Muller mss., 1910-1967
Papers, 1910-1967, of Hermann Joseph Muller at the Lilly
Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana
Summary Information
Repository
Lilly
Library (Indiana University, Bloomington)
Indiana University
1200 E. Seventh St.
Bloomington, IN 47405-5500
Phone: 812-855-2452
Fax: 812-855-3143
Email: liblilly@indiana.edu
http://www.indiana.edu/~liblilly
Creator
Muller, H. J. (Hermann Joseph),
1890-1967
Extent
75, 050 items
Title Muller mss., 1910-1967
Collection No.
LMC 1899
Extent
75,050 items
Language
Materials are in English
Abstract
Consists of the papers of Hermann Joseph
Muller, 1890-1967, including correspondence; writings and reprints; research and data
from his work as well as from his students and colleagues; materials related to
conferences and work with various professional organizations.
Access Restrictions
This collection is open for research, however items in the fragile file are restricted
use.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information
Gift. 1967
Usage RestrictionsPrior arrangements are not necessary before coming to the Library, however, patrons
from out of town are encouraged to communicate with the Library in advance of their
visits to ascertain availability of materials.
Photocopying permitted only with the permission of the Curator of Manuscripts, Lilly
Library
Preferred Citation
[Item], Muller mss., Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana
Biographical Note
Geneticist and Nobel prize laureate. Muller was born and schooled in New York City,
receiving an A.B., M.A. and in 1915 his Ph.D. from Columbia University. His first
faculty appointment was at Rice University in Houston, Texas. He then accepted a
two-year appointment as instructor at Columbia hoping it would lead to a permanent
position. In 1920, however, Muller accepted an offer from the University of Texas. In
Austin his experiments on fruit flies (
Drosophila) first
showed that exposure to radiation caused mutation in living organisms. This work would
earn Muller the 1946 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Muller applied for and won a Guggenheim fellowship in 1932 and left the U.S. in
September to spend a year at the only
Drosophila laboratory
in Europe which was doing parallel work, Berlin's Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Brain
Research. As the Nazi take over of the German government, the persecution of Jews, and
the burning of forbidden books increased through 1933, Muller accepted a position at the
Institute of Genetics in Leningrad. He had been elected a corresponding member of the
Soviet Academy of Sciences, under whose auspices and budget basic research was carried
out in the USSR, and in Leningrad for the first time he had an appointment as a
full-time research scientist without teaching responsibilities. In December, 1934, he
and his research group moved to Moscow. By 1936 Stalin was beginning his reign of terror
with hundreds of arrests and executions, including prominent scientists who were falsely
accused of Trotskyism. Stalin began influencing the outcome of scientific research and
bitter disagreements with Trofim D. Lysenko, whose theories on genetics reflected party
line politics, pushed Muller to enlist in the Spanish Republican cause as the best way
of getting out of the Soviet Union. Although he worked for just eight weeks in Madrid
during the spring of 1937, his service provided the immunity he needed for a permanent
departure from the USSR in good standing and with the least damage to the reputations of
his Russian colleagues.
After leaving the Soviet Union in September 1937, Muller spent some weeks in Paris at
Boris Ephrussi's laboratory before accepting an offer from F.A.E. Crew at the Institute
of Animal Genetics in Edinburgh. Originally a temporary appointment, Muller was soon
awarded a three-year Macauley Research Fellowship as well as some supplemental
Rockefeller Foundation support to run his laboratory. It was during this period that he
met a young German refugee named Dorothea Kantorowicz who had been appointed as a
technician in the Institute's pregnancy laboratory. They were married in May 1939. The
outbreak of war later that year greatly affected the working habits of the institute,
and Crew initiated a determined effort to get Muller and his research placed in an
American university. Despite failing to obtain any position offers the Mullers left for
New York , via Lisbon, in September 1940. A month later Harold Plough offered Muller a
temporary position at Amherst College in Massachusetts, an undergraduate liberal-arts
college. Following the attack on Pearl Harbor Plough left Amherst for full-time service
as bacteriologist with the U.S. Army and Muller was then given an indefinite appointment
as a professor of biology; however that appointment was ultimately determined to end in
June 1945. Following a visit to Bloomington, Indiana, and interviews with zoology
department faculty and President Herman B Wells, Muller was offered an appointment as
research professor, meaning that he would do as much graduate teaching as he desired but
would not be expected to do any undergraduate teaching. Muller remained at Indiana
University until his retirement in 1964.
A year after his arrival at Indiana Muller received the Nobel Prize. He received many
more awards and tributes over the years, including the Bossom Award, the Kimber Genetics
Award, and several honorary doctorates. His death in 1968 came just two months before he
would have received Indiana's honorary degree voted him by the Faculty Council and
approved by the Trustees the year before. Muller was active in numerous scientific
organizations and was in contact both personally and professionally with the leading
geneticists and biologists of the day. Some correspondents represented in the collection
include: Edgar Altenburg, Charlotte Auerbach, Gert Bonnier, Herbert Brewer, Cyril Dean
Darlington, Max Delbrück, Milislav Demerec, Theodosius Dobzhansky, Carl Gottfried
Hartman, Lancelot Hogben, Alexander Hollaender, Sir Julian Huxley, Joshua Lederberg,
Salvador Edward Luria, Otto Lous Mohr, Gregory Pincus, Guido Pontecorvo, Carl Sagan,
Tracy Sonneborn, Alfred Henry Sturtevant, Leo Szilard, Nikolai Vladimirovich
Timoféev-Resovskii, and Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov.
Scope and Content Note
Consists of the papers of Hermann Joseph Muller, 1890-1967, including correspondence;
writings and reprints; research and data from his work as well as from his students and
colleagues; materials related to conferences and work with various professional
organizations.
Elof Axel Carlson's biography of Muller,
Genes, Radiation, and Society: The Life and Work of H.J. Muller
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1981) was derived largely from research in
this collection.
Note on Indexing Term - "Education": Included
are class notes from his courses on radiation genetics, evolution, mutation and the gene and lecture
notebooks from his high school and Columbia University classes.
Arrangement
The collection is organized into the following series: I. Correspondence; II. Writings
by Muller and others; III. Conferences and Meetings; IV. Indiana University; V.
Organizations; VI. Research and Education; VII. Subjects; VIII. Photographs; IX.
Printed; X. Clippings; XI. Audio/Visual Materials; XII. Additional.
Additional Physical Form Available
Some audio materials have been reformatted for use in the repository only.
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Indexing Terms
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The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in
IUCAT, the IU Libraries' online
catalog. Materials about related topics, persons or places can be found by searching the
catalog using these terms.
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Names
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Indiana University.
Dept. of Zoology.
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Indiana University
--Faculty --Archives.
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Indiana University. Dept. of
Zoology.
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Muller, H. J.
(Hermann Joseph), 1890-1967.
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Muller, H. J.
(Hermann Joseph), 1890-1967 --Correspondence.
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Altenburg, Edgar, 1888-
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Auerbach, Charlotte.
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Bonnier, Gert.
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Brewer, Herbert.
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Darlington, C. D. (Cyril Dean),
1903-
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Delbrück, Max.
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Demerec, M. (Milislav), 1895-1966.
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Dobzhansky, Theodosius Grigorievich,
1900-1975.
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Hartman, Carl Gottfried, 1879-1968.
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Hogben, Lancelot Thomas, 1895-
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Hollaender, Alexander, 1898-
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Huxley, Julian, 1887-1975.
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Lederberg, Joshua.
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Luria, S. E. (Salvador Edward),
1912-
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Mohr, Otto Lous, 1886-
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Pincus, Gregory, 1903-1967.
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Pontecorvo, Guido.
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Sagan, Carl, 1934-
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Sonneborn, T. M. (Tracy Morton),
1905-
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Sturtevant, A. H. (Alfred Henry),
1891-
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Szilard, Leo.
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Timoféev-Resovskii, N. V. (Nikolai
Vladimirovich), 1900-
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Vavilov, N. I. (Nikolai Ivanovich),
1887-1943.
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Series:
Correspondence1910-1972
Arranged chronologically and alphabetically. A card index in the Library may be
consulted for the location of individual letters in the chronological section and
throughout the rest of the collection.
Subseries:
Chronological files
Box 1
1910-1940
Box 2
1941 - 1946, Oct.
Box 3
1946, Nov. - 1948, Aug.
Box 4
1948, Sept. - 1950, July
Box 5
1950, Aug. - 1953, Aug.
Box 6
1953, Sept. - 1955, Nov.
Box 7
1955, Dec. - 1957, June
Box 8
1957, July - 1958, Nov.
Box 9
1958, Dec. - 1959
Box 10
1960 - 1961, Feb.
Box 11
1961, Mar. - 1962, Apr.
Box 12
1962, May - 1963, July
Box 13
1963, Aug. - 1964, Oct. 15
Box 14
1964, Oct. 16 - 1965
Box 15
1966 - 1972 undated and unidentified; "nuts"
Subseries:
Box 16-30
Alphabetical files
Altenburg, Edgar 1912-1967
Appleyard, Raymond K. 1952-1958
Auerbach, Charlotte 1938-1967
Baudevin, Helene 1957-1958
Bonnier, Gert 1946-1959
Brewer, Herbert 1954-1964
Cook, Robert C. 1933-1965
Crew, F.A.E. 1937-1963
Crow, James F. 1943-1967
Darlington, Cyril Dean 1937-1955 ,1961-1967
Delbrück, Max 1939-1951
Demerec, Milislav 1936-1961
Dobzhansky, Theodosius 1928-1963
Dunn, L.C. 1929-1965
Fabergé, A.C. 1938-1960
Fact
1939
Glass, H. Bentley 1933-1966
Goldschmidt, Richard 1939-1948
Graham, Robert 1963-1971
Haldane, J.B.S. and Charlotte 1934-1964
Hartman, Carl 1925-1967
Henle, James 1936-1953
Herskowitz, Irwin H. 1941-1965
Hogben, Lancelot 1938-1964
Hollaender, Alexander 1939-1964
Hook, Sidney 1949-1958
Hsu, T.C. 1951-1956
Huxley, Julian S. 1916-1967
Ilse, Dora 1937-1952
I.U. Press 1951-1967
Kaplan, William D. 1965-1966
Kline, Calvin W. 1958-1964
Koller, Peo C. 1939-1966
Lee, William R. 1957-1966
Li, C.C. 1951-1966
Luria, Salvatore Edward 1940-1966
Medvedev, Nikolai Nikolayevich and Tatiana Gregorevna 1937-1966
Mohr, Otto Lous and Tove, 1922-1961 , 1966
Nachtsheim, Hans 1948-1963
Novitski, Edward 1948-1966
Offermann, Carlos and Jessie 1937-1964 , 1967
Oster, Irwin I. 1953-1967
Pauling, Linus 1947-1962 ,1966
Payne, Fernandus 1921-1947
Pincus, Gregory and father J.W. Pincus 1936-1967
Plough, Harold Henry 1938-1958 ,1962
Pollack, Jack Harrison 1961-1962
Pontecorvo, Guido 1939-1964
Popovsky, Mark 1965-1967
Prabhu, S.S. 1938-1966
Price, Bronson 1934-1965
Puck, Theodore 1949-1967
Ray-Chaudhuri, S.P. 1939-1967
Robson, J.M. and Sarah 1939-1945
Sagan, Carl and Lynn 1952-1966
Saturday Review. 1948 , 1949 , 1955-1959
Science.
Science, the Newsweekly for
Scientists,
The Scientific Monthly, the
literary magazine of science and, later,
Science magazine, published by the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.1945-1966
Scientific American 1947-1965 (originally:
The Sciences)
Sherman, Jerome K. 1961-1965
Smith, Paul E. 1960-1965
Snyder, Laurence 1926 , 1938-1964
Sonneborn, Tracy M. 1945-1966
Sonnenblick, Benjamin P. 1941-1966
Stadler, Lewis John 1938-1949
Stern, Curt 1926-1965
Sturtevant, Alfred Henry 1942-1965
Szilard, Leo 1948-1965
Timofeef-Ressovsky, N.W. 1927-1947
Traut, Horst 1959-1965
Trout, William E., III 1959-1967
Vavilov, Nicolai Ivanovich 1938-1939
Vogt, Marguerite (Maggie) 1932-1965
Vogt, Marthe 1937-1953
Vogt, Oscar & Cecile 1937-1962
Waddington, C.H. 1938-1948
Weinstein, Alexander 1928-1947
Wells, Herman B 1945-1967
Zimmerman, A.W. 1947-1949
Series:
Writings
Organized into three sections. Muller's holograph and typescript Writings are
arranged in chronological order, as are his Reprints. These are followed by
Writings by Others, which is mostly holograph copies and typescripts, and is
arranged alphabetically by author. Some printed materials follow this section.
Inventories are available for all three sections. Items in the fragile file (Box
8) are restricted use.
Subseries:
Writings by Muller
Holograph and typescript copies of writings. Also includes lecture and speech
typescripts, notes and related materials. Class lecture typescripts, notes and
related materials may be found in the Research and Education section. D.I.S.
(Drosophila Information Service) papers to which HJM contributed are listed at
the end of the dated writings. Reprint numbers are given where known. Some
writings may be enclosed in letters; check card index for titles.
Box 1
1910, Mar.
24 Revelations of biology and their significance. An address
read to the Peithologian Society of Columbia University. Contains HJM's
earliest idea on eugenics.
(Photocopy of final draft - original is in fragile file)
1910
Revelations of biology (fragment of early draft). p.19-24.
(Photocopy - original pages in fragile file)
1910
Revelations of biology. Preliminary draft fragments.
(Photocopy - original in fragile file)
1911-1912 Erroneous assumptions regarding genes.
(Photocopies of 2 drafts - original is in fragile file). Reprint 1
1914 A
factor for the fourth chromosome of
Drosophila
Pub.
Science 39:906.
Reprint 4
1916
Applications and prospects. Discussion of eugenic views and human
evolution
(Photocopy - original in OVERSIZE)
ca.
1916 The recent findings in heredity. Unpub.
ca.
1916 Some recent work in heredity. Rice Institute
lecture.
ca.
1916 Some recent work in heredity. Draft/notes for Rice
Institute lecture
1916?
[Lectures on heredity for course at Rice?]
(Photocopies - originals are in fragile file)
1916-1918 The newer biology. Lecture at Rice
Institute.
Photocopy - Originals are in fragile file)
ca. 1917-1918 The essential facts of heredity.
[Preface?]
1920 The
genetic basis of truncate wing--an inconstant and modifiable character in
Drosophila (analysis)
Reprint 13
1921
Elimination of the X-chromosome from the egg of D[rosophila] m[elanogaster]
by x-rays
[lecture?]
1923
Abstract or summary of Hertwig, Paula. Bastardierungsversuche mit erkernten
Amphibieneiren.
(Hybrid investigations with denucleated Amphibian eggs)
1924 Flies
into Russia looking for flies
1924?
Lecture on evolution and its genetic basis
ca.
1925 Chromosome deformation as proof of the theories of linear
gene arrangement and crossing over
(University of Texas)
1927 The
problems of genic modification [abstract].
Reprint 43
ca.
1927 Lecture, re: a general survey of the gene.
ca. 1928-1931 "Baur ms."
(8 folders)
1929 The
cytological expression of changes in gene alignment produced by x-rays in
Drosophila
Reprint 50
1930?
Bibliography on the genetics of Drosophila. Typescript; 2p. of holograph
bibliographic citations.
Reprint 120
1932 The
dominance of economics over eugenics (includes typescript of ms.; mimeo with
autograph changes; mimeo with pencil corrections; mimeo copies for
distribution; mimeo copies of the abstract)
(4 folders)
Reprint 70 (Also a copy enclosed in Muller to Raymond Postgate, Feb.
26, 1939. Alphabetical correspondence--FACT, 1939)
ca.
1932 Chromosome abnormalities (intra-chromosomal)
ca.
1932 Genetic methods
ca.
1932 Moving model of mitosis
ca. 1932-1933 Address to Institute for Brain Research in
Berlin (German). English translation
(2 folders)
1933, Nov.
4 Genetics and evolution
1933 Report
on Sixth International Genetics Congress
Reprint 75
1933 The
effects of Roentgen rays upon the hereditary material
Reprint 72
1933
Haldane on evolution
Reprint 73 (original is in fragile file)
ca.
1933 "Old literature on radiation" or "Early x-ray literature
(before 1926)"
1934, Nov.-Dec Muller and D. Raffel.
Inverted synopsis of genes as evidence for the periodic character of their
mechanism of attraction
ca.
1934 Darwin and Marxism
Fragments and drafts
ca.
1934 Genetics and Marxism
1934
Lenin's doctrines in relation to genetics
Photocopy of version published as Appendix II in Loren R. Graham's
Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union.
Reprint 80/2
1934?
Nazi apologetics and German science
Notes, drafts, manuscript and German translation
(5 folders)
1935,
Aug. The position effect as evidence of the localization of
the immediate products of gene activity.
Reprint 95 (original is in fragile file)
ca.
1935 Data on two new mutations to bar eye in
Drosophila, by Muller and K.V. Kossikov
(original is in fragile file)
1935?
The determination of the relation between the dosage of the irradiation and
the frequency of induced mutations.
1935
Muller: OUT OF THE NIGHT
Includes list of possible titles, 1934; and, German
translation. Reprint 98
(4 folders)
1935 The
present status of the mutation theory
(original in fragile file) Reprint 99
ca.
1935 Status of the Problem
[draft]
ca.
1935 Summary. 1. Two new cases of origination of
allelomorphs...
[p. 18-20 - draft]
1936,
Apr. Why continue with fundamental science? Address to have
been given at laying of cornerstone of new building of the Institute of
Genetics.
[photocopy - original in fragile file]
1936, May
4 The social direction of human biological
evolution.
1936,
Aug. [lecture notes] Cold Spring Harbor
1936, Dec.
23 Basis of the theory of the gene: The experimental evidence
concerning the properties of the gene.
(photocopies - ms. and typed transcript in fragile file) Reprint 107
1936 "As a
scientist with confidence..." [letter to Stalin] Thermofax copy and typed
transcript
(see also: 1936, May 4. The social direction...)
1936
Autobiographical notes [prepared for Vavilov]
(Photocopy - original in fragile file)
1936?
The doctrine of the gene. Written for PRAVDA?
(typescript - original in fragile file).
1936?
Evolution as viewed by Morgan
Reprint 112
1936?
New evidence concerning the nature of bar mutation, by Muller, A.A.
Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya and K.V. Kossikov
1937,
Oct. The biological effects of radiation, with especial
reference to mutation. Summary "given out at Congress in Paris. Oct. 1937."
Reprint 111
1937?
Can simple breaks occur?
1937?
The effect of a long established duplication on the frequency of detectible
(sic) mutations.
1937?
Minute rearrangement in the chromocentral region simulating simple
chromosome breakage, by Muller, A.A. Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya, and M.
Belgovsky.
1938, July
25 Report on the study of the production of mutations by
x-rays and other means in relation to problems of cancer
research.
1938 Does
smoking lengthen life?
1938 The
remaking of chromosomes (excerpt).
Box 2
1939, Apr.
13 How heredity works [broadcast BBC, Apr. 13, 1939 for "The
Listener"].
Reprint 123
1939, July
20 Foreword for Drosophila Bibliography
1939, Aug.-Sept. The geneticists
manifesto.
[aka: Social biology and population improvement]. Reprint 129
1939 How
Genetic systems come about, review of C.D. Darlington's
The Evolution of Genetic Systems
Reprint 127
1939 The
mechanism of structural change in chromosomes of
Drosophilia
Reprint 128
1939?
Production of mutations by x-rays
[fragment]
1940, July
8 Recombinants between
Drosophila
species (
melanogaster and
stimulans) whose F1 hybrids are sterile, by Muller
& Pontecorvo. 3p.
Reprint 135
1940,
Oct. The artificial mixing of incomplete germ plasms in
Drosophila [abstract], by Muller and G.
Pontecorvo.
[1940]
The lethality of dicentric chromosomes in Drosophila, by Muller and G.
Pontecorvo.
Reprint 139
(2 folders)
1940
Mutation effects of ultra-violet light in
Drosophila by Muller and K. Mackenzie.
1940?
Partial hybrids between
Drosophila melanogaster
and
stimulans and their bearing on the
mechanism of speciation, by Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
[unpublished?]
[1940]
Position effect and gene divisibility considered in connection with three
strikingly similar scute mutations by Muller and D. Raffel.
Reprint 136
(2 folders)
1941 Edmund
B. Wilson - an appreciation
Reprint 151
1941
Isolating mechanism, evolution and temperature. [?] Paper read before
American Society of Naturalists
Reprint 148
1941
Recessive genes causing interspecific sterility and other disharmonies
between
Drosophila melanogaster and stimulans,
by Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
Reprint 144
[1941]
The surprisingly high frequency of spontaneous and induced chromosome
breakage, and its expression through dominant lethals, by Muller and G.
Pontecorvo.
Reprint 145
1941 The
threads that weave evolution
Reprint 141
1942
Genetics as the alleged basis of Hitlerism
1942
Mutation rate dependent on the size of the X-chromosome
Reprint 150
1942?
The methods of genetics in their application to problems of life and
evolution.
1943?
Evolutionary trends. Based on paper read before the Committee on Common
Problems of Paleontology and Genetics, New York, July 26, 1943.
Also includes notes for seminar give Aug. 20, 1943 on Genetics in
relation to Paleological Problems
1943
Further evidence for the proportionality of breakage frequency to chromatin
mass, regardless of its arrangement in blocks.
1943 A
physicist stands amazed at genetics, a review of Erwin Schrödinger's
What is Life? (incomplete).
Reprint 162
1944?
[Aging effects and mutation]
Reprint 156?
1945, Oct.
11 On the need of provision for biology in the proposed
legislation for the support of scientific research.
1945 From
article on Variation (Experimental) for Encyclopedia Britannica
1945
1945 [Gene]
Pilgrim Trust Lecture
Reprint 158
1945 or
1946 [Sonneborn/Lindegren's kappa K controversy]
1946,
Mar. [Age paper ‑ draft and notes] "1st and longer draft of
St. Louis paper (incomplete and not used)."
1946,
Mar. Genetic dangers of high energy radiation, report
submitted to Dr. Frank Ellis, for the British Ministry of Labour Panel for
Advisory Matters connected with Industrial Radiology
1946, Dec.
10 Acknowledgement for Nobel Award
[banquet speech]
[1946]
A Comparison of the potentialities of individual loci for different types of
visible mutations.
[see also laboratory assistants papers], Reprint 165
1946
Physiological effects on "spontaneous" mutation rate in
Drosophila
[abstract] Reprint 159
1946 Two
mutants of mosaic expression not caused by gross rearrangement of
heterochromatin
Reprint 160
1947, Jan.-Apr. Changing genes: their
effects on evolution.
1) IU convocation address in celebration of the Nobel Prize, Jan. 23;
2) Abridged version given at Oak Ridge, Apr. 8
Reprint 170
(3 folders)
1947, Mar.
6 Address to Indiana Cancer Society, Indianapolis
1947,
Apr. Mutational Prophyllaxis, for N.Y. Academy of Medicine
Reprint 168
1947,
May Human erosion by mutation, Bacon lecture series given at
University of Illinois College of Medicine, May 28;
Lecture also given at Ohio State
1947, June
4 Honors Day address at Indiana University School of
Dentistry
Reprint172
1947, June
26 Lecture: Humanity and Mutations. Life insurance
executives
1947, Oct.
24 Address to Orthopedists, Indianapolis
1947?
[Gene] Article for Encyclopedia Brittanica
Reprint 171
1947
Lecture honoring Dean Payne
[lecture notes]
1948, Feb.
19 Harvey Lecture - Evidence of the Precision of Genetic
Adaptation. Correspondence only, 1947-1950
(see: Reprint 194)
1948, Mar.
5 Man's goals
Written for Schroeder Foundation, St. Louis
1948 The
destruction of science in the U.S.S.R
Reprint 173
1948 Gene.
For Nelson's Encyclopedia
Reprint 179
1948 On the
occasion of Dean Fernandus Payne's retirement
1948 Time
bombing our descendants
Reprint 178
1948?
The mutational potentialities of some individual loci in
Drosophila, by Muller and J.I.
Valencia.
Reprint 183
1949, Mar.
22 Broadcast to Conference of Mayors in Washington, D.C.
Text as delivered in speaking and as worded for printing
1949, June
10 Genetics in the scheme of things
Talk given to Emeritus Club of Indiana University.
Also given at 8th International Congress of Genetics, Edinburgh, July
7, 1949.
Reprint 174
1949, Nov.
15 The Russian cultural inquisition
Given at Hunter College.
1949, Dec.
28 Our load of mutations
Presidential address, read before American Society of Human Genetics, New
York.
Reprint 199
1949 E.B.
Wilson: October 19, 1856-March 3, 1939.
Proof only for publication in
Genetics
Reprint 187
1949 The
frequency of spontaneous mutations at individual loci in Drosophila, by
Muller, J.I. Valencia and R.M. Valencia.
Reprint 190
1949
Genetics and its relations with other fields of knowledge
Broadcast Radio Diffusion Francaise, Feb. 26, 1949
published in
The Indiana Teacher
French translation Reprint 208
1949 Is
radiation a menace to posterity?
1) broadcast Apr. 23 for Adventures in Science
2) The menace of radiation for
Science News Letter
for June 11
Reprint 181
1949 The
production of mutations at individual loci in
Drosophila by irradiation of oocytes and oogonia, by Muller, J.I.
Valencia and R.M. Valencia.
late 40s/early
50s "For more than a decade, biological scientists...[first
line]"
re: Lysenko and Soviet science
1950,
June Science in bondage
Reprint 198
1950, July
11 Through Berlin glasses
Address given to Legal Institute
1950?
Further evidence that most "recessive" genes exert their main action as
dominants, by Muller and S.L. Campbell.
(2 folders)
1950?
Implications of a subliminal mutant having a recessive lethal
allele.
1950 The
rise and fall of genetics in the U.S.S.R.
Typescript and carbon. Proposed manuscript for 1st of Voice of America
broadcast series.
1951, Feb.
15 Mutations in Mankind
[Lecture notes] Lecture at Stetson University, De Land, Florida
1951, Mar.
11 Message to the Indian Veterinary Research Institute,
Diamond Jubilee
1951, Mar.
28 Science and freedom, given at the Indian Congress for
Cultural Freedom, Bombay.
Reprint 202
1951, Apr.
25 Introduction of J.S. Huxley...as Patton lecturer at Indiana
University.
Holograph Includes undated introduction of James F. Crow
1951,
Sept. The localization of the mutagenic loci at which
spontaneous mutants are known, by Muller and J.I. Valencia
Reprint 204
Includes other abstracts for The Genetics Society of America, 1951-1952
1951,
Nov. Genetic effects of cosmic radiation
Reprint 207
Box 3
1952, Mar.
25 Methods of estimating frequency of induced chromosome
breaks.
1952,
Apr. The genetic damage to later generations produced by
radiation.
1952, May
5 Message to scientists behind the Iron Curtain
For Voice of America.
1952, Dec.
8 Can man shape his own future? Review of Charles Galton
Darwin's
The Next Million Years.
Reprint 216
1952,
Dec. The bogey of cosmic rays
1952 The
calculation of mutation frequency involving groups of mutants of common
origin
(The standard error of the frequency of mutants some of which are of
common origin - abstract.)
Reprint 211
1952 The
contradiction between totalitarianism and scientific progress
(distributed by U.S. Information Services as: Sterility of Soviet
Science.)
Reprint 209
1952
Genetics and its relations with medicine
1952
Preface. Bibliography on the genetics of
Drosophila
Reprint 221
1952
Science: Our grandest adventure
1) Talk at science talent search banquet, Indianapolis, Apr. 5
2) Science - Man's hazardous adventure,
Reader's
Digest
, June 26
Will science continue? For
Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists
Reprint 214
1953,
Sept. The betrayal of science under communism
Published as "Russia's shackled science."
Reprint 222
[1953]
Genes--the core of our being
Includes:
Student's Guide to The Scientists Speak:
Biology
, 1959
1953
Radiation genetics
Notes by Frank N. Young
1953-1954 Life
CBS broadcast, Columbia University Bicentennial lecture series.
Reprint 242
Also includes correspondence concerning series
1954, Jan.
7 The Degradation of Science in Russia
Given for Phi Kappa Phi, University of Honolulu.
Lecture notes, clippings
1954,
Dec. [Genetic damage produced by radiation] for
Semaine du Monde?
Box 4
1954
Another case of dissimilar characters in
Drosophila apparently representing changes of the same locus, by
Muller and F. Verderosa.
Abstract
Reprint 240
1954 The
manner of production of mutations by radiation
Chapter 8 of
Radiation Biology, Vol. l,
ed. by A. Hollaender
Reprint 225
(7 folders)
1954 The
nature of the genetic effects produced by radiation
Chapter 7 of
Radiation Biology, Vol. l,
ed. by A. Hollaender
Reprint 224
(8 folders)
1954 The
relation of neutron dose to chromosome changes and point mutations in
Drosophila
I. Translocations. Draft fragments, holograph and typescript copies
Reprint 232
(6 folders)
1954
Science under Soviet totalitarianism
Reprint 228
1955,
Apr. Do A and H bombs damage the hereditary constitution?
Reprint 247?
1955,
Apr. The genetic damage produced by radiation
Reprint 246
1955,
June Effects of radiation and other present-day influences
upon the human genetic constitution
Published as:
Radiation and human mutation
Reprint 249
1955,
July On the relation between chromosome changes and gene
mutations
Reprint 255
1955,
Nov. Controlled fertilization and its larger implications
(aka: Artificial insemination as viewed in the perspective of
biology)
1955
Further information concerning the multi-locus nature of the dumpy series in
Drosophila, by Muller, Helen U. Meyer and E.A. Carlson.
Reprint 245
1956,
Mar. In the cause of humanity
Acceptance speech as president of the American Humanist Association
Reprint 257
1956,
Apr. Pushing back the frontiers of biology
Reprint 272
1956, June
9 Man's place in living nature
Address delivered at the dedication of Jordan Hall, Indiana University,
Bloomington, June 9.
Reprint 261
(Revised as: Man and gene in the world picture)
1956, Aug.
18 Toast at close of banquet given by the International
Radiobiological Conference, Stockholm
1956,
Aug. [The effects of radiation on human genetics]
Talk given at WHO meeting
1956-1959 Science for Humanity
Abridgement of: The world view of moderns.
Talk in Indianapolis, Oct. 27; given in revised form at Northwestern
University Feb. 19, 1957; and the University of
Missouri, June 7, 1957; published in the Bulletin of
Atomic Scientists, 1959.
Reprint 284A
1956 An
estimate of the mutational damage in man from data on consanguineous
marriages, by Muller, Newton E. Morton and James F. Crow.
(original title: An estimate of the mutational load...)
Reprint 266
1956
Further studies bearing on the load of mutations in man
Reprint 267
1956
Identification of half-translocations produced by x-rays in detaching
attached-X chromosomes of
Drosophila
melanogaster
females, by Muller, Seymour Abrahamson and I.H.
Herskowitz.
Reprint 258
1956 Man's
biological dilemma: Radiation risk or genetic opportunity
(unpublished)
1956
Virchow Society talk
1956 re:
population control; importance of science to humanity, etc.
fragment - pp. 23-29
1957, Mar.
2 Freedom from ignorance
Talk before American Humanist Association, Cincinnati
1957, July
20 Recommendations for research on the genetic effects of
radiation and related problems.
Mimeo
1957, Aug.
27 Human values in relation to evolution
Reprint 282
1957,
Aug. The radiation danger
Reprint 280
1957, Nov.
22 Possible advances of the next hundred years: A biologist's
view
Statement prepared for symposium "The next hundred years," held by the
Seagram Company, New York City.
Reprint 273
1957,
Nov. Man's responsibility for his genetic heritage
Talk at Antioch College, Nov. 24
Also includes lecture notes for talk entitled: Our responsibility for our
genetic heritage.
Published as Man's future birthright
Reprint 281
[1957,
Dec.] Can science provide an ethical code?
1957?
Atomic radiations and hereditary effects
For "World of Mind" radio series.
1957
Mutational damage in relation to radiation dose and biological
conditions.
Published as: Damage from point mutations in relation to...
Reprint 268
1957
Potential hazards of radiation
Originally: The need for caution in the use of x rays, presented at the
second workshop on preventive dentistry, May 2, 1957
Reprint 270
1957
Principles of back mutation as observed in
Drosophila and other organisms, by Muller and I.I. Oster.
Reprint 269
1957
Radioactive fallout and human progress
Reprint 271
1957 The
world view of moderns
Reprint 284
1958,
Jan. Evolution by mutation
Reprint 285
1958, Feb.-1960, Aug. The meaning of
freedom
Address before the Unitarian Fellowship of Bloomington, Indiana, Feb.
23, 1958
Given at the Aspen Institute of Human Studies, Aug. 27, 1959
presented at Urbana, Illinois, Oct. 25, 1959;
talk to Rationalists, Wisconsin, Aug. 13, 1960
Reprint 312
1958, May
25 The problem of life on satellites and beyond
For television
1958,
May Direct measurement of mutational effects on human cells in
satellites
Box 5
1958, June
24 Man, health and hunger
[debate]
1958,
July Advances in radiation mutagenesis through studies on
Drosophila.
Reprint 288
1958,
Sept. In search of peace
Reprint 298
1958, Oct.
31 Survival of the fit: ethical implications for a new
dimension in education.
Symposium, Springfield College
1958, Nov.
28 One hundred years without Darwinism are enough
Address to Central Association of Science and Mathematics Teachers,
Indianapolis.
Reprint 299
1958,
Dec. Chromosome breakage as the basis of the somatic damage
produced in irradiated individuals
Prepared for conference on the genetic aspects of life shortening by
radiation damage, Ames, Iowa, Dec. 13-14.
Reprint 280
1958
Approximation to a gravity-free situation for the human organism achievable
at moderate expense.
Reprint 287
1958 How
much is evolution accelerated by sexual reproduction?
Reprint 295
1958 In
recognition of Oscar Riddle
Reprint 378
1958 The
mutation theory reexamined
Reprint 289
(2 folders)
1958 The
prospects of genetic change
Reprint 303
1959,
Apr. Evolution and genetics
Reprint 311
(2 folders)
1959, June
8 . Genetic nucleic acid: The key to the origin of living
matter
Also given as talk at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Reprint 334
1959,
June The chromosomal basis of the mortality induced by x-rays
in
Drosophila
Reprint 310
1959, July
16 Genetics in relation to medical research, statement...
Statement at hearings before the Subcommittee on Reorganization and
International Organization of the Committee on Government Operations of
the U.S. Senate
Reprint 313
1959, July
30 Science in the U.S.S.R. as seen by a geneticist
Talk to Prof. Byrns group of students about to leave for Russia
1959,
July The permissible dose in the light of recent
developments
Paper given before International Committee on radiological protection,
Munich (ICRP/59/M-44)
Reprint 319
1959, Aug. 4-7 Talks on mutation for
filmed course in genetics
1959, Sept.
2 Lecture on somatic damage from radiation at Denver Medical
Center
Based on Reprint 280
1959, Sept.
27 The significance of Darwin's discovery
Talk before Unitarian Fellowship, Bloomington.
Also includes: Introduction of Chauncey D. Leake, at The Indianapolis
Unitarian, Nov. 8, 1959.
1959, Sept.
29 Man's conquest of man
Delivered at Seagram symposium on The Future of Man.
Reprint 302
1959,
Nov. Relations between cultural and biological
evolution
Statement for "Social and cultural evolution" held by Panel V, Nov.
28, 1959, in the series "Issues in evolution" at the University
of Chicago Darwin Centennial Celebration.
Includes notes for lecture given to biology teachers
Reprint 301b?
1959,
Nov. Letters to editors of The Indianapolis Star, Daily
Student and Daily Herald-Telephone, concerning eugenics discussion prepared
by Muller for Darwin Centennial Celebration.
1959, Dec.
29 Humanistic factors in the radiation problem
Talk before AAAS symposium.
1959,
Dec. Life forms to be expected elsewhere than on
earth
Papers given: 1) National Association of Biology Teacher's luncheon,
Chicago meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science, Dec. 29, 1959
2) Oak Park High School, Chicago, Feb. 29, 1960
3) Macalester College, St. Paul, MN, Apr. 24, 1962
Reprint 327
(2 folders)
1959
Evidence of the lower mutagenicity of chronic than intense radiation in
Drosophila gonia, by Muller, I.I. Oster and
Stanley Zimmering.
Reprint 305
1959
Further evidence of the relatively high rate of origination of "invisible"
detrimental mutations, by Muller, and Helen U. Meyer.
Reprint 304
1959
Genetic basis of somatic damage produced by radiation, by Muller and Wolfram
Ostertag
1959 The
guidance of human evolution
Paper for the Darwin Centennial Celebration of the University of Chicago,
Nov. 24-28, 1959
Reprint 301
(2 folders)
1959
Tolerance of gonial cells of
Drosophila
melanogaster
for heavy x-ray does divided into installments, by
Muller, Helen U. Meyer, and Elizabeth F. Ehrlich.
Reprint 300
1960, Mar.
13 The future physical development of man
Talk at Symposium on Human Evolution: Past, Present and Future,
Pennsylvania State University.
(unpublished)
(2 folders)
1960, Apr.
12 The integrational role of the evolutionary approach
throughout education
Paper given at Philosophy of Education Society, Columbus, OH.
Reprint 314
1960,
Apr. The high effectiveness of fast neutrons in inducing
minute deletions, by Muller, Stanley Zimmering and I.I. Oster.
Reprint 315
1960,
Apr. Remarks concerning the content of a high school biology
course
(with particular reference to the treatment of genetics and
evolution)
1960,
May A sex-linked lethal without evident effect in
Drosophila males but partially dominant in
females, by Muller and Stanley Zimmering.
Reprint 316
1960,
May Do air pollutants act as mutagens?
Abstract
Reprint 317
1960, June
4 The impact of science on our civilization
Address given at the Alumni Institute Round Table Discussions, Indiana
University.
1960, Aug.
17 Results in radiation genetics obtained by the Indiana
University
Drosophila group since those report
in Sept. 1958 at the Second Geneva "Atoms for Peace" conference, report
submitted to A.E.C.
(2 folders)
1960,
Sept. The issues concerning man's genetic future, Dartmouth
convocation on the great issues of conscience in modern
medicine.
Published as: Genetic considerations.
Reprint 320
1960, Oct.
15 The radiation syndrome - a genetic
interpretation
Talk at the Symposium on Human Genetics, San Francisco.
1960, Nov.
26 Humanist house
Talk given at dedication dinner, Yellow Springs, OH
1960 Are
induced mutations in Drosophila overdominant? by Muller and Raphael
Falk.
Reprint 324
(2 folders)
1960 Human
evolution by voluntary choice of germ plasm
Reprint 328
1960 The
human future
Reprint 326
1960
Mutation by alteration of the already existing gene, by Muller, Elof Carlson
and Abraham Schalet.
Reprint 323
1960 Should
we weaken or strengthen our genetic heritage?
1961, Feb.
12 [Inscription] "Presented to President and Mrs. John F.
Kennedy for the book of Inaugural inscriptions written by 167 Americans
invited to participate in this way"
1961, Feb.
16 The new light on mutation, introductory remarks at the
Symposium held by the Biophysical Society Meeting, St. Louis.
1961, Apr.
11 Alexander Hamilton award medal acceptance speech, Low
Memorial Library, Columbia University, New York City.
1961,
Apr. The future in the life sciences
address given at symposium, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(see: Reprint 347)
1961,
May Some mutational techniques in
Drosophila
, by Muller and I.I. Oster.
Reprint 340
(2 folders)
Box 6
1961,
Aug. Survival
Lecture delivered before IBS, Aug. 28
Reprint 330
(3 folders)
1961, Sept.
28 The impact of science on modern civilization
Speech given to IU Alumni Association, Bloomington.
Pub. REVIEW in 1963
1961,
Nov. Prospectives for the life sciences, based on address
given on this theme, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Apr. 8,
1961.
Reprint 347
1961
Genetic nucleic acid: the key material in the origin of life
Addendum and references only
Reprint 334
(2 folders)
1961
Germinal choice, a new dimension in genetic therapy
Reprint 329
1961 Ideals
to live by, a review of
Science Ponders
Religion
, edited by Harlow Shapley.
Reprint 321
1961 Long
live mediocrity!
A review of
The Future of Man, by P.B.
Medawar.
Reprint 322
1961
Similarity of x-ray-induced mutation rate in gonia of
Drosophila females and males, by Muller and Helen U. Meyer.
Reprint 325
1961
Studies in genetics
Reprint 335
1961
Studies on the action of the dominant female-lethal F1 and of a less extreme
allele, Fls, by Muller and Stanley Zimmering.
Reprint 333
1962, Feb.
13 Are we responsible for the genetic heritage of the
future?
Address given in the Great Issues Course, Dartmouth College.
1962, Mar.
6 How does man's genetic future concern us of today?
Talk delivered at Colorado College.
1962, Mar.
30 Statement to Radio-Liberty, for broadcasting to the
U.S.S.R.
1962, Apr.
26 Opening statement for "The New Biology," College of the
Air, Chicago
1962,
Sept. The role of biology in general education
Reprint 342
1962, Oct.
16 [Notes concerning radioactive fallout and peace, for
lecture, Des Moines, Iowa.]
1962, Nov.
29 Genetic progress by voluntarily conducted germinal
choice
Paper presented at Symposium on "The Future of Man," CIBA Foundation,
London.
Reprint 341
1962 Are
chronic and acute gamma irradiation equally mutagenic in
Drosophila? by Muller, I.I. Oster and Stanley
Zimmering.
Reprint 339
(2 folders)
1962 A
biographical appreciation of Sir Julian Huxley
Reprint 336
1962
Mechanisms of life span shortening by radiation
Reprint 337
1962 Rains
of death, a review of Rachel Carson's
Silent
Spring
.
1963, Mar.
29 Human genetic betterment
address before American Humanist Association
1963, Mar.
30 Many different ways to climb a mountain
Acceptance speech for Humanist of the Year.
1963,
Apr. Means and aims in human genetic betterment
Ohio Wesleyan University symposium paper.
Reprint 357
1963, Apr.
26 Radiation and heredity
paper given at symposium on Man-His Environment and Health, New York
Academy of Medicine.
Reprint 348
(3 folders)
1963,
Aug. The need for recombination to prevent genetic
deterioration
simplified account of paper, Genetics Society of America, University of
Massachusetts, Amherst
Reprint 344
1963,
Sept. Synthesis, for symposium on radiation
genetics
Reprint 358
1963 Better
genes for tomorrow
Address to American Humanist Association's annual meeting.
Reprint 349
1963
Perspectives for the life sciences
Based on address given at symposium, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Apr. 8, 1961
(see: 1961, Apr.)
1963 The
role of scientific education in value formation
Reprint 354
(2 folders)
1964, Jan.
7 Genetic aberrations
Telephone talk arranged by Dr. Novak of Stephens College, Columbia,
MO.
Also includes correspondence, schedule, and other related materials
1964, Jan.
10 Dom-tester III, the use of dominant sterility for detecting
lethal and other mutations in chromosome III
1964, Feb.
21 Calculation of risk incurred by descendants of irradiated
peoples.
1964,
Apr. Man in biological perspective
Lectures delivered in a series on "The Prospects for Man," Swarthmore
College, Apr. 5 and 12.
Reprint 363
(2 folders)
1964, July
2 Review of Eugenics:
Hereditarian
attitudes in American Thought
, by Mark H. Haller.
1964, Sept.
20 Address to Diamond Circle, a fund raiser for City of
Hope
1964, Oct.
18 Talk given at dedication of two laboratories for
biochemistry, City of Hope Medical Center
1964, Nov.
15 Acceptance speech, Seventh Annual Salute to Medical
Research, City of Hope, Chicago.
1964
Genetic effects of chemicals
Reprint 353
1964 The
relation of recombination to mutational advance and
deterioration.
Reprint 350
1965, Jan.-Feb. Is genetic progress
feasible in man?
Lecture given at 1) City of Hope
2) Salk Institute, Feb. 25, 1964
1965, Mar.
8 Bacteriophage: A biological microcosm
Mendel Centennial speech.
Also, notes for introductions to speeches by Curt Stern and Robert S.
Edgar, notes for speech at Harvard Biology Department dinner,
correspondence and other materials
1965,
Aug. Message to Mendel Memorial Symposium,
Czechoslovakia
Box 7
1965 Dosage
compensation of
Drosophila and mammals as
showing the accuracy of the normal type, by Muller and W.D.
Kaplan.
Reprint 366
(3 folders)
1965 The
gene material as the initiator and the organizing basis of life.
Reprint 369
1965 A
humanist's view of the encyclical on peace
Reprint 356
1965
Introduction to new edition of E.B. Wilson's
The Cell
in Development and Inheritance
.
Reprint 367
(3 folders)
1966, May
26 Human progress, as conceived by H.J.M.
1966, Aug.
16 Statement by biologists evoked by evolution debate in
Arkansas
Reprint 370
1966,
Sept. What genetic course will man steer?
Reprint 372
(4 folders)
1966?
The greatest moral and spiritual challenge of today.
[1966]
Translocational Pale
Drosophilae and Snaker
mice, a semicentennial parallel.
Reprint 371
[1966]
What is the scientific revolution?
undated Biological effects of radiation
undated "Discussion of Professor Muller's paper"
undated The effects of radiation on the human
constitution
Article for WHO publication
undated The genetic effects of radiation
undated The influence of x-rays upon heredity
undated On the calculation of the number of loci separately
producing a given recessive phenotype
undated The Sifter technique--a new tool for the quantitative
study of mutations in the second chromosome of
Drosophila
D.I.S. (Drosophila Information Service papers):
Contains papers, research notes, abstracts, stock lists, directories by
HJM, et al. for publication.
(12 folders)
(see also: individual titles listed above)
Incomplete or unidentified writings
List of articles mostly by subject, e.g. Genetics in Russia,
memorials and tributes, etc.
Probably not inclusive
Mostly assembled by Thea Muller or Elof Carlson.
List of works,1936
Poems and limericks
Subseries:
Reprints
Mostly reprints, but also contains complete journals, abstracts, mimeographs,
tear sheets, etc. If a copy does not exist in the collection, it is designated
as "MISSING"
Arranged roughly in chronological order. Most of the numbers were assigned by
Muller and are preserved.
Box 9
0.1912 Principles of heredity (from manuscript prepared by H.J.
Muller in 1912).
Mimeograph
1. 1911-1912 Erroneous assumptions regarding
genes
Published as abstract of: Some genetic aspects of sex, HJM for
The American Naturalist, Vol. LXVI, Mar-Apr.
1932.
(for original see: Writings 1911-1912)
2. 1914 A new mode of segregation in Gregory's tetraploid
primulas
The American Naturalist, 48:508-512
3. 1914 The bearing of the selection experiments of Castle and
Phillips on the variability of genes.
The American Naturalist, 48:567-576
4. 1914 A factor for the fourth chromosome of
Drosophila
Science, 39:906.
Photocopy
5. 1914 A gene for the fourth chromosome of
Drosophila
The Journal of Experimental Zoology,
17:325-336
6. 1915 The mechanism of Mendelian heredity, by T.H. Morgan,
A.H. Sturtevant, H.J. Muller and C.B. Bridges (New York: Holt & Co.)
(See: Lilly 7-6043)
7. 1916 The mechanism of crossing over
The American Naturalist, 50:193-221,
284-305, 350-366, 421-434. Revised
8. 1917 The effect of long-continued heterozygosis on a variable
character in Drosophila, by Walter W. Marshall and H.J. Muller.
The Journal of Experimental Zoology,
22:457-470
9. 1917 An Oenothera-like case in Drosophila
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences
, 3:619-626
10. 1918 Genetic variability, twin hybrids and constant hybrids,
in case of balanced lethal factors.
Genetics 3:422-499
11. 1919 A series of allelomorphs in Drosophila with
non-quantitative relationships.
MISSING
12. 1919 The rate of change of hereditary factors in Drosophila,
by H.J. Muller and Edgar Altenburg
Proceedings of the Society of Experimental Biology
and Medicine
, 17:10-14.
Mimeograph
13. 1920 The genetic basis of truncate wing--an inconstant and
modifiable character in Drosophila (analysis), by H.J. Muller and Edgar
Altenburg.
Genetics, 5:1-59
14. 1920 Are the factors of heredity arranged in a
line?
American Naturalist, 54:97-121
15. 1920 Further changes in the white-eye series of Drosophila
and their bearing on the manner of occurrence of mutation.
The Journal of Experimental Zoology,
31:443-473
16. 1920 A quantitative study of mutation in the second
chromosome of Drosophila
Read before American Society of Naturalists, Chicago, Dec. 31: Title in
Science, 53:97, 1921 and
Records of the American Society of
Naturalists
, 3:69, 1921.
MISSING
17. 1921 A study of the character and mode of origin of eighteen
mutations in the X-chromosome of Drosophila, by Muller and Edgar
Altenburg.
Copied from the
Proceedings of the American
Society of Zoologists Anatomical Record
20:213.
Abstract
18. 1921 A lethal gene which changes the order of the loci in the
chromosome map.
Read before Gen. Sec., AAAS, Toronto, Dec. 1921.
MISSING
19. 1921 A decade of Drosophila
Read at Carnegie Institute, Cold Springs Harbor, Aug. 1921, and deposited
in the archives of the Institute.
Published in Russian, 1922 as: "Results of a decade of research on
Drosophila."
Russian reprint only
20. 1921 Mutation
Read before 2nd International Congress of Eugenics, New York City, Sept.
1921.
Published in
Eugenics, Genetics and the
Family
, 1:106-112; republished in
Newman's Readings in Evolution, Genetics, and Eugenics, pp.
495-502.
Reprint, mimeograph copies, and copy of
Proceedings of 2nd International Congress...
21. 1921 Variation due to change in the individual
gene
Read before American Society of Naturalists, Toronto, Dec. 1921;
published in
American Naturalist,
56:32-50.
Reprint and mimeographs
22. 1921 Micromanipulation by light waves
Read and demonstrated before the American Society of Zoologist,
Toronto.
MISSING
23. 1922 The measurement of mutation frequency made
practicable
Read before The Gen. Sec., Dec. 1922.
Anatomical
Record
, 24:419, Jan. 1923.
Abstract
24. 1923 A simple formula giving the number of individuals
required for obtaining one of a given frequency.
American Naturalist, 57:66-73
25. 1923 Recurrent mutations of normal genes of Drosophila not
caused by crossing over
Read before Gene. Sec., Dec. 1923.
Anatomical
Record
, 26:397-398, 1924.
Abstract
26. 1923 Observations of biological science in Russia
Scientific Monthly, 16:539-552
27. 1923 Partial list of biological institutes and biologists
doing experimental work in Russia at the present time.
Science, 57:472-473
28. 1924 Chromosome breakage of X-rays and the production of eggs
from genetically male tissues in Drosophila, by H.J. Muller and A.L.
Dippel.
The British Journal of Experimental
Biology
, 3:85-122; 1925.
Anatomical Record, 29:150. Abstract
Abstract
29. 1924 The latitude of genetic in determination of psychic
characters in man, as indicated in a case of identical twins reared
apart.
Read before Gene. Sec, Dec. 1924.
Anatomical Record, 29:144-145.
Abstract
30. 1924 A moving model of mitosis and segregation, for use in
the teaching genetics
Exhibit before American Society of Zoologists.
Anatomical Record, 29:86.
Title only
31. 1925 The regionally differential effect of x-rays on crossing
over in autosomes of Drosophila
Genetics, 10:470-507
32.1925 The standard errors of chromosome distances and
coincidence, by Muller and J.M. Jacobs-Muller.
Genetics, 10:509-524
33. 1925 Why polyploidy is rarer in animals than in
plants
American Naturalist, 59:346-353
34. 1925 Mental traits and heredity as studied in a case of
identical twins reared apart
Journal of Heredity, 16:433-448.
Photocopy
35. 1925 The non-functioning of the genes in spermatozoa, by
Muller and F. Settles.
Read before Gene. Sec., Dec. 1925.
Zeitschrift fürinduktive Abstammungs-und
Vererbungslehre
, 43:285-312
Anatomical Record, 31:347.
Abstract
36. 1925 Life histories of identical twins, B. and J.
Mimeographed notes distributed privately.
37. 1926 Determining identity of twins
Journal of Heredity, 17:195-206
38. 1926 Inbreeding versus "accumulation of blood."
Journal of Heredity, 17:240-242
39. 1926 The gene as the basis of life
Read before International Congress of Plant Sciences, Ithaca, Aug. 19,
1926, 1:897-921.
Revised edition in Russian in "Collected Works on Genetics." "Sel'
khozgiz" Moscow-Leningrad, PP. 148-177, 1937
40. 1926 Induced crossing over variation in the X-chromosome of
Drosophila
The American Naturalist, 60:192-195
41. 1926 Quantitative methods in genetic research
Read before American Society of Naturalists, Philadelphia, Dec. 1926.
American Naturalist, 61:407-419.
42. 1927 Artificial transmutation of the gene
Science, 66:84-87
43. 1927 The problems of genic modification
Read before Fifth International Genetics Congress, Berlin, Sept.
1927.
Verhandlungen des V. internationalen Kongresses für
Vererbungswissenschaft: Suplplementband I der Zeitschrift für
Induktive Abstammungs-und Vererbungslehre
, 234-260, 1928.
44. 1927 Effects of x-radiation on genes and
chromosomes
Read before Gen. Sec., Nashville, Dec. 1927.
Awarded the annual prize of the AAAS.
Anatomical Record, 37:174.
Abstract and manuscript copy
45. 1928 The production of mutations by x-rays
Read before National Academy of Sciences, Washington, Apr. 1928
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences
, 14:714-726
46. 1928 Genetics humanized
Journal of Heredity, 19:345-347
47. 1928 The measurement of gene mutation rate in Drosophila, its
high variability, and its dependence upon temperature.
Genetics, 13:279-357
48. 1928 Chromosome translocations produced by x-rays in
Drosophila, by H.J. Muller and Edgar Altenburg.
Read before Gene. Sec., New York, Dec. 1928.
Anatomical Record, 41:100.
Abstract
49. 1929 The method of evolution
Research professorship lecture read at University of Texas, May, 1928.
Published
Science Monthly, 19:481-505,
1929.
Reprinted in revised form under title:
Heritable
variations, their production by x-rays and their relation to
evolution, Annual Report, Smithsonian Institution for 1929
,
345-362, 1930
50. 1929 The cytological expression of changes in gene alignment
produced by x-rays in Drosophila
American Naturalist, 63:193-200
51. 1929 Parallel cytology and genetics of induced translocations
and deletions in Drosophila, by H.J. Muller and T.S. Painter.
Journal of Heredity, 20:287-298
52. 1929 Variation (experimental
Encyclopedia Britannica, 14th ed., pp.
987-989.
Photocopy
53. 1929 The first cytological demonstration of a translocation
in Drosophila
The American Naturalist, 63:481-486
54. 1930 Radiation and genetics
Read before American Society of Naturalists, Jan. 1930.
American Naturalist, 64:220-251
55. 1930 The frequency of translocations produced by x-rays in
Drosophila, by Muller and Edgar Altenburg.
Genetics, 15:283-311
56. 1930 Evidence that natural radioactivity is inadequate to
explain the frequency of "natural" mutations, by Muller and L.M.
Mott-Smith.
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Science
, 16:277-285
57. 1930 Oenothera-life linkage of chromosomes in
Drosophila
Journal of Genetics, 22:335-337.
Photocopy
58. 1930 Types of visible variations induced by x-rays in
Drosophila
Journal of Genetics, 22:299-334.
59. 1930 Are "progressive" mutations produced by x-rays? by
Muller and J.T. Patterson.
Genetics, 15:495-578
60. 1930 Analysis of several induced gene-rearrangements
involving the X-chromosome of Drosophila, by Muller and W.S.
Stone.
Read before Gene. Sec., Dec. 1930.
Anatomical Record, 47:393-394.
Abstract
61. 1931 Effect of dosage changes of sex-linked genes, and the
compensatory effect of other gene-differences between male and female, by
H.J. Muller, B.B. League and C.A. Offermann.
Read before Gene. Sec., New Orleans, Dec. 31, 1931.
Anatomical Record, 51 (Suppl.):110.
Abstract
62. 1931 Causes of interregional differences in crossover
frequency, studies in individuals homozygous for gene arrangements, by
Muller, C.A. Offermann and W.S. Stone.
Read before Gene. Sec., New Orleans, Dec. 1931.
Anatomical Record, 51 (Suppl.):109.
Abstract
63. 1931 Some genetic aspects of sex
Read before American Society of Naturalist, New Orleans, Dec. 1931.
American Naturalist, 64:118-138
64. 1932 Regional differences in crossing over as a function of
the chromosome structure, by Muller and C.A. Offermann.
Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of
Genetics
, 2:143-145
65. 1932 The differentiation of the sex chromosomes of Drosophila
into genetically active an inert regions, by Muller and T.S.
Painter.
Zeitschrift für inductive Abstammungsund
Vererbungslehre
, 62:316-365
66. 1932 A cytological map of the X-chromosome of Drosophila, by
Muller and T.W. Painter.
Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of
Genetics
, 2:147-148.
Photocopy
67. 1932 Heribert Nilsson's evidence against the artificial
production of mutations
Hereditas, 16:160-168
68. 1932 Where angels fear to tread?
Review of Gaskell's "What is Life?" and Kraft's "Can Science Explain
Life?"
Journal of Heredity, 23:80-86
69. 1932
Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of
Genetics
, 1:213-255
70. 1932 The dominance of economics over eugenics
Read before 3rd International Congress of Eugenics, New York, Aug.
1932.
Scientific Monthly, 37:40-47
Birth Control, Rev., 16, 1932
Priroda, 1934, No. 1, 100-106, in Russian
under title: Eugenics in the service of the National-Socialists
Fact, London, 24:58-75, 1939
71. 1932 Evidence against the occurrence of crossing-over between
sister chromatids, by Muller and A. Weinstein.
American Naturalist, 67:64-65.
Abstract
72. 1933 The effects of Roentgen rays upon the hereditary
material
The Science of Radiology, Chap. 17:305-318
(London: Balliere, Tindall and Cox, 1934).
Spanish translation in
Revista de Radiologia y
Fisioterapia
, 1934, 1:9-12 and 1935
German translation in Strahlenthereapie,
1936, 55:207-224
73. 1933 Haldane on evolution: Review of Haldane's "Causes of
Evolution."
Prog. Mod. Biol., Vol. 2, No. 3:90-92 in
Russian
74. 1933 Human heredity
A review of Bauer, Fischer and Lenz's "Human Heredity."
Birth Control Review, 17:19-21
75. 1933 Report on Sixth International Genetics
Congress
Prog. Mod. Biol., 2:135-146 in
Russian.
Photocopy
Box 10
76. 1934 Radiation genetics
Proceedings of the 4th Internationaler
Radiologenkongress
, Zurich, 1934, 2:100-102
Abstract
77. 1934 Apparent gene mutations due to the position-effect of
minute gene rearrangements, by Muller, A.A. Prokofyeva and D.
Raffel.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
3:48-49
Abstract
78. 1934 The views of Haeckel in the light of
genetics
Philosophy of Science, 3:313-322
Priroda, No. 1, 10:128-133, 1936
in Russian under title "Haeckel and genetics."
79. 1934 Inversions; attached X's: rearrangement in general;
deficiency; balancing of deleted X-chromosomes; triploids; extension of
third chromosome; etherizing bottles; stock lists
D.I.S. 2:57-60, 62-63, 66
Photocopy
80. 1934 Some fundamental lines of development of theoretical
genetics and their significance from the standpoint of medicine.
Read before Medico-Genetics Conference, Moscow, May 1, 1934.
Sovietskaya Clinica, 20:17-28 in
Russian
80/2. Lenin's doctrines in relation to genetics
Academy of Sciences, U.S.S.R., pp.
565-592
81. 1934 Genetics as opposed to the concept of "pure races."
Prog. Mod. Biology, Vol. 3:525:541 in
Russian
Photocopy
82. 1934 The problem of the stratostat in connection with
problems of interest for genetics.
Academy of Sciences U.S.S.R., pp. 569-573
in Russian
83. 1934 Continuity and discontinuity of the hereditary material,
by Muller and A.A. Prokofyeva.
Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR, N.S., 4:74-83 in Russian and English.
Reprinted in enlarged and revised form under title: The individual gene
in relation to the chromomere and the chromosome,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 21:16-26,
1935
84. 1935 Minute intergenic rearrangement as a cause of apparent
"gene mutation," by Muller, A.A. Prokofyeva and D. Raffel.
Nature, 135:253-255.
85. 1935 The optical dissociation of Drosophila chromomeres by
means of ultraviolet light, by Muller J. Ellenhorn and A.A.
Prokofyeva.
Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences de
l'URSS, N.S.
1:234-241
86. 1935 On the incomplete dominance of the normal allelomorphs
of white in Drosophila.
Journal of Genetics, 30:407-414
87. 1935 The origination of chromatin deficiencies as minute
deletions subject to insertion elsewhere.
Genetica, 17:237-252
88. 1935 A viable two-gene deficiency phaenotypically resembling
the corresponding hypomorphic mutations.
Journal of Heredity, 26:469-478
89. 1935 On the dimensions of chromosomes and genes in Dipteran
salivary glands.
American Naturalist, 69:405-411
90. 1935 Invalidation of the genetic evidence for branched
chromonemas in the case of the pale translocation in Drosophila, by Muller
and K.V. Kossikov.
Journal of Heredity, 26:305-312
91. 1935 Inert regions of chromosomes as the temporary products
of individual genes, by Muller and S.M. Gershenson.
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences
, 21:69-75
92. 1935 [Genetics]
Cumulative Report of the Committee on Effects of
Radiation
, Washington, National Research Council, 1928-1934:
16-19.
Photocopy
93. 1935 Introductory chapter in book "Factors of Evolution" by
J.B.S. Haldane.
MISSING
94. 1935 Human genetics in Russia.
Journal of Heredity, 26:193-196
95. 1935 The position effect as evidence of the localization of
the immediate products of gene activity.
Read before the 15th International Physiological Congress, Leningrad,
Aug. 16, 1935. Institute of Genetics, Academy of Sciences of the USSR,
Moscow
96. 1935 Nomenclature of alleles; balancing chromosome-1 with
scuteS1 labeling of stock cultures; fly morgue; seeding with yeast,
supplying vials with paper.
D.I.S. 3:48, 50, 52.
Abstract
97. 1935 The structure of the chromonema of the inert region of
the X-chromosome of Drosophila, by Muller and A.A. Prokofyeva.
Comptes Rendus de l'Academie des Sciences de
l'URSS, N.S.
, 1:658-660
98. 1935 Out Of The Night: A biologist's view of the
future.
(see: Lilly 7-6069)
99. 1935 The present status of the mutation theory.
Read at De Vries Memorial Meeting, Leningrad, Nov. 1935.
Priroda, No. 6:40-50 in Russian
Current Science, Special No., March 1938,
pp. 4-15
100. 1936 Bar duplication
Science, 83:528-530.
Mimeograph copies
101. 1936 Construction of homozygous stocks; insertion of foreign
chromosome into homozygous host stock; insertion of desired genes into
attached X's; combination of invisible genes; to balance sex-linked genes;
labor-saving method of starting homozygous or balanced stocks of
female-fertile sex-linked genes; balancing of duplications by deficiencies
or lethals and vice versa; detection of mutations; accumulation of mutations
(negativing of natural selection); accumulation of mutations in given
sex.
D.I.S. 6:7-9, 10-11, 12-13, 14-17.
Photocopy
102. 1936 Balanced stocks, by Muller and C.B. Bridges.
D.I.S. 6: 9-10.
Photocopy
103. 1936 Physics in the attack on the fundamental problems of
genetics.
Scientific Monthly, 44:210-214
104. 1936 Unequal crossing over in the Bar mutant as a result of
duplication of a minute chromosome section, by Muller, A.A.
Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya and K.V. Kossikov.
Comptes Rendus (Doklady) de l'Academie des
Sciences de l'URSS, N.S.
, 1(10):83-84, 87-88 in Russian and
English
105. 1936 The determination of the relation between the dosage of
irradiation and the frequency of induced mutations.
Strahlentherapie, 55:72-76 in German.
Photocopy
106. 1936 On the variability of mixed races.
Proc. Med. Genet. Inst., 4:213-236 in Russian with English summary
American Naturalist, 70:409-442
107. 1936 The present status of the experimental evidence
concerning the nature of the gene.
MISSING
107/2. 1936 Genetics and politics.
Letter to the editor.
Journal of Heredity,
27:267-268.
Tear sheet
108. 1937 A further analysis of loci in the so-called "inert
region: of the X-chromosome of Drosophila, by Muller, D. Raffel, S.M.
Gershenson and A.A. Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya.
Genetics, 22:87-93
109. 1937 Main results of investigations made in the Institute of
Genetics of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, by Muller, J.J. Lus, T.K.
Liepin, A.A. Sapehin, and D. Kostoff.
Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR. (Otd. mat.-est., Ser. biol.):1469-1492 (Russian
with English summary)
110. 1937 Reversibility in evolution considered from the
standpoint of genetics.
Read before Society for Experimental biology, London, Dec. 21, 1937.
Biological Reviews, 14:261-280
111. 1937 The biological effects of radiation, with especial
reference to mutation.
Read before 8th Réunion Internationale de Physique-Chimie-Biologie,
Paris, Oct. 1937.
Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles,
No. 725, XI:477-494
112. 1937 Evolution as viewed by Morgan.
Review of T.H. Morgan's "Scientific Basis of Evolution."
Book and Proletarian Revolution, No. 8:128-134 in Russian.
113. 1937 The absence of transmissible chromosome fragments
resulting from simple breakage, and their simulation as a result of compound
breakage involving chromocentral regions, by Muller, A.A.
Prokofyeva-Belgovskaya and D. Raffel.
Genetics, 23:161.
Abstract
114. 1937 Further evidence of the prevalence of minute
rearrangement and absence of simple breakage in and near chromocentral
regions, and its bearing on the mechanisms of mosaicism and rearrangement,
by Muller and M.L. Belgovsky.
Genetics, 23:139-140.
Abstract
115. 1938 The remaking of chromosomes.
The Collecting Net, 13:181, 183-195,
198
116. 1938 Bearings of the Drosophila work on problems of
systematics.
Proceedings of the Zoological Society,
Ser. C, 108:55-57
117. 1938 Gene rearrangement in relation to radiation dosage, by
Muller, A.I. Makki and A.R. Sidky.
Read before the Genetical Society, London, Dec. 1, 1938.
Journal of Genetics, 37, No. 3, 1939.
Abstract
118. 1939 Dr. Calvin B. Bridges.
Nature, 143:191-192
119. 1939 New mutants; additions and corrections to symbol list in
D.I.S. 9.
D.I.S. 12:39-40.
120. 1939 Bibliography on the genetics of Drosophila.
Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, l32 pp.
3 copies
121. 1939 Discriminatory effect of ultraviolet rays on mutation in
Drosophila, by Muller and K. Mackenzie.
Nature, 143:83-84
122. 1939 Gene and chromosome theory.
7th International Congress of Genetics.
Nature, 144:813-816
123. 1939 How heredity works.
The Listener, 21:845-847.
Tear sheet
124. 1939 Report of investigations with radium.
Medical Research Council Special Report Series, No. 236:14-15
125. 1939 Report of Dr. .J. Muller and collaborators, working at
the Institute of Animal Genetics, University of Edinburgh.
16th Annual Report, British Empire Cancer Campaign: pp.226-231
126. 1939 Genetics and society.
Fact, 27:92-98.
Galley, tear sheet, print
127. 1939 How Genetic systems come about, review of C.D.
Darlington's
The Evolution of Genetic
Systems
.
Nature, 144:648-649
128. 1939 The mechanism of structural change in chromosomes of
Drosophila.
Read before 7th International Congress on Genetics, Edinburgh, Sept.
1939.
Journal of Genetics suppl. vol., pp.
221-222. 1941
129. 1939 The geneticists manifesto.
Journal of Heredity, 30:371-373
also under title: Social biology and population improvement.
Nature, 144:521-522.
130. 1939 Evidence of the nongenetic nature of the lethal effect
of radiation on Drosophila embryos, by Muller and R. Lamy.
Proceedings of the 7th International Genetical Congress, 1939
Journal of Genetics, suppl. vol., pp.
180-181.
Abstract
131. 1940 Bearings of the Drosophila work on
systematics.
The New Systematics, ed by J. Huxley (Clarendon:Oxford), pp. 185-268
132. 1940 An analysis of the process of structural change in
chromosomes of Drosophila.
Journal of Genetics, 40:1-66.
Reprint and galley
133. 1940 New Mutants.
D.I.S. 13:52.
Photocopy
134. 1941 Report on experiments with gamma radiation.
British Journal of Radiology
14:157-158.
Abstract
135. 1940 Recombinants between Drosophila species the F1 hybrids
of which are sterile, by Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
Nature, 145:199-200
136. 1940 Position effect and gene divisibility considered in
connection with three strikingly similar scute mutations by Muller and D.
Raffel.
Genetics, 25:541-583
137. 1940 The artificial mixing of incompatible germ plasms in
Drosophila, by Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
Read before National Academy of Sciences, Oct. 29, 1940.
Science, 92:418, 476.
Abstract
138. 1940 Mutation effects of ultra-violet light in Drosophila, by
Muller and K. Mackenzie.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of
London
, Series B, No. 857, 129:491-517
139. 1940 The lethality of dicentric chromosomes in Drosophila, by
Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
Genetics, 26:165.
Abstract
140. 1941 On judging the significance of a difference obtained by
averaging essentially different series.
American Naturalist, 75:264-271
141. 1941 The threads that weave evolution.
Transactions of The New York Academy of
Sciences
, Series II, 3:117-125
142. 1941 The role played by radiation mutations in
mankind.
National Academy of Sciences.
Abstract
143. 1941 Report on ultraviolet induced chromosome changes and
other investigations.
Biological Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, 52:42-43
144. 1941 Recessive genes causing interspecific sterility and
other disharmonies between Drosophila melanogaster and simulans, by Muller
and G. Pontecorvo.
Read before the Genetics Society of America, Cold Spring Harbor, Aug.
29, 1941.
Genetics 27:157 and
Records of Genetics Society of America.
Abstract
145. 1941 The surprisingly high frequency of spontaneous and
induced chromosome breakage, and its expression through dominant lethals,
by Muller and G. Pontecorvo.
Read before the Genetics Society of America, Dallas, Dec.
30, 1941
Genetics 27:157-158 and
Records of Genetics Society of America.
Abstract
146. 1941 Induced mutations in Drosophila.
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative
Biology
, 9:151-165
147. 1941 Resume and perspectives of the symposium on genes and
chromosomes.
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative
Biology
, 9:290-308
148. 1941 Isolating mechanism, evolution and
temperature.
Paper read before American Society of Zoologists, Dallas, Dec.
1941.
Biological Symposia, 6:71-125
149. 1942 Locus of pale lethal; insertional translocation involved
in "In (dp)", viable non-crossover X-chromosome; stock with marked
inversions of all major chromosomes.
D.I.S. 16:64-65.
Photocopy
150. 1942 Mutation rate dependent on the size of the
X-chromosome.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
11, and
Genetics, 28:83
151. 1943 Edmund B. Wilson - an appreciation.
American Naturalist, 77:5-37, 142-172
152. 1943 A stable double X-chromosome
D.I.S. 17:61-62.
Abstract
153. 1943 The mechanism of chromosome breakage by
irradiation.
Year Book of the American philosophical
Society
for 1943:162-165
154. 1944 The non-equivalence of the blocks and the salivary
"heterochromatin."
Records of Genetics Society of America,
13:28 and
Genetics, 30:15
Abstract
155. 1944 Failure of dissemination by nitrogen; high primary
non-disjunction of the insertional double-X; reddish - a new near-normal
allele of white; tandem attached X's producing ring chromosomes; use of
males with defective Y's to promote the laying of unfertilized
eggs.
D.I.S. 18:56-58.
Abstract
156. 1945 Age in relation to the frequency of spontaneous
mutations in Drosophila.
Year Book of the American Philosophical
Society
for 1945:150-153
157. 1945 Genetic fundamentals, I. The work of the genes. II. The
dance of the genes.
Messenger lectures at Cornell University, Nov. 1945.
(See: Genetics, Medicine and Man. Lilly QH431 .M958g 1947)
158. 1945 The gene.
Pilgrim Trust Lecture, read before Royal Society of London, Nov.
1, 1945.
Proceedings of the Royal Society, B.,
134:1-37
159. 1946 Physiological effects on "spontaneous" mutation rate in
Drosophila.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
14:55 and
Genetics, 31:225.
Abstract
160. 1946 Two mutants of mosaic expression not caused by gross
rearrangement of heterochromatin.
D.I.S. 20:66-68, 88-89, 93-96.
Abstract
161. 1946 New translocations between the X and 4th chromosomes, by
Muller, M. Lieb and J. Valencia.
D.I.S. 20:87.
Abstract
162. 1946 A physicist stands amazed at genetics.
Review of Schrodinger's "What is Life."
Journal of Heredity, 37:90-92
163. 1946 The production of mutations.
Nobel Prize lecture read before the Caroline Institute, Stockholm,
Sweden, Dec. 12, 1946.
Journal of Heredity, 38:259-270
164. 1946 Twin needs of science.
Speech given at the Nobel banquet, Stockholm, Dec. 10, 1946.
Journal of Heredity, 38:258
165. 1946 A comparison of the potentialities of individual loci
for different types of visible mutations.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
15:61-62 and
Genetics, 32:98-99.
Abstract
166. 1946 Thomas Hunt Morgan.
Science, 103:550-551
167. 1947 Reintegration of the symposium on genetics, paleontology
and evolution.
Genetics, Paleontology, and Evolution,
Princeton University Press, pp. 421-445
168. 1947 Mutational prophylaxis.
Read before New York Academy of Medicine Conference on Problems of Public
Health.
Bulletin of the New York Academy of
Medicine
, 24:447-469
169. 1947 New mutants, by Muller and J.I. Valencia.
D.I.S. 21:69-71.
Abstract
170. 1947 Changing genes: their effects on evolution.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
3:267-272, 274 and
Universitas, 5:569-576
in German, under title: Genmutation und Evolution
171. 1947 Gene.
Encyclopedia Britannica, 10:100-101.
1950. Photocopy
172. 1947 Honors Day address at Indiana University School of
Dentistry.
Alumni Bulletin, 3rd Qtr., pp. 5, 13
173. 1948 The destruction of science in the U.S.S.R.
Saturday Review of Literature, Dec. 4,
31:13-15, 65-66; Dec 11, 31:8-10, under title: Back to
barbarism--scientifically.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists,
12:369-371, under title: The crushing of genetics in the U.S.S.R.
174. 1948 Genetics in the scheme of things.
Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of
Genetics (Hereditas)
, suppl. Vol., 1949.
175. 1948 Letter of resignation from the Academy of Sciences of
the U.S.S.R.
Science, 108:436
Box 11
176. 1948 Autobiographical note, Les Prix Novel in 1946.
Stockholm:109-111
MISSING
177. 1948 The construction of several new types of Y
chromosomes.
D.I.S. 22:73
Abstract
178. 1948 Time bombing our descendants.
American Weekly, Jan. 3.
Manuscript
179. 1948 Gene.
American Peoples Encyclopedia,
9:349-351.
Photocopy
180. 1949 The Darwinian and modern conceptions of natural
selection.
Proceedings of the American Philosophical
Society
, 93 (6):459-470
181. 1949 Is radiation a menace to posterity?
Science News Letter, 55 (June 11):374,
379-380, under editor's title: The menace of radiation
182. 1949 Progress and prospects in human genetics.
American Journal of Human Genetics,
1:1-18
183. 1949 The mutational potentialities of some individual loci in
Drosophila, by Muller and J.I. Valencia.
Proceedings of the 8th International Congress of
Genetics (Hereditas)
, Suppl. Vol., 681-683
184. 1949 Simultaneous induction of chromatic and chromosome
rearrangements of the same chromosome, by Muller, S. Luria and J.I.
Valencia.
D.I.S. 23:93.
Abstract
185. 1949 Formation of attached X's by reverse crossing over in
the heterochromatic region.
D.I.S. 23:99-102.
Abstract
186. 1949 Shaw on Lysenko.
Publ. under editor's title: It still isn't science: a reply to George
Bernard Shaw.
Saturday Review of Literature, Apr. 16,
32:11-12, 61.
Includes Shaw's: The Lysenko muddle.
187. 1949 E.B. Wilson: October 19, 1856-March 3, 1939.
Genetics, 34:1-9
188. 1949 The lack of proportionality of mutations recovered to
dosage of ultra-violet administered to the polar cap of Drosophila, by
Muller, Edgar Altenburg, L. Altenburg, and H.U. Meyer.
Genetics, 35:95
189. 1949 Studies on mutations induced by ultraviolet in the polar
cap of Drosophila, by Muller, H.U. Meyer, M. Edmondson, and L.
Altenburg.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
18:103-104.
Abstract
190. 1949 The frequency of spontaneous mutations at individual
loci in Drosophila, by Muller, J.I. Valencia and R.M. Valencia.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
18:105-106.
Abstract
191. 1949 The production of mutations at individual loci in
Drosophila by irradiation of oocytes and oogonia, by Muller, R.M. Valencia
and J.I. Valencia.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
18:106.
Abstract
192. 1949 The use of rearranged X's and Y's in facilitating class
work with Drosophila.
D.I.S. 23:110-111.
Abstract
193. 1949 Russia's counter revolution against biological
science.
Review of "Death of a Science in Russia," by C. Zirkle.
New York Herald-Tribune, Dec. 11, 1949,
Sec. 7, p. l. Clipping
194. 1950 Evidence of the precision of genetic
adaptation.
The Harvey Lectures, Series XLIII, 1947-1948.
Lecture delivered before the New York Academy of Medicine, Feb. 19, 1948
(Chas. C. Thomas: Springfield, Ill.), pp. 165-229
195. 1950 Radiation damage to the genetic material.
Sigma Xi Lecture read Nov. 4, 1948.
American Scientist, 38 (1):35-59, 126 (Pt.
I); 38 (3):399-425 (Pt. II).
Reprinted in German in
Strahlentherapie,
85:362-390, 509-536, 1951.
Rev. edition:
Science in Progress, Chap.
IV, pp. 93-165, 481-493. Yale University Press, 1951.
Abstract under title "Radiation damage of genetic origin,"
Journal of Heredity, 39:357-358, 1948
196. 1950 Some present problems in the genetic effects of
radiation.
Oak Ridge Symposium on Radiation Genetics, Mar. 26-27, 1948.
Journal of Cellular and Comparative
Physiology
, 35 (Suppl. 1):9-70
197. 1950 Partial dominance in relation to the need for studying
induced mutations individually.
A discussion following the paper by Sewall Wright.
Oak Ridge Symposium on Radiation Genetics, Mar. 26-27, 1948
Journal of Cellular and Comparative
Physiology
, 35 (Suppl. 1):205-210.
Mimeograph copy
198. 1950 Science in bondage.
Address delivered at the panel on "Science and Totalitarianism" of the
Congress for Cultural Freedom, Berlin, June 27, 1950.
Science, 113:25-29 (tear sheet)
Thought (Delhi), 4, no. 3:7-8, 16,
1952.
Tear sheet, mimeograph copy.
199. 1950 Our load of mutations.
Presidential address read before American Society of Human Genetics, New
York, Dec. 28, 1949.
Journal of Human Genetics, 2:111-176.
Excerpts published under title: "The growing backlog of genetic defect,"
The Journal of Heredity, 41:230, 240
(tear sheet)
200. 1950 The development of the gene theory.
Presented at Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 12, 1950 at Golden
Jubilee of Genetics.
Genetics in the 20th Century, Chap. V, pp. 77-99 (New York: Macmillan
Co., 1951).
201. 1951 Message to university students studying science, Apr.
15, 1951, Tokyo.
Kagaku Asahi, 11, No. 6:28-29.
Mimeograph copy
202. 1951 Science and freedom.
Indian Congress for Cultural Freedom.
Mimeograph copy
203. 1951 Detection of mutations in the second chromosome yb use
of the "sifter" stock; homosexual copulation in the male of Drosophila, and
the problem of the fate of sperm of males isolated from females;
localization of Y:bw+ insertion and cr-u sterile (CRS).
D.I.S. 25:117-118, 118-119, 119
204. 1951 Ultraviolet induction of mutants at loci at which
spontaneous mutants are known, by Muller, et al.
D.I.S. 25:119-120
205. 1951 The localization of the mutagenic action of
neutron-induced ionizations in Drosophila, by Muller and J.I.
Valencia.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
20:115-116.
Abstract
206. 1952 Gene mutations caused by radiation.
Symposium on Radiobiology, June 14-18, 1950.
Chap. 17, pp. 296-332 (New York: John Wiley & Sons).
207. 1952 Genetic effects of cosmic radiation.
Proceedings of Symposium on Physics and Medicine
of the Upper Atmosphere
, San Antonio, Texas, Nov. 6-9, 1951,
Chap. 17, pp. 316-330
208. 1952 Genetics and its relations with other fields of
knowledge.
The Indiana Teacher, 96 (No. 8,
April):248-249.
Tear sheet
209. 1952 The contradiction between totalitarianism and scientific
progress (distributed by U.S. Information Services as: Sterility of Soviet
Science).
MISSING
210. 1949-1951 A comparative study of mutations
arising under different conditions in Drosophila.
4th (pp. 123-124), 5th (p. 153) and 6th (p. 119) annual reports to the
American Cancer Society, Division of Medical Science, National Research
Council, Washington, D.C.
Abstract
211. 1952 The standard error of the frequency of mutants some of
which are of common origin.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
21:52.
Abstract
212. 1952 Influence of oxygen and of temperature on the rate of
autosomal recessive lethals induced by ultraviolet in the polar cap of
Drosophila melanogaster, by Muller and Helen U. Meyer.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
21:48.
Abstract
213. 1952 Influence of aging at two different temperatures on the
spontaneous mutation rate in mature spermatozoa of Drosophila melanogaster,
by Muller and Helen L. Byers.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
21:14
214. 1952 Will science continue?
Address delivered for the annual talent search, Junior Scientists'
Assembly, Indianapolis, Apr. 5, 1952, under title "Science:
Mankind's greatest adventure."
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 8, No.
9:301-307
215. 1952 Breeding systems for detection of sex-linked lethals in
successive generations.
D.I.S. 26:113-114
216. 1953 Can man shape his own future?
Review of Charles Galton Darwin's
The Next Million
Year
.
Published as: Back to Malthus: A dubious document of doom for the human
race.
New York Herald-Tribune, Jan. 11,
1953, p. 3.
Tear sheet
217. 1953 Autosomal mutation studies by means of crisscrossed
lethals and balanced male steriles.
D.I.S. 27104-105
218. 1953 Autosomal nondisjunction associated with the rotund
translocation.
D.I.S. 27:106-107
219. 1953 Further evidence of abnormal types of copulation by the
male D. melanogaster.
D.I.S. 27
MISSING
220. 1953 The call of biology.
A.I.B.S. Bulletin, 3:4
221. 1953 Preface. Bibliography on the genetics of
Drosophila.
MISSING
221/2. 1953 Survival in Space.
Letter to editor of
Collier's, Mar. 14,
1953.
Mimeograph copy
222. 1953 The betrayal of science under communism.
Published as "Russia's shackled science."
New
Leader
, Oct. 26, pp. 15-16.
Tear sheet and mimeograph copy
223. 1953 Evidence against the healing of x-ray breakages in
chromosomes of female Drosophila melanogaster.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
22:79.
Abstract
224. 1953 The nature of the genetic effects produced by
radiation.
Radiation Biology, ed. by A. Hollaender,
Vol. l, Chap. 7, pp. 351-473
224/2. 1953 Miracle of heredity.
Condensed from a chapter of the book,
Out of the
Night
.
Science Digest, Mar. 1953, pp. 6-7
224/3. 1953 Education in relation to communism.
Excerpts from article in
The Indiana Daily
Student
, March 17, 1953.
Mimeograph copy
225. 1954 The manner of production of mutations by
radiation.
Radiation Biology, ed. by A. Hollaender,
Vol. l, Chap. 8, pp. 475-626
226. 1954 Damage to posterity caused by the irradiation of the
gonads.
American Journal of Obstetrics and
Gynecology
, 67:467-483
227. 1954 The manner of dependence of the "permissible dose" of
radiation on the amount of genetic damage.
Acta Radiologica, 41:5-19
228. 1954 Science under Soviet totalitarianism.
Totalitarianism, ed. by C. Friedrich,
Chap. 12, PP. 233-244.
Mimeograph copy
229. 1954 The lack of proportionality between mutation rate and
ultraviolet dose in Drosophila, by Muller, L.S. Altenburg, H.U. Meyer, M.
Edmondson and Edgar Altenburg.
Heredity, 8:153-185
MISSING
230. 1954 Concerning the healing of chromosome ends produced by
breakage in Drosophila melanogaster, by Muller and I.H.
Herskowitz.
The American Naturalist, 88:177-208
231. 1954 A nonlinear relation between x-ray dose and recovered
lethal mutations in Drosophila, by Muller, I.H. Herskokwitz, S. Abrahamson
and I.I. Oster.
Genetics, 39:741-749
232. 1954 The relation of neutron dose to chromosome changes and
point mutations in Drosophila. I. Translocations.
The American Naturalist, 88:437-459
233. 1954 A semi-automatic breeding system ("Maxy") for finding
sex-linked mutations at specific "visible" loci
D.I.S. 28:140-141
234. 1954 A stably breeding attached-X stock ("snoc") designed for
discriminating between deletional and other "detachments."
D.I.S. 28:141-143
235. 1954 A stock for automatic accumulation of lethals arising in
the female
D.I.S. 28:143-144
236. 1954 Multipurpose stocks for studies of mutagenesis
D.I.S. 28:144-146
237. 1954 Origination of a viable achaete deficiency by nearly
homologous nonreciprocal exchange
D.I.S. 28:146-147
238. 1954 Evidence against a straight end-to-end alignment of
chromosomes in Drosophila spermatozoa, by Muller and I.H. Herskowitz.
Genetics, 39:836-850
239. 1954 Genetic proof for half-translocations derived from
irradiated oocytes of Drosophila melanogaster, by Muller, S. Abrahamson and
I.H. Herskowitz.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
23:28.
Abstract
240. 1954 Another case of dissimilar characters in Drosophila
apparently representing changes of the same locus, by Muller and F.
Verderosa.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
23:72.
Abstract
241. 1954 Characteristics of the far stronger but "spottier"
mutagenicity of fast neutrons as compared with x-rays in Drosophila
spermatozoa.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
23:58.
Abstract
242. 1955 Life.
Science, 121:1-9
The Humanist, 15:249-261.
Shorter version in "Man's Right to Knowledge" 2nd Series: pp. 19-33.
243. 1955 A comparative study of mutations arising under different
conditions in Drosophila.
9th Annual Report of the American Cancer Society, 1953-1954, National
Research Council, Washington, D.C., pp. 113-114
244. 1955 The Soviet change of attitude in genetics.
Christian Science Monitor, Feb. 4,
1955.
245. 1955 Further information concerning the multi-locus nature of
the dumpy series in Drosophila, by Muller, Helen U. Meyer and E.A.
Carlson.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
24
Genetics, 40:585.
Abstract
246. 1955 The genetic damage produced by radiation.
Science, 121:837-840
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists,
11:210-212
247. 1955 How radiation changes the genetic constitution.
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists,
11:329-339
248. 1955 Comments on the genetic effects of radiation on human
populations.
Journal of Heredity, 46:199-200
249. 1955 Effects of radiation and other present-day influences
upon the human genetic constitution.
Published as: Radiation and human mutation.
Read at 5th Annual meeting of Nobel Prize winners, Lindau, Germany, July
14, 1955.
Scientific American, 193:58-68
Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau, Apr.
1956, Seite 127 bis 135.
250. 1955 Correction of localization of crs and breaks of
Y:bw+.
D.I.S. 29:146
251. 1955 Improvement of stock "Maxy," for studying mutations at
specific loci in the X of the male
D.I.S. 29:146-147
252. 1955 Male-sterility of transformed females despite provision
of X:Y balance characteristic of males
D.I.S. 29:147
253. 1955 Testing for third-chromosome mutations by means of
crisscrossed lethals
D.I.S. 29147-149
254. 1955 Effect of narcosis on x-ray-induced mutations in sperm
treated in inseminated females, by Muller, I.H. Herskowitz and I.I.
Oster.
D.I.S. 29:149
254/2. 1955 Disaster by Instalments [sic].
The Nation, Apr. 9, 180:304
254/3. 1955 What will radioactivity do to our children?
Interview with Dr. H.J. Muller.
U.S. News & World Report, May 13, pp.
72-78
255. 1956 On the relation between chromosome changes and gene
mutations.
Brookhaven Symposia in Biology, 8:126-147
256. 1956 The effects of radiation on the human
constitution.
Proceedings of the Military-Industrial Conference
under title: "Race poisoning by radiation,"
Saturday Review, June 9, 1956, pp. 9-11, 37-39
revised edition entitled "After effects of nuclear radiation,"
Journal of the American Society of Safety
Engineers
, 1:42-48
257. 1956 In the cause of humanity.
Acceptance speech as president of the American Humanist Association.
The Humanist, 16:107-110
258. 1956 Identification of half-translocations produced by x-rays
in detaching attached-X chromosomes of Drosophila melanogaster females, by
Muller, Seymour Abrahamson and I.H. Herskowitz.
Genetics, 41:410-419
259. 1956 The higher efficiency of ordinary x-rays than of 18 MeV
electrons in inducing chromosome changes when applied to Drosophila
spermatozoa.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
25
Genetics, 41:646-647.
Abstract
260. 1956 The higher susceptibility of ring-shaped Y-chromosomes
of Drosophila to loss both spontaneously and on irradiation of spermatozoa,
by Muller, and H.U. Meyer.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
25
Genetics, 41:653-654.
Abstract
261. 1956 Man's place in living nature.
Address delivered at the dedication of Jordan Hall, Indiana University,
Bloomington (Revised as: Man and gene in the world picture).
I.U. Publications, 15pp.
The Humanist, 17:3-13, 93-102 (1957);
Scientific Monthly, 84:245-257 (1957)
262. 1956 Interview, under editor's title, "Ways to reduce
radiation hazards."
Scope Weekly (CIBA), 1, No. 29, pp. 1
& 13.
Tear sheet and abstract
263. 1956 Genetic principles in human populations.
American Journal of Psychiatry,
113:481-491
Scientific Monthly, 83:277-286
264. 1956 Another entire inversion formed by opening of a ring X.
D.I.S. 30:140-141
265. 1956 Reciprocal and half-translocations with a rod X
chromosome produced by x-raying sperm and oocytes, by Muller and I.H.
Herskowitz.
D.I.S. 30:141-142
Box 12
266. 1956 An estimate of the mutational damage in man from data on
consanguineous marriages, by Muller, Newton E. Morton and James F.
Crow.
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences
, 42:855-863
267. 1956 Further studies bearing on the load of mutations in
man.
Acta Genetica et Statistica Medica,
6:157-168
267/2. 1956 Long-range effect of exposure to radiation.
Journal of the American Medical
Association
, 162:475.
Mimeograph copy
268. 1957 Mutational damage in relation to radiation dose and
biological conditions.
Published as: Damage from point mutations in relation to radiation dose
and biological conditions.
Effect of Radiation on Human Heredity,
World Health Organization, Geneva, pp. 25-47
269. 1957 Principles of back mutation as observed in Drosophila
and other organisms, by Muller and I.I. Oster.
Advances in Radiobiology, pp. 407-415
270. 1957 Present-Day Problems in Radiology, IV. Potential hazards
of radiation.
Excerpta Medica, 14:223-224
271. 1957 Radio active fallout and human progress.
Based on address before I.H.E.U., London, July 30, 1957.
Proceedings of the International Humanist and
Ethical Union, 2nd Congress, London
, 1957, p. 26-35 (also as
separate pamphlet: Utrecht, I.H.E.U. Inc., 1958)
Canadian World Government News, No. 2:4-16
(1958, under title: "Radiation Damage and the avoidance of war").
272. 1957 Pushing back the frontiers of biology.
Broadcast in diverse languages, Dec. 23, 1956, over the
Voice of America as component of their “Frontiers of Knowledge”
series.
Published under editor’s title, “The immediate biological future” in the
New Frontiers of Knowledge (Public
Affairs Press, Washington, D.C.), p. 56-59, and in German translation
under title “Grenzerweiterung der Biologie” in
Deutsche Universitätszeitung, 12:14-15 and in
Naturwissenschaftliche Rundschau
11:208-210.
273. 1957 Possible advances of the next hundred years: A
biologist's view.
Statement prepared for symposium "The next hundred years," held by the
Seagram Company, New York City.
(Basis of address at Centennary of the Seagram Co., Nov.
22, 1957 in New York.)
Published in abridged form, as delivered, in
The
Next Hundred Years
.
A Scientific Symposium (Jos. E. Seagram
& Sons, Inc., N.Y.), p. 33-35, and (with errors) in
N.Y. Times for Dec. 8, Section 6, p. 13.
274. 1957 Sex-chromosome loss following X-radiation of D.
melanogaster sperm, by Muller, I.H. Herskowitz and E.A. Carlson.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
26
and
Genetics 42:376
Abstract
275. 1957 Science fiction as an escape.
The Humanist, 17:333-346.
276. 1957 Mutation studies of chromosome-3 simplified by
"sifter-3" method.
D.I.S. 31:139-140.
277. 1957 Transposition of entire 4-euchromatin into a fully
functional Y, by Muller and Margaret Edmondson.
D.I.S. 31:140.
278. 1957 Suppressor action effective with a subgene deficiency of
a normally duplicated locus, by Muller and I.I. Oster.
D.I.S. 31:141-143.
279. 1957 Further improvements in the "Maxy" stock for detection
of specific-locus mutations, by Muller and A. Schalet.
D.I.S. 31:144.
280. 1958 Muller, H.J. The radiation danger.
Colorado Quarterly 6:229-254
reprinted in
Best Articles and Stories
2:55-64.
281. 1958 Man's future birthright.
An address at the University of New Hampshire, Nov. 21, 1957.
University of New Hampshire, 24 pp.
Sexology, 26:413-415
Spanish edition of
Sexology magazine,
8:413-415
281/2. 1958 Hook.
Letter to the editor of
The New Leader,
Feb. 17, 1958, p.29.
Tear sheet
282. 1958 Human values in relation to evolution.
Science 127:625-629, reprint
Saturday Review, May 3, 1958, pp. 41-44,
under title: "The survival of the finest," tear sheet and magazine
283. 1958 Human values (letters to the editor), by Muller and
Walter K. Bonsack.
Science 127:1513-1514.
284. 1958 The world view of moderns.
University of Illinois 50th Anniversary Lecture Series separate, 29
pp.
abridged version entitled: "Science for Humanity,"
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 15:146-150, 176.
285. 1958 Evolution by mutation.
Bulletin of the American Mathematical
Society
, 64:137-160.
286. 1958 General survey of mutational effects of
radiation.
Ch. 6 of
Radiation Biology & Medicine,
ed. by W.D. Claus (Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley Publ. Co., Inc.), pp.
145-177.
286/2. 1958 In recognition of Oscar Riddle.
The Humanist, 2:108-109
286/3. 1958 Letter to the editor.
Frontier, May 1958, p.25
287. 1959 Approximation to a gravity-free situation for the human
organism achievable at moderate expense.
Read at Symposium on Possible uses of earth satellites for life-sciences
experiments, Washington, D., May 17, 1958.
Science 128:772, reprint
abridged version, mimeograph copy
288. 1958 Advances in radiation mutagenesis through studies on
Drosophila.
2nd U.N. International Conference on Peaceful Uses
of Atomic Energy
, V. 22. (
Biological
Effects of Radiation
): 313-321 (Geneva, U.N.), and
Progress in Nuclear Energy 6:146-160 (N.Y.,
Pergamon Press, 1959).
289. 1958 The mutation theory re-examined.
Proceedings of the 10th International Congress
Genetics
, 1:306-17.
290. 1958 Genetic effects of high doses of x-rays in oogonia, by
Muller and Helen U. Meyer.
D.I.S. 32:137-39.
291. 1958 Preliminary evidence of detrimental mutations
originating at a comparatively high rate in untreated females, by Muller and
Helen U. Meyer.
D.I.S. 32:138-39.
292. 1958 An androgenetic homozygous male.
D.I.S. 32:140.
293. 1958 Pseudo-crossing over near centromeres of the 3rd
chromosomes induced in late oocytes by x-rays.
D.I.S. 32:140-141.
294. 1958 Further study of the mutants fx and f+ih, by Muller,
I.I. Oster, and Elizabeth Ehrlich.
D.I.S. 32:144-145.
295. 1958 How much is evolution accelerated by sexual
reproduction?
Anatomical Record, 132:480-81.
296. 1959 The mutability of 18 Mev electrons applied to Drosophila
spermatozoa, by Muller, I.H. Herskowitz and J.S. Laughlin.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
28
Genetics 44:321-27
297. 1959 Darwin's achievement.
International Humanist & Ethical Union
Information Bulletin
, Jan., no.21, pp. 1-3.
298. 1959 In search of peace.
The Humanist, No. 2:69-70.
299. 1959 One hundred years without Darwinism are
enough.
School Science & Mathematics, April,
pp. 304-16
The Humanist 3: 139-49.
300. 1959 Tolerance of gonial cells of Drosophila melanogaster for
heavy x-ray doses divided into installments, by Muller, Helen U. Meyer, and
Elizabeth F. Ehrlich.
Records of Genetics Society of America,
28
Genetics 44:527-28.
Abstract
301. 1959 The guidance of human evolution.
Paper for the Darwin Centennial Celebration of the University of Chicago,
Nov. 24-28, 1959.
Biology and Human Affairs, Vol. 26, no. 3,
June 1961
in
Biology and Medicine 3:1-43
summary in
The Centennial Papers: University of
Chicago Darwin Centennial Celebration
, p. 50-51
excerpts in
Eugenics Quarterly 6:245-248;
abridged version titled: "Should we weaken or strengthen our genetic
heritage?" Daedalus, Summer 1961, pp. 432-450;
301/2. 1959 Relations between cultural and biological
evolution.
Two statements for "Social and cultural evolution" held by Panel V, Nov.
28, 1959, in the series "Issues in evolution" at the University
of Chicago Darwin Centennial Celebration
302. 1959 Man's conquest of man.
Delivered at symposium, "The Future of Man," Seagram Anniversary, New
York, Sept. 29, 1959.
The Future of Man, p. 33-36 (N.Y., Jos. E.
Seagrams & Sons, Inc.).
Mimeograph copy
303. 1959 The prospects of genetic change.
American Scientist 47:551-61
under title: The prospects of genetic progress, World Academy of Art and
Science, 1:59-75
304. 1959 Further evidence of the relatively high rate of
origination of "invisible" detrimental mutations, by Muller and Helen U.
Meyer.
Science 130: 1422.
Abstract
305. 1959 Evidence of the lower mutagenicity of chronic than
intense radiation in Drosophila gonia, by Muller, I.I. Oster and Stanley
Zimmering.
Science 130:1423.
Abstracts
306. 1959 Genetic basis of somatic damage produced by radiation,
by Muller and W. Ostertag.
Science 130:1422-23.
Abstract
307. 1959 A simplified breeding system for detecting sex-linked
lethals in successive generations.
D.I.S. 33:149.
Abstract
308. 1959 An attached-X chromosome set-up of exceptionally high
stability.
D.I.S. 33:149-50.
Abstract
309. 1959 Antimorphic behavior of cataract.
D.I.S. 33:150.
Abstract
310. 1960 The chromosomal basis of the mortality induced by x-rays
in Drosophila.
Immediate and Low Level Effects of Ionizing Radiations Conference,
Venice, June 1959.
International Journal of Radiation
Biology
, Spec. Sup., pp. 321-325.
311. 1960 Evolution and genetics.
Accademia Nazionale Dei Lincei, Quad No.
47:15-37.
312. 1960 The meaning of freedom.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
16:311-316.
313. 1960 Genetics in relation to medical research,
statement.
Statement at Hearings before the Subcommittee on Reorganization and
International Organization of the Committee on Government Operations of
the U.S. Senate, 86th Congress, 1st session, in report on “The U.S.
Government and the Future of International Medical Research
International Health Study, Pt. 1” pp. 126-134. U.S. Gov’t Printing
Office, Washington.
Mimeograph copy
314. 1960 The integrational role of the evolutionary approach
throughout education.
Educational Theory 10:274-279.
315. 1960 The high effectiveness of fast neutrons in inducing
minute deletions, by Muller, Stanley Zimmering and I.I. Oster.
Science 131:1322.
Abstract
316. 1960 A sex-linked lethal without evident effect in Drosophila
males but partially dominant in females, by Muller and Stanley
Zimmering.
Genetics 45:1001-1002.
Abstract
317. 1960 Do air pollutants act as mutagens?
Environments of Man, by Jack B. Bresler
(Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley), 1968, pp. 256-257
3rd Conference on Research in Emphysema, Aspen, Colorado, June 10-12, pp.
55-56, Abstract
American Review of Respiratory Diseases
(1961), 83:571-572, Abstract
318. 1960 Letter to the editor,
The
Humanist
, "Modernized magic: a protest"
The Humanist, 20: 227-229.
319. 1960 The permissible dose in the light of recent
developments.
Paper given before International Committee on radiological protection,
Munich (ICRP/59/M-44.
Transactions of the International Commission on
Radiological Protection
(meeting with Experts on Somatic and
Genetic Radiation Effects, Munich, 1959), pp. 38-43.
320. 1960 The issues concerning man's genetic future.
Published as: Genetic considerations.
The Great Issues of Conscience in modern
Medicine
, pp. 16-18 (Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New
Hampshire).
Mimeograph copy
321. 1961 Ideals to live by, a review of Science Ponders Religion,
edited by Harlow Shapley (Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc., 1960)
The Humanist 21:105-107.
322. 1961 Long live mediocrity!
A review of
The Future of Man, by P.B.
Medawar.
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 4:
377-380.
323. 1961 Mutation by alteration of the already existing gene, by
Muller, Elof Carlson and Abraham Schalet.
Genetics 46:13-226.
324. 1961 Are induced mutations in Drosophila over dominant? I.
Experimental design, by Muller and Raphael Falk.
Genetics 46:727-757.
325. 1961 Similarity of x-ray-induced mutation rate in gonia of
Drosophila females and males, by Muller and Helen U. Meyer.
Records of the Genetics Society of America
30:92-93
Genetics 46:882-883.
Abstract
326. 1961 The human future.
The Humanist Frame, ed. by Julian Huxley,
pp. 401-414.
327. 1961 Life forms to be expected elsewhere than on
earth.
The American Biology Teacher
23:331-346
Spaceflight, 5:74-85
328. 1961 Human evolution by voluntary choice of germ
plasm.
Science 134:643-649.
Box 13
329. 1961 Germinal choice, a new dimension in genetic
therapy.
Excerpta Medica (Amsterdam), International
Congress Series, No. 32, 2nd International Conference Of Human Genetics,
Rome, Italy, July 1961, p. E 135 (Abstract No. 294)
Médecine et Hygiène, No. 674, p. 139-140
330. 1961 Survival.
AIBS Bulletin 40:15-24
331. 1961 Frozen fatherhood.
Letter to the Editor,
Time 78:12.
332. 1961 Letter to the Editor,
Science
134:1914-l9l7.
333. 1961 Studies on the action of the dominant female-lethal F1
and of a less extreme allele, Fls, by Muller and Stanley
Zimmering.
D.I.S. No. 35: 103-104.
334. 1962 Genetic nucleic acid.
The Graduate Journal, Vol. %, no. 1,
Spring 1962
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine
5:1-23.
335. 1962
Studies in genetics.
Incl. Previously unpublished treatment, "Principles of heredity," 1912,
pp. 6-18. 618 pp. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press.
336. 1962 A biographical appreciation of Sir Julian
Huxley.
The Humanist No. 2 & 3:51-55.
337. 1962 Mechanisms of life-span shortening.
Cellular Basis and Aetiology of late Somatic
Effects of Ionizing Radiation
(London and New York: Academic
Press), pp. 235-243; discussion pp. 244-245, 346-349.
337/2. 1962 Let's face the truth about nuclear testing!"
This Week, June 10, pp.4-6
337/3. 1962 Improving man's genes.
Sexology, 28:724-728; 28:802-804.
Tear sheet
337/4. 1962 Letter to the editor of Sexology, re: artificial
insemination.
Sexology , 29:3, p.177.
338. 1963 Mortality induced by X-irradiation of early Drosophila
embryos of structurally different genotypes, by Muller and Helen U.
Meyer.
Records of the Genetics Society of
America
, 31:101-102
Genetics , 47:970-971.
Abstract
339. 1963 Are chronic and acute gamma irradiation equally
mutagenic in Drosophila? by Muller, I.I. Oster and Stanley
Zimmering.
Repair from Genetic Radiation Damage, ed.
F. Sobels (Oxford, London, New York and Paris: Pergamon Press), pp.
275-304; discussion, pp. 305-311.
340. 1963 Some mutational techniques in Drosophila, by Muller and
I.I. Oster.
Methodology in Basic Genetics, ed. Walter
J. Burdette (San Francisco: Holden-Day, Inc.), pp. 249-274; discussion,
pp. 274-278.
341. 1963 Genetic progress by voluntarily conducted germinal
choice.
Man and His Future, ed. Gordon
Wolstenholme (London: J. and A. Churchill), pp. 247-262; discussion, pp.
274-298.
342. 1963 The role of biology in general education.
AIBS Bulletin , 13: 22-30
New Thinking in School Biology , (OECD
Publ. 15, 573, Paris), pp. 25-40.
343. 1963 Elements of a modern biology programme in secondary
schools.
In
New Thinking in School Biology (OECD
Publications No. 15, 573, Paris), pp. 262-266.
343/2. 1963 Impact of science on modern civilization.
Based on address, Alumni Institute, June 4, 1960.
A&S The Review, Vol. 5, no. 3, pp.
1-8.
344. 1963 The need for recombination to prevent genetic
deterioration.
Genetics , 48: 903.
Abstract
MISSING
345. 1963 Significance of artificial insemination in relation to
practical genetics in man.
Advances in Sex Research, ed. Hugo G.
Beigel (New York, Evanston and London: Harper and Row), pp. 119-122.
345/2. 1963 Many different ways to climb a mountain.
Acceptance speech for Humanist of the Year award, Mar. 30, 1963.
The Humanist, 23:62-63
345/3. 1963 A statement to special assembly on man's right to
freedom from Hunger.
The Humanist, 23:53
346. 1964 The gene.
American People’s Encyclopedia ,
8:426-427.
Mimeograph copy
347. 1964 Perspectives for the life sciences.
Address at M.I.T. Centennial, April, 1961.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists ,
20:3-7.
348. 1964 Radiation and heredity.
American Journal of Public Health ,
54:42-50.
349. 1963 Better genes for tomorrow.
Address to American Humanist Association's annual meeting, 1963.
The Population Crisis and the Use of World
Resources
, ed. Stuart Mudd (The Hague: Dr. W. Junk,
Publisher), pp. 314-338
The Population Crisis (Bloomington, Ind.:
Indiana University Press, 1965), pp. 223-247
abridged version with title: Human genetic betterment, address before
American Humanist Association annual meeting, March 29, 1963,
Chicago, mimeograph copy.
350. 1964 The relation of recombination to mutational
advance.
Mutation Research , 1:2-9.
351. 1964 Genetic effects of radiation.
Journal of Nuclear Medicine , 5:351.
Abstract
352. 1964 On the basic role of nucleic acid in life.
Letter in reply to David H. Elsyn's criticism of gene primacy
concept.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists , 20,
No. 8:36-37.
Mimeograph copy
353. 1964 Genetic effects of chemicals.
Interbureau By-Lines (FDA) 1:133-145.
354. 1964 The role of scientific education in value
formation.
Values in American Education, ed. by T.
Brameld and S. Elam (Bloomington, Ind.: Phi Delta Kappa, Inc.), pp.
75-98; discussion pp. 98-113.
Mimeograph copy
355. 1964 Dosage compensation as an exemplification of genetic
accuracy, by Muller and W.D. Kaplan.
Science , 146:427-428.
Abstract
MISSING
355/2. 1964 Introduction [to]
Science and the
Supernatural
, by A.J. Carlson.
The American Humanist Association
pamphlet.
355/3. 1964 Genetic damage expressed in descendants of irradiated
individuals.
Medical Science, Oct. 1964
356. 1965 A humanist's view of the Encyclical on Peace (author’s
title not used by ed.).
Therefore Choose Life (Santa Barbara,
Calif.: Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions), pp. 27-38
Polish translation,
Tematy (Waldon Press,
Inc.) by M.E. Royek, pp. 12-20
abridged version by Saturday Review editor, under title "Uses of
tolerance,"
Saturday Review ,
48:23-25.
357. 1965 Means and aims in human genetic betterment.
Address before Symposium on Prospects for the Experimental Control of
Human Heredity and Evolution, Ohio Wesleyan University, Ohio, Apr.
6, 1963.
The Control of Human Heredity and
Evolution
, ed. by T.M. Sonneborn (New York and London:
Macmillan), pp. 100-127.
358. 1965 Synthesis.
Proceedings of the XI International Congress of Genetics, Leiden,
1963.
Genetics Today , 2:265-274.
359. 1965 Letter, under editor’s title: Dr. Muller sets the record
straight.
Sexology , 32:248-249.
MISSING
360. 1965 Germinal Choice (editor’s title)
Reply to Mirsky's and Dobzhansky's polemics against Huxley (letter
originally sent to
Scientific
American
).
Eugenics Review , 57:100-104.
361. 1965 Scientists and eugenics.
Letter to editor under editor’s title.
Science , 149:1171-1172
362. 1965 Comments within editorial "The tree of knowledge of good
and evil."
World Medicine 1, No. 6:64.
MISSING
363. 1966 Mankind in biological perspective.
Lecture delivered in a series on "The Prospects for Man," Swarthmore
College Centennial, Apr. 1964.
Centennial Review (Michigan State
University) 10, No. 2:163-213.
364. 1966 Commentary on theological resources from the biological
sciences.
Zygon, Journal of Religion and Science 1,
No. 1:49-51
abridged version titled: Integrated whole,
Religious Humanism, 2:117
365. 1966 Autobiographical note.
Encyclopedia of Science and Technology.
New York: McGraw Hill Book Co.
MISSING
366. 1966 Dosage compensation of Drosophila and mammals as showing
the accuracy of the normal type, by Muller and W.D. Kaplan.
Genetic Research , 8:41-59
367. 1966 Introduction to new edition of Edmund B. Wilson's
The Cell in Development and Inheritance, 1st
(1986) edition,
as reprinted by Johnson Reprint Corporation, N.Y. pp. ix-xxxciii.
368. 1966 Letter in reply to Beardmore's criticism.
Eugenics Review , 38:9-10.
368/2. 1966 Choosing genes.
Letter in reply to Lucy Eisenberg's "Genetics and the Survival of the
Unfit,"
Harper's Magazine, June 1966.
Tear sheet
369. 1967 The gene material as the initiator and the organizing
basis of life.
Proceedings of the 34th Annual Meeting of the Genetics Society of America
(1965)
American Naturalist, 100:493-517.
370. 1967 Statement by biologists evoked by evolution debate in
Arkansas.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Vol.
23, No. 2, pp. 39-40.
Tear sheet
371. 1967 Translocational Pale Drosophilae and Snaker mice, a
semicentennial parallel.
Mutation Research, 4 (1967) 201-205.
372. 1967 What genetic course will man steer?
Proceeding of the Third International Congress of
Human Genetics
(The Johns Hopkins Press), pp. 521-543
abridged version by Elof Carlson,
Bulletin of the
Atomic Scientists
, March 1968, pp. 6-12.
Subseries
Writings by Others
Holographs and typescripts arranged alphabetically by author.
Box 14
Abelson, Philip H. Who shall live? Text of remarks...at panel
discussion on "Science, Society and the Public's Health--Ethical Issues,"
Oct. 5,
1966
Abrahamson, Seymour. The influence of oxygen on the x-ray induction
of structural changes in Drosophila oocytes
Agol, I.I. A mosaic in Drosophila mel.
[Russian]
Altenburg, Edgar, Luolin S. Altenburg and Robert N. Baker. Evidence
indicating that the mutation rate induced in Drosophila by low doses of
ultraviolet light is an exponential function of the dose
Altenburg, Edgar. The limit of radiation frequency effective in
producing mutations.
________________ and Luolin Altenburg. The lowering of the
mutagenic effectiveness of ultraviolet by phtoreactivating light in
Drosophila
________________, Janet Bergendahl and Luolin S. Altenburg. The
non-effect of intensity on the mutagenesis of ultraviolet light within a
nineteen-fold range in Drosophila
________________. Chapter III: The origin of life and the earlier
stages in evolution.
________________. The "Viroid" theory in relation to plasmagenes,
viruses, and cancer
________________. Untitled.
Arcuri. Adaptation*purpose in nature
Auerbach, Charlotte. Changes in the concept of mutation and the aims
of mutation research.
___________________. The role of mutagen specificity in mutation
breeding
Beadle, George. Liquidating irresponsible opinion
Beatty, A.V. and J.W. Beatty. Radiation recovery enhanced through
inhibitors of protein synthesis and amino acids
Belgovsky, M.L. Dependence of translocation frequency upon the x-ray
dosage
______________. Lack of proportionality between x-ray dosage and
translocation frequency in Drosophila melanogaster
Blacker, C.P. Voluntary sterilisation: Need for a
reassessment
Boche, Robert D. Observations on populations of animals exposed to
chronic roentgen radiation
Börnstein, Walter. The influence of non-optical stimuli upon the
colour-change of amphibians
Boyle, Hal. Unwise use of x-rays weakening: Dr. Herman Muller is
called "Mister Mutations" on IU Campus
Brewer, Herbert. The ethics of artificial insemination
_______________. Faith and reason
_______________. Parenthood in Evolution and Society
_______________. The population problem in relation to the
biological and moral regeneration of man
_______________. Sterilization, semen banks and constructive
fertility control
_______________. Reversibility following sterilization by
vasectomy
Bridges, Curt B. The mutants of Drosophila malanogaster
_______________. Bridges' instructions on salivary gland
technique
(excerpt)
Briggs, Michael H., Gregg Mamikunian and John P. Revill. A
bibliography of exobiology
Brues, Austin M. and George A. Sacher. Analysis of radiation
damage
Carlson, Elof and J.L. Southin. The effect of chemically induced
mosaicism on the F2:F3 sex-linked lethal ratio during spermatogenesis in D.
melanogaster
_____________. A further analysis of allelism in the dumpy series
of D. melanogaster.
_____________. The gene: a critical history
_____________. A method for determining the maximum detectable
number of mutational events in D. melanogaster
_____________. Proposal for research grant; progress reports on
research and thesis; outline of genetics course
Cook, Robert C. Detection of carriers of recessive genes
______________. Eugenic hypothesis B
______________. Lethal genes: a factor in fertility
______________. Social and biological factors in human
fertility
Cooper, Kenneth W. Apparent non-random segregation in autosomal
structural heterozygotes of Drosophila melanogaster.
Crow, James F. Citation for H.J. Muller on the occasion of his being
named "Humanist of the Year"
_____________. A comparison of fetal and infant death rates in
the progeny of radiologists and pathologists
_____________ and Rayla Greenberg. A comparison of the effect of
lethal and detrimental chromosomes from Drosophila
populations.
_____________ and Motoo Kimura. Evolution in sexual and asexual
populations. Preliminary draft and final
_____________. The genetic load as a means of analysis of hidden
variability in Drosophila populations.
_____________ and N.E. Morton. The genetic load due to
mother-child incompatibility
_____________ and Y. Hiraizumi. Heterozygous effects on
viability, fertility, rate of development, and longevity of Drosophila
chromosomes that are lethal when homozygous.
_____________ and Arthur P. Mange. Measurement of inbreeding from
the frequency of marriages between persons of the same
surname
_____________. More on the heterozygous effects of lethals in
natural populations.
Department of Mutations and the Problem of Gene. Research
paper,Sept. 1933-Dec. 1936
[Russian]
Dobzhansky, Theodosius. The end of genetics in the Soviet
Union.
Dulin, William E. Study of the production of sex-linked lethals and
breakage of the y-chromosome by x-rays in
Drosophila
melanogaster
Dunn, L.C.? Harvard farewell dinner1/10/50
[speech]
Ellis, Frank. The genetic effects of non-sterilising doses of
penetrating radiation
Emerson, Alfred E. The evolution of behavior among social
insects
Ephrussi, Boris. The mechanism of position effect--some preliminary
experiments.
_______________ and Eileen Sutton Gersh. The mechanism of
position effect--experiments on the phenotypic expression of position
effects in relation to changes in pairing of neighboring chromosome
regions.
Failla, G. Report of the Subcommittee on Permissible Dose from
External Sources.
Falk, Raphael. Are induced mutations in
Drosophila overdominant?
_____________. Delay in joining of x-ray-induced breaks by anoxia
in
Drosophila melanogaster
(abstract)
_____________. Nitrogen treatment effects on
rearrangement-induction patterns in
Drosophila
melanogaster
_____________ and E. Goldschmidt. On the dominance of the
"recessive" lethals
_____________. Viability mutations induced by x-ray irradiation
in
Drosophila melanogaster
_____________, Ana Rahat and Nehama Ben-Zeev. Viability of
heterozygotes for induced mutations in
Drosophila
melanogaster
Frye, Sara H. and Elof A. Carlson. Pilot experiments involving x-ray
induced mutants in the dumpy and yellow regions of scute-191 chromosomes in
Drosophila melanogaster
Glushchenko, I. Reactionary genetics in the service of
imperialism
(Pravda, April 5, 1949)
Golin, Milton. The new physician
Haldane, J.B.S. and Pearl Moshinsky. Inbreeding in Mendelian
populations with special reference to human cousin marriage.
Haman, John O. X-ray irradiation to promote ovulation
Herskowitz, Irwin H. Genetic recombination induced by x-rays in
female germ cells of
Drosophila
___________________. Induced changes in female germ cells of
Drosophila
___________________. The mutability of formaldehyde in different
early developmental stages of
D.
melanogaster
males
___________________. Nucleotide-sharing by adjacent
cistrons
___________________. The production of mutations in
D. melanogaster with chemical substances
administered in sperm baths and vaginal douches
___________________. A sperm bath method for chemical mutagenesis
in
Drosophila melanogaster
Hogben, Lancelot. Mathematical genetics
________________. Review of The Nature-Nurture Controversy by
Nicholas Pastore, King's Cross Press, 1949 pp. 214
Huxley, Julian. European order and world order: What we are fighting
for
______________. Evolution: The modern synthesis
(corrected proofs)
______________. Evolutionary humanism
______________. Evolutionary vision
______________. Knowledge, morality and destiny
Jehle, Herbert. Are kinematic effects involved in specific
interactions?
______________. Quantum mechanical resonance between identical
macromolecules
______________. Specificity of interaction between identical
molecules
Jones, Hardin B. Some physiological factors related to the effects
of radiation in mammals
Joravsky, David. The first stage of Michurinism
Kaplan, Ira I. The question of genetic injury following x-ray
irradiation of the ovaries in the treatment of sterility
Keighley, Geoffrey and E.B. Lewis.
Drosophila
counter.
Kerkis, J.J. Conjugation of the chromosomes of hybrids of
Drosophila melanogaster and
Drosophila simulans.
Box 15
Kline, Calvin W. The potential significance of sperm
banks
_______________. Prospectus for the formation of a Society for
the Guidance of Human Evolution
(2 folders)
Kossikov, R.V. The lack of effect of etherization on the x-ray
mutation mate in
Drosophila simulans
Laptev, I. Anti-patriotic acts under the guise of "scientific"
criticism.
Lee, William R. The dosage response curve for radiation induced
dominant lethal mutations in the honey bee.
Lippincott, Ellis R., Richard V. Eck, Margaret O. Dayhoff and Carl
Sagan. Thermodynamic equilibria in planetary atmospheres
McConnell, R.A. The absolute weapon
(fiction)
McKinnon, John G. What chance for a well born race? Sermon
delivered...at the All Souls Unitarian Church, Indianapolis,Dec. 6, 1959
Mather, K. Chinese text-book on population genetics. Review of
Ching Chun Li's An introduction to population genetics
Meier, Richard L. Science and the human fertility problem: prologue
to planning for economic development.
Meyer, Helen U. Modification of the ultraviolet-induced rate of
autosomal lethals by nitrogen pretreatment or post-treatment in
Drosophila
Miller, Samuel S. Red secret
Murray, Dwight H. Are x-rays dangerous to YOU?
Nachtsheim, Hans. For a new academy.
Novitski, Edward. An alternative to the distributive pairing
hypothesis in Drosophila
________________. The compound X chromosomes in
Drosophila
Owen, William. The universe and the carbon cycle
Oster, Irwin I. The effect of mitotic poisons on the sensitivity of
Drosophila germ cells to ionizing radiation
______________. Evidence of the genetic basis for x-ray induced
life-shortening
(abstract)
______________. Experiments on the effect of photodynamic
substances on the incidence of x-ray induced lethal mutations in
Drosophila females and other data.
______________. Factors affecting the sensitivity of
Drosophila melanogaster to ionizing
radiation
______________. Factors bearing on the non-malignancy of tumours
in
Drosophila
______________. The time of death of sex-linked lethals of
different origins in
Drosophila melanogaster
______________. Variation in the sensitivity of chromosomes to
x-rays.
Ostertag, Wolfram and Hans-Georg Fromme. Morhologische und
chromosomale Veränderungen an Leukozyten- und MeLa-Zellkulturen des Menschen
und Chromosomenverlust bei
Drosophila
melangaster
nach Koffeinapplikation
Piddington, Marion. The frustration of the maternal instinct and the
new psychology.
Pollack, James B. and Carl Sagan. The microwave phase effect of
Venus
_____________. Polarization of thermal emission from
Venus
Ponnamperuma, Cyril, Ruth Mariner and Carl Sagan. Formation of
adenosine by ultraviolet irradiation of a solution of adenine and
ribose
Pontecorvo, G. Chemicals with specific action on nucleic acid
components in the study of gene reproduction and gene action.
_____________. The "dosage" of paternal chromosomes in hybrids
between
Drosophila melanogaster (triploids)
x
simulans
_____________. Genetical analysis of cell
organisation.
_____________. The induction of chromosome losses in Drosophila
sperm and their linear dependence on dosage of irradiation
_____________. The lethality of dicentric translocated
chromosomes in
Drosophila
_____________. [Paper on dosage frequency relationship for
losses]
(incomplete)
Prokofieva-Belgovskaya, A.A. Heterocyclicity of the system
"maternal-daughter" chromosomes.
Puck, Theodore T. [Memorial to Raymond Lanier]
Puttanna, C.R. The roles of paracentric inversions in populations
with reference to
Rattus norvegicus
Rajee, S. A literary letter from India.
Ray Chaudhuri, S.P. and G.K. Manna. Evidence of a multiple
sex-chromosome mechanism in a gryllid.
__________________. Frequency of dicentric bridges in meiosis in
the grasshopper,
Gesonia punctifrons
produced by difference dosages of x-rays
Robinson, John N. and Earl T. Engle. Effect of neutron radiation on
the human testes: A case report
Russell W.L. Radiation-induced gene mutation rates in
mice
Sagan, Carl. Contributions to the theory of biogenesis: An
integrative approach.June 1954
___________. Direct contact among galactic civilizations by
relativistic interstellar spaceflight.
Draft copy
___________. Exobiology: A critical review, paper presented at
the Fourth International Space Science Symposium (COSPAR), Warsaw,
Poland,June
1963
___________, Philip L. Hanst and Andrew T. Young. Nitrogen oxides
on Mars
___________ and James B. Pollack. On the nature of the clouds and
the origin of the surface temperature of Venus
___________. Organic matter and the moon.
2nd draft
___________. Physical studies of planets: Part IV: Production of
organic molecules in planetary atmospheres: A preliminary
report
___________. Structure of the lower atmosphere of Venus.
Submitted to ICARUS,Mar. 31, 1962
___________ and W.W. Kellogg. The terrestrial planets
___________. Venus as a planet of possible biological
interest
___________ and Lee Wanerman. Whiffling through the Tulgey worlds
Savitsky, V.F. [Article about genetics in Russia]
Schalet, A. A study of spontaneous visible mutations in
Drosophila melanogaster
Sears, E.R., A.C. Faberge and E. Novitski. Genetic and cytological
studies of chromosome structure and behavior, research proposal
Sherman, J.K. Research on frozen human semen - past, present and
future
Sisakyan, N.M., O.G. Gasenko, and V.V. Antipov (The USSR Academy of
Sciences). Satellite biological experiments. May 1964
Smith, Paul E. Selection priority for anomalies in A.I.
donors
Sobels, F.H. Dose rate, cyanics and some other factors influencing
repair of mutational radiation damage in
Drosophila
___________. Genetic variation and maximum permissible level of
radiation.
___________. Modification of pre-mutational radiation damage in
Drosophila
Sonneborn, Tracy M. The dependence of the physiological action of a
gene on a primer and the relation of primer to gene
Sonnenblick, B.P. X-ray exposure in routine diagnostic practice: A
survey of 117 fluoroscopes
Stern, Curt. [Review of] Heredity and its variability by T.D.
Lysenko
Box 16
Szilard, Leo. On the nature of the aging process
____________. [Four short stories]
Thomas, J. Andre and Simon Chevais. Experimental production of
mutations by the 3 aminophenylsulfamide isomers in the fly Drosophila -
action on male cells
Toll, C.H. Monocular color-vision defect
Trout, William E., III. The so-called recovery phenomenon after
irradiation in
Drosophila melanogaster
Valencia, J. The cytology of small deletions at specific loci in
Drosophila
Wagoner, Dale E. [Problems of heterochromatin]
Wallace, Bruce. The average effect of radiation-induced mutations on
viability in
Drosophila melanogaster
Wallace, Henry A. What the scientist can do to combat
racism.
Westing, Siegfried W. The importance of a new x-ray effect for our
daily diagnostic and therapeutic x-ray work.
Yakovlev, Y.A. On Darwinism and some anti-Darwinians
Zavadovsky, Mikhail. Fertility of livestock increased by hormone
method
Mitchell R. Radiation--Helpful or harmful?
Abstracts and extracts of articles by others
Grant and project proposals
Poems for or dedicated to HJM
unidentified authors. Includes Genetic Research in Britain,1939-1945
Subseries:
Reprints, Clippings and Other Printed Items
Reprints, clippings and other printed articles follow this section and are
arranged alphabetically by author. (See also: PRINTED (series IX))
Alexander, Jerome
Altenburg, Edgar
Auerbach, Charlotte
Baumiller, Robert C.
Bernal, J.D.
Bethe, Hans A.
Biophysics Research Group
Birkina, B.N.
Blacker, C.P.
Brewer, Herbert
Burdick, Allan B.
Burhoe, Ralph Wendell
Bylinsky, Gene
Carlson, Anton J.
Catsch, A., O. Peter and P. Welt
Clark, A.M.
Conus, E.
Crick, F.H.C.
Crow, James and Arthur P. Mange
Crow, James and Motoo Kimura
Dawson, Percy M.
Dawson, Peter S.
Day, Lincoln
Dingle, H.
Dobzhansky, Theodosius
Dodd, Stuart C.
Edwards, R.G.
Ehrenberg, L., A. Gustafsson and N. Nybom
Eichholtz, F.
Eisenberg, Lucy
Falkner, Frank
Fox, H. Munro
Fox, Sidney W.
Freud, Anna
Gates, Reginald Ruggles
Glass, H. Bentley, Patricia A. McIntyre, Rozelle Hahn, and C.
Lockard Conley
Goodman, H.O. and S.C. Reed
Goodman, Walter
Gowen, John W.
Grahn, Douglas
Grulow, Leo and Sidonie K. Lederer
Gyurdzhian, A.A.
Halperin, Sidney L.
Hanson, Frank Blair and Frances R. Ferris
Harris, B.B.
Hartung, Ernest W.
Haynes, Lewis L., James L. Tullis, Hugh M. Pyle, May T. Sproul,
Stanley Wallach, William C. Turville
Hays, Paul R.
Herrick, C. Judson
Hoelzel, Frederick
Huang, Su-Shu
Jacobs, Harry L.
Kellogg, William W. and Carl Sagan.
Kerkis, J.
Kilston, Steven D., Robert R. Drummond and Carl Sagan. A search for
life on earth at kilometer resolution. Reprinted from
Icarus: International Journal of the Solar System
, Vol. 5, No. 1,
Jan.
1966
Kittson, R.
Kleegman, Sophia J.
Kopp, Carolyn
Lader, Lawrence
Lasagna, Louis
Lanzavecchia, G.
Lee, William R.
Lear, John
Lederberg, Joshua
Lee, William R.
Lewit, S.G. and A.S. Serebrowsky
Lewontin, R.C.
Lindop, Patricia J. and J. Rotblat
Marine, Gene
Mendel, Gregor
Montalenti, Giuseppe
Morgan, Thomas Hunt. Further Experiments with mutations in eye-color
of Drosophila: The loss of the orange factor, 1912
(OVERSIZE)
Moshkovsky, Sh.
Muller, Kenneth J.
National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council. Biology and
the exploration of Mars, Summary and conclusions of a study by the Space
Science Board
Nemerov, Howard
Nirenberg, Marshall W.
Ohno, Susumu and B.M. Cattanach
Ohno, Susumu and Mary F. Lyon
Oliver, C.P.
Oster, Irwin I.
Packard, Charles
Packer, E., S. Scher and Carl Sagan
Painter, Theophilus S.
Passin, Herbert
Pavan, C. and M. Diaz
Pincus, Gregory
Prabhu, S.S.
Proust, Jacqueline
Putnam, Carleton
Puttanna, C.R.
Rabinowitch, Eugene
Race, R.R., Ruth Sanger and Sylvia D. Lawler
Race, R.R., A.E. Mourant, Sylvia D. Lawler and Ruth
Sanger
Rickover, Hyman G.
Riddle, Oscar
Roe, Anne
Romanell, Patrick
Romaschov, D.D.
Russell Henry Norris
Sagan, Carl
Salisbury, G.W.
Slizynski, B.M.
Smith, Homer W.
Smith, Luther
Snyder, Laurence H.
Terman, Lewis M.
Viswanathan
Vogt, Oskar
Waddington, C.H.
Wagoner, Dale E.
Ward, Julian E.
Watson, J.D.
Weaver, Warren
Wythenshawe, Lord Simon
Young, Frank Norman and Sears Crowell
Zeman, Wolfgang, Sheila Donahue, Paul Dyken and Joseph
Green
Series:
Conferences/ Meetings
Arranged chronologically by the date of the conference or meeting. Contents of
the folders may contain earlier or later materials than the date given, reflecting
plans to attend or publication of resulting paper, for example.
Contains correspondence, conference proceedings, member lists, circular letters,
and other related materials. There are also materials on meetings and conferences
filed with particular organizations. Arranged in chronological order. The date(s)
reflect when the conference or meeting was held or lecture given. Actual contents
of the folders will often span earlier or later dates in preparation or conclusion
of event.
Box 1
1921, Sept. 22-28 Second International
Congress of Eugenics; New York City, NY
1927, Sept. 11-17 Fifth International
Genetics Congress; Berlin
(see also: Oversize)
1932, Aug. 21-23 Third International
Congress of Eugenics; New York City, NY
1935 Fifteenth
International Congress of Physiology (Invitation to reception only);
Leningrad
1936, Sept. 28-29 Discussions on mutations;
Copenhagen
1937, Sept. 30-Oct. 8 Réunion Internationale
de Physique Chimie Biologie; Paris
1937, Dec. 20-22 Forty-first Conference of
the Society for Experimental Biology; London
1938, Apr. 2-5 Report of the Klampenborg
Conference
1938, Aug. 19
B.A. Symposium: Mechanism of Evolution. (Program only)
n.p.
1938, Summer Second Gene Conference; Woods
Hole, MA
1938,
Nov. Gene Group Conference; Spa, Belgium
1939, Aug. 23-30 Seventh International
Congress of Genetics; Edinburgh, Scotland
(2 folders)
1941, June/July Cold Spring Harbor Symposia
on Quantitative Biology (9:290-308), 1941. Includes: "Résumé and Perspectives
of the Symposium on Genes and Chromosomes" and notes on talks; Cold Spring
Harbor
1946, Jan. 26-28 Conference on Mutations;
New York City, NY
1946, Oct. 31-Nov. 2 Ninth Washington
Theoretical Physics Conference; Washington, D. C.
Includes: photograph of participants.
Muller's Nobel Prize was announced at this meeting
1947, Jan.
Biophysikalische Konferenz im Max Planck-Institut für Physik;
Göttingen
1947, Apr. 1-3 The New York Academy of
Medicine Centennial Celebration, Institute on Public Health; New York City,
NY
1947, June
4 Indiana University School of Dentistry, Honor Day
Program.
Program only: Address by HM
1948, Mar. 26-27 Symposium on Radiation
Genetics; Oak Ridge, TN.
Includes photostat copy of Muller's "Partial Dominance in Relation to the
Need for Studying Induced Mutations Individually (A discussion following the
paper by Sewall Wright)"
1948, June
24 Atomic Energy Commission meeting of Subcommittee on
Permissible Dose of Radiation; Chicago, IL
1948, July 7-14 Eighth International
Genetics Congress; Stockholm
Muller was president.
Includes: "The Mutational Potentialities of Some Individual Loci in
Drosophila" by Muller and J.I. Valencia
(2 folders)
1948, Oct. 4-6 Symposium on the Fundamental
Properties of Protoplasm, Detroit Institute of Cancer Research; Detroit,
MI
1948, Oct. 19
Symposium on low level irradiation, Argonne National Laboratory;
Chicago, IL
[1948]
Symposium on [genes and cytoplasm].
Celebrating 100th anniversary of the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
Includes papers by Tracy Sonneborn, Curt Stern and David Bonner
1949, Feb. 25-27 National Cancer Conference
(American Cancer Society, Inc.); Memphis, TN
1950, June 14-18 Symposium on Radiobiology -
National Research Council, Oberlin College; Oberlin, OH.
Includes Panel IV paper "Radiation Mutations" by Muller
(3 folders)
1951, June 7-15 Symposia on Quantitative
Biology, XVI. Genes and Mutations; Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island,
NY
1951, Oct. 11
Atomic Energy Commission meeting; Washington, DC
1951, Nov. 6-9 Air Force Symposium on the
Physics and Medicine of the Upper Atmosphere; San Antonio, TX
1952, June 9-11 Symposium on Chromosome
Breakage; John Innes Horticultural Institution
1952, June 20-22 Conference on Population
Problems; Williamsburg, VA
1952, June 22-27 European meeting of Nobel
prize winners, 1952; Lindau, Germany
1952, Aug. 30-Sept. 1 10th Anniversary World
Science Fiction Convention; Chicago, IL
1952, Sept. 15-20 Conference on Radiobiology
and Radiation Protection; Stockholm
1953, Jan.
13 New York Obstetrical Society Symposium on the Effects of
Irradiation of Gonads in the Female; New York City, NY
1953, Mar. 6-8 American Academy of Arts
& Sciences Conference on Totalitarianism; Boston, MA
1954, Apr. 19-21 Genetic Recombination
Conference, Oak Ridge National Laboratory; Oak Ridge, TN
1954, Nov. 19-20 Conference on Genetics.
Argonne National Laboratory; Lemont, IL
1955, July
15 Fifth Annual Meeting of Nobel Prize Winners; Lindau,
Bavaria.
"The Effect of Radiation and Other Present-day Influences Upon the Human
Genetic Constitution" by Muller
1955, Aug. 8-20 United Nations International
Conference on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy; Geneva.
(2 folders)
Box 2
1955, Aug. 8-20 United Nations
International...(cont.)
(2 folders)
1955, Nov. 12-13 Sixth County Medical
Societies Civil Defense Conference; Chicago, IL
1955, Nov. 20
National Academy of Sciences Panel - Biological Effects of Atomic
Radiation; Princeton, NJ
1956, Feb. 9-10 Military-Industrial
Conference; Chicago, IL.
Includes materials from the 1955 conference, apparently not attended by
Muller
1956, Aug. 1-6 First International Congress
of Human Genetics; Copenhagen
1956, Aug. 7-11 WHO - Study Group on the
Effect of Radiation on Human Genetics; Copenhagen.
Includes correspondence on publication of working papers
(3 folders)
1956, Aug. 15-19 Fifth International
Conference on Radiobiology; Stockholm.
(3 folders)
1956, Oct. 31-Nov. 1 33rd Annual Conference
of the Milbank Memorial Fund; New York City, NY
1957, May 20-22 89th annual meeting of the
Dental Society of the State of New York; New York City, NY
1957, Aug. 12-21 Meetings. Talk? on Genetics
and Medicine; Denver and Boulder, CO
1957, Nov.
22 Seagram Company Symposium - The Next Hundred Years
1958, May
2 Mid-Western Conference on Genetics and Radiobiology; St. Louis,
MO
1958, May 14-17 Symposium on Possible Uses
of Earth Satellites in Life Science Experiments; Washington, DC
1958, Aug. 10-16 International Congress of
Radiation Research, University of Vermont; Burlington, VT
1958, Aug. 15-16 Conference on Long-Term
Effects of Ionizing Radiations on Mammals; Burlington, VT
Includes contribution by Muller
1958, Aug. 20-27 Tenth International
Genetics Congress; Montreal
Contains lists of Russian geneticists to be invited, including a list and
statement from Ake Gustafsson concerning his trip to Russia and the
scientists
(2 folders)
1958, Sept. 1-13 International Conference on
Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy; Geneva
(4 folders)
Box 3
1958, Dec. 15-18 Second Australasian
Conference on Radiation Biology; Melbourne, Australia
1958 East-West
Symposium; Brussels
1959, Apr. 8-10 Simposio su Evoluzione e
Genetica, Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei; Rome[?], Italy
1959, June 1-3 Symposium on the Structure
and Function of Genetic Elements, Brookhaven National Laboratory; Upton,
NY
1959, June 22-26 Symposium on the Immediate
and Low Level Effects of Ionizing Radiations, sponsored by UNESCO, IAEA and
CNRN; Venice
(2 folders)
1959, Sept.
29 The Future of Man Symposium; New York City, NY
1959, Nov. 24-28 Darwin Centennial
Celebration; Chicago, IL
(4 folders)
1959, Nov. 27-29 Seminar on Science and
Mankind; Chicago, IL
Sponsored by the Committee for the Study of Mankind, University of
Chicago
1959, Dec. 26-29 National Association of
Biology Teachers with the American Association for the Advancement of Science;
Chicago, IL
1960, Apr. 8-11 Conference on Human
Chromosomes; Denver, CO
1960, Apr. 12
Philosophy of Education Society; Columbus, OH
Includes: "The Integrational Role of the Evolutionary Approach Throughout
Education," an address by Muller
1960, June 3-4 Alumni Institute;
Bloomington, IN
Includes copy of paper given by Norwood Russell Hanson.
1960, June 10-12 Third Conference on
Research in Emphysema; Aspen, CO
(2 folders)
1960, Sept. 8-10 Dartmouth Convocation on
the Great Issues of Conscience in Modern Medicine; Hanover, NH
1960, Sept.
21 Minnesota Human Genetics League; Minneapolis, MN
1960, Sept. 21-22 Ninth United States Civil
Defense Council Conference; Minneapolis, MN
1960, Sept. 30-Oct. 2 American Academy of
Arts & Sciences Conference A - Genetics and the Direction of Human
Evolution; Boston, MA
(3 folders)
1960, Oct. 14-15 Fourth Annual Symposium of
the Kaiser Foundation Hospitals in Northern California on Human Genetics; San
Francisco, CA
1960, Nov. 4-6 American Academy of Arts
& Sciences; Boston, MA
Conference B - Dynamics and Direction of Social Evolution
(2 folders)
Box 4
1960, Nov. 4-6 American Academy...(cont.)
(1 folder)
1960, Nov. 5
Third annual conference of The Society for the Scientific Study of
Sex on Religion and Sex, and Artificial Insemination; New York City,
NY
1960, Dec. 2-4 American Academy of Arts
& Sciences; Boston, MA
Conference C - Evolution and the Individual
(3 folders)
1961, Feb. 16-18 5th annual meeting of the
Biophysical Society; St. Louis, MO
1961, Mar. 12-15 5th Annual Science Lecture
Series, Taylor University; Upland, Indiana
1961, Apr. 6-9 International Conference on
Scientific and Engineering Education (The Centennial Celebration, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology); Cambridge, MA
1961, May 3-5 Symposium on Methodology in
Basic Genetics; Austin, TX
1961, Sept. 7-12 Second International
Conference of Human Genetics; Rome
Includes correspondence with Excerpta Medica Foundation which published
abstracts of papers
1962, Jan.
23 Symposium on RNA Coding, Indiana University; Bloomington,
IN
1962, Mar. 27-30 UNESCO/IAEA Symposium on
cellular basis and aetiology of late somatic effects of ionizing radiations;
London
The Chester Beatty Research, Institute of Cancer Research: Royal Cancer
Hospital
1962, Aug. 15-19 An International Symposium
at the Department of Radiation Genetics of the state University of Leiden,
Repair from Genetic Radiation Damage and Differential Radiosensitivity in Germ
Cells
Includes photograph of conferees; Leiden
1962, Nov. 26-30 Symposium on the Future of
Man, The CIBA Foundation; London
1963, Apr.
6 Prospects for the Experimental Control of Human Heredity and
Evolution, a science symposium, Ohio Wesleyan University; Delaware,
Ohio
1963, Apr. 25-26 Twenty-third Eastern States
Health Education Conference, The New York Academy of Medicine; New York City,
NY
1963, Sept. 2-10 Eleventh International
Genetics Congress; The Hague
(2 folders)
1963, Oct.
12 Conference on The Status of Soviet Jews; New York City,
NY
Includes a "Message to the Conference [by] Dr. Hermann J. Muller..."
1963, Oct. 20-25 Conference of the U.S.
Civil Defense Council; Rochester, NY
Includes notes for speeches to: Civil Defense Conference, called Radiation
damage effects
the annual meeting of Medical Health Group, called Protecting our genetic
heritage (or Radiation damage effects); untitled speech to the Food and Drug
Administration
1963, Nov. 3-6 Fifth Conference on Genetics;
Princeton, NY
(3 folders)
1963 XVI
International Congress of Zoology
Materials concerning organizing committee.
[1964], Aug. 23-Sept. 5 The Aspen
Executives' Program, Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies; Aspen,
CO
1965, Jan. 18-19 Conference on Resources of
the Sciences for Theology, Meadville Committee on Theology and the Sciences.
Meadville Theological School of Lombard College; Chicago, IL
Box 5
1965, Feb. 18-20 International Convocation
on Pacem in Terris (Peace on Earth), the Encyclical of Pope John XXIII; New
York City, NY
Includes: "A Humanist's View of the Encyclical on Peace" by Muller
1965, Aug. 4-7
1965, Aug. 9-11 G. Mendel Memorial Symposium
and Symposium on the Mutational Process
Brno, Czechoslovakia (Aug. 4-7); Prague, Czechoslovakia (Aug. 9-11)
1965, Sept. 7-11 Mendel Centennial Program,
under the auspices of the Genetics Society of America, Colorado State
University; Fort Collins, CO
1965, Sept. 22-28 Eleventh International
Congress of Radiology; Rome
1966, Sept. 5-10 Third International
Congress of Human Genetics, University of Chicago; Chicago, IL
1945-1966 Tentative programs, proceedings and other materials
related to conferences and meetings probably NOT attended by HJM
Series:
Indiana University
Contains materials concerning Indiana University when Muller was a faculty member.
This includes various miscellaneous administrative files, materials concerning
grants administered by the University, and personnel files of his student
assistants, kitchen help and secretaries.
General files
Miscellaneous letters, memos, notes, etc. concerning the following
subjects:
Box 1
Administration of Scientific Research Funds from Outside Sources,
1947-1966
Division of Biological Sciences. 1963-1967
Bulletins, other materials, mostly printed
Faculty annual reports, 1949-1964
Graduate students.
Lists of Ph.D. committee members for various students, related materials
concerning graduate students, 1947-1958.
Rosters of graduate students, 1961-62--1963-64
Indiana University Bulletin, The President's Report for 1947-1948
I.U. Press Faculty Committee. 1952-1959
Correspondence and other materials
Jordan Hall. 1945-1956
Building plans and correspondence concerning maintenance
Laboratory supplies and equipment.
Correspondence, advertisements, expenses, etc.
(3 folders)
News Bureau releases.
Proposed academic programs
Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America
(TIAA)
Teachers Union
Zoology Dept.
Ph.D. discussion-1966, memo re: establishment of NSF,
etc.
(2 folders)
Blue books, 1949-1953
Class records, 1946-1948
Staff payroll and tax information.
Subseries:
Grants
Contains correspondence, applications, budgets, expenditures, memos, progress
reports for the following grants administered through Indiana University.
Box 2
American Cancer Society (Cancer Research Grant). 1946-1958
(12 folders)
Atomic Energy Commission. 1951-1965
(11 folders)
National Science Foundation. 1966-1967
(1 folder)
Rockefeller Foundation. 1948-1960
(15 folders)
U.S. Public Health Service. 1947-1964
(16 folders)
General grant information: Budget sheets; personnel;
miscellaneous
(7 folders)
Subseries:
Personnel
Contains correspondence, letters of recommendation, appointment forms, etc. for
Muller's research assistants, kitchen staff and secretaries. There may be other
correspondence with these individuals in the Correspondence section. Check the
card index for specific names. Lists of some personnel begin this section.
Box 3
Abrahamson, Seymour
Adams, Dorothea J.
Akiyama, Jane
Balbinder, Betty Jean
Barbour, Evelyn Leone
Bardwell, Elizabeth
Barger, Jean Ann
Bart, Carol
Baumiller, Robert G.
Bay, Viola (Cox)
Beckman, Betty Jean
Boyd, Janet K.
Burger, Herta
Byers, Helen
Cahn, Elise
Cantor, Harvey
Carlson, Elof
Chilton, Elizabeth S.
Cicak, Astrid
Clevenger, Sarah
Cline, Shirley D.
Cohen, Dorothy
Cosden, Ellyn Jane
Covert, Patricia Joan
Davis, Sandra
Dawson, Mary Ann
DeAubrey, Marietta
Douthitt, Rosalie
Edmondson, Margaret
Ehrlich, Elizabeth
Eidemiller, Roberta
Ellis, Lois Elaine
Erickson, John E.
Evans, Leonard W.L.
Evins, Suzanne
Falk, Raphael
Fischler, Drake A.
Flores, Pablo Humberto
Forrest, Paul
Frye, Sara Conley
Frye, Wilma
Gaw, Lulu
Gilbert, Bertha Ellen
Glass, Ethna Evon
Goss, Annette Berniece
Grow, Eugenia H.
Gyger, Alberta
Hackett, Adeline
Hall, Janet Ruth
Hanis, Nancy
Hannah, Aloha M.
Hanson, Earl D.
Herskowitz, Irwin H.
Iyengar, Shanta V.
Jeter, Virginia L.
Johnson, Margaret Genetta
Jones, Carolee June
Kline, Doris Ruth
Kramer, Josephine
Lasley, Eleanore
Laszlo, Anna
Litman, Rose
McCoskey, Janet Elizabeth
McEvoy, Paul
McQuate, John
Madison, Charlotte (i.e., Sherry)
Margolin, Jean
Masters, Mary (Dodson)
Megow, Brigitte
Meyer, Helen Unger
Miller, Emma Marie
Mischaikow, Eleanor
Modjeski, D'Lores
Moore, Minnie E.
Nelson, Geraldine
Oster, Irwin I.
Ostertag, Wolfram
Otting, Elvira Marie
Patterson, Mary
Patton, Louise
Peko, Dorothy
Petoe, Louise
Pfau, Mary Gail
Powers, Mary
Poynter, Beverly
Purvis, Claudine J.
Rakestraw, Wilodean
Ranard, Irene
Rhudy, Diane
Rice, Edna
Rinehart, Robert R.
Ritter, Jo Ann
Ritter, Kenneth J.
Roeper, Mary Elizabeth
Rubinstein, Natalie
Ruch, Colene
Schalet, Abraham
Scheinok, Harriet
See, Helen Louise
Shuman, Catherine
Sparks, Janice Kay
Stafford, Joyce
Stranska, Maria
Telfer, James D.
Thomas, Sandra Elizabeth
Ulvestad, Irene
Valencia, Juan
Valencia, Ruby
Van Buskirk, Beatrice
VanCleave, LaVerne
Verderosa, Fred
Verderosa, Ruth
Voorhies, Mary Nan
Wagoner, Dale
Warshay, Diane Wortman
Wesling, Joan
Williams, Jean
Wolfram, Mary
Wright, Marcia Ann (Cooper)
Zimmering, Stanley
Series:
Organizations
Arranged alphabetically by title of the organization, committee, council,
congress, institute, or society of which Muller was a member. Includes
correspondence, newsletters, bulletins and related printed materials. See also
materials filed under CONFERENCES/MEETINGS.
Organizations, committees, councils, congresses, institutes, and societies in
which Muller was a member. Includes correspondence, newsletters, bulletins and
related printed materials. Where Muller participated in particular meetings and
conferences, these materials are filed under CONFERENCES/MEETINGS...
Box 1
Ahimsa Shodh-Peeth (Ahimsa Research Institute). Papers, 1963-1964
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Papers, 1942-1964
American Association for the Advancement of Science. Papers, 1921 , 1922 , 1947-1951 , 1957-1965
(2 folders)
American Association of Anatomists. Dec. 27-29, 1917
Abstracts of Papers to be presented at the 33rd session of AAA, [attended by
Muller?]
American Association of Scientific Workers. Papers, 1956-1958
American Association of University Professors. Papers, 1949-1951 , 1966
American Genetic Association. Papers, 1945-1963
American Humanist Association
(see also: International Humanist and Ethical Union):
Correspondence, 1955-1967
By-laws, memoranda, etc., 1955-1962 , 1964
Box 2
American Humanist Association
By-laws, memoranda, etc. (cont.)
Humanist Council of Southern California, 1959
Humanist Leadership Handbook (blue notebook)
Humanist of the Year award to H.J. Muller, announcements, 1963
Project Worth, 1957 , 1959-1961
The Promises of Humanism, by Edwin H. Wilson, 1957
Riddle (Oscar) papers, 1959
Miscellaneous, 1956-1958 , 1963 , 1966
Publications:
Free Mind,
Sept. 1953-Aug./Sept. 1963
Box 3
American Humanist Association
Publications:
Free Mind (cont.)
The Humanist, 1957-1963
The Mid-Lakes Humanist, Nov. 1959 ,
Jan.
1960 , June-July 1961
The Toledo Humanist, Apr. 22, 1956-Apr. 25, 1957
Publications written by H.J. Muller, including: Interview with H.J.
Muller by Edwin H. Wilson, 1956
Publications written by others
American Institute of Biological Sciences, Biological Sciences
Curriculum Study. Papers, 1947 , 1957 , 1960-1962
high school course materials
memorandums, nos. 55-142 (Lacks 68, 99); printed
(10 folders)
American Philosophical Society. Papers, 1942-1965
(2 folders)
American Society of Human Genetics. Papers, 1947-1948, Aug.
Box 4
American Society of Human Genetics. Papers, 1948,
Sept.-1965
(10 folders)
American Society of Naturalists. Papers, 1925 , 1943-1952 ,
1964
(3 folders)
American Society of Zoologists. Papers, 1917 , 1918 , 1921 , 1922 , 1947-1957 ,
1960-1965
(4 folders)
Animal Cell Information Service. Newsletters, 1959-1960 .
Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission of the National Research Council.
Papers,1947-1951
Atomic Energy Commission, 1946-1961
(2 folders)
(see also: Grants section)
Atomic Scientists Association (British)
Biological Sciences Curriculum Study
(see: American Institute of Biological Sciences)
Birthright, Inc. Papers, 1947-1949
(2 folders)
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists. Papers, 1947-1965
(6 folders)
Center for Human Understanding of the University of Chicago,
Washington, D.C. Papers, 1965-1966
City of Hope Medical Center. Papers, 1960-1967
Includes acceptance speech at the 7th Annual Salute to Medical Research,
Nov. 15, 1964
(3 folders)
Committee for the Study of Mankind (later: Council for the Study of
Mankind). Papers, 1959-1963
including proceedings of the Seminar on Science and Mankind at the
University of Chicago, Nov. 28-29, 1959 which
contains comments by Muller
(2 folders)
Box 5
Committee for the Study of Mankind (cont.)
(1 folder)
Congress for Cultural Freedom. Papers, 1950-1961
Contains papers for the Committee on Science and Freedom, and the American
Committee on Cultural Freedom meeting in India in 1951)
(12 folders)
Congress of Scientists on Survival. Papers, 1961-1964
Council for a Livable World (Leo Szilard movement).1962-1964
Council for Basic Education. Papers, 1956-1957
The Educational Committee to Halt Atomic Weapons Spread.
Papers,1966
The Educational Policies Commission. Papers, 1960-1965
Emergency Committee of Atomic Scientists. Papers, 1948-1951
(3 folders)
Federal Radiation Council. Papers, 1960
Includes: Report No. 1: Background Material for the Development of Radiation
Protection Standards
Federation of American Scientists. Papers, 1948-1964
including papers for the Scientists' Committee on Loyalty Problems, 1948-1950
Field Information Agency, Technical (FIAT), Office of Military
Government for Germany (US). Papers,1946-1947
Fund for the Republic. Printed, 1956
Box 6
The Genetical Society of Great Britain. Mostly programs, 1937-1967
Genetics Society of America. General papers, 1947-1964
(5 folders)
Committee on Aid to Geneticists Abroad, 1944-1952
(6 folders)
Committee to Counteract Anti-Genetics Propaganda, 1949-1950
Executive Committee, 1946-1947
Golden Jubilee, Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 1950
Inter-Society Committee on a National Science Foundation, 1947
Public Education and Scientific Freedom Committee, 1950-1953
House Un-American Activities Committee
The Humanities Center for Liberal Education
Indiana Cancer Society, Inc. Papers, 1946-1951
International Committee for Radiation Protection (ICRP)
Correspondence, 1955-1967
(5 folders)
Circulars, 1955-1962
(see also: Recommendations)
(8 folders)
Box 7
Circulars, 1962-1966
(9 folders)
Recommendations, 1954 , 1956-1958
(see also: Circulars)
(2 folders)
Miscellaneous, 1953-1966
(8 folders)
Box 8
Miscellaneous
(1 folder)
International Humanist and Ethical Union
(see also: American Humanist Association)
Papers, 1956-1962 , 1966 , including: Congress guides
and proceedings, directories, memoranda, etc.
(8 folders)
Information Bulletin (IHEU) 1956-1963
(2 folders)
Related publications
(4 folders)
Clippings
International Rescue Committee, Inc., Resettlement Campaign for Exiled
Professionals. Papers, 1950-1951
Japan Council Against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Papers,1947-1957
Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy, 1957
Includes statements by Muller and others before Committee
Knights of Reason. Proposed articles of association.1957
Laureate Foundation. Non-profit, non-political foundation set by
Theodore de Rittberg.
Thought by Muller to be fraudulent. Correspondence concerns invitation to
Muller to be on Board of Directors and Board of Governors and his subsequent
refusal,
1963
Long Island Biological Association, Cold Spring Harbor.
Printed,1954-1956
Medical Research Council (Great Britain). Report of Medical Uses of
Radium,1939-1940
National Academy of Sciences. Papers, 1938-1953
Includes papers concerning annual meeting held in Bloomington in 1959
(Pilgrim Trust Lecture papers, see: The Royal Society)
(6 folders)
Box 9
National Academy of Sciences. Papers, (cont.)
1954-1966
(12 folders)
National Academy of Sciences, Subcommittee on Genetic Effects of Atomic
Radiation, 1955-1964
(13 folders)
Muller was a member and sometime chairman. In 1955 the National Academy of
Sciences established a committee with six subcommittees to study the biological
effects of atomic radiation. The subjects of the subcommittees were: genetic
effects, pathologic effects, meteorological aspects, effects on agriculture and
food supplies, disposal and dispersal of radioactive wastes, and oceanography
and fisheries. The papers include correspondence, draft and summary reports,
and related materials. In addition, there are other materials related to the
effects of atomic radiation, mostly printed. (See also: NCRP for more
publications). Known dates and places of Subcommittee meetings:
1955, Nov.
21 (1st meeting) Princeton
1956, Feb. 5-6 Chicago
1956, Mar. 1
NYC
1956, May 12-13 NYC
1956, June
10 Washington, DC
1957, Aug.
15 NYC
In addition, there are other materials related to the effects of atomic
radiation, mostly printed, such as: summary of medical aspects, by Shields
Warren and James P. Cooney, Apr. 1, 1949; Stevenson-Kefauver Campaign
Committee, regarding stopping of H-bomb tests, 1956; United Nations
Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation reports, 1956-1957;
other misc. articles and publications.
Box 10
National Academy of Sciences, Subcommittee on Genetic Effects...
(cont.)
(6 folders)
National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Papers, 1964-1967
A number of panels were established by North American Aviation, Inc. to
recommend experiments for early lunar exploratory missions. It was called
LESA, Lunar Exploration Systems for Apollo. Muller was on the panel on Life
Sciences and Biology.
(15 folders)
National Committee for Radiation Protection and Measurements
(NCRP)(later: National Council on Radiation...)
Correspondence, 1948-1965
(2 folders)
Miscellaneous, 1947-1953
(3 folders)
Box 11
Miscellaneous, 1954-1966
(11 folders)
Publications list
(1 folder)
Publications of NCRP, including drafts, notes and some
correspondence:
Exposure to Radiation in an Emergency
(2 folders)
Permissible Dose from External Sources of Ionizing
Radiation
(3 folders)
Related publications
(3 folders)
Box 12
Related publications, cont.
(2 folders)
National Council of American-Soviet Friendship, Inc. Science Bulletin,
Vol. 1, Nos. 1-3,
1945
National Research Council, Committee on Common Problems of Genetics,
Paleontology, and Systematics. Papers, 1943-1948
Includes papers and draft of talk by Muller for the Conference on Genetics,
Paleontology, and Evolution held Jan. 2-4, 1947 in
Princeton, New Jersey
(3 folders)
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Papers,
1961-1962
(3 folders)
Phi Beta Kappa. Papers, 1943-1957
Phi Beta Pi. Papers,1949-1950
The Physicians Forum, Inc. Papers,1955-1957
Planned Parenthood Federation of America. Correspondence, 1952-1954
Population Crisis Committee. Papers,1965-1966
Pugwash Conference of International Scientists on Biological and
Chemical Warfare.
Named for the location of 1st conference held in Pugwash, Nova Scotia,
Canada in 1957
Correspondence, 1957-1964
History of the Pugwash Conferences, by Professor J.
Rotblat.
List of Pugwash conferences, locations and dates
Newsletter, Vol. 1 (July 1963) - Vol. 4 (July-October 1966).
Pugwash International Conference on Continuing Education
Miscellaneous papers and proceedings for the following
conferences:
1st - Pugwash, Nova Scotia, Canada1957, July 6-11
2nd - Lac Beauport, Quebec, Canada1958, Mar. 13-Apr. 11
Box 13
2nd - cont. Lac Beauport, Quebec, Canada1958, Mar. 13-Apr. 11
3rd - Kitzbuhel-Vienna, Austria1958, Sept. 14-21
5th - Pugwash, Nova Scotia, Canada 1959, Aug. 24-30
6th - Moscow, U.S.S.R.1960, Nov. 27-Dec.
5
7th - Stowe, Vermont1961, Sept.
5-9
8th - Stowe, Vermont1961, Sept.
11-16
9th - Cambridge, England1962, Aug.
25-30
10th - London, England1962, Sept.
3-7
11th - Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia 1963, Sept. 20-25
Box 14
12th - Udaipur, India1964, Jan. 27-Feb.
1
13th - Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia 1964, Sept. 13-19
14th - Venice, Italy1965, Apr.
11-16
15th - Addis Ababa, Ethiopia1965, Dec. 29-Jan. 3, 1966
16th - Sopot, Poland1966, Sept.
11-16
Quadri-Science, Inc. Papers,1961-1966
Radiation Research Society. Papers, 1951-1952
The Royal Society. Papers, 1940-1965
including papers on Pilgrim Trust Lecture given by Muller, 1945
(given by an English scientist before National Academy of Sciences in
even years, and by an American scientist before The Royal Society in odd
years)
(3 folders)
Sigma Xi. Papers, 1945-1958
(7 folders)
Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine, Ohio Valley Section.
Papers, 1949-1957
Society for Social Responsibility in Science. Newsletter, 1953-1957 ; letter, May 23, 1956
Society for the Study of Evolution. Papers, 1946-1967
(9 folders)
Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences. 1946-1966
Muller received the Nobel Prize for Physiology for 1946. Materials here
concern Muller's matriculation as a foreign member of the Royal Swedish
Academy of Sciences. Papers .
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. Statement
on Race. Papers, 1951-1953
(2 folders)
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. World
Population Conference. Papers,1953
Box 15
United World Federalists. Papers, 1950-1963
(2 folders)
Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, Inc. Papers, 1947-1951 , 1959-1964
(3 folders)
World Academy of Art and Science (formerly: World Academy of Arts and
Sciences). Papers, 1957-1967
(11 folders)
The Zoological Society (India). List of members, 31 March 1965
Membership list. Unknown organization, undated
Series:
Research and Education
Arranged chronologically. The early files cover Muller's education, from Morris
High School to his college years and includes entrance exams, class notes, and
experiments. Later files include lecture notes for classes he taught, as well as
speeches and talks he gave elsewhere, and data and notes for both his and his
students experiments. Also included are notes taken by Muller from lectures given
by others. Lectures and speeches, including transcripts, notes and related
materials given outside his classes may also be found in the Writings section.
Box 1
1902-1904 College entrance examination board.
Mimeographed exams, June l4, l902 & June l904, verso of p.1 has HJM
note.
(2 folders)
ca. 1903
Biology notebooks (2), Morris High School.
Contain class experiments and demonstrations.
1905?
"Book showing the derivation of the signs explained in the other paper"
(original belongs to Thea Muller.)
Includes Xerox copy "Symbols from Muller's own shorthand" lp., prepared by
T.M.
1906, Feb. 5-1907, June. Chemistry notebook
(Morris High School)
1906, Mar.
Chemistry notes.
(Mimeographed sheets with HJM annotations; high school class)
1906, Apr. 23-Nov. 26. Morris High School
report of grades
1906, June 18-23 and
1907,
June. College entrance examination, report of grades
ca.
1906-1907 Physics worksheets (with HJM annotations). Morris High
School
1907 "In the
cause of science" by HJM.
[published? in Morris High School annual, 1907] (original belongs to Thea
Muller).
1907 Morris
High School annual and commencement exercise program
1908-1910 Columbia University, report of grades
1910? Eugenics: The journey to the promised lands no man himself
may reach (drawing).
[part of Writings: Revelations of Biology and their Significance?]
1910, Mar. 3-Apr. 29. College lecture notes:
Wilson's cell course.
1 vol.
1910, Mar. 3-May 19. College lecture
notes:
Education; Educational biology; Physiology; Cellular Embryology (Wilson's
cell course); Experimental Zoology (Morgan); Experimental Embryology
(Morgan).
1 vol. and loose sheets
1910 Sept.
Columbia University: Registration book of H.J. Muller.
[original belongs to Thea Muller]
1910? College lecture notes on heredity (Sumner and Morgan).
1 vol.
1911, July-Aug. College lecture notes on
embryology.
1911 M.A.
Thesis by HJM.
Autograph, lacks p. 1 and final page(s).
1911?
Notes (lecture?) on brain anatomy
1911?
Quotations from "Chance or purpose in the origin and evolution of adaptation"
by T.H. Morgan, 1910.
Contains HJM changes and annotations to the quotations
1911-1912 Animal Biology Course, Cornell University
ca.
1911-1912. Data notes: General physiology records/experiments.
1 vol.
1911-1912 Gene character (portion of a paper on gene
character).
1911-1912? A theory of hearing, 4p.
Unpublished.
1912, Jan. 20.
Invertebrate zoology examination book, Columbia
University
1912?, Feb.
14. College lecture notes on reproduction, pharmacology.
1 vol.
1912, Aug. 15-Oct. 1 Data notebook: includes
truncate wing x-ray experiment.
1 vol.
ca. 1912
College lecture notes on physiology; pharmacology.
1 vol.
1912?
College lecture notes on psychology, the cell,
education.
1 vol.
1912?
College lecture notes (miscellaneous loose sheets).
1912? A
suggestion as to some features of the mechanism of irritation (unpublished note
on neural physiology).
1913, June 11-1914, July 7 Truncate
experiments [data notebook] "T"
1913, June-1914, July Data notebook L:
linkage experiments.
1913, Oct.-1914, Dec. T2 data notebook
(inserts)
1913, Nov.
18 T2 data notebook: Truncate analysis [inserts removed to
separate file]
1913, Dec.
15 Regeneration (experiment or class notes?)
1913?
Data notebook Y: linkage experiments - X chromosome
1913 Data
notebook Y: linkage experiments - X chromosome (inserts removed from Data
notebook Y)
includes: The linkage relations as shown by a study of many factors
simultaneously - unpublished
1913? The
living world [outline sketch for unpublished book] including "game of
eugenics."
1913 Roll
Book, ES67 (English to Foreigners).
Contains lecture notes on Wilson's Cytology course, Mar.-Apr. and on
Calkin's Protozoa course.
1914 Linkage
data for dissertation.
1 vol.
1915, Dec.-1916, May Data notebook: linkage
data; truncate analysis, etc.
1915?
Data notebook Y: Map distances for 1st and 2nd chromosomes.
Loose sheets inserted
ca. 1915
Data for Ph.D. dissertation
[loose sheets]
1915?
HJM's shorthand.
Photocopy
1918, July 26-Nov. Data notebook: Lethal
experiment
(Includes two ms. writings: A qualitative study of mutation in the
x-chromosome of Drosophila, by Edgar Altenburg and The nature of the gene
and the possible physical significance of synapsis, by H.J. Muller).
1918 Beaded
wing analysis
1919, July-Aug. Data notebook: Temperature
induced mutations (with inserts)
includes drafts of Altenburg & Muller article: "Rate of change of
heredity factors in Drosophila."
1919, Sept.
Data notebook IV: Lethal experiment.
Woods Hole (partially in Edgar Altenburg's hand).
1919?
Criticisms of beaded wing paper by Edgar Altenburg with marginal
notations by HJM.
[pp. 4-12 of a letter to HJM]
pre-1920 Research notes and data
1920?, June 30-Aug. Data notebook: lethal
localizations and sex ratio studies
1920, July-Dec. Miscellaneous data
notes
1920?
Class roll book: Columbia University.
Lecture insert on "genetic change in Drosophila"
1920?
Cytological technique (based largely on courses given by E.B.
Wilson)
[mimeo]
1920 Data
notebook I: Age
1920? Data
notebook: linkage data of 3rd chromosome
1920 Muller
and Altenburg. A study of the character and mode of origin of eighteen
mutations in the Chromosome of Drosophila.
Drafts
Box 2
1921, Jan.-Feb. Data notebook II
1921, Oct.-1922, Sept. Data notebook:
Chem[istry].
Also contains other data, poems, shorthand exercises
1921-1922 Zoology 106.
Lecture notes and tests
1921-1927 "Texas" Research notes, data, teaching materials from
Muller's tenure at the University of Texas
(6 folders)
1922, Oct.?-1923, Mar. Technician's data
notebook: X-ray induced chromosome loss
ca. 1922
Data notebook and manuscripts for Edgar Altenburg's The measurement
of mutation frequency in the X chromosome of Drosophila and Muller's A study of
the character and mode of origin of eighteen mutations in the X-chromosome of
Drosophila
1922-1923 Technician's data notes: X-ray induced chromosome
losses
1924
Laboratory Directions in Anatomy, Physiology and Hygiene (Zoology 6),
University of Texas
(mimeo)
ca. 1925
Plans for crosses
1926-1927 "X-ray experiment, 1926-27. X-rayed Nov. 3, 1926."
Production of mutations by x-ray (includes 1921 data for stock crosses; cover
title: B 1921)
1 vol. [Nobel Prize experiment]
1926-1927 X-ray mutation experiment starting Fall of
1926.
1 vol. [Nobel Prize experiment]
1927, Oct.-1929, Mar. Data notebook X:
mutation experiments.
1 vol. & loose sheets
1927?
Mutation experiment data
1927-1929 Plans
1930, Nov.
7 Method of Cooperation outline
1930-1939 Miscellaneous data and experiment notes, incl. notes
on Agol article
1932, Jan.
15 Radium Emanation Corporation certificate
1932, Feb.
9 How x-rays can remake living things.
The Worcester R. Warner Memorial Lecture in Science under the auspices of
The Cleveland Engineering Society. Commemorative folder with announcement of
lecture and clippings
ca. 1932
Address to the student forum, Texas
1932 Data
notes, fragments, etc.
1932 Notes for
writings? on genetics and evolution
ca. 1932
Rokitzky, Ferry, Schapiro and Sidoroff. Data for temperature shock in
Drosophila
1932 Scute
data
1932
Timofeef-Ressovsky. Data on temperature effects
1932-1933? Demonstration chart for paper #66
1932-1933 Russia memorabilia.
Includes notes, fragments, supply orders; two address books; American
Express bank book; Russian daily record book for 1934 (blank); and
miscellaneous printed items
(3 folders)
1933?
Data from Krner, including some from Maggie Vogt
1933?
Proposals for investigations concerning the genetic effects of radium
(typescript carbon)
1933?
Russian study of twins.
Plan of research at the Medical-Biological Institute where HJM was
consultant
1933-1934 Materials needed for cytological work by the Institute
of Genetics, Academy of Sciences
1934 Russian
bibliography on abortion, ca. 1923-1933.
1934 Scute
data
1934-1935 Miscellaneous experiment notes, data, etc.
1935, Feb.
Prokovjeva. Drawings and photos of scute
Box 3
1935 An
agreement for socialist competition between the Section on evolution and
breeding of Domestic Animals and the Section on Mutation and Problems of Genes
of the Institute of Genetics of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet
Union
1935?
Data
1935 Data and
notes
1935 Evolution
outline
1935 The gene
and mutation in relation to division and rearrangement of the heredity
material.
Two experimental data worksheets in Russian
1935 Kerkis,
J. The preponderance of physiological mutations.
manuscript and mimeo copies
1935 Muller
and Prokovjeva. The Structure of the Chromonema of the Inert Region of the
X-chromosome of Drosophila.
Notes, drawings, reprint (LOW 97)
1935-1937 Institute of Genetics, Moscow (includes reports,
recommendations, notes, etc.).
Also on Kosikoff; Appendix to Report on Dissertation of H. Emme
(2 folders)
1935-1937? Muller, et al. [Russian colleagues] Mutation
Production.
Outline
1936, Nov.
7 Strong, Anna Louise. The Miracle-maker of Odessa.
(typescript)
1936? Aim
of experiments
[notes]
1936
Drosophila Bibliography.
Academy of Sciences of USSR Press. Printed with numerous holograph
corrections and notations. Smuggled out of USSR to Spain. Later printed in
Edinburgh.
See also: Writings.
1936? Notes on work with co-workers, Institute of Genetics, Moscow.
Title from envelope
1936 Vestuale,
Felicia? Main Facts
[Spain?]
1936-1937 Institute of Genetics, Moscow:
[Work plans]
1937, Mar.
7 Latest plans H.J.M.
1937, Mar.-Apr. [Blood transfusion
file]
incl. printed material, 1935-36; draft of a paper?; notes on transfusions;
pamphlet by Duran-Jorda, The Service of Blood Transfusion at the Front
organization - Apparatus; Bethune's Canadian Blood Unit.
1937, Sept. 10-1940, July 18 [Data
notebook. Contains notes of work by Russian colleagues; ultraviolet experiment
notes; sex ratio experiment data; in back written upside down, is daily
schedule, 1936, Mar. 14-16, for HJM];
numerous loose sheets laid in, incl. radiation dosage data; some sheets
removed but filed in folder with volume.
1937?
Experiment data and notes
1937?
Genetic considerations (notes)
1937 List of
mutant loci (omitting most lethals) arranged according to chromosome and serial
order so far as determined;...
1937?
Passages on eugenics
(material for a paper?)
1937?
Suggestions for experiments
1937 Talk in
Madrid, Spain
1937?
Work notes (title taken from box in which located)
1937?
Work of the department of mutation and the gene from September 1933
to December 1936 (Report of H.J. Muller)
1937?
Work plans for others
1937-1954 Institute of Animal Genetics, University of
Edinburgh
(2 folders)
1938, Jan. 13-May 30 Ultra-violet
irradiation of Drosophila data;
incl. sheets of miscellaneous data, etc.
1938? Mar. 12 The nimble knight (comic piece on
chess)
1938 Bridges'
map
1938 Data and
experiment notes on dosage compensation.
1938
Notes
1938?
Scheme of crossings of Mr. I.A. Ahmed.
3p. [found in 1938 data notebook]
1938 Student
data notes
1939, Feb.-May Biology 7 (Genetics),
schedule and references
1939, Apr.
Biology 1, exam
1939, Apr.-1940, Apr. Report...on work done
by aid of grant from Scottish Cancer Control Organisation
1939, Aug.-1940, Aug. Report of Section F,
Institute of Animal Genetics, University of Edinburgh.
1939 Sidky,
A.R. Gonosomic Mosaicism involving a lethal.
[student paper? prepared for HJM's L489 Genetics course at University of
Edinburgh] 11p.
1939?
Experiment data; lists of stocks developed
1939?
Memorandum on the needs of the Drosophila work at the Institute of
Animal Genetics, University of Edinburgh
[for Rockefeller Foundation]. 12p
1939
Notes
1939?
Theoretical data on dosage compensation?
1940, June-July Experiment data on dosage
compensation?
1940, Aug.?
Report of Section F, Institute of Animal Genetics, University of
Edinburgh, August, 1939 to August 1, 1940.
3 copies
1940?
Koller, P.C. Analysis of the complementary steriles in D. melanogaster x D.
stimulans hybrids.
[typescript accompanied by autograph notebook sheets of data and
illustrations.]
1940
MacKenzie, K. and Muller. Mutation effects of ultraviolet light in
Drosophila.
Includes three of MacKenzie's data books and notes, Oct. 1939-May 1940;
drafts and notes for article; typescript of article with numerous autograph
changes in HJM's hand
(4 folders)
1940 Sex ratio
experiment data
1940 Student
data
1940-1941 The genetic effects of radiation.
Lecture given at Amherst Science Club.
1940-1945 Notes on lectures attended
1940-1945 Data and notes
(2 folders)
1940-1948 Data and notes
Box 4
1941, Mar.
12 Ives. Allelism in Drosophila Lethals.
Table
1941, May
7
1941, May
14 Notes for radiobiology lectures given at Amherst
seminar
1941, May
9 Changing the biological basis of heredity.
Notes for lecture given at Smith College
1941, Summer Toast to Delbruck and wife,
Cold Spring Harbor
1941, Nov.
5 The physical basis of inheritance.
Given to Poultry Breeders' School, Mass. State College. Also contains
program for 1940 school which Muller may have attended, but did not speak;
and, notes for Nov. 17, 1943 lecture to Poultry men patterned after this
lecture
1941, Nov.
Notes for talk at Amherst alumni meeting
1941?
Acetabularia.
1941?
Literature on speciation.
Marked for printer.
1941?
Report of H.J. Muller on general program of work
[i.e., cancer studies]. [appeal to National Cancer Council for research
funds]
1941 Report on
work done at Cold Spring Harbor during the summer of 1941
1941 Twin
memorandum, Nos. 1 and 2; Twin bulletin, Sept. 1941
1941 X-ray
data on crystalline proteins
1941-1942 Biology 35 laboratory.
Notes
1941-1942 Notes on seminar and symposium lectures by
others
1941-1944 Amherst College.
Miscellaneous materials concerning stay at Amherst College
(2 folders)
1941-1944 Muller and F.A. Hays. Mutations induced in domestic
chickens by ultraviolet light irradiation:
experiment plan; data notebooks and loose sheets
(4 folders)
1941-1945 Age and Poultry experiments notes
1941-1945 Data and notes
(3 folders)
1942, Feb.
19 Doctoring for our genes.
Notes for lecture given to Amherst pre-meds.
1942, Feb.
26 Notes for lecture on the gene, given at physiology seminar,
Clark University, Worcester, MA
1942, Mar. 16
Physical basis of inheritance.
Notes for lecture in anthropology
1942, Apr.
Experiment "B" on translocation [data].
("exp. with M. Kohn")
1942, Sept.-1943, Jan. Biochemistry 23.
Exams, lab schedules, handouts, etc.
1942, Oct. 9-1943, Jan. Biology
seminars.
notes
1942, Oct. 19-1943, Nov. 16 Science Club
lectures
1942, Oct.-1943, May Biology 35-36. Genetics
lectures
1942, Nov.
27 Gene nature and reduplication.
Notes for biology seminar lecture
1942, Dec.-1944 Pupal irradiation experiments
1942
Conditions for the mating of Xenopus
1942-1943 Irradiation studies on the nature of heterchromatin
(Rockefeller grant - Amherst) Also contains correspondence with Rockefeller
Foundation
1942-1948 Drosophila materials for cultures.
(including correspondence with suppliers)
1943, Feb.-Apr. Biology II: Botany and
Genetics
1943, Mar.
13 Dosage compensation.
Notes for seminar lecture
1943, July-Oct. Biology I.
notes
1943, Oct.-1944, May Biology
35-36
1943, Nov.
19 Genetics of sex.
Notes for seminar lecture
1943
Translocation cross data
1943-1944 Biology, Chemistry and Physics seminars.
Notes
1943-1944 Translocations Y+ and Ybw+, laboratory
work
1943-1945 Age experiment.
Record book 3 (series 46...) 1 vol.; loose sheets for exp. data series 1-18
and 19-45, removed from Record Book 3
(2 folders)
Box 5
1943-1945 Age experiment: Goldstein data
(2 folders)
1943-1945 Age experiment: data by others.
1943-1945 Age experiment: data & individual data slips
(5 folders)
1943-1945 Radiation experiments with mice (notes).
Acted as consultant, work done in Rochester, NY
1943-1946
1958 Zoology
Department, Columbia University. Newsletters
1944, Feb.-May. Biology II. Notes,
handouts
1944, July
Evidence of the meticulousness of selection.
Notes for lecture given at Woods Hole
1944, July-Oct. Biology I. Lectures
notes
1944, Oct.-1945, June Biology II. Notes,
exam
1944, Nov.-1945, Feb. Biology 35. Notes, lab
exercises, exam
1945, Apr.
4 Age & mutation.
Notes for "Coll. conf. lecture"
1945, Apr. 16-18 Biology I. Lecture
notes
1945, May 8
What use genetics.
Notes for lecture given at Westfield
1945, May
14 Evidence of the evolutionary importance of insensible
gradations.
Notes for lecture
1945, Nov.
9 Dangers associated with the use of X-rays
[program for one session of meetings celebrating the 50th anniversary of
discovery of X-rays] London.
1945 Age in
Relation to Frequency.
Notes, draft of pp. 33-50, typescript of pp. 49-73
1945?
Evolution class.
Notes, drawings
1945?
Lecture on radiation, with reference to target theory - Amherst?.
1945?
Remarks at dedication of Cancer Research Laboratories,
Detroit
1945-1949 Evans, Robley D. Quantitative inferences concerning
the genetic effects of radiation on human beings.
Reprint and related materials
ca.
1945-1949 Map of most useful loci. [chart].
1945-1964 Notes for lectures to Tracy Sonneborn's
classes
1946, Feb.-June Mutation and the
gene.
Lecture summaries, 84p. and exam.
1946, Mar.-Oct. Advanced Genetics. Lectures
notes, supplementary exam, etc.
1946, Dec.
12 Lecture at Lund, Sweden.
Notes
1946, Dec.
Talk to Genetics Society of America, Boston.
Lecture notes
1946? Class lecture on X-chromosome and mapping of
regions
1946 Data:
garnets, phenotypes, prunes.
[see also Laboratory assistants papers]
1946 Data and
experiment notes
1946?
Draft of proposal for cancer research program and support documents
ca. 1946
Laboratory assistants' papers.
Includes papers by A.M. Hannah, R. Marie Valencia, J. Valencia.
1946-1947 Data and notes
1946-1948 Zoology 232. Laboratory projects, elementary
genetics
1946-1948 Zoology 232A. Exams, grades, information on
students
1946-1950 Lecture notes for various class sessions, seminars,
and meetings
1946-1950 Data and notes
1947, Apr.
9 Mutation and Radiation.
Talk given at Clinton Laboratories. Notes
1947, Oct.-1948, Jan. Advanced
Genetics.
Lecture notes
1947-1949 Data and notes
1948, Feb.
20 Genetic effects of radiation.
Lecture at Jewish Hospital, Brooklyn, NY. Notes
1948, May
11 Lecture to Chemistry Club of Bloomington High School.
Notes
[1948]
"Earlier specific locus data (pre 1949)."
(has some as early as 1925, other data on IU stationery). Title from HJM
folder label.
1948 Evidence
of the precision... illustration and notes
1948?
Lancelot Hogben, F.R.S. Information
[a curriculum vitae]
1948 or
1949 Genetic effects of radiation.
Lecture to MD's
1948-1949 List of formal lectures
1948-1949 U.S. Public Health Service grant - methods
1948-1950 U.S. Public Health Service grant - ultraviolet
experiment
1948-1958 Notes, final and midterm exams for Zoology 344, 366,
465, 565, 575
1949, Feb.
19 Radio broadcast for Radiodiffusion Francaise.
Mostly correspondence and several program schedules
1949, May
5 Proposed M.A. exam
Box 6
1949, Oct.
1 Hsieh, C.C. and John Erickson.
Experiment to demonstrate relative mutation rate as affected by the presence
of the scute YL chromosome.
1949, Oct.-Nov. Transcripts from audograph
records of class lectures
1949, Oct.-1950, Jan. Z344. Lecture notes,
mid-term and final exams, several student lab reports
1949?
Binomial and Poisson Distributions: Fiducial Limits of the
Expectation
1949 Oxygen
concentration in the induction of mutations.
Lecture by Edmondson?
[1949]
Induced mutations at specific loci [data].
[1949]
Mutants, pre-1950
1949 Neutron
and radiation compiled data
1949
Notes
1949-1950 Z565, Mutation and the gene.
Telfer's notes?
1949-1959 Student rosters, book orders, other class
materials
1940s. Map of most useful loci
1940s. Radiation Damage
1940s? Superbar(Bs) dosage effects.
Negatives and illustrations
1950, Feb.
Research program of H. J. Muller
1950, Spring Telfer, J.D. A study on the
mutagenic action of ozone.
A progress report for HJM.
l950, July-1951, Oct. Edmondson, Margaret.
The Induction of Sterility Mutations by Ultra-violet Radiation.
Experiment reports
1950, Sept. 29
U.S. Public Health Service grant.
Telfer's data
1950, Nov.
Telfer, Jim and John Erickson. Ozone experiment
1950
Comprehensive annual report of work done on Grant EG-9C from the American
Cancer Society for the period from July 1, 1949 to June 30, 1950
1950 Zoology
344. Exam
1950-1951 Printed Schedule of classes, IU
Bloomington
1950-1959 Class and student notes, etc.
1951, Feb. 16
Experiences of science in Russia.
Lecture given at DeLand, Florida to БББ honorary biology fraternity
1951, Jan.-June Lecture notes for Evolution
I
1951, May
10 Freedom and social responsibility.
Talk give at Freedom House. Notes
1951, June 11
Muller's notes from lecture by Gustaffson
1951, Oct.-1952, Jan. Z565, Mutation and the
gene.
Lecture notes and 1951 mid-term exam
1951?
Data on crossovers on irradiations
1951 Notes by
Julian Huxley while here as Patten lecturer;
final exam for Evolution Z465 given June 5, 1951
1951 Student
experiment data, course information,...
1951
Ultra-violet radiation: data, research, etc. by Edmondson, Margaret, Edgar and
Luolin Altenburg.
1951-1952 Byers, H.L. Lethals derived from cells...
1951-1952 Lecture notes, and drafts for course descriptions and
announcements
1951-1953 Z465 Evolution.
Notes by Frank N. Young, with special lectures by the following: A.C.
Kinsey, R.E. Cleland, and Julian Huxley
1952, May
20 Lecture given at Neumann's seminar in anthropology.
Notes
1952, May
Talk to visiting high school science students and their teachers.
Lecture and notes
1952, Oct.-1953, Jan. Lecture notes for
Evolution II
1952, Nov. 3-6 Correspondence and
illustrations for lectures at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
1952 13
photographs of Aeromedical Field Laboratory and balloon
experiments;
data and notes
1952 Notes on
Failla's manuscript
1952 Iyengar,
Shanta V. Report
1952-1953 Cancer data
1952-1953 Lab notes and data; Edmondson report of June 9, 1953;
list of names (of possible lecturers?)
1952-1953 Research data
1952-1962 Zoology 366. Final exams
1953 Data and
notes
1953 Frye,
Sarah. Correspondence and stock lists
1953 Kramer,
Jody. Crossing-over data and correspondence
1953 M14-M31
neutron lethals from neutron experiment: research data
1953 Zoology
565. Radiation and Mutagenesis.
Lecture notes
1953-1954 Abrahamson and Telfer.
Progress report
1953-1954 Verderosa, Fred and Muller. Extents of
Deficiencies
(2 folders)
1954, Aug.
Notes for talk in Honolulu
1954, Summer Abrahamson and Telfer. Data
(notebooks)
vol. 1: 54-7A, Series 11-18, neutron & neutron
control
vol. 2: 54-7A, Series 21-26, x-ray & x-ray control
vol. 3: 54-9 & 10, Series 31-42, neutron & neutron
control
Box 7
vol. 4: 54-7B, Series 71 1-300, low dose x-ray
vol. 5: 54-7B, Series 71 301-500, low dose x-ray
vol. 6: 54-7B, Series 72 1-300, low dose x-ray
vol. 7: 54-7B, Series 72 301-500, low dose x-ray
vol. 8: 54-7B, Series 75-76, high dose x-ray
vol. 9: 54-7B, Series 77 1-300, x-ray control
vol. 10: 54-7B, Series 77 301-500, x-ray control
vol. 11: 54-7B, Series 78 1-300, x-ray control
vol. 12: 54-7B, Series 78 301-500, x-ray control
Box 8
1954
Abrahamson and Herskowitz. Research data
1954
Abrahamson and Telfer. Progress reports, proposed experiments, and
correspondence
1954
Herskowitz, Irwin H. and Muller. Evidence for Nonlinear Arrangement of
Chromosomes in Drosophila.
Correspondence, data and report
1954
Herskowitz, Irwin H. and Muller. Genetic Effect of Radiation on Populations
"Productivity Project"
Correspondence, data and report
1954 Meyer,
Helen, Shanta V. Iyengar, et al. Ultra-violet experiments. U.S. Public Health
Services grant.
Correspondence, data, reports, etc.
1954?
Quastler. Notes and data
1954-1955 Genetics laboratory. Handouts for lab
crosses
1954-1955 Research notes
1954-1957 Schalet, Abe. Progress report and data
1954-1957 Zoology 365. Exams
1955, Jan.
12 Notes for lecture given to Sonneborn's Heredity
class
1955, Feb.-June Z565, Mutation and the gene.
Lecture notes and mid-term exam
1955, Apr.
20 Lecture in advanced genetics by Herskowitz.
"...probably gave this lecture in Muller's course when M. was away to a
meeting" [note by TM]
1955, Oct.
20 Neutron experiment data
1955, Oct.
Notes for genetic lab course
1955-1965 Notes on experiments, etc.
"These outlines and data from experiments were unassorted [sic] in a large
box, probably transferred there for moving. I left most papers in the order
- disorder - in which they were, but bundled together those that were near
each other...April 13. 81 Thea Muller"
(17 folders)
1956, Feb.
22
1956, Feb.
24 Lecture notes for Frank Young's class - Evolution
Z465
1956
Data
1956 Oster,
Irwin. Data
1956-1959 Data
1957, May
10 Evolution of life.
Notes for lecture given at the University of Chicago
1957, May
31 Statement for the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy
1957, June
7 An interpretation of radiation damage to the exposed individual
on the basis of changes induced in the chromosomes of his somatic
cells.
Notes for genetics seminar, University of Missouri
1957, Oct.
Scheme for experiment with Drosophila
1957, Dec.
10 Biological problems in the conquest of space.
Notes for lecture given at I.U. Men's Quad
1957, Dec.
Crowell, Villa B. Experiment to determine percentage of larval-pupal
death due to x-irradiation of P1 males: research data.
1957 Radiation
Genetics.
Lecture notes
1957-1958 Crowell and Herskowitz. Heterosexual activity and
longevity of the Drosophila male.
Abstract, notes, data
1957-1964 Notes from lectures attended by Muller
1958 Chovnick,
A. Proposed research on: Structural and functional studies of a complex locus
in
Drosophila melanogaster
1958
Cosdan-Korn, E. Crowding. Experiment data
1958
Experiments and data
1958-1960 Data (notebook)
1959, Feb.-May Evolution class.
Lecture notes
1959-1960 "Invisible" detrimental mutations: data
(see Reprint 304)
1959-1960 Genetics & medicine.
Notes for lecture?
1959-1960 Notes on experiments
1959-1961 Calendars (incomplete)
1959-1961 Chronic vs. acute data
1959-1963 Zoology 465. Lecture notes, exams, student rosters,
lists of books
1960, Feb.
22 Introduction of Peo Koller.
Notes only
1960, Oct.
22 Suzuki, David. "lumped data"
1960, Nov. 16
Human life as viewed by modern genetics.
Notes for speech given to I.U. theologians and a group of scientists from
Eli Lilly
1960-1961 Research data
1960-1962 Chronic vs. acute data
Box 9
1961, Jan.
Wagoner, Dale. Research data
1961, June
24 Notes
1961, Summer White, Patti. Research
data
1961, Nov.
6 What we should know about the Soviet Union.
Notes for speech given to Phi Kappa Psi. (also given at Drake University,
Oct. 17, 1962)
1961, Nov.
16 Radiation Damage.
Notes for speech given to Military Conference personnel, Indianapolis
1961, Nov.
28 Introduction of Rabinowitch talking on "Science &
scientists in the Soviet Union"
Notes
1961, Dec.
6 Civil defense. Notes for speech or lecture?
1961 Genetic
basis of somatic damage: data
(see LOW 306)
1961 White and
Bart. Research data
1961 Zoology
575. Lecture notes and exam
1961-1962 Zoology 565 (Mutation and the Gene).
Lecture notes and exam
1962, Jan.
16 Talk for dinner held at Harvard Club, by Dr.
Grace.
Notes
1962, June
18 The core of our being.
Notes for talk given to high school science students (see also: Writings:
1953)
1962, Nov.
2 Recent trends and developments in genetics.
Notes for talk given to RESA of Monsanto, St. Louis
1962 Chronic
acute, data
1962
Crosses
1962 A toast
to Julian Huxley
1962 Wood,
Vida. Research data
1963, Jan.
Data
1963, June
4 Evolutionary conclusions from code synonymy.
Notes for talk given at Cal. Tech.
1963, June
17 Evolution: past, present and future
1963, Oct.
4 Test ban treaty.
Notes on speech given to Steelworkers' Institute at I.U.
1963, Nov.
26 Data
1963 Data and
notes
1963 Lieb,
Margaret. Research data
1963 Wall
schemes
1964, Feb.
28 An estimate of the magnitude and modes of expression of the
genetic damage produced by ionizing radiation.
Notes for lecture for Harvard seminar
1964, June
23 A few tricks with chromosomes and genes in Drosophila.
Notes for lecture
1964, Aug. 15-16 Experiment data
1964?
Data
1964 Menninger
Foundation.
Correspondence and other materials pertaining to Muller's role as
consultant
1964
Introductory remarks to seminar at City of Hope?
1964 or
1965 Kaplan. Research data, including slides
1964-1965 Rinehart, Robert. Chronic and acute, research
data
1965, Feb.
9 Darwin today.
Notes for telephone talk given to Stephen's College
1965 Evolution
class. University of Wisconsin.
Notes
1965-1966 Data and notes
1966, June
4 Notes on Fritz Sobel's paper on "repair"
1966, Sept.
28 Notes
1966
Evolution, Zoology 410 (University of Wisconsin)
Lecture notes, exams, "Tree of Life," "Probable Interrelations of Selected
List of Multicellular Animals," clippings
(see also: Audiotapes of lectures)
(5 folders)
1966 "Muller's
last notes"
n.d., Auerbach, Charlotte. Chronic-Acute. Data
n.d., Charts
(see also: Oversize)
n.d., Class notes
n.d., Class texts on evolution
n.d., Data and notes
(7 folders)
n.d., "Drosophila figures"
Includes drawings and data on Drosophila
(4 folders)
n.d., Ehrlich, Betty. Research data
n.d., Experiment notes and labels
n.d., Handouts on linkage and crossing over
n.d., Longevity of celibate and non-celibate males of Drosophila
melanogaster
n.d., Miscellaneous photographs:
Mutated colony developing from a single irradiated and appearance of a
normal colony; typical giant developing from x-irradiation of normal cells
of human skin and typical giant developing from x-irradiation of normal
cells from Chinese hamster lung; bone marrow cell from a human female
showing 46 pairs of chromosomes
n.d., Moving model of mitosis - instructions.
(Model was patented)
n.d., Notes
n.d., Notes corresponding to slides? or other illustrations? of meiosis
of a lily and grasshopper.
n.d., Notes taken at Makin's lecture
n.d., Previous experience and courses completed by several
students
n.d., Reports
n.d., Schemes 2 and 3 for detection of lethals in
chromosomes
n.d., Supply stock (mice) for teaching
n.d., Ultra-violet experiments. Data
Oversize
n.d., X-chromosome map of different Drosophila species and many
additional charts used for teaching and/or lectures
Series:
Subjects
Materials may include correspondence, certificates, and printed items. Arranged
alphabetically by various subjects, including: 1. Awards; 2. Biographical
materials, including personal and family-related items; 3. Drosophila stock lists
and requests; 4. Evolution. Mostly concerning debate held in 1966 in Arkansas; 5.
Germinal choice; 6. Lysenkoism; 7. Radiation; 8. Reprint requests and lists; 9.
Savitsky case.
Subseries:
Awards
Includes certificates, diplomas and plaques, some with related correspondence
and other materials.
Box 1
1910
Columbia University A.B. degree. Program, photocopies of congratulatory
letters, etc.
1927 Bossom
Award: recommendation file; clippings, etc. re: award and supporting
documentation
[Photocopies, originals belongs to Muller family]
(2 folders)
1928
American Association for the Advancement of Science, 5th annual
prize
1933, Feb.
2 Photocopy of diploma to Academy of Sciences of the Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics
1940
University of Edinburgh. Program for graduation ceremonial, doctorate of
science
1946 Nobel
Prize:
telegram informing HJM of award; souvenirs--programs, menus, calling
cards; subsequent honors related to Nobel prize; photograph of Alfred
Nobel; miscellaneous
(4 folders)
1948
Department of State,
certificate designating HJM as "a delegate of the United States to the
Eighth International Congress of Genetics, to be held at Stockholm,
Sweden, July 7-14
1949
Columbia University, Honorary Doctorate of Science
[see: Oversize for diploma]
1951
1954-1955 American Cancer Society grant-in-aid
certificates
1955 Kimber
Genetics Award
(see also: Plaques)
1958
Linnean Society of London, Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
Commemorative Silver Medal
1959
Leopoldina, Darwin Award
1959
University of Chicago, Honorary Doctorate of Science
1960 Japan
Academy honorary membership
1960
Morris High School Annual Alumni Award
1961 Columbia University, Alexander Hamilton Award
1963
Jefferson Medical College, Honorary Doctorate of Medicine
(see: Oversize for diploma)
1964
Swarthmore College, Honorary Doctorate of Science.
Program only (see: Oversize for diploma)
Oversize 1
Certificates, diplomas, etc. from the following
institutions:
1928 Pi
Gamma Mu honorary membership certificate and enrollment card
1931, Apr.
29 National Academy of Sciences diploma
1943, Dec.
14 Phi Beta Kappa Associates diploma
1946, May
22 Regia Academia Scientiarum Suecica
1947
Lynceum Academy, Rome
1948, Apr.
2 Societas Regia Scientiarum Haumiensis
certificate
1948, Sept.
21 Phi Beta Pi honorary membership certificate
1949
Columbia University, Doctorate of Science diploma
1949
Societas Regia Edinensis
1953 Praeses Concilium et Sodales Regalis Societatis Londini
Pro Scientia Naturali Promovenda
1957, Apr.
6 Alpha Epsilon Delta National Premedical honor society
certificate of membership
1957, Apr.
26 Academia Scientiarvm et Litterarvm Mogvntina
1960, Oct.
25 Kaiserlich Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher
certificate
1962, Feb.
26 La Academia de Artes y Ciencias de Puerto Rico
diploma
1963
Jefferson Medical College honorary doctorate of Medicine diploma
1964, Dec.
30 National Association of Biology Teachers honorary
membership certificate
1964.
Swarthmore College, Honorary Doctorate of Science diploma
undated.
National Institute of Sciences of India, honorary fellow
certificate
Oversize 2
Plaques and Framed items (on a separate shelf):
1955
Kimber Genetics Award (framed certificate)
1956
Rudolf Virchow Medical Society in the City of New York, Virchow
Medal
1960, Sept.
22 United States Civil Defense Council, Pfizer Award of
Merit
1963
Humanist of the Year
1964, Nov. 1
City of Hope National Medical Center... citation...on the
occasion of the seventh Annual Salute to Medical Research
Subseries:
Biographical
Box 2
Autobiographical notes
Awards, honors, jobs, 1907-1918 .
Mostly photocopied correspondence Biographical sketches - mostly for
biographical sources and press releases
(9 folders)
Curriculum vitae
Drawings (Oversize).
Various sketches and mechanical drawings
Family
- mostly correspondence of parents, grandparents, etc. and genealogical
information
(3 folders)
Financial
- includes bank statements, papers concerning insurance, homes,
automobiles, taxes, and Charles Lyons (Muller's uncle who left money to
Muller and his sister Ada).
(5 folders)
Medical reports
Muller, Thea - visa application and immigration details
Scientific contributions. Lists
Television and radio appearances
- Including: script for 1959 Halftime Show #4 "Dr. Hermann J. Muller, for
IURTS; correspondence pertaining to various appearances in
documentaries
Travel
- Passports-1945, 1950, 1955, 1959,
schedules, packing lists and related correspondence,
1945-1964 More travel information may be found filed with
specific conferences and meetings Muller attended.
(5 folders)
Tributes and memorials:
Birthday tributes
- Age 65, 1955, program only; Age 70, 1960
See also: Festschrift for 70th birthday. (Oversize bound volume)
(3 folders)
Indiana University retirement
- Certificate, program of dinner to honor retiring faculty, poem by
Tracy Sonneborn
Memorials
- Includes many published tributes following HJM's death, Apr. 1967
(5 folders)
Miscellaneous
(2 folders)
Subseries:
Drosophila Stock
Box 2
1939-1964 Lists.
(14 folders)
1951-1964 Requests. Correspondence,
Not indexed
(16 folders)
Subseries:
Box 3
Evolution
Most of the materials concern a statement drafted by H.J. Muller which was
sent to eminent scientists across the U.S. attesting to the validity of
evolution. The statement was prompted by a debate entitled "Is the theory of
evolution scientifically established?" held at the Memorial Auditorium of
Little Rock, Arkansas on June 29, 1966 ; (Pro) Professor R.C. Lewontin,
geneticist from the University of Chicago and Dr. Thomas K. Shotwell, biology
teacher at the Allen Academy, Bryan, Texas; and (Con) Professors J.C. Bales and
Jack Sears, both of Harding College, Searcy, Arkansas.
Materials include: drafts and final copies of the statement, including a
reprint of the statement from the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, Feb.
1967 ; lists of names of signers and signed forms; related manuscript
and printed items. (3 folders) (See also: Correspondence in the chronological
and alphabetical files, mostly dating between February and November of 1966;
Printed; Audio/Visual Materials)
Subseries:
Germinal Choice
Box 3
American Eugenics Party
Brochure and newsletters
Brewer, Herbert
(First person to suggest germinal choice which he called eutelegenesis)
Articles, clippings, photocopied letters by HJM and Julian Huxley
Crank letters
Letters from general public concerning support for or opposition to
germinal choice
Eugenics Records Office
Contains Abridged Record of Family Traits form, partially filled in by
HJM and other printed materials
Eugenics Review
Vol. 24, no. 2 (July 1932); Vol. 25, no. l (Apr. 1933); Vol. 57, no. 3
(Sept. 1965); tear sheet containing HJM's letter to editors of The
Scientific American, Apr. 12, 1965
Foundation For Germinal Choice:
Circular letters; donors file; minutes; Prospectus; reply forms - blank
and completed (alphabetical by name); misc. - includes: Proposed North
American charter members, List of correspondents
(7 folders)
Human Betterment Association of America, Inc.
Brochures, articles, etc. concerning voluntary sterilization
Institute for Personality & Ability Testing
Form and related clipping
Lists of writings by HJM and others
Religious and legal aspects of germinal choice
Articles and reprints
Script of Canadian television program on germinal choice. Feb. 11,
1960
Sperm bank.
Statement, June 5, 1963 and notes by HJM; articles
and clippings; controversy, 1980
(4 folders)
Sperm freezing and storage
Mostly reprints and advertisements
(2 folders)
Standard Donor Data Sheet, Case A
Includes tentative questionnaire, 2/10/66 and some
correspondence
Wisconsin Student Dating Form
Miscellaneous germinal choice materials
Newspaper clippings
(see: Clippings: 1962, Sperm Banks; 1963-1966, Germinal Choice)
Subseries:
Box 3
Lysenkoism
Trofim Denisovich Lysenko, geneticist, was president of the Lenin All-Union
Academy of Agricultural Sciences. He discounted Mendelian theories of genetics
in favor of Communist party line theories, i.e., that genetic characteristics
could be altered by simply changing the environment. Debate in Russia became
impossible when Lysenko announced that this theory was officially endorsed by
the Central Committee. Muller denounced him as a charlatan and resigned from
the Academy of Sciences of the USSR.
The papers, mostly 1948-1949, include correspondence, Muller's
resignation, various writings on the subject, reprints and printed articles.
Also included is a folder concerning Voice of America which contains mostly
correspondence about Muller's participation in broadcasts concerning
Lysenkoism, 1949-1956. (9 folders) (see also: Clippings:
1948-1963, Lysenkoism)
Subseries:
Box 4
Radiation
Various materials on radiation, including: correspondence, 1947-1955, concerning radiation injuries and advice; reports, 1945,
submitted to the British Ministry of Labour Panel for Advisory Matters
connected with Industrial Radiology, including one by HJM entitled Genetic
Dangers of High Energy Radiation; research and notes; reprints; and clippings
(5 folders) (See also: National Academy of Sciences, Subcommittee on Genetic
Effects of Atomic Radiation)
Subseries:
Box 4
Reprints
Requests. Correspondence, 1948-1967. Not indexed (16 folders) Followed by
two files of outdated lists of reprints. See: List of Reprints for corrected
version
Subseries:
Box 4
Savitsky Case
Correspondence, 1946-1948, concerning bringing Viacheslav, Helen
and other members of the Savitsky family to the U.S. from Russia. (4 folders)
Series:
Photographs
Arranged chronologically. Mostly contains photographs of Muller, his family,
friends and colleagues.
Box 1
1898? Hermann
J. Muller as a young child.
Copies, original is in the Oversize section
ca.
1900 H.J. Muller's father in Manhattan art metal
workshop
1906 Hermann
J. Muller, age 16
1906 Morris
High School, New York. Morris Science Club
[Oversize]
1910 Hugo
DeVries, standing in a greenhouse.
Photographic postcard
1910 Hugo
DeVries standing outdoors with his wife and their young child in a baby
carriage.
Photographic postcard
1913 First
data papers
1914?
Jacques Loeb, seated at desk and reading (2)
1916 Hermann J.
Muller
1917-1918 Edgar Altenburg, standing outdoors at the University
of Texas
1918 Luncheon
party for Sturtevant, Columbia University, "The flye room group":
H.J. Muller, Schrader, A.H. Sturtevant, Otto Mohr, Calvin B. Bridges, E.
Anderson, Huettner, Thomas Hunt Morgan, Alexander Weinstein, the "Caveman"
1918 Julian S.
Huxley
ca. 1920
Edgar Altenburg standing outdoors with Frances John (Mrs. Theodore John), and
two other people, near Austin, Texas
1922, June
"Group outside the cottage of [?] Sanders, editor of Eugenics Review (the best
periodical on the subject)..."
Includes, Hogben, J.S. Huxley, Sanders, stock, Edgar Altenburg and
Garstrag
ca. 1922
Calvin B. Bridges, standing outdoors
ca. 1922
Cattell, standing outdoors
ca. 1922
Edward Conklin, seated indoors in an office or lab
ca. 1922
Marian Irwin, standing outdoors
1922?
McClung, standing outdoors
ca. 1922
Metz, standing outdoors
1922?
G.H. Parker, sitting outdoors
ca. 1922
Helen Redfield, seated in an office or lab, wearing a white lab
coat.
ca. 1922
George Linius Streeter (1873-1948), portrait
ca. 1922
A.H. Sturtevant, standing outdoors
1922 Vavilov
and Berg, with three others, sitting outdoors
1922 Seven
portraits of unidentified scientists
ca. 1925
Hermann J. Muller, standing outdoors
1926 Group
photograph: International Botanical Congress - Agronomy and Genetics Section,
Cornell
[Oversize]
1926-1927 X-ray data (12 copies)
1927 Hermann
J. Muller. Photograph by Bachrach, Fabian
ca. 1927
Pete Oliver working in a lab with an X-ray machine at the University of
Texas
1928 Hermann
J. Muller, Peter Oliver, and Theophilus Shickel Painter at work in a lab at the
University of Texas, Austin
1930?
Professor J. I. Davies standing outdoors with his "Anheuser bush"
ca. 1930
Weier, Nachtheim and Anderson, seated on running board of car
1931 A. Israel
Agol working with a microscope in a lab
1931 Solomon
Levit, Hermann J. Muller, Carlos Offermann, and A. Israel Agol, in a
lab
1932, June
Front page of The Spark
1932? Ada
(Muller) Griesmaier
1932 Twins in
Moscow at Levit's Institute for Medico-Genetics (2)
1932 Roberts,
Weier, Anderson, Weinstein, Nachtscheim standing outdoors
ca. 1932
Dr. Oscar Vogt, standing outdoors at the Institut fur Gehirnforschung (Kaiser
Wilhelm Institute for Brain Research), Berlin
1933 Diploma
of Election to the Academy of the U.S.S.R.
1933 Muller,
Streeter, Mrs. Vogt, Timofeef, and Dr. Vogt standing outdoors
1934 Institute
for Medico-Genetics under construction
1934?
Group portrait, Moscow lab staff
1934?
Anna Rachel Whiting working with a microscope in a lab
1935, Apr.
Hermann J. Muller with N. V. Timofeef-Ressovsky? and Nicolai
Ivanovitch Vavilov? in Leningrad, (USSR)
1935, May
17 Namama
1935?
Hermann J. Muller in a lab in Moscow, with A. A. Prokofyeva, Nicolai
Ivanovitch Vavilov, Boris Ephrussi, et al.
1935?
Roselee Raffel, working with a microscope in a lab in the
USSR
1936, Dec.
23 Muller, H.J. Attack on Lysenko, first page of
paper
1936 Daniel
Raffel working with a microscope, Institute of Genetics, Moscow
1936?
Nicolai Ivanovitch Vavilov
ca. 1937
Raissa L. Berg, Russian geneticist
1937 Portrait
of Lysenko and title page of book
1938, Feb.
26 Group photograph taken in front of the guest house of The
Institute of Animal Genetics, Edinburgh, Scotland
[Oversize]
1938 Group at
a masquerade party:
including Hermann J. Muller, Thea Muller, Frances Albert Eley Crew,
Charlotte Auerbach, Guido Pontecorvo, and Peo Koller, Institute of Animal
Genetics, Edinburgh
ca. 1938
C.D. and Margaret Darlington seated at table; Darlingtons, et al.
standing outdoors
1939, May
Thea Muller, Dr. J.M. Robson, Ada Griesmaier, and Mrs. J.M. Robson
1939, Sept.
Phineas Whiting, Anna Rachel Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. Slizynski,
standing outdoors at the International Genetics Congress, Edinburgh
1940-1945 Plaque depicting F.A.E. Crew
1942, July
30 J.H. McGregor, signed
1942 Sketch
on bracket fungus of Elk Lake in the Adirondacks
1944, Feb.
9 John Buck, HJM, C. Stern, E.W. Schaeffer, S.C. Bishop, E.
Adolph, and H.M. Smith in Rochester, NY
1944, May
Hermann J. Muller, taken at UCLA by Hans Reichenbach Professor of
Philosophy
1945, Oct.
29 Group portrait taken at the International Geneticists'
Conference at John Innes Horticultural Institute, London,
including Hermann J. Muller, Otto Mohr, Sinks, Winge, and Harland
1945, Dec.
10 Hermann J. Muller with King Gustav at the Nobel Ceremony,
Stockholm
1945-1966 Muller home on 1st Street, Bloomington, IN
Box 2
1946, Dec.
5 Hermann J. Muller, James B. Sumner, professor of Bio-chemistry
at Cornell and Percy W. Bridgman, professor of Mathematics and Natural
Philosophy at Harvard, disembarking plane from Sweden after receiving Nobel
Prize awards
1946 Group
portrait of Hermann J. Muller, Tracy M. Sonneborn, Salvador E. Luria, Kenneth
Mather, Norman Wingate Pirie, and Ralph E. Cleland in a lab at Indiana
University, Bloomington
1946 Hermann
J. Muller and daughter Helen
1946 Hermann
J. Muller, Thea and daughter Helen
1946 Hermann
J. Muller and James Sumner
ca. 1946 or
1947 Hermann J. Muller, Thea and Herman B Wells
ca. 1946 or
1947 Hermann J. Muller, Herman B Wells and Fernandus
Payne
1947, Nov.
24 Student technicians in Muller's Lab: Lela Wong, Helen Byers
and Doris Polly
1947 Hermann
J. Muller
ca.
1947-1948 Hermann J. Muller at baggage claim in unidentified
airport
1947-1949 Four views of Hermann J. Muller and the lab staff at
Indiana University, Bloomington:
The Kitchen staff; group photo; two female assistants; Muller with two
female assistants
1948 Salvador
E. Luria with a student in a lab
1949 Portrait
of Hermann J. Muller
1949 Hermann
J. Muller, using a jeweler's loupe lens to observe the contents of a
vial
1949 Group
portrait of the Zoology staff at Indiana University, Bloomington, including
Hermann J. Muller, Tracy M. Sonneborn, Alfred C. Kinsey, and Sears
Crowell
1950-1960 Two views of Price home with air raid
shelter
1951, Apr.
4 Group photograph: Animal Genetics Society of India
[Oversize]
1951, Apr.
Muller in Japan at conference: group photograph; Muller at blackboard; greeted
as VIP at airport
1951 Dr. and
Mrs. Taku Komai
1952, Dec.
Daughter Helen at 9 years old, used for X-mas card
1952 Muller
with unidentified man
1954 Zoology
Department staff, Columbia University
1955, Dec. 21
Photograph of Mars with card "Happy birthday. The red thread slowly
weaves its way upwards...Carl Sagan"
[Oversize]
1955 Hermann
J. Muller teaching the Drosophila laboratory class in Jordan Hall at Indiana
University, Bloomington
1955 Dr.
Fernandus Payne, Dean of the Graduate School at Indiana University,
Bloomington
1957, Mar.
25 Hermann J. Muller portrait
1957, May
Stanley G. Smith, Manna, and S.P. Ray-Chaudhuri, taken at Forest Insect
Laboratory, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada
1957 Hermann
J. Muller, at age 66
1958, Sept.
8 Hermann J. Muller at a reception given by the USSR delegation
at the Hotel Metropole, Geneva, Switzerland at the Geneva Conference - with
Glass, Taylor Gustafsson, Alikhanian, et al.
1958?
James F. Crow and family
1958?
Hermann J. Muller, seated in his office
1960, Dec.
28 Five photographs taken at 70th birthday dinner:
Thea Muller and HJM; H. Bentley Glass, Thea and Helen Muller; Edgar
Altenburg and H. Bentley Glass; HJM, Cecile and Clarence P. Oliver; Irwin
Oster (See: Festschrift volume, pp. 27a - 27c)
1960, Dec.
Juan Valencia, lecturing - standing in front of a blackboard and
using a pointer; Ruby M. Valencia at work in a lab
1960 Hermann
J. Muller at work in the lab, holding glass vials
1960-1967 Hermann J. Muller, Jonas E. Salk and Curt
Stern
1961, Apr.
11 Group photograph, including:
Judge Bryan, Urey, Pres. Kintz, Hermann J. Muller, Dean Palfrey and Lamb.
Taken at reception preceding Alexander Hamilton awards at Columbia
University
1962, Sept.
4 Group of people including Hermann J. Muller, Murphy, Pantazis,
and White, listening to a speaker at a meeting in Vevey,
Switzerland
ca. 1962
Two views of Tracy M. Sonneborn, Hermann J. Muller, and Ganeff Thoday on a
panel ("Reform for Teaching of Biology") at a meeting in Vevey,
Switzerland
1963 Hermann
J. Muller and Jonas E. Salk, sitting together at a book-covered table and
talking in the lab
1963 Portrait
of Hermann J. Muller, cropped from picture which included Jonas E.
Salk
1963 Five
views of Hermann J. Muller at work in his lab
1963 Hermann
J. Muller at work in lab - drawing from photograph for Scientific
Products
[Oversize]
1963 Hermann
J. Muller with two students at Swarthmore College, Pa.
1963 Hermann
J. Muller with graduate student Dale Wagoner
1963 Hermann
J. Muller and Thea hiking at Elk Lake
1965 J.J.
Kerkis
1965 Gregory
Pincus
1966
Manuscript of Muller's last speech, Chicago
1967 Display
in Muller's lab including jar with masked crab; close-up of crab
1967 Memorial
service exhibit
1967 Muller's
office
1967 Dr. Elof
Axel Carlson and Dr. Oscar Riddle in Muller's office. (5 views, both color and
black & white)
1968, Nov.
Virginia Mauck displaying photographs to be used in a Lilly Library exhibit on
Muller
1968 Edgar
Altenburg
1968 Five
views of exhibit in Tokyo
1968 Muller
home, interior view
1969 Genetic
damage from radiation (fly sketch)
1969 Two views
of High school exhibit
1969 "Ideal
Subject is Fruit Fly"
1969
Sonneborn's house
1970, Aug.
26 Salvador E. Luria before giving Muller memorial lecture at
Indiana University (portrait and two contact sheets)
1970 Muller
exhibit in Jordan Hall
1970 Marcus
Rhoades and Salvador E. Luria in Sonneborn's garden
1973, June
Daughter - Helen (Muller) Htun, niece - Ruth (Kenter) McNeil and grandson -
Kenneth J. Muller
1974 Charlotte
Auerbach
undated, Beal
undated, Cyrus Northrop Memorial Auditorium, University of
Minnesota
undated, Genetics Station, Tsarskoye, Selo. Formerly a mansion given by
Queen Victoria to Grand Duke Michael Michaelovitch
undated, Dr. Paul Gleess, Göttingen
undated, Dontcho Kostoff (1897-1949), Bulgarian scientist
undated, Jane Lyons, Muller's grandmother
undated, Portrait of Muller by Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. and
six proofs
[Oversize]
undated, Hermann J. Muller, Leo Szilard, Chisholm? and one other at
Kitzbühel conference
undated, E.B. Wilson
undated, Drawing of Sewall Wright
undated, Two unidentified portraits and miscellaneous
photographs
Series:
Printed
Arranged chronologically. Mostly contains printed articles or magazines containing
articles about Muller. Also included is a folder of Spanish Civil War materials
collected by Muller in 1936 and
The Spark,
the controversial newsletter Muller helped edit and distribute. Other printed
materials may be found throughout the collection as indicated.
Box 1
1927, Oct.
8
The Literary Digest, 95:2, pp. 23-24. Evolution
speeded up by the x-ray
1928, May
5
Science News-Letter, 13:369, pp. 283-284. Cosmic
rays may cause evolution
1932, Nov.
Student Review, 2:2, pp. 9-10. Eugenics under
capitalism, by Chester Hines
1933, July
21
Science, 78:2012, p.55. Scientific notes and
news
(tear sheet)
1939, Aug.
26
Science News Letter, 36:9, p. 131. Plan for
improving population drawn by famed geneticists
1946-1947, Feb. Various magazines containing articles on Nobel
Prize
1947, Jan.
The Date of Indiana University, 2:3, p. 6-7.
I.U. science--front and center!, by Norman Sklarewitz
1947, Mar.
17
Life, 22:11, pp. 89. Ideal subject is fruit
fly
(Oversize)
1948, Apr.
Purdue Scientist, 1:3, P. 14. The man behind the
Nobel Prize, by David E. Mann, Jr.
1948, Dec.
13
Newsweek. p. 53. Party-line genetics
(tear sheet)
1949, Apr.
30
The Nation, 168:18, p. 511-513. Letters to the
Editors, Waldorf aftermath.
1949, Apr.
Neue Welt, pp. 91-96. Wen verteidgt Professor
Nachtsheim? by N. Nushdin.
1949, May 7
Saturday Review, pp. 20-21. How to make more
communists, by Norman Cousins
1949, May 7
Science News Letter. Effects of radiation on
offspring called insidious
(tear sheet)
1949, May
Science Illustrated, 4:5, pp. 46-48, 53-60. Dr.
Muller and the million human time-bombs, by Morton M. Hunt
1949, Nov.
The Journal of Heredity, 40:11, p. 307-314.
Fly-lovers and man-haters, by A.N. Studitski
1949, Dec.
The Indiana Teacher, 94:4, pp. 122-124, 141. Dr.
Muller and the million human time-bombs, by Morton M. Hunt (Condensed from
article in Science Illustration, May 1949)
1950, Mar.
8
Pathfinder, 57:5, p. 40. X-ray: cure &
danger
1951, June
19
Semana. Un sabio en su salsa.
(Oversize)
1951?
The Genetics Group, Department of Zoology, The
University of Texas.
1953, Mar. 14
Collier's, pp. 38-44. Man's survival in space!
(tear sheet) (Oversize)
1955, May
13
U.S. News & World Report, pp. 72-78. What
will radioactivity do to our children? Interview with Dr. H.J.
Muller
1956, May
15
Indiana University Bulletin, 54:11.
1958, July
14
Time, pp. 50-54. The secret of life
1958, Nov.
Reader's Digest, p. 140. The new age of "atomic
crops"
1959, Jan.
Sexology, p. 343. Editorial, Future of the human
race.
1961, Apr.
Columbia College Today, 8:2, pp. 10-13. Nobel
Prize laureates
1962, Mar.
21
Science World, 11:4, pp. 16. Priority, prestige,
and prizes, by Richard Schulz
1962, Apr.
Saga, 24:1, pp. 18-25, 91-93. World's greatest
scientist reports on fallout, by Jack Harrison Pollack
1962, May
Saga, 24:2, pp. 55-59, 84-87. Epic life of Dr.
Muller, by Jack Harrison Pollack
1962, June
Saga , 24:3, pp. 16-18, 98-99. Dr. Muller talks:
Russia's biggest science boners, by Jack Harrison Pollack
1962, Sept. 23
Epoca, pp. 24-27. Ogni giorno le radiazioni ci
uccidono
(Oversize)
1962, Oct. 7
Rice University, 1912-1962, A Houston Chronicle special supplement,
p. 26
(Oversize)
1963, Aug.
Jefferson Medical College Alumni Bulletin, p.
5-6. 139th commencement exercises.
1964, Sept.
Sexology, 31:2, pp. 76-79. The need for human
sperm banks
1964, July
Scope , The City of Hope Employee Publication,
no. 1, p. 1 Professor H.J. Muller, Nobel laureate, joins Institute
staff
1965, Sept.-Oct.
The Journal of Heredity, 56:5, pp. 197-202.
Portents for a genetic engineering
1965, Dec. 14
World Medicine, 1:6, p. 64. The tree of
knowledge of good and evil
1966, May
The University of Wisconsin-Madison Campus
Report
, 2:5, pp.4-5. Brittinghams-University benefactors and
advisers
1967 Various
magazines containing tributes and memorials to HJM
(2 folders)
1968, Nov.
15
Science, 162:3855, pp. 772-776. H.J. Muller,
crusader for human betterment, by T.M. Sonneborn.
1974, Mar.-Apr.
Free Mind, 17:2, p. 5. The end of an
edifice
1974, Spring/Summer
Southern Exposure, 2:1, pp. 67-70. Nobel prize
winner purged at the University of Texas, by Ronnie Dugger.
1982, Mar.-Apr.
The Humanist, 42:2, pp. 35-41. Selections from
the writings of H.J. Muller
Subseries:
Printed - Other
1917, Jan. - 1921, Oct.
The Rice Institute Pamphlet, Vol. 4, no. l;
Vol. 8, nos. 2 and 4; Vol. 9, no. 2
1930, Dec.
The Socialist Standard (Great Britain). Vol.
27, No. 316
1932,
June
The Spark, Vol. l, No. l.
Student newspaper HJM helped to distribute and edit. He had to resign
from the University of Texas or face a hearing
1936, May-1937, June/July
The Journal of Contraception. Vol. l, nos. 7,
8, 10; Vol. 2, nos. 1, 2, 6-7.
1936
Spanish Civil War. Newspapers, ad and handbill collected by HJM during his
stay in Spain
1939, Mar.
A Report on Contraceptive Materials, consumers Union of United
States.
1960-1965 Exobiology.
Tear sheets of articles; Life in Other Worlds, Mar. 1, 1961, proceedings
of a symposium sponsored by Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. on the
occasion of the tenth anniversary of the Samuel Bronfman Foundation
1950-1964 Miscellaneous magazines and
publications
Series:
Clippings, 1927-1972
Arranged chronologically. A few subjects have been kept together and filed within
the chronological arrangement, such as: Cartoons by Low, collected by Muller's
wife Thea, 1938-1939; foreign newspaper clippings about Nobel Prize, 1946;
Lysenkoism, 1948-1963; Atomic testing, 1950-195; International
Conference on Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, 1955; Darwin Centennial, 1959; Sperm
Banks, 1962; Watson and Crick, 1962; Germinal Choice, 1963-1966 (see also:
Oversize)
Box 1
Biographical, 1927-1945
Box 2
1946-1947
Box 3
1948-1950
Box 4
1951-1955
Box 5
1956-1957
Box 6
1958-1960
Box 7
1961-1962
Box 8
1963-1972
Series:
Audio/Visual Materials
(Consult Curator of Manuscripts for access.)
Box 1-2
Audiographs
- 66 discs mostly correspondence and some lectures
Cassettes
- 2 copies of Muller's talk "Genes: The core of our being" for Harcourt
Brace Record "The biologist speaks"
LP recording
- The Scientists Speak
Color slides
- 6 slides of age experiment tables (charts) on blackboard, May
1945
Wax cylinders
- 2 unidentified marked "HJ?"
Reel-to-reel tapes:
8 tapes of lectures given at RNA Coding Symposium held at Indiana
University, Bloomington, Jan. 23, 1962
29 tapes of Muller's lectures for Zoology 410 (evolution), given at
the University of Wisconsin - Madison in 1966. 14 additional tapes of
excerpts.
Also includes typescripts and correspondence with Thea Muller concerning
the tapes
2 copies of interview of Charlotte Auerbach by Tracy Sonneborn on
Muller, taped March
1972
Julian Huxley. Humanism - The continuing revolution
Series:
Additional
Box 1-7
Restricted