FOOES

e
Evening
Stat
The
WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION

&

WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY,

NOVEMBER

24,

1954—THIRTY-SIX

PAGES.

Home De
Evenings

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OL =

Shadow of the Atom
Lies Over Human Race

Strikes at Chain of Life.

Scientists Use Fruit Flies to See if Radiation
Will Affect Generations to Be
Born in the Future

Editor’s Note: Is it nossible that an invisible, slow-

acting, largely undetectable poison is acting on the human

race?

The question of the cffect of atomic radiation ts one

of those paramount today in the scientific world. The Star's
science editor. Thomas R. Henry, has erplored the subiect

exhaustively in recent weeks, His findings will appear ina
series of six stories, of which this is the first.

By Thomas R. Henry
Science Editor of

The Star

A somber shadowlies over the promised atomic age.
It is a threat to the continued existence of man on earth,
implied from results of experiments with lower animals.
It is not the frequently voiced threat of slaughter and

destruction in war on an unprecedented scale. but of the
effects of a hidden, insidious, largely undetectable and un-

controilable poison which perhaps is capabie of destroying
the humun race as a biological penus.
According to this

The poison is the effect on germ plasm—the stream of
life which binds cenerations—of the slowly increasing background radiation of the earth itself. including the atmosphere
and the seas, which maybe the aftermath of both American
and Russian experimental explosions of atomic bombs, and
possibly from effur:s to develop atomic energy for peacetime uses.

Horrors of an atomic war often have been pictured—

preat cities laid waste, millions killed, even civilization itself
destroved. But such calamities do not cqual in magnitude the

long-range threat which might not begin to become evident
for several generations. according to these geneticists.
Their thesis is based largely on theoretical considerations.

without thoroughly convincing or precise cata. Such data
will be extremely difficull. costly and perhaps impossible to
obtein, Possibiv never before has science been taced with
such an elusive tasK as the one involved in obtaining convineing evidence to prove or disprove the assumptions in

question. The postulated effects are quite sécurely hidden.
No microsc@ge will reveal them. Few, if any. now ahve wil
Wt SS (hers in human beings.

It probably will be necessary

(Continued on Pare ed. Col 23

thesis. which admutted!y is far from

satisfactorily established, it is met members of the present
Tt js their unkern degeneration who are being iniured

scendants for generations ta come.
This is the recent warning of some of the world’s furemost
They have been discussing it. largely an highly
geneticists

technical payers before spechuteed wudiences for 200 years,

Now men hke Prof. A. TH. Sturtesant of Calitorima Tnstitite
of Technoleey: Dr. E. D. Adrian, ne dent of the Royal Society
of London; Dr. Herman J. Muder ot the University of Indiana.

BEST COPY AVAILABLE

and Piince Louis de Broslie, a ieeding French phy must. teel

that mankind at large should be made aware of its peri
They have been moved to expres + thar own feats tw what
they

consider

quite

unintormed

they have dn mind Gores bac exp!

ora cmencs

that

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