It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
(visit the link for the full news article)
The 41-year-old physicist, whose job entailed running experiments for the National Research Council, had just finished some work for a researcher overseas and left his findings on his desk, to be mailed later.
Sometime that night or the next morning, he took his garbage bins outside for pickup.
Then, he vanished without a trace.
Originally posted by masqua
I'm thinking about terrorists, dirty bombs, countries developing nuclear devices and all sorts of nastiness.
Originally posted by msdesertrat
There is a another thread discussing the death of two other nuclear physicists.
www.abovetopsecret.com...
If foul play is involved, this would make three in less than six months.
Originally posted by MaxBlack
I don't want to leave out the Vampires so in closing I think we could keep this up for a while if we began such a quest.
Take your pick, but I doubt we will ever know the truth of this disappearance. All we can do is hope he is alive and enjoying off world life.
Reviews Written by
Lachlan Cranswick (Daresbury, England)
Show: Most recent reviews Most recent comments Page: 1
Passchendaele: The Untold Story
by Robin Prior
Edition: Paperback
Availability: Out of Print--Limited Availability
19 used & new from $3.50
36 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
Eye opener, Highly readable and top notch scholarship, January 25, 2000
Unlike the usual dross (though still readable) that many WWI history books are like, this is an amazingly good book.
The authors have obviously done their background work using the primary sources to an extent that to the reader, they convincingly break several WWI myths as routinely stated in many WWI history books.
The first being about Battles of Attrition; making it clear the aims of the Generals in the various battles had solid strategic objectives that they were trying to gain. The Attrition excuse being made after the event to try and make a failed battle sound like a victory of sorts.
Tanks were not a war winning weapon in WWI, but of importance for supporting the infantry (tanks being highly vunerable to artillary. The argument by the authors is that artillary was the WWI winning weapon on the Western Front.
The main eye opener (for me at least) was the primary importance of artillary and evolving role and technology of the artilliary which had developed (high accuracy continuous correction shelling, counter battery, creeping barrage) to the point by 1917 that potentially, the British could break the German lines on the Western Front to a limited extend, and with limited casualties. However the hankering by Haig for a Breakthrough (and continous belief that one more push would demolish the morale of the German Army) helped lead "inadvertantly" to another attrition style battle.
Overall, well worth buying and hopefully setting the standard that future WWI histories will be written to.
1. Powder Diffraction: Theory and Practice by Armel Le Bail, Ian Madsen, Lachlan M.D. Cranswick, and Jeremy Karl Cockcroft (Hardcover - 10 Mar 2008)
Buy new: £59.00 £54.55
15 new from £40.976 used from £45.15
Get it by Saturday, Feb 27 if you order in the next 14 hours and choose express delivery.
Eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery.
Excerpt - Table of Contents: "491 Chapter 17 Computer Software for Powder Diffraction Lachlan M. D. Cranswick 17.1 Introduction 494 17"
Books: See all 2 items
2. Principles and Applications of Powder Diffraction by Abraham Clearfield, Joseph Reibenspies, and Nattamai Bhuvanesh (Hardcover - 19 Sep 2008)
Buy new: £90.00 £85.50
23 new from £65.982 used from £125.51
Get it by Saturday, Feb 27 if you order in the next 17 hours and choose express delivery.
Eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery.
Excerpt - page 1: "Chapter 1 An Overview of Powder Diffraction Lachlan M. D. Cranswick ©Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada 1.1 Introduction"
Books: See all 2 items