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RE: Study: High-density storage of nuclear waste heightens terrorism risks
Thanks, Steve. As a graduate of Princeton's engineering school, I have long
been disturbed by Princeton's anti-nuclear stance. This is a particularly
egregious example. I'm going to ask for equal time to rebut it in the same
journal. We'll see. Princeton just got a new Dean of Engineering who
apparently has never had a course in engineering--she's a mathematician and
a software maven. I don't know anything else about her, but I am
pessimistic about getting much help there :-(
Ted Rockwell
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
[mailto:owner-radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu]On Behalf Of Steven Dapra
Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 10:28 PM
To: radsafe@list.vanderbilt.edu
Subject: Re: Study: High-density storage of nuclear waste heightens
terrorism risks
Feb. 15
Frank von Hippel was introduced into this thread (by me). Here is a
little more about him.
According to an article by one of its reporters in the Feb. 15 Albuquerque
Journal, Congress recently released a report suggesting new uses or
applications for the U. S. nuclear arsenal, including weapons able to
strike deep under ground bunkers. The report was promptly attacked by arms
control advocates, one of them being Frank von Hippel.
According to the article, he said, "This is very much Cold War rhetoric."
Von Hippel is an "arms control scientist" and former White House adviser on
nuclear weapons issues during the Clinton administration. He seems to have
a rather broad-ringing anti-nuke bias.
This biography of von Hippel is from the Princeton website.
<<<
A former assistant director for national security in the White House Office
of Science and Technology, von Hippel’s areas of policy research include
nuclear arms control and nonproliferation, energy, and checks and balances
in policymaking for technology. Prior to coming to Princeton, he worked for
ten years in the field of elementary-particle theoretical physics. He has
written extensively on the technical basis for nuclear nonproliferation and
disarmament initiatives, the future of nuclear energy, and improved
automobile fuel economy. He won a 1993 MacArthur fellowship in recognition
of his outstanding contributions to his fields of research. Ph.D. Oxford
University.
Frank von Hippel is co-director of the Program on Science and Global
Security.
>>>
He also wrote a "Public Interest Report" for the Federation of American
Scientists about his White House years, and co-authored an article "U.S.
Tritium Production Plan Lacks Strategic Rationale" with Charles Ferguson in
Defense News, December 7–13, 1998, p. 29.
Here is a link to a list of his publications and organizational
affiliations <http://www.princeton.edu/~globsec/people/fvhippel.html>.
More about him here
<http://www.ransac.org/new-web-site/about/members/hippel.html>.
If you do a Googol search you can find a whole pile of stuff about him in
the anti-nuclear field; mostly related to disarmament.
Steven Dapra
sjd@swcp.com
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