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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!psuvax1!psuvm!wtu
- Organization: Penn State University
- Date: Thu, 10 Sep 1992 10:32:50 EDT
- From: <WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Message-ID: <92254.103250WTU@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: "What's New" Sep-04-1992
- Lines: 64
-
- =========================================================================
- Received: from STANFORD.BITNET by PSUVM.PSU.EDU (Mailer R2.08) with BSMTP id
- 4306; Fri, 04 Sep 92 16:12:09 EDT
- Date: Fri, 4 Sep 92 13:10:17 PDT
- To: wtu@psuvm.bitnet
- From: "Janice Smith" <VP.APS@STANFORD.BITNET>
- Subject: What's New for 09-04-92
-
- WHAT'S NEW, Friday, 4 September 1992 Washington, DC
-
- 1. THE NATIONAL SCIENCE BOARD COMMISSION ON THE FUTURE OF THE NSF
- (WN 28 Aug 92) will hold public meetings on Sept 17, Oct 16 and
- Nov 7. Written public comments are invited on how NSF can advance
- the health of academic physics and do more to link academia and
- industry. Comments should reach the Commission by 15 Oct 92.
- The Executive Secretary of the Commission is Charles Brownstein,
- Director, NSF Office of Planning and Assessment, Room 546,
- National Science Foundation, Washington, DC 20550. (202) 357-1201
- The 15 member Commission will be announced Tuesday, September 9.
-
- 2. UNITED STATES AGREES TO BUY WEAPONS-GRADE URANIUM FROM RUSSIA.
- The highly-enriched uranium will be blended with either depleted
- or natural uranium in the U.S. to produce fuel for power plants.
- At least 10 metric tons is to be imported each year for the first
- five years, and 30 tons per year thereafter. Even so, it will
- take a long time to put a serious dent in the Russian inventory
- of bomb-grade uranium, which is estimated to be over 1,000 tons.
- Moreover, the agreement does not deal with plutonium, which would
- be more expensive to process into fuel, nor does it prevent the
- Russians from continuing to make enriched uranium and plutonium.
- Burning fissile material in power plants is the safest means of
- disposal. There is concern about transporting large amounts of
- fissile material around the world, but the risk of diversion if
- it were processed into fuel in Russia might be even greater.
-
- 3. PHYSICISTS IN THE NEWS! From MIT to MIU, physicists are making
- news. At Maharishi International University, the chair of the
- Physics Department, John Hagelin, is running for President on the
- Natural Law ticket, and expects to be on the ballot in 40 states
- by November. The Harvard trained physicist wants to create a
- meditation corps of 7,000 military volunteers; that is the square
- root of 1% of the world population--the number needed to generate
- super radiance for global scale effects. In Washington, a press
- conference featuring nuclear physicist Stanton Friedman, author
- of Crash at Corona, revealed newly unearthed information about
- the government cover-up of a 1947 crash of a flying saucer in New
- Mexico. One alien, a humanoid with suction cups on the ends of
- its fingers, survived. At MIT, there was a conference on alien
- abductions organized by David Pritchard, an APS Fellow. Although
- the conference was confidential, a report should be out by the
- end of the year. According to Pritchard, 1% of the population has
- abduction experiences--the square of the number needed for super
- radiance. The physical evidence is not conclusive, but abductees
- do exhibit spots on MRI scans corresponding to the location of
- brain implants inserted through their nostrils by the aliens.
-
- 4. TAIWAN IS EXPECTED TO BE THE NEXT FOREIGN PARTNER IN THE SSC.
- According to generally reliable sources, Taiwan is prepared to
- contribute $40M. Combined with $50M committed by India, that ups
- foreign participation to 1% (or is it the square root of 1%?).
-
-
-
- To: WHATSNEW(Personal Dist. List)
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