(8 of 10)
4. The radio-activity can be readily extracted.
5. Genes and chromosomes of the Japanese people at Hiroshima are not likely to be affected.
67. All over the U.S., early in November, scientists were hunting especially bred mice because:
1. The demand had gone up with more funds available for cancer research.
2. A new crop of Ph.D.'s were setting up laboratories all over the country.
3. The leading U.S. source of experimental mice at Bar Harbor, Maine, had been destroyed by fire.
4. For some mysterious reason mice died all over the U.S.
5. Mice were being used in large quantities to study atomic-bomb effects.
68. From Columbia University came an announcement indicating that a new drug, SN 13, 274, used with quinine, permanently cures 95% of all cases of:
1. Pneumonia. 4. Relapsing malaria.
2. Heart ailments. 5. Influenza.
3. Venereal diseases.
69. Medical statistics on Army pilots show that flyers who have had a crackup:
1. Should be barred from further flying because of the psychological effects.
2. Make better flyers than those who have never had an accident.
3. Never want to fly again.
4. Are very likely to crack up again if they fly too soon, and alone.
5. Should never have been allowed to fly in the first place, in most instances.
70. One of the most talked-about scientific studies of the times is Alfred Charles Kinsey's report:
1. How Men Behave.
2. Studies in the Psychology of Sex.
3. New Introduction to Biology.
4. Sexual Behavior of the Human Male.
5. Behaviorism.
71. A potential new weapon, used experimentally on mice, cockroaches and mosquitoes by the Army Signal Corps at State College, Pa., employs:
1. High-pitched sound waves.
2. Radar.
3. Invisible light beams.
4. Projected radio-active beams.
5. Strong odors which paralyze the olfactory nerve.
72. Speaking to 600 doctors and hospital administrators in Manhattan recently, Bernard M. Baruch:
1. Advised them to give up their opposition to compulsory government health insurance.
2. Cited the shortcomings of U.S. medicine in the last war.
3. Condemned socialized medicine as a "step toward Sovietizing America."
4. Advocated more and more emphasis on psychiatry.
5. Termed medical training "100 years behind the times."
73. New Nobel Prize Winner Sir Edward Appleton's probings in the upper atmosphere before World War II led in time's nick to Britain's secret weapon:
1. Artificial fog. 4. Supersonic walls.
2. Weather control. 5. Death rays.
3. Radar.
74. Without a cent of backing, famed Dr. Frederic Wertham launched for Harlem Negroes a now successful:
1. Cancer laboratory.
2. Psychiatric clinic.
3. Rapid treatment centers for VD.
4. Tuberculosis sanatorium.
5. Institute of Gerontology.
75. Experiments on diets of mice by a trio of University of Minnesota physiologists support this conclusion:
1. Eat less and live longer.
2. Alcohol, used habitually, hardens the arteries.
3. Cancer can be cured with a proper diet.
4. Color blindness almost always results from poor diet.
5. If a
