LIBGYs

( continued)

He think that it would be a good idea since there was se
euch interest in the subject in the Part I report that
organise an additional seainar this afternoon on
eize distribution.

fe will hold that in the Nuclear ine

confarence room on the second floor and invite anyone te
attend who wishes, who is assigned to any of the other

is.

We'll also move the sexinar on scavenging, transport, and
usion into this room for we have a feeling that this will
be the largest of the various meetings.

At the end of

bour Er. Turner will give ua directions as to where these
other meeting roous are.

In the next forty ainutes I

shall try to tell you what we intend te recoumend on the
worldwide problems.

As I indicated earlior this is prisarily

an outline of experiments to be done.

The problea is

will people start dying as a result of an atomic war, and

we focus our attention on the radioactivity. It fan't

that

we haven't paid some attention to other physical effecte
but that we are rather convinced that the radioactivity i
the sost likely to te the most serious.

#e organized the

project on the assumption that biolegy is so lapossibly
difficult that we do best to segresate biology and to pay
attention to those things we can do soxething about on a

short range and so we asked the Division of Biology and
Sedicine to tell us what the most isportant and nost dangee
oys fiasion products were, or the most dangerous radio-

Denarters 1

ba

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