Activity Listings
- Check from AHP to Barclay and Linda Kamb for $100.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2]
- Check from AHP to Crellin Pauling for $100.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2]
- Check from AHP to Jim Morris for $5.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2] [Also filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Check Registers, 1957-1962), Box #4.076, Folder #76.4]
- Check from AHP to Joan Harris for $10.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2]
- Check from AHP to Linda Hopkins for $10.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2]
- Check from AHP to Pauline D. Ney for $25.00. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Business and Financial: Bank Statements and Canceled Checks, January 1960-December 1961), Box #4.026, Folder #26.2]
- Letter from LP to Linus Pauling Jr. [Filed under LP Biographical: (Family Correspondence: Linus Carl Pauling, Jr., 1957-1974), Box #5.038, Folder #38.3]
25 December 1960
Dear Linus and Anita,
Mama and I have just got back from our trip to Chicago, New York, and Chicago again. Everything went along well on this trip. It involved several talks about peace and civil liberties, and one scientific talk, about proteins and nucleic acids in relation to human beings and other living organisms. It was part of a symposium honoring our friend Herman Mark, who is now retiring as professor of macromolecular chemistry in Brooklyn Polytechnic.
Word has reached us indirectly that Mrs. Reynolds came to talk to you about a plan that she and her husband have for making a study of survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. She talked with us briefly about this plan. Mama and I are disturbed that she should have come to you, because this was not done at our suggestion, and, in fact, I have felt somewhat doubtful about the significance of the sort of investigation that she described, rather briefly, to us. It seems to me that the statistical fluctuations involved in such a study are so great that it might not have much value. Perhaps she is not thinking of a scientific study at all.
Much love from
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