Project Day Lily
An American Biological Warfare Tragedy
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Project Day Lily story chronicles the events surrounding what the public knows as "Gulf War Syndrome." To this day, the public perception of that tragedy is very limited, but now there are over 150,000 veterans of that conflict that suffer from chronic illnesses and tens of thousands have died without acknowledgment or proper assistance to keep secret the origin of their illnesses.
Project Day Lily tells the story of the discovery that men and women of our Armed Forces were actually exposed to chemical and biological mixtures from missiles and sprayers during the Gulf War that were supplied, in part, by a sinister network using a group of rogue bureaucrats, intelligence operatives and scientists. They were also exposed to contaminants in the multiple vaccines given during deployment. Project Day Lily presents the story of how one of these biological agents was found by two American scientists in veterans of the Gulf War and in civilians as part of a massive testing program and how various academic and governmental employees did everything in their power to prevent this information from being released to the American public.
About the Author
Garth Nicolson (B.S. UCLA 1965; Ph.D. UCSD 1970) is President of the Institute for Molecular Medicine, Huntington Beach, California. Previously the David Bruton Chair at the U.T. M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston and Professor of Internal Medicine at U.T. Medical School, he has published 550 medical and scientific papers and 14 books and served on 20 medical and scientific journals. Nancy Nicolson (B.A. Johns Hopkins 1975; Ph.D. Florida State 1982) is CEO of The Institute for Molecular Medicine. Previously on the faculty at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, she has published over 50 papers. They are both Colonels (Honorary) of the U. S. Army Special Forces and U. S. Navy SEALs (Honorary).