and fallout THE LIVING AMPLIFIER Why fallout creates a problem foods. Herewrth a 10-page report, I. the time it takes you to read across this line. many thousandsof the individual atoms which make up the mat- data for the milk supply in 50 cities sources of radioactive materials in man’s diet and in his environment. With respect to milk, the samples examined have not necessarily represented the milk being drunk by the majority of consumers even in the few areas studied. By testing samples of milk purchased over store counters in 50 widely-distributed places in the U.S. and in Canada, CU has sought to extend the work done by the Government agencies. The results, which are presented on pages 108 to 110, serve to check the relatively scant data on milk published by the AEC and the PHS, and to extend their coverage to include many more areas. That a private or- ganization of limited means can carry out such a program suggests that an expanded monitoring network should be economically feasible under Federal, state, or even community or dairy auspices. CU goes further. Though the interest of the PHS in the matter has led it to equip and staff some very competent laboratories, it is still true that the overall problem has remained the province of the AEC. Butit is hard to see why judgments on matters of public health should have to depend primarily on the reports of the very agency charged with the responsibility of manufacturing nuclear weapons, rather than on those of an agency whosespecific job is to safeguard the public health. Without reflecting in any way on the AEC’s competence or integrity, CU would support measures which would lead to thorough and independent investigations (as well as routine surveillance) by the Public Health Service on fundamental biological and con- trol problems, wherever there is concern with fallout. The fact is that fresh clean milk, which looks and tastes just as it always did, nevertheless contains (wherever you get it these days) an unseen contaminant, a toxic substance known to accumulate in human bone. There is an analogy: bacterial contamination. There, too, the presence of unsensed contaminants can bring grave harm. Mostofus, even if we are not bacteriologists, know by now the danger from germs, and yet know howto estimateit rationally, and not to fear it unreasoningly. It is exactly with this kind of reasoned concern that we seek to approach the more novel problem of fallout contamination. @ In the next column and on the next few pages, before we proceed to the results of our analyses of milk samples, we proposeto tell something of the story of low levels of radiation as they existed in the pre-atomic-bomb era, and of how they have been changing since. For it is only against this background that the findings have meaning. ter of your own body spontaneously disintegrate. These disintegrations occur in all human beings, in all living things. Radioactive materials always have been with us in extremely minute quantities. They exist in the foods we eat and consequently in the tissues of our bodies. Some radiant energy produced by the disintegrations, rather like the X rays to which we may be subjected by a dentist or physician, passes right out of the body. If you climb into a “counting cylinder” (see photo), the special liquid inside the tank’s wall will react to this radiation and translate it into tiny pulses of light. Our senses cannot detect such radiation at all—which does not mean that it is without consequence for living matter. Just as the rays by their bombardment produce light pulses within the special liquid of the tank, so they preduce changes in the living cells through which they pass. The energy thus imparted within these cells is small in total amount, but it is intensely concentrated; an average of a few hundred atoms will be altered chemically in every living cell through which the rays pass. And thus begins a biological chain of events. For living matter acts as a kind of amplifyins system, somewhat analogous to the electronic circuits of the laboratory counter. The living amplifier takes time; it is slow to respond. Sometimes the cell which was damaged by traversing rays will recover. But the damage to one or a few cells may become in time a self-regenerating and uncontrollable tumor. If the cells affected are cells of the special reproductive tissues, the damage may be done to the subtle molecules of genetic material which contains the blueprint for the next generation; such damage is what we call genetic. When the damageis to a cell of the body not engaged in reproducing the next generation, the effect is said to be somatic. In its most serious form the somatic damage may be malignant (cancer or leukemia) ; in milder form, it may appear as an apparentacceleration of the aging process. For very low levels of radiation, it may be that no somatic effect is observable. The “counting cylinder” in the photograph across the page includes in its count the rays from a perfectly normal constituent of all living cells: potassium. This chemical element is essential to life, as every gardener knows; one of its isotopes (isotopes are chemically identical but physically different atoms) is radioactive. In a normal 160-pound man, about 5000 atomsof this isotope (potas- sium-40) decay each second throughout life. Radiation passes through us not only from internal sources like the potassium in our muscle tissue, but from external sources as well. The very rocks around us contain uranium and thorium in small amounts, along with their radioactive relatives, particularly radium. And there are the cosmic rays, which come in from interstellar space to strike us. In short, we know that life always has grown in the midst of penetrating radiation. The question must be put: How much has that radiation been? We have to work out some answer to that question before we can proceed to the next one: How much more, if any, can we tolerate? CONSUMER REPORTS 103

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