DRAFT Well I mean you can see, give them a magic pill, why that you can't do anything, unless you can which will automatically cure. is a very important thing to get So that is the numbers. What's you're next question? BERGE: Next question was, Harvard by Shields Warren, you said that you had been brought to and I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about him. KOHN: You know Shields Warren was, the AEC at the end, he was a consultant with after the war ended, official job was during the war, I forget what his but at the end of the war he became the director of the division of biology and medicine for the AEC to help them out. He really didn't want the job, did it because they needed somebody. another man in. Then they finally got He was professor of pathology for Harvard Medical School he was at the New England Deaconess hospital. think, but he Shields, I I don't quite know how he got interested in radiation toxicity. I think the AEC, at one point, asked him about it, and he then looked it up and found there wasn't any comprehensive review, and he set about to write and wrote in the 40's. He wrote a series of papers reviewing what was known about the affects of radiation toxicity and radiation biology. primarily interested in cancer, path. BERGE: Then Shields was and came to radiation through that I don't know what do you want me to say about him. What made him invite you? 31 Do you know?

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