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Warren, Stafford

Warren, Stafford. An Exceptional Man for Exceptional Challenges, vols. 1 and 2. Oral History Program. Regents of the University of California, 1983. [Pg.172]

Warren, Stafford L. The Role of Radiology in the Development of the Atomic Bomb. In Radiology in World War II, ed. Kenneth D. A. Allen, a volume in the series Medical Department of the U.S. Army in World War II. Washington, D.C. U.S. Surgeon-General s Office, 1966. [Pg.172]

Stafford A, Warren G (eds) (1991) Plant cell and tissue culture. Open University Press, Milton Keynes... [Pg.611]

A bomb exploded in a desert damages not much besides sand and cactus and the purity of the air. Stafford Warren, the physician responsible for radiological safety at Trinity, had to search to discover more lethal effects ... [Pg.677]

On August 9,1945, at 11 02 A.M., there was a blinding, searing light, and then the sky over Nagasaki became blacker than night. The dust and debris from the atomic bomb explosion blanketed Urakami Valley, completely blocking out the sun. US. Army-Air Force photo HQ AAF/AS-2. From Stafford L. Warren Papers, 987, Box 62, Folder 7, UCLA Special Collections Library. [Pg.6]

The Committee on Atomic Casualties also instructed me to visit the dean of the new medical school at ucla. Dr. Stafford Warren. All 1 knew then was that Dr. Warren had been among the first American physicians to visit both Hiroshima and Nagasaki after the bombs. Only later did I learn that he had been responsible for radiation safety for the entire Manhattan Project, which had developed those first bombs. He had also been a witness at the dawn of the atomic age when the world s first atomic blast lit the skies at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16,1945—less than a month before the bombs were deployed against Japan. [Pg.49]

Report of Student Casualties in Hiroshima by the First Tokyo Army Hospital, November 1945. A tabulation of students, the name and location of their schools, and their occupation at the instant of the detonation, compiled by teachers and parents, noted the following of 6,226 students documented in the report within 1.2 miles of the hypocenter, 4,825 perished. The original reports are in the Stafford Warren Papers, 987, Box 61, Folder 1, Special Collections Library,... [Pg.168]

Stafford, A. (1991) Natural products and metabolites from plants and plant tissue cultures. In Plant Cells and Culture, (eds Stafford, A. and Warren, G.). The Open University, Milton Keynes, pp. 124-162. [Pg.159]


See other pages where Warren, Stafford is mentioned: [Pg.164]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.624]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.76]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.58 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.677 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.76 ]




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