Jerry I. Jacobson

JERRY I. JACOBSON is fifty-three, married with four children and was
nurtured in Brooklyn, New York. He began to study at Albert Einstein as
a six year old two years after discovering Darwin and Freud. Subsequent
to earning his B.A. from Brooklyn College in Philosophy and his D.D.S.
and D.M.D. from Temple University. In 1970, he served as captain and
emergency oral surgeon in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War. He
treated more than twenty thousand patients at his four clinical
facilities in New York during the decade. His postdoctoral training in
physics included twenty-five elective physics courses taken at a half
dozen universities. Dr. Jacobson retired from the practice of oral
surgery in the early eighties, a profession he chose despite his life
long interest in medicine and physics because he believed it was freer
of politics. Moved by his late father’s case of laryngeal cancer, Dr.
Jacobson was determined to provide the death of cancer, and followed
Einstein’s example of intellectual freedom and independence. His
creative drive to understand the universe is obsessive yet prolific,
producing twenty books, 150 scientific articles, 2,000 works of art
including 600 oil paintings, six screen plays, 75 musicals compositions
and another 100 articles in philosophy, art and theology. He is an
accomplished musician in clarinet and saxophone and has played with many
notable figures in the jazz, classical and pop worlds. Today Dr.
Jacobson holds twenty letters patents and has numerous patents pending
in 80 countries. Convinced he has discovered a principle of physics
which Einstein himself knew must exist but could never pinpoint, he has
published his theory of Jacobson Resonance worldwide. He wears two hats
today: one as scientist and President of the Institute of Theoretical
Physics and Advanced Studies for Biophysical Research in Jupiter,
Florida; and the other as a businessman, Chairman and CEO of a public
biotech corporation (Jacobson Resonance Enterprises, Inc.), which is
developing its technology, the Jacobson Resonator, at the John C.
Stennis Space Center in Mississippi through the Lockheed Martin
Prototyping Laboratory. Dr. Jacobson, in contract with the Mississippi
Enterprise for Technology located at the Stennis Space Center, has
established collaborations with professors of like mind and spirit at
universities such as Cornell Medical School in New York City, Oklahoma,
Mississippi, Texas A&M, Florida, Fairleigh Dickinson and Duke. He is
currently talking to representatives of NASA with the intent of
contributing in the areas of space research and controlled thermonuclear
fusion.