Images (2)
Document
| id |
id
75726376
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI
APR 30 1931
COLUMBIA
DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY
April 27th, 1931.
Mr. H. H. Barker
United States Radium Corporation
535 Pearl Street
New York City, New York
My dear Howard:
Your letter reporting your meeting with Dr.
Ewing and Dr. Craver I read with considerable interest and I
shall try to write Dr. Craver in the near future. Craver has
not replied as yet to my letter which accompanied the data on
the radium content of the excreta. I expect some comment on
this report from him very soon. I really regret that Dr. Failla
has lost interest in the gamma ray and expired air methods of
determining radium content of living persons. At this time it
would be especially desirable to measure the activity of the
girls who have been under Dr. Craver's treatment and I hope that
Dr. Failla can be persuaded to do this. I should be very much
surprised if the activity of these girls has materially changed
since the time when we last made measuroments on them.
I am especially pleased with Dr. Ewing's attitude
with reference to the matter of publication and in my letter to
Dr. Craver I shall suggest that we proceed to publish at an
early date.
I have been away for nearly a week attending the
spring meeting of the Amerioan Electrochemical Society held in
Birmingham. I saw a good many Missourians who have migrated
to the South and had a very good time. Dr. Lind, however, did
not attend the meeting and it foll to my lot to present the
two papers for which he was scheduled.
About two weeks ago we finally received our Wolf-
Hess gamma ray machine. It is an instrument with very low
natural drift. We get a fall of about two small divisions in
50 minutes which is a little better than the instrument that was
used by Mr. Knowles in his work. As a result of some tests made
on two of my students who are engaged in the refining laboratory
I feel confident that the presence of one microgram of radium in
a living person can be detected with certainty by means of this
new electroscope. We shall be able to use this instrument for
determining the radium content of residues and feces in the ani-
mal experiments now under way. When a standard of 1/10 of a
microgram of radium is strapped to the case of the instrument
a very marked increase in drift is observed and a standard of only
1/100 of a microgram still produces a slight but distinct increase
in drift.
With very good wishes, I remain,
Sincerely yours,
Herman Schlundt
hs.as
Herman Schlundt.
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to