Word: hydrogenate
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...most of the U.S. public the hydrogen bomb was still a direful novelty last week, but to scientists there was little news about...
Last week, the U.S. could not feel so sure. Its supposed monopoly of A-bombs was gone. The hydrogen bomb, when & if it is developed, made the nation's own shoreline for the first time in 135 years a perilous frontier. Even if both Russia and the U.S. began working on the H-bomb simultaneously, Russia would have a lead. It would have a lead because in the kind of war that might wipe out entire cities and whole armies at one surprise stroke, the U.S. would strike only if struck first. The element of surprise would always...
...news that the U.S. was building a hydrogen bomb, together with Dean Acheson's opinion that it was no longer any use to seek agreement with Russia on atomic energy control (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS), caused some people to look for a convenient hole to creep into. France, the U.S.'s principal ally on the Continent, seemed to be looking hardest...
...Hydrogen bombs and atomic explosives are not the primary concerns of the small group of scientists who are working on various projects of the now University synchro-cyclotron on Divinity Avenue...
...afternoon last week, while the world's headlines featured nothing more exciting than the hydrogen bomb, Cinemactress Ingrid Bergman picked up the phone in her luxurious Rome apartment. She spoke calmly to tall, handsome Dr. Pier Luigi Guidotti, 32, the family physician of Italian Cinemaestro Roberto Rossellini. As she hung up, the doctor rushed over to drive her to Rome's most modern private clinic, the streamlined Villa Margherita. At 7 p.m., Ingrid gave birth to a plump, blue-eyed...