Word: atomization
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...should use the atom bomb at our own discretion-not U.N.'s. Whenever the military says, "Drop it," the Senate and the House will support them. It is time we recognize where we stand now and where we stand for the future...
Columbia University has named nine of its officials to a committee to protect life and property on Morningside Heights in the event of an atom bomb attack...
Official Ottawa's first reaction to the crisis was one of silence. Later, after a cabinet meeting, External Affairs Boss Mike Pearson warned against use of the atom bomb by U.S. decision alone. Said Pearson: "Before a decision of such immense and awful consequence . . . there should surely be consultation . . . with the governments concerned. One of those would be the Canadian government...
...Dean Rusk, Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs. But by then the Latin American mood seemed to have leveled off into a kind of lethargic apprehension. A cross-country auto race commanded bigger headlines in Argentina than President Truman's statement on the use of the atom bomb (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS). Brazilians went back to their futebol games. Korea still seemed very far away. There was no reason to doubt that in any crisis Latin America would be behind the U.S. But the latinos still had to learn what the U.S. would do in Asia before they...
...Eugene Gardner, a brilliant young nuclear physicist, was working in 1942 at Berkeley, Calif, with the Manhattan (atom bomb) Project. His secret work required him to drill a hole in an electrode made of beryllium oxide. Out of the hole a fine dust rose, and 29-year-old Gardner inhaled it. He did not know, nor did anyone know at the time, that the beryllium in the dust was a slow, implacable poison...