OFFICE MEMORAND~,`~ o STANFO,RD UNIVERSITY o OFFICE MEMORANDUM SUBIECT: Andromeda &r-a in cc" - ._ You may be interested in the enclosure for 0 z your own information, und I enclose copies a Is0 ii that I aslc be forwarded to lir. Crichton. m 3: Basic scientists who have worked in the genetics of bacteria and viruses believe that these discoveries have ever growing importance for the prevention and healing of serious human diseases. We live, in the present era, in an incompletely justified optimism about having "conquered infectious bacterial disease" as the fruit of the dcvelopmcnt of the antibiotics. However, viruses are in general still beyond the reach of antibiotic ther- apy. Even bacteria, believed to be under firm control re f Man !saban asures needed larth. rtinuing their own evolution and ; upon human health with re- tg run, only our continued vigil- olution can justify our hope of lead in this life and death race. pride I might wish to take in the ts that may arise from my own ashes by the application of this ;ht for. the engineering of bio- In this respect we are in some- n as the nuclear physicist who :nt of atomic weapons, with one :lear weaponry depends on the ial technology. It has then been *eat powers long enough to sus- :e of deterrence and to build a I on non-proliferation. Nuclear ally, become a stabilizing factor he status quo in parallel with zonomic and industrial develop- 11 work just the other way. Study Report on chemical and. las summarized some infectious d as points of departure for the ;ical weapons. Any knowledge- suggest many more. I will not details, nor will I bludgeon you ses that some of these agents pro- to your own conscience the bur- nts about using these kinds of cans would be repelled by the IO less by exposure to the human -"...I..v" v- .u., " .--- - -arm of warfare. Overriding such comparisons should be the grave moral issue in a policy that risks the lives of a world of innocent bystanders. Fortunately, these concerns actually converge with our self-interest in calling for a halt to bacterial warfare before it becomes established in the arms-traffic of the world. M Y MAIN 'FEARS ABOUT BW have to do with the side-effects of its proliferation 1) as a technique of aggression by smaller nations and insurgent groups 15 Reprinted from Stanford M.D., Fall 1969, Vol. 8, Nb. 4.0. 1969 by the Stanford Medical Alumni Association. A scene from Universal's "The Andromeda Strain"-" The reality of each shot became a passion." DIRECTORS AT WORK-III WISE IN of props and costumes; another studio -no one dares guess which-reputedly' has had its own inventory appraised with the same purpose in mind. On a clear day, you can almost see buzzards circling in the skies over Los Angeles. HOLLYWOOD Without question, the next year or so will witness drastic revisions and reor- ganizations within the motion picture industry. Reshuflling has already begun by ARTHUR KNIGHT in the higher echelons, while staffs have been cut to the bone. And fur- ther, many independents have taken T he In thing in Hollywood these to searching around outside the indus- days, it seems, is to proclaim the try altogether for their financing, death of the big studios, a prop- making distribution deals with the osition that is not difficult to sustain when one visits most of the lots out here. The silence, the inactivity, the emptiness are almost oppressive. Sev- cral studios have closed their once bustling commissaries. At Paramount, generally you now can park your car on the famous Western street, with its rows of wooden frontier shops and houses, and a man-made mountain hovering in the background. Metro has already auctioned off its treasure-trove majors only after their picture has been completed. Or, more often, they take the studio's money and run-run as far from the lot as possible, in the manner of Dennis Hopper with Easy Rider or his forthcoming The Last MolGe, which he shot in Peru. Despite all this convincing evidence to the contrary, however, the persistent rumor that the studios are dead is, as they like to say about the theater, pre- mature. There are, and presumably ever will be, some movies that simply could never be made without both the technical facilities and the financial resources of a major studio. To date, and without exception, the independ- ent financing secured outside the indus- try has been in terms of a half-million dollars and under; the multimillion- dollar movie still requires the under- writing of an established firm that can amortize the considerable risks of a single production over a wide range of films. More importantly, like them or loathe them, these costly spectaculars demand stages, settings, costumes, and sometimes special effects that may well tax the staff and full resources of any ma.jor studio, but would be utterly im- uossible with anvthing less. The Andromeda S