Word: atomization
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Kremlin jitters may have planted a Paris report that Russia had "infra-cosmic lays," which could explode any atom bomb from 12 miles. The report added that "safety belts," studded with "infra-cosmic ray" generators, are to be scattered from 60 to 100 miles around strategic cities and industries...
...ardently pro-atom U.S. Army was mum on the professor's suggestion. If it does lend its B-29s, the U.S. public will probably not be told about it. And if an experiment succeeds in setting up a chain reaction, it is possible that no living thing will be around to applaud.* For, if the scientists ever succeed in pulling the trigger...
...declared intent to internationalize the atom "and all other major weapons adaptable to mass destruction" did not end atomic nationalism. It strongly survived among President Truman's military advisers, who resumed their support of the highly nationalistic May-Johnson control bill. The British did not miss the point...
Lately, he has been working on the "binding force," the powerful, short-range attraction which holds the nucleus of an atom together. Except for the binding force, science's innermost mystery, the entire earth would presumably explode...
...prize for chemistry went to pioneer atom-splitter Professor Otto Hahn, 66, lately of Berlin. Hahn came to the U.S. in 1933 to lecture for one year at Cornell. He is believed to be in the U.S. at the present time, under different circumstances. Where he is now, U.S. scientists cannot say and Government authorities will not say. If he is one of the German scientists imported to the U.S. as "human reparations," it will be the first time a Nobel prize has been awarded to a virtual prisoner of war. When Professor Hahn did his first atom-splitting...