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The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1996: Vol 52 Index PDF

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Preview The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1996: Vol 52 Index

INDEX Authors Hansen, Chuck, “A Useful Resource,” July/ Wars: The ABM Treaty is in Danger,” Aug., 3 Jan./Feb., 24, 28-31 Adamskii, Viktor, “The Way It Was,” Nov./ Hesketh, R. V., “Unnatural Causes,” Sept./ Mian, Zia, “A Time of Testing?,” July/Aug., Dec., 54-60 Oct., 3, 61 35-40 Arkin, William M., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear Hibbs, Mark, “Tomorrow, A Eurobomb?,” Molinelli, Sonny, “The Chicken Little Syn- Forces, End of 1995,” Jan./Feb., 62-63; Jan./Feb., 16-23; “Germans Knew Plutoni- drome,” March/April, 3 “New, and Stupid,” Jan./Feb., 64; “Russian um Sting Was ‘Problematic,” March/ April, Moore, Mike, “On the Scale,” Jan/F eb., 2; “Par- (C.1.S.) Strategic Nuclear Forces, End of 7-8 adise Delayed,” review of Weinberg, The 1995,” March/April, 62-63; “The Clock Holdren, John, “Peace-Building in the First Nuclear Era, Jan./Feb., 55-56; Strikes Out,” March/April, 64; “Known Post-Cold War World,” March/April, 29-32 “Shackling the Genie,” March/April, 2; Nuclear Tests Worldwide, 1945-1995,” Holdstock, Douglas, “A European NWFZ?,” “Korean Reactor Pact On Target,” March/ May/June, 61-63; “Nuclear Excuses,” July/Aug., 3 April, 8-9; “Behind the Clock Move,” May/June, 64; “U.S. Nuclear Weapons Holloway, David, “The Way It Was,” Nov./ March/April, 17-23; “The Moral Principle,” Stockpile, July 1996,” July/Aug., 61-63; Dec., 53-54 May/June, 2; “An Unassuming People,” “Nuking Libya,” July/Aug., 64; “Russian Hoodbhoy, Pervez, “The Tritium Solution,” July/Aug., 2; “Wanted: Wee Weaponeers,” Nuclear Stockpile, September 1996,” July/Aug., 41-44 July/Aug., 8-9; “Cheery Words, Little Sept./Oct., 62-63; “The Special-Weapons Isaacs, John, “The Representation-Without- Action,” July/Aug., 14-15, 60; “One Sunny Umbrella,” Sept/Oct., 64; “British, French, Taxation Blues,” Jan/Feb., 14-15; “The Sen- Day,” Sept/Oct., 2; “World Court Says Most- and Chinese Nuclear Forces,” Nov./Dec., ate’s Fits and START,” March/April, 13-14; ly No to Nuclear Weapons,” Sept./Oct., 64-67; “The Six Hundred Million Dollar “Star Wars: Play It Again, Bob,” May/June, 39-42; “Don’t Panic,” review of Walt, Revo- Mouse,” Nov./ Dec., 68 9-10; “Military Spending: Debatable, But lution and War, Sept./Oct., 60-61; Arnett, Eric H., “CTB: Nuclear Club Gets Not Debated,” July/Aug., 12-13; “A Byrd, “Options,” Nov./Dec., 2; “A Boost for Aboli- Clubbier,” May/June, 12-13; “South Asia: Not a Hawk,” Sept./Oct., 20-21; “Chemical tion,” Nov./Dec., 38-43 India’s Nuclear Brownout,” Nov/Dec., 15-16 Weapons Convention: Right Wing Targets Morrison, Philip, “Telling Time,” May/June, 60 Bailey, Kathleen, “World Court Opinion: So Treaty,” Nov./Dec., 13-14 Mtimkulu, Bereng, “Reluctant Peacekeeper,” What?,” Sept./Oct., 46-47 Jagger, John, “We’re All Radioactive,” Jan./Feb., 9-10; “NWFZ: Africa Bans the Bruce, Frank R., “No Chernobyls Here,” Nov/ March/April, 3, 60 Bomb,” July/Aug., 11 Dec., 63 Johnson, Rebecca, “Strike Up the Ban: The Norris, Robert S., “U.S. Strategic Nuclear Burroughs, John, “Nukes on Trial,” March/ View From Geneva,” Jan./Feb., 44—45; “The Forces, End of 1995,” Jan./Feb., 62-63; April, 41-45 In-Comprehensive Test Ban,” Nov./ Dec., “Russian (C.LS.) Strategic Nuclear Forces, Cabasso, Jacqueline, “Nukes on Trial,” 30-35 End of 1995,” March/April, 62-63; “Known March/April, 41-45 Johnson, Chalmers, “Go-Banken-Sama, Go Nuclear Tests Worldwide, 1945- 1995,” Cohen, Avner, “Peres: Peacemaker, Nuclear Home!,” July/Aug., 22-29 May/June, 61-63; “U.S. Nuclear Weapons Pioneer,” May/June, 16-17 Jones, Suzanne, “Take a Hard Look at Subcrit- Stockpile, July 1996,” July/Aug., 61-63; Cortright, David, “The Coming of Incremen- ical Tests,” Nov./Dec., 44-47 “Russian Nuclear Stockpile, September talism,” March/April, 32-36 Kalinowski, Martin, “The Tritium Solution,” 1996,” Sept./Oct., 62-63; “British, French, Cranston, Alan, “Even the Generals Agree,” July/Aug., 41-44 and Chinese Nuclear Forces,” Nov./Dec., Nov./Dec., 4 Kamp, Karl-Heinz, “An Overrated Night- 64-67 Dasgupta, Sunil, “Operation Brasstacks,” mare,” July/Aug., 30-34 Panofsky, Wolfgang K. H., “No Quick Fix :»r review of Bajpai et al, Brasstacks and Kaneko, Kumao, “Japan Needs No Umbrella,” Plutonium Threat,” Jan./Feb., 3, 59 Beyond, Jan./Feb., 57-58 March/April, 46-51 Petrarolha, Fabio L. S., “South America: Day, Samuel H., “Rotblat Nobel Gives Hope to Khariton, Yuli B., “The Way It Was,” Nov./ Rivals to March Side By Side,” Sept./Oct., Free-Vanunu Campaign,” Jan./Feb., 5-6 Dec., 53-63 14; “Brazil: The Meek Want the Earth Dean, Jonathan, “No NATO Expansion Now,” Khripunov, Igor, “Russian Elections: Red Now,” Nov./Dec., 20-29 May/June, 18-19 Army Blues,” May/June, 13-14, 55; “The Pike, John, “Buying Votes with B-2s,” DeVolpi, Alex, “No Quick Fix for Plutonium Parity’s Over,” Sept./Oct., 16-19 May/June, 4 (resporse),” Jan./Feb., 60-61 Kiselyov, Sergei, “Inside the Beast,” May/ Plesch, Daniel T., “Letting Defeatism Defeat Dornan, Robert K., “Clinton Policies Destruc- June, 43-51 Disarmament,” July/Aug., 4 tive,” Nov./Dec., 3 Krepon, Michael, “World Court Opinion: The Prados, John, “No Reform Here,” Sept./Oct., Epstein, William, “Revolt of the Non-Aligned,” Counter-Revolution,” Sept./Oct., 45-46 55-59 March/April, 39-40; “CTB: Next Steps,” Kiintzel, Matthias, “Germany’s Other Plutoni- Press, Eyal, “The Dismal Facts,” review of Nov./Dec., 35-37 um Option,” July/Aug., 3 Makhijani, et al., Nuclear Wastelands: A F avin, Christopher, “Nuclear Power Brown- LaForge, John, “Invalid Uses,” Jan./Feb., 61 Global Guide to Nuclear Weapons Produc- ing Out,” May/June, 52-55 Landau, Susan, “Joseph Rotblat: The Road tion, March/April, 58-59 Fricaud-Chagnaud, C.G., “Eurobomb? Nen; Less Traveled,” Jan./Feb., 46-54 Project on Eliminating Weapons of Mass Eurodeterrence? Oui,” May/June, 3, 60 Lenssen, Nicholas, “Nuclear Power Browning Destruction, “A Four-Step Program to Gerson, Joseph, “‘I Refuse,’” July/Aug., 26 Out,” May/June, 52-55 Nuclear Disarmament,” March/April, 52-55 Goldberg, Stanley, “With Friends Like Levin, Ruth, “Try 30 Seconds,” March/April, Rankin-Lowe, Jeff, “Oh Canada!,” May/June, These ...,” review of Sime, Lise Meitner: 60-61 60 A Life in Physics, July/Aug., 55-57; Lumpe, Lora, “Costly Giveaways,” Sept./ Oct., Rauch, Jerome S., “Stop Fidgeting at the Mar- “Another Death Greatly Exaggerated,” 30-39 gin,” March/April, 61 review of Horgan, The End of Science: Fac- Lyman, Edwin S., “Weapons Plutonium: Just Richelson, Jeffrey T., “High Flyin’ Spies,” ing the Limits of Knowledge in the Twilight Can It,” Nov./Dec., 48-52 Sept./Oct., 48-54 of the Scientific Age, Nov./Dec., 60-62 MacKenzie, Donald, “Toward Disinvention,” Riveles, Stanley, “A Tenth Inning for Star Gordon, Danielle, “The Verdict: No Harm, No Sept./Oct., 4 Wars: The Treaty is Safe,” Jan./Feb., 25-27 Foul,” Jan./Feb., 32-41; “Experimentation Makhijani, Arjun, “The U.S. Can’t Have It Rotblat, Joseph, “Remember Your Humanity,” Continues,” Jan./Feb., 36; “No Peace for Both Ways,” March/April, 36-39; “The March/April, 24-28 South Africa’s Wand’ring Warriors,” Stewardship Smokescreen,” Sept./Oct., Rothstein, Linda, “Pu in the Sky,” Jan./Feb., May/June, 5-6; “Getting a Real Bang for the 6-7; “Physicists Test Threshold—Of Toler- Buck,” July/Aug., 6; “Where in the (Cyber) Marples, David, “The Decade of Despair,” ance,” March/April, 5-6; “Looking Into World is Carlos Salinas?,” Sept./Oct., 6-7; May/June, 22-31 Mitre’s Corners,” May/June, 7-8; “Hey, “Coming Soon to a Sky Near You,” McCally, Mike, “Aftereffects,” review of Army, Welcome to Our World,” July/Aug., Sept/Oct., 50; “Reading Between the Party Yamazaki, Children of the Atomic Bomb, 5-6; “Searching for Reality,” July/Aug., Lines,” Nov./Dec., 5-8 and Schull, Effects of Atomic Radiation, 9-10; “Jumping to Conclusions,” July/ Aug., Handler, Joshua, “Russia Ready for START March/April, 56-57 10; “$1 Billion a Day,” review of Pasztor, II,” Jan./Feb., 11-12 Mendelsohn, Jack, “A Tenth Inning for Star When the Pentagon Was for Sale, July/Aug., November/December 1996 69 59-60; “The Flipper Flap,” Sept./Oct., 8; 57-58 Nov/Dec., 20-29; will march with Argentina, “Cassini, Yes; Topaz, No,” Sept./Oct., 9-10; Horgan, John, The End of Science: Facing the Sept/Oct., 14 “Good News, Bad News,” Nov./Dec., 8-9; Limits of Knowiedge in the Twilight of the Britain: nuclear forces, Nov./Dec., 60-63; nucle- “Excuses, Excuses,” Nov./ Dec., 10 Scientific Age, reviewed by Stanley Gold- ar tests, May/June, 61-63 Schwartz, Stephen I., “The $4 Trillion Dele- berg, Nov./Dec., 60-62 Bulgaria: nuclear power in, May/June, 58 tion,” Nov/Dec., 40 Makhijani, Arjun, Howard Hu, and Katherine Bulletin: blew it on Clock, March/April, 64; Sharp, Jane, “Bosnia Needs A Friend With Yih, eds., Nuclear Wastelands: A Global holds public hearing on Doomsday Clock, Staying Power,” March/April, 4 Guide to Nuclear Weapons Production, March/April, 17-23; on World Wide Web, Sich, Alexander R., “Truth Was an Early Casu- reviewed by Eyal Press, March/April, 58-59 March/April, 15-16 alty,” May/June, 32-42; “The Shutdown O’Prey, Kevin P., A Farewell to Arms? Rus- Butler, Gen. Lee: supports nuclear disarma- Question,” May/ June, 36-37; “The Denial sia’s Struggles with Defense Conversion, ment, Nov./Dec., 4 Syndrome,” May/June, 38-39 reviewed by Walter C. Uhler, July/Aug., Byrd, Robert: sounding dovish, Sept./Oct., Smirnov, Yuri, “The Way It Was,” Nov./Dec., 57-59 20-21 54-59 Pasztor, Andy, When the Pentagon Was for California votes: and Stealth bomber, May/ Smith, Nancy, “No Plan for Abolition,” May/ Sale, reviewed by Linda Rothstein, July/ June, 4 June, 60 Aug., 59-60 Canberra Commission: and nuclear disarma- Spain, Lauren, “Doomsday Clock: Cool Site of Schull, William J., Effects of Atomic Radiation, ment, Nov./Dec., 38-43; omitted weapons the Day,” March/April, 15-16; “Reading reviewed by Mike McCally, March/April, costs, Nov./Dec., 40 Between the Party Lines,” Nov./Dec., 5-8 56-57 Cassini: not dangerous, Sept./Oct., 9-10 Stone, Jeremy, “World Court Opinion: Less Sime, Ruth Lewin, Lise Meitner: A Life in Central Intelligence Agency: see CIA Than Meets the Eye,” Sept./Oct., 43-45 Physics, reviewed by Stanley Goldberg, Chemical Weapons Convention: Senate ratifi- Suter, Keith, “Treaty of Rarotonga: U.S. Signs July/Aug., 55-57 cation vote postponed, Nov./Dec., 13-14 On At Last,” March/April, 12-13; “Home- Stampfli, John F., “14 Agencies,” Nov./Dec., 63 Chernobyl: anniversary of, May/June, 2; blow front Politics,” Nov/Dec., 42 Walt, Stephen M., Revolution and War, to nuclear power, May/June, 52-55; a decade Taylor, Theodore B., “Circles Of Destruction,” reviewed by Mike Moore, Sept./Oct., 60-61 of despair, May/June, 22-31; the shutdown Jan./Feb., 4 Weinberg, Alvin M., The First Nuclear Era, question, May/June, 36-37; six who were Toyoda, Toshiyuki, “The ‘X’ Factor,” Jan/Feb., reviewed by Mike Moore, Jan./Feb., 55-56 there, May/June, 43-51; what really hap- 61 Yamazaki, James N., Children of the Atomic pened, May/June, 32-42 Tripolskaya-Mitlyng, Viktoria, “When a Forest Bomb, reviewed by Mike McCally, March/ China: not a military threat, July/Aug., 19-21; Falls, Splinters Fly,” July/Aug., 16--18; “A April, 56-57 nuclear forces, Nov./Dec., 60-63; nuclear Parade of Troubles,” Nov./Dec., 17-19 tests, May/ June, 61-63 Tsipis, Kosta, “Telling Time,” May/June, 60 CIA: reform, Sept./Oct., 55-59 Uhler, Walter C., “Combating Conversion,” Subjects Cold Warriors: dolphins fail to adapt to peace review of O’Prey, A Farewell to Arms? time, Sept./Oct., 8 Russia’s Struggles with Defense Conver- Commission on Roles and Capabilities: and sion, July/Aug., 57-59 ABM Treaty:, Jan/Feb., 25-27 CIA reform, Sept./Oct., 55-59 Ustiugov, Mikhail, “Kazakh Power Play,” Africa: signs nuclear-weapon-free zone treaty, Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty: see CTB July/Aug., 45-49 July/Aug., 11; and South African mercenar- Conference on Disarmament: and CTS. Jan./ Vardanian, Astghik, “Armenia’s Leftover He- ies, May/June, 5-6; South Africa as peace- Feb., 41-45; crunch time for CTB, May/ roes,” May/June, 46; “Armenia’s Choice,” keeper, Jan./Feb., 9-10; June, 10-12; India blocks CTB, Sept/Oct., 9; July/Aug.. 50-54 Ames, Aldrich: Sept./Oct., 55-59 and nuclear test ban, Nov/Dec., 30-35 von Hippel, Frank, “Take a Hard Look at Sub- Argentina: will march with Brazil, Sepi./ Oct., Congress: no debate on military spending, critical Tests,” Nov./Dec., 44-47 14 July/Aug., 12-13; penny-pinching with U.N., Wang Hao, “China Is No Threat,” July/Aug., Armenia: fate of its Chernobyl volunteers, Jan/Feb., 14-15; Senator Byrd turns dovish, 19-21 May/June, 46; nuclear power in, May/June, Sept./Oct., 20-21; to revive Star Wars?, Waterston, Liz, “A European NWFZ?,” 58, July/Aug., 50-54 May/June, 9-10; see also Senate July/Aug., 3 Arms control: crunch time for CTB, May/June, Conventional weapons: giveaways costly, Weglarczyk, Bartosz, “Just Like the Bad Old 10-12; and incrementalism, March/ April, Sept./Oct., 30-39 Days?,” Sept./Oct., 5-7; “Nuclear Smug- 32-36; North Korea’s reactor pact on target, Croatia: Dubrovnik recovering, Nov./Dec., gling: Smoke, But No Fire,” Sept./Oct., 15 March/April, 8-9; Russia ready for START 11-12 Weiss, Peter, “World Court Opinion: And Now, III, Jan/Feb., 11-12; U.N. approves CTB, CTB: Nov./Dec., 2; crunch time in Geneva, Abolition,” Sept./ Oct., 42 Nov,/Dec., 30-37; U.S. view on CTB, May/June, 10-12; Events leading to, Wenzel, Kevin, “No Quick Fix for Plutonium Jan./Feb., 41-44 Nov./Dec., 30-35; at impasse, Sept./Oct., 9; Threat,” Jan./Feb., 59-60 Asia: China no threat to neighbors, July/ Aug., life after, Nov/Dec., 35-37; and Non-Aligned Woodard, Colin, “Fighting for the Scraps,” 19-21; Japan needs no nuclear umbrella, Movement, March/April, 39-40; and nuclear May/June, 56-59; “Nuclear Expansion,” March/April, 46-51; U.S. military to stay in powers’ cooperation, May/ June, 12-13; per- May/June, 58; “The Balkans: Morning in Okinawa, July/Aug., 22-29 mits nuclear powers to modernize their Dubrovnik,” Nov/Dec., 11-12 Australia: Canberra Commission, Nov./Dec., arsenals, March/April, 36-39; stewardship Wurst, Jim, “Land Mines: Inching Toward a 38-43; and nuclear disarmament, Nov./ Dec., program challenges, Sept./Oct., 22-29; and Ban,” March/April, 10-11; “Lasers,” 42 U.S. plans for subcritical tests, Nov./Dec., March/April, 11; “Land Mines: Bobbled Aviano: Nuclear Surety Inspection, July/Aug., 44-47; view from Geneva, Jan/Feb., 44—45; Ban,” Sept/Oct., 11-14 64 view from Washington, Jan./Feb., 41-44 Zamora Collina, Tom, “Strike Up the Ban: The B-2 bomber: buying votes with, May/June, 4 Cyberwar: the digital battlefield, July/Aug., View from Washington,” Jan./Feb., 41-44; B61: new weapon or not?, Jan./Feb., 64 “Bad Timing,” Jan/Feb., 43; “CTB: Crunch Ballistic missile defense: Star Wars redux?, Czech Republic: nuclear power in, May/June, Time in Geneva,” May/June, 10-12 May/June, 9-10 58 Zerriffi, Hisham, “The U.S. Can’t Have It Both Belarus: and contamination from Chernobyl, Defend America Act: Star Wars redux, Ways,” March/April, 36-39; “The Steward- May/June, 22-31; nuclear power in, May/June, 9-10 ship Smokescreen,” Sept/Oct., 22-29 May/June, 58 Defense Department: and “non-profit” consul- Bellona Foundation: under pressure in Russia, tants, May/June, 7-8 Sept/Oct., 5-7 Defense Nuclear Agency: now Defense Special Board of Directors: holds hearing on Dooms- Weapons Agency, Sept./Oct., 64 Books day Clock, March/April, 17-23 Democratic Party: platform, Nov./Dec., 5-8 Bosnia: peacekeeping in, March/April, 4; U.S. Deutch, John: Sept./Oct., 55-59 Bajpai, Kanti P., et al, Brasstacks and Beyond, Army tests Shortstop in, July/Aug., 6 Dole, Bob: and Defend America Act, May/ reviewed by Sunil Dasgupta, Jan./ Feb., Brazil: and Landless Workers Movement, June, 9-10; did not read platform, Nov/ Dec., 70 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 5-8; Mexico: missing president not in cyberspace, 62-63 Dolphins: rescued by U.S. Navy, Sept./Oct., 8 Sept./Oct., 6-7 Nuclear power: in Armenia, July/Aug., 50-54; Doomsday Clock: hearing, March/April, 17-23; Military spending: Byrd protests, Sept./Oct., in Eastern Europe, May/June, 56-59; in leap forward a setback, March/ April, 64; 20-21; giving away old to buy new India, Nov./Dec., 15-16; in Kazakhstan, moved forward, Jan./Feb., 2; poll on World weapons?, Sept./Oct., 30-39; good and bad July/Aug., 45-49; truth about Chernobyl, Wide Web, March/April, 15-16 news, Nov./Dec., 8-9; modest in China, May/June, 32-42 Dubrovnik: after Serbian shelling, Nov./Dec., July/Aug., 19-21; not debated, July/Aug., Nuclear smuggling: Germans knew sting was 11-12 12-13 problematic, March/April, 7-8; and Poland, Eastern Europe: NATO shouldn’t add, Mitre Corporation: fees, May/June, 7-8 Sept./Oct., 15 May/June, 18-19; and nuclear power, Moscow summit: little action, July/Aug., 14-15, Nuclear targeting: new REACT system, May/June, 56-59 60; and nuclear disarmament, July/Aug., 4 Nov./Dec., 68 Energy Department: releases radiation exper- MOX fuel: disadvantages of, Nov./Dec., 48-52 Nuclear testing: barred by CTB, Nov./Dec., iment information, Jan./Feb., 32-41 NATO: shouldn’t expand now, May/June, 18-19 35-37; CTB signed at last, Nov./Dec., 30-35; Ethics: and radiation experiments, Jan./Feb., Nevada Test Site: to conduct subcritical tests, India about to try?, July/Aug., 35-40; world- 32441 Nov./Dec., 44-47 wide, 1945-1995, May/June, 61-63 Europe: German-French plan for Eurobomb?, New republics: Armenia’s energy crisis, Nuclear warhead dismantlement: July/Aug., Jan/Feb., 16-23 July/Aug., 50-54; Kazakhstan seeks nuclear 61-63 Excess defense articles: given away by U.S., power prestige, July/Aug., 45-49 Nuclear waste: disposal of plutonium, Nov./ Sept./Oct., 30-39 New Zealand: no-nukes policy, Nov./Dec., 42 Dec., 48-52 Force XXI: and digital battlefield, July/Aug., Nikitin, Alexander: charged with treason in Nuclear weapons: abolition as U.S. policy, Russia, Sept./Oct., 5-7 March/April, 32-36; British, French, Chi- France: and a Eurobomb, Jan./Feb., 16-23; Non-Aligned Movement: revolt by, March/ nese, Nov./Dec., 64-67; cost, Nov./Dec., 40; nuclear forces, Nov./Dec., 60-63; nuclear April, 39-40 could be disinvented, sort of, Sept./Oct., 4; tests, May/June, 64-67 North Korea: reactor pact on target, March/ earth-penetrating, Jan./Feb., 64; four-step Germany: and a Eurobomb, Jan./Feb., 16-23; April, 8-9 program to end, March/April, 52-55; haves government knew plutonium sting was Nuclear abolition: now, Sept./Oct., 42 get clubbier, May/ June, 12-13; history of problematic, March/April, 7-8; other pluto- Nuclear accidents: blow to nuclear power, Soviet thermonuclear, Nov./Dec., 53-63; Lraq nium option, July/Aug., 3 May/June, 52-55 blames for defeat, May/June, 64; of little Global Positioning System: costs of commercial Nuclear arsenals: British, French, and Chinese value to Japan, March/April, 46-51; and use, July/Aug., 9-10 stockpiles, Nov./Dec., 64-67; Russian stock- “paper warriors,” Sept./ Oct., 64; recruiting Health: and background radiation, July/ Aug., pile, Sept./Oct., 62-63; U.S. stockpile, future designers, July/Aug., 8-9; Russia’s 10; radiation experiments, Jan./ Feb., 32-41; July/Aug., 61-63 strategic forces 1995, March/April, 62--63; and radiation threshold theory, Marci/April, Nuclear contamination: uncovered by Bellona terrorists don’t need, July/Aug., 30-34; U.S. Foundation, Sept./Oct., 5-7 stockpile 1996, July/Aug., 61-63; U.S. strate- Hiroshima: publication of One Sunny Day, Nuclear costs: July/Aug., 61-63; Nov./Dec., 40 gic forces 1995, Jan./Feb., 62-63; U.S., Rus- Sept./Oct., 2 Nuclear deterrence: and Iraq, May/June, 64; sia like them, intend to keep them, Hungary: nuclear power in, May/June, 58 hasn’t deterred war, March/April, 24-28; March/April, 36-39; World Court to judge Hydrogen bomb: Soviet, Nov./Dec., 53-59 Japan needs no umbrella, March/April, legality of, March/April, 41-45; World Court Hydronuclear testing: and CTB, Nov./Dec., 46-51; untenable, March/April, 29-32 says mostly no to, Sept./Oct., 39-47 44447 Nuclear disarmament: Jan/Feb., 4; abolition as Nuclear-weapon-free world: propounded by India: and CTB, Nov./Dec., 2; blocks CTB, U.S. policy, March/April, 32-36; Canberra Joseph Rotblat, Jan./Feb., 46-54; needed, Sept./Oct., 9; nuclear power browning out, Commission plan for, Nov/Dec., 38-43; coun- March/April, 24-28; World Court ruling Nov./Dec., 15-16; preparing for a nuclear tered by U.S. design capacity, Sept./Oct., ambiguous on, Sept./Oct., 39-42 test?, July/Aug., 35-40 22-29; CTB does not address, Nov./Dec., Nuclear-weapon-free zones: Africa signs Inhumane Weapons Convention: and land mine 30-35; and defeatism, July/ Aug., 4; disinven- treaty, July/Aug., 11; Japan should promote, ban, March/April, 10-11; land mine ban bob- tion possible, Sept./Oct., 4; four-step pro- March/April, 46-51; U.S. signs Treaty of bled, Sept./Oct., 11-14 gram for, March/April, 52-55; gradual Rarotonga, March/April, 12-13 Intelligence: and CIA reform, Sept./Oct., 55-59 psychological process, Sept./Oct., 45-46; has Okinawa: July/Aug., 2; abused by U.S. bases, Iraq: and nuclear deterrence, May/June, 64 support of military, Nov./Dec., 4; and India, July/Aug., 22-29 Israel: Shimon Peres, nuclear pioneer, May/ Nov./Dec., 2; needed, March/April, 29-32; Organization for African Unity: and peace- June, 16-17 needs action, March/April, 24-28; next steps keeping, Jan./Feb., 9-10 Japan: betrays Okinawa, July/Aug., 22-29, after CTB, Nov./Dec., 35-37; and Nobel Pakistan: calm as India seems about to test, needs no nuclear umbrella, March/April, peace prize, March/April, 2; U.S., Russia July/Aug., 35-40; needs tritium treaty with 46-51 don’t want, March/April, 36-39; World Court India, July/Aug., 41-44 Kazakhstan: and nuclear power, July/Aug., can’t order, Sept./Oct., 46-47; World Court Party platforms: and 1996 presidential race, 45-49 ruling ambiguous, Sept./Oct., 39-42 Nov./Dec., 5-8 Kurchatov, Igor: , Nov./Dec., 53-63 Nuclear materials security: agreements at Peacekeeping: Brazil, Argentina train for, Land mines: ban bobbled, Sept./Oct., 11-14; Moscow summit, July/Aug., 14-15, 60 Sept/Oct., 14; and U.S. ambivalence toward inching toward ban, March/April, 10-11 Nuclear missiles: computer targeting of, U.N., Jan./Feb., 14-15; Landless Workers Movement: in Brazil, Nov./Dec., 68 Pentagon: and Mitre Corporation, May/June, Nov./Dec., 20-29 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: crunch time 7-8; still guarding accurate GPS signals, Langsdorf, Alexander: July/Aug., 10 for CTB, May/June, 10-12; and future aboli- July/Aug., 9-10 Latin America: Brazil, Argentina move closer, tion, Sept./Oct., 4; India, Pakistan bomb lob- Peres, Shimon: nuclear pioneer, May/June, Sept./Oct., 14; Brazil’s Landless Workers bies strong, July/Aug., 35-40; and 16-17 Movement, Nov./Dec., 20-29 Non-Aligned Movement, March/April, Plutonium: can-in-canister disposal, Nov./ Dec., Lebed, Alexander: Nov./Dec., 17-19 3940; North Korea’s reactor pact on target, 48-52; disposal, Jan./Feb., 3, 59; fuel for Libya: could be nuked from Aviano, Italy, March/April, 8-9; tritium treaty needed on satellites, Nov/Dec., 10; German sting prob- July/Aug., 64 subcontinent, July/Aug., 41-44; U.S. in vio- lematic, March/April, 7-8; Germany’s other Lithuania: nuclear power in, May/June, 58 lation of, March/April, 36-39 option, July/Aug., 3; natural breeding of in Los Alamos National Laboratory: and plutoni- Nuclear Notebook: British, French, Chinese atmosphere, Jan./Feb., 6-7 um production, Nov./Dec., 10 nuclear forces, Nov./Dec., 64-67; nuclear Poland: nuclear power in, May/June, 58; and LYNER facility: site for subcritical tests, tests 1945-1995, May/June, 61-63; Russian nuclear smuggling, Sept./Oct., 15 Nov./Dec., 44-47 nuclear stockpile, Sept/Oct., 62-63; Russian Pugwash: founding, Jan./Feb., 46-54; and Manhattan project: Joseph Rotblat’s departure strategic forces 1995, March/April, 62-63; Nobel peace prize, March/ April, 29-32 from, Jan./Feb., 46-54 U.S. nuclear stockpile 1996, July/ Aug., Radiation: background, July/Aug. 10; Cher- Mercenaries: South African, May/June, 5-6 61-63; U.S. strategic forces, 1995, Jan/Feb., nobyl’s legacy, May/June, 22-31; experi- November/December 1996 71 ments on humans, Jan./Feb., 32-41; and 13-14 than already undertaken, Sept./Oct., 43-45 health-effects threshold theory, March/ START III: and defeatism, July/Aug., 4 World Court Project: members of, March/ April, 5-6 Stealth bomber: buying votes with, May/June, April, 41-45 Radioisotope thermal generators: on Cassini, 4 World Military and Social Expenditures 1996: Sept/Oct., 9-10 Stockpile stewardship: how necessary?, Nov/Dec., 8-9 Rarotonga, Treaty of: U.S. signs at last, Sept/Oct., 22-29 World Wide Web: finding deposed heads of Mareh/ April, 12-13 Strategic Defense Initiative: see Star Wars state on, Sept/Oct., 6-7; includes Doomsday Reconnaissance: and commercial images, Terrorists: desire for nukes overrated, July/ Clock poll, March/April, 15-16 Sept./Oct., 50; spy satellites, Sept./Oct., Aug., 30-34 Yugoslavia: Dubrovnik recovering, Nev/ Dec., 48-54 Theater missile defense: and ABM Treaty, 11-12; peace in Bosnia?, March/ April, 4 Red Army: how will it vote?, May/June, 13-14, Jan/Feb., 25-27 55; see also Russian army Topaz: idea of reemerging?, Republican Party: platform, Nov./Dec., 5-8 Sept./ Oct., 9-10 Romania: nuclear power in, May/June, 58 U.S. Air Force: new com- Rotblat, Joseph: meaning of Nobel for, puter program for nucle- Ee re Statement of Ownership, Managemen(t,R eanqdb uyC3 ii9rUc r.uSl.eCa.t di38o 8n5 ) Jan./Feb., 5-6; Nobel Peace Prize winner, ar targeting, Nov/ Dec., = a oe JMaanr.c/hF/eAb.p,r il46,- 524 ; and nuclear disarmament, U.S6.8 A rmy: and digital bat- «omeBs uFlarleeqntueinenc y of the Atomic Scientists = ~ Oo 19 a166d et 3) 4;1 9)? 8$4/.21% Russia: charges environmentalist with trea- tlefield, July/Aug., 5-6; —— * SoeGsy,t Cou ey — 6942 South Kimpark Avenue son, Sept./Oct., 5-7; and Chernobyl, May/ uses Shortstop defense, Chicago, Illinots 60637 June, 22-31; fears NATO expansion, May/ July/Aug., 6 . Comg6u0a4t2e South Kimbark Avenue (Nor Premer) June, 18-19; how will army vote?, May/ U.S. military: in Okinawa, Chicago, Illinois 667 June, 13-14, 55; hydrogen bomb history, July/Aug., 22-29 the — ¢ - Nov./Dec., 53-60; little action at Moscow U.S. Navy: rescues veteran 60d4u2c atiSoonuat!h KimFobua rt Av‘oer ovPeo r Nuclear Science summit, July/Aug., 14-15, 60; “new Rus- dolphins, Sept./ Oct., 8 Chicago, Tilinots 69637 ke Moore sian” jokes, Sept/Oct., 10; nuclear stockpile, U.S. peacekeepers: in 6042 South Kimbark Ave, Chicago, IL 69637 Sept./Oct., 62-63; nuclear tests, 1945-1995, Bosnia at last, March/ “Tine tontrea n Marg Acree May/June, 61-63; ready for START III, April, 4 6042 South Kimbark Ave, Chicago, IL 69637 Jan./Feb., 11-12; six who were at Cher- U.S. strategic forces: 1995, "*TT aieee" peat opsmo eee bew ano re rtooeme m m sn atmeo ae nd eeme meeaaotoaat ymc aoPaanrt e nnatejih a aafi eva“m nnaaetee 0 7Re G oSaCAnPH TeLOeR COafrS ePn EmEetD0 OTS nobyl, May/June, 43-51; strategic forces Jan./Feb., 62-63 me pera & ere 9d eciress “a De vias 1995, March/April, 62-63; weakened mili- Ukraine: and contamina- Educational! Foundation For Nuclear Science 6047 Kimbart Ave, Chicago, TL 60637 tary, Nov./ Dec., 17-19; what really hap- tion from Chernobyl, | pened at Chernobyl, May/June, 32-42; will May/June, 22-31; Cher- (Nonprofit: no stock issued) | turn inward, July/Aug., 16--18 nobyl, what really hap- Russian army: how will it vote?, May/June, pened, May/June, 32-42; 13-14; in crisis, Nov./Dec., 17-19 nuclear power in, May/ Sakharov, Andrei: Nov./Dec., 53-63 June, 58; six who were at Salinas, Carlos: not in cyberspace, Sept./Oct., Chernobyl, May/June, 6-7 43-51 4J Sandia National Laboratories: wants future United Nations: 50th weapons designers, July/Aug., 8-9 anniversary, Jan./Feb., Sate4l8l-i5t4e s: intelligence-collecting, Sept./Oct., b1l4y- 1a5p;p rGoevneesr aClT BA,s sNeomv-/ ry ens 10' edere rooms tasp epones (neck one) CHeOe rPaaer aNCpneeettnC g reesn gTQehudea nQpgue apPnreges cePe rdeicncegc ti'on2 gr M 'o2 rMeaer ts Savannah River: and plutonium disposal, Dec., 30-35; see also PS Form 3826, Compe 1904 (See mamncosFo Aervesrse ) Nov./Dec., 48-52 Peacekeeping SDI: see Star Wars Vanunu, Mordechai: cam- cn TS4 emus Cate torG reseCmutoe Srat ow Senate: Byrd turns dovish, Sept./Oct., 20-21; paign to free buoyed by z Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Sentember/October 1996 postpones Chemical Weapons Convention Rotblat Nobel, Jan./ Extent and Menus of Creuten Bo aap enC umeenene ea vote, Nov/Dec., 13-14; and START Treaty, Feb., 5-6 8 TemN o Co(mMeye Prasms R un) 12,500 | 12,9 March/April, 13-14 Verification: and U.S. sub- PwSdeN eoar r o Requested Croammor | 11 Shortstop: neutralizes artillery shells, July/ | critical tests, Nov./ Dec., 7 Pad orR equesiec Mae Suomin paone | a Aug., 6 44AT * ‘ane aioReen veaseie c Crosator SSloouvtahk iaA:f rincuac:l eamre rpcoewnearri eisn,, MaMya/yJ/uJnuen,e ,5 8 5-6; Vit4r8i-fi5c2a tion: Nov./Dec., 2 Free Onan veor DyM as ar One Free) peacekeeping by, Jan/Feb., 9-10 Warhead design: new not South America: Brazil, Argentina move closer, needed, Jan./Feb., 64; | Tow Free Onarnmuton (Sum of' S0a nd | Se) Sept./Oct., 14; Brazil’s Landless Workers new designers wanted, @ ee Oramibu(tSuoenn of' Sc arn 150 movement, Nov./Dec., 20-29 July/Aug., 8-9 9) C(1) OaftcpMeo JteaO em sLestni oswe rs Seamed South Asia: Indian nuclear power , Nov/ Dec., Warhead dismantlement: 2)P atur Om Mewes Agere 15-16 Russia, Sept/Oct., 62-63 \ Tom (Seen of1 5g,H IaTnd, NS N South Pacific: U.S. signs Treaty of Rarotonga Weapons giveaways: costly, at last, March/April, 12-13 Sept./Oct., 30-39 P(e"ricea/r t1 8Pgex n s1 a0n0d)o r Seqvesie Croa mtor Soviet Union: hydrogen bomb history, Western power companies: 7 grease and Tee© Cam Samar Nov./Dec., 53-63; see also Armenia, Kaza- and Eastern Europe, WA Wer khstan, Lithuania, New republics, Russia May/June, 56-59 Space: Cassini, Sept./Oct., 9-10; commercial World Court: opinion on FRG AIG Saege a Nt erate, images from, Sept./Oct., 50; images from, legality of nuclear weap- instructot Piubolinshser s Sept./ Oct., 48-54 ons, March/April, 41-45, ) wComopemte and "ieo ne copy of Ome form wah yaur postmaster ono rb efore October | annually Keep & copy ofI nec ompteftoermd f or Spying: images availabie commercially, Sept./ Sept/Oct., 2; rules nukes 2 (nioetna rc aumhsoisuunenddst e meoe f p 1o0nad 5rs dm 1 a1n.g acgaesne s© wehedrue Bcaems teelcksh aoidfeOr eop AeGnRcuIrNtGy heeOkpdeOrR iEE8 Rt r‘usntaeoe.m c o17, u# mno nde,ec hoepckmb moxe| U pasueeba ariscnohe ihremen oontrweee to# ntt h e Oct., 50; more sophisticated, Sept./Oct., generally unlawful, more space = equrec 2 Bes ure toN uria al etormation called fori nt em 1S regarding swculation Free cvcustor must be shown «seme 157.0 and! Sta4r8 -W5a4r s: Dole’s Defend America Act, May/ aS epstt.a/rOtc,t .,S ep3t9.-/4O2c;t .r,u li4n2g; ‘ CpJoGm ucabptxatmnt udaaeutnxnanengs ebn Ocaodtpdo cbr eoarst eibnadd c ase exthotanton an0 quran) o:e psatie pxitaton thee Staattere oCmcftoe Obwenn:e rts4 n teh epM uapniacgeambe6onnn ato nt c 5 int er 6 nckcete ame oft he eEue inw tuch tus Statement ofO wners wil Deo nrted June, 9-10; tenth inning for, Jan./Feb., ruling as part of gradual- 25-27 ism, Sept./Oct., 45-46; START: Russia ready for round three, Jan./ ruling irrelevant, Sept./ Feb., 11-12; and U.S. Senate, March/April, Oct., 46-47; ruling less 72 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

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