution and daring needed; Gradient of dryness toward Southwest; Need to regu- late Cloudbuster operations; Space ships and space problems; Outlook. APPENDIX A. Rules to follow in Cloud Engineering (cid:9) 105 B. Protocols of the first 97 DOR removal operations (cid:9) 107 C. Documentary record on information given regarding ORANUR, DOR and WEATHER CONTROL (cid:9) 125 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1. WHERE WINTER DROUGHT HIT THE U. S.) 1954 vi la. AIR VIEW OF ORGONON, RANGELEY, MAINE viii 2. THREE STATES OF EXPANSION IN THE OR ENVELOPE 4 2a. RELATIONSHIP . OF ORGONE STREAMS, ATMOSPHERE AND EARTH (cid:9) . 6 3. MELANOR ON ROCK SURFACES 16 3a. SIGHTINGS OF SPACE SHIPS IN APRIL, 1952 21 3aa. SIGHTINGS OF SPACE SHIPS MARCH THROUGH JULY, 1954 22 3b. TRACKS OF ALL TORNADOES, 1916-1950 23 4. CLOUD-BUSTING - THE DESTRUCTION OF CLOUDS 36 5. CLOUD-BUSTING - THE MAKING OF CLOUDS 38 5a. 40 THE CLOUDBUSTER MOUNTED ON A TRUCK 5b. THE CLOUDBUSTER MOUNTED ON A PLATFORM 40 6. THE(cid:9) SPIRAL DRAW " IN FOG-LIFTING 42 7. RELIEF OF WESTERN MOUNTAIN RANGES 48 8. DISTRIBUTION OF PRINCIPAL CLIMATIC TYPES IN THE U.S. 48 9.- AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL IN THE U.S. 50 10. PROPOSITION FOR OROP DESERT, U.S. SOUTHWEST 52 11. PROPOSITION FOR OROP DROUGHT, OCEAN TO EAST 53 12. PROPOSITION FOR OROP DESERT, WESTERN SAHARA 53 13. MT. BIGELOW GROUP OBSTRUCTS OR FLOW (cid:9) . 54 14. DISSIPATION OF CLOUDS OVER ORGONON 57 15. . MAP OF FIRST BREAKING OF DROUGHT 58 16. DIRECTION OF RAINFALL AFTER OROP ELLSWORTH 63 17. " BACKWASH " (cid:9) . 73 17a. DRAWING MOISTURE FROM OCEAN ONTO CONTINENT 86- 18. OROP GALACTIC STREAM (cid:9) . 97 19. PRECIPITATION FROM MID-DECEMBER TO MID-FEBRUARY, 1954 (cid:9) . 99 iv INTRODUCTION TO 0 R 0 P D E S E R T The story of OROP DESERT IS long and complicated. Let us be- gin with the word OROP. This word was coined to designate all operations on the part of human beings regarding DESERT. Desert here includes drought, atmospheric conditions which lead to drought and desert, and the technical means, based on the . scien- tific understanding of nature, which could, possibly, do something beneficial about the prevention of drought and desert development. 'C OR " is included because the scientific data underlying our technological data on desert development have been worked out in the realm, method, research and technical development of thought, which differs from other systems of thinking in it is neither mechanistic nor mystical, b (cid:9) energetic. Thus, " OROP " comes to designate engineering operations in- volving the COSMIC ENERGY FUNCTIONS. This does not end the introduction of OROP DESERT. The physi- cal desert outside in nature is a matter of millenia of cosmic events. Many places on our planet were once green, fruit-bear- ing countrysides which nourished rich and happy human cultures and civilizations. Only twenty-five thousand years ago, the South- west of the USA, so the archeologists and geologists tell us, was inhabited by men living on green lands. This is true, without going into detailed proof here, of the Nile Delta, and the land where Jesus had walked the earth only two thousand years ago, the whole region around Nazareth, today subsumed under the name " Near East." We are told by historians, too, that other regions, such as the Mexican and South American plains and valleys, today poor, were once rich. This, I suppose, is also true of the Roman Empire, today reduced to a poor, plague-ravaged Italy. What underlies the making of deserts? It is obvious that deserts are not merely pro-ducts of some un- known events in nature; they are spreading more and more over vast regions of our globe. The severe droughts which threaten to extinguish all human existence are truly functions of desert devel- opment. The following chart, taken from U. S. News and World Report depicts the spreading of this menace in the USA today. V Vi(cid:9) INTRODUCTION - (cid:9) - - -- --- - (cid:9) ----------- . (cid:9) ! (cid:9) I4. By U. S. News Pub. (OFP. FIGURE 1. The point to be stressed in the approach to the problem of desert development is this: Deserts are (cid:9) on natural functions which operate in the direction of dehydration of the atmosphere and soil, i.e., death. However.,, man would have conquered the desert and would have been capable of halting the development of desert had he himself not been subjected to a process in his emotional structure, a process which we shall designate as "EMOTIONAL DESERT". Man himself is responsible for desert making and desert break- ing. Man has the tools of knowledge and the tools of technology at his disposal today to combat desert development,' and even to turn existent deserts- back into green, rich pastures for man and ani- mal alike. (cid:9) -