Expectations for the US Nuclear Stockpile Stewardship Program
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: Panel to Assess Reliability, 2002. Quarto, 30, wraps, footnotes, figures, appendix, covers somewhat worn and discolored. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: Panel to Assess Reliability, 2002. Quarto, 30, wraps, footnotes, figures, appendix, covers somewhat worn and discolored. More
Washington, DC: Panel to Assess Reliability, 2002. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. quarto, 30 pages, wraps, footnotes, figures, appendix. Subtitled: FY2001 Report to Congress of the Panel to Assess the Reliability, Safety, and Security of the United States Nuclear Stockpile. This report focussed on a narrow question: is there a technical issue that necessitates a return to nuclear testing? In order to meet the growing technical challenges of stockpile stewardship, the Panel recommended that Presidential guidance be revised to require a balanced and complete assessment of the stockpile, the nuclear weapons complex that supports it, and the alternative options available for sustaining confidence. More
New York: Random House, 1979. First Edition. Fourth Printing. 299, illus., map, appendices, index, front DJ flap creased and price clipped, rear board corner bumped, small tear to front DJ. More
New York: Random House, 1979. First? Printing. 299, illus., map, appendices, index, rear DJ somewhat soiled, small tears, creases, and chips to DJ edges. More
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1951. presumed First Edition, First printing. Hardcover. xiv, 210 pages. Charts. Index. Some pencil scribbling inside front board and flyleaf. DJ soiled and worn along edges, small pieces missing at DJ spine. DJ is in two pieces, with front separated from the spine and rear portions. Foreword by Frederick W. Williams, Maxwell Air Force Base. In their retreat from Seoul in September, 1950, the Reds left behind them the secret of their most powerful weapon: their master plan for the complete and continuing conquest of an entire population. Each individual who survived the 90 days of Red occupation bore the mark of that plan. John W. Riley, Jr. was a sociologist at Rutgers. Wilbur Schramm was a communications expert at the University of Illinois. In this work they picture the Communist scheme: the occupation of the territory by a swift sure blow of military force, the erection of an iron curtain to shut out alien influences, and the elaborate and frightening plan by which they meant to control not only the acts but the thoughts of the South Koreans. If the stark facts of the Riley-Schramm report seem inapplicable to human situation, the reader need only turn to other contemporary illustrative works. Here then, in all its aspects, the that plan that bur for the combined efforts of 52 free nations would be operating with deadly efficiency in South Korea now. Here is the plan that will be applied wherever the military powers of the Reds is sufficient to gain a foothold for the political army. More