On December 2, 1942, a small group of physicists under the direction of Enrico Fermi gathered on an old squash court beneath Alonzo Stagg Stadium on the Campus of the University of Chicago to make and witness history. Uranium pellets and graphite blocks had been stacked around cadmium-coated rods as part of an experiment crucial to the Manhattan Project–the program tasked with building an atom bomb for the allied forces in WWII.
Seventy Years of Nuclear Fission: Short on Confidence; Long on Waste |
| By: Gregg Levine Tuesday January 29, 2013 12:55 pm |
The Thing That Couldn’t Die: Yucca Battle Continues in Congress and in the Courts |
| By: Gregg Levine Friday May 11, 2012 2:10 pm |
It is hard not to think of this black and white bubbe meise while reviewing the most recent chapters in the battle over the future of the partially excavated, purportedly moribund Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in southwestern Nevada.


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