This document clearly has changed science as it was established in 1942, setting the whole community on it's scholarly ear. The 6th photo clearly shows the benzene ring, the most basic of all organic chemistry. Next is b-phenyl which when bombarded with x-rays, conjoins with the barbituates in the solution to become biphenyl barbitol. The excitement of the molecules raises the electron levels to orbits around the nucleus of the atoms in the benzene ring to actually displace time and space. The pages with the formulas are clearly calculaltions that conjoin the quantum physics of the x-ray stimulated molecules with the practical aspect of magnetism and anti-magnetism.
It is too bad that this paper was not published as I am sure we would have heard much more of Dr. Anderson Pace. Instead, there was one old professor on Pace's doctorial review board that would not accept (contrary to Einstein's theories and calculations at the time) that by bending the time/space continum, one would be able to surpass the speed of light. He put the total rejection on this project, Pace's application for a Doctorate degree and ordered it to be filed under "Z" so that it could not be found. That automatically caused the whole Pace Theory of Relative Metallic Distortion and Recovery to be labeled as total bunk in the science and education community. And this Doctorial board went on to work for the United States Government in Intelligence, later to become the founding nucleus of the Central Intelligence Agency.
Friends, what we have here is the ultimate, chemoquantatative micro metallic processor, capable of the highest quantative analysis and discrimination of all metals. In fact, one could find a penny in the land fill with this machine, should it be built, and know the date of the coin and what the chemical basis of the gooey compound next to it is.
By the way, Anderson Pace died in 1969, the humble cartaker of the laboratory rat and mouse reproduction compound.
And there is a flag on the play. This would make a great Wiki entry, just about as accurate as the other stuff there.
And to think that when I first started college, working as a janitor, and my assignment was to clean out the "left" materials of a retired professor, all I found was a paper on thumbsucking. Which I used in two other classes. Oops, maybe I should not have admitted to that.