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...produce only the latter. Plutonium is a far handier substance for making bombs, and some skittish critics are afraid that Clinch River might become a target for terrorists seeking to cadge a few pounds of plutonium to make an atomic weapon. The reactor is designed to be cooled by liquid sodium, a highly volatile substance, and there are some doubts about the ability of the reactor to control a catastrophic leakage in the sodium ducts. "It is a much more dangerous and complex device than other reactors," says Vanderbilt's Barach...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clinch River: a Breeder for Baker | 8/3/1981 | See Source »

Built by a French-dominated consortium of European companies, Ariane is a liquid-fuel rocket reminiscent of the U.S. Atlas/Centaur launch vehicle. In its first test, in 1979, the rocket reached orbit, but the second Ariane burned up shortly after liftoff, in 1980, because of engine failure. Thus Ariane's latest launch attempt -the next-to-last trial before the rocket is scheduled to go into regular commercial service-was regarded as something of a make-or-break proposition, like Columbia's flight last April...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: NASA, en Garde! | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

...Angeles, Calif., was one of several firms spawned by the 1960s vogue for freezing human bodies until the cures for various diseases were found, at which time the bodies would be thawed and presumably revived. When Cryonics Interment went broke after five years, however, the supply of freezing liquid nitrogen was cut off and the eight or so bodies in the company's burial capsules thawed and decomposed. The relatives of three of the deceased-who had paid a total of $31,294 to have their loved ones preserved-sued Cryonics Executive Robert Nelson and Mortician Joseph Klockgether. Nelson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: THE RIP VAN WINKLE WRINKLE | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

...they are still perplexed by many dents and chips in the brittle material, especially on the starboard side. Best guess so far: the damage was incurred during lift-off by ice and insulation that broke free of the shuttle's giant external fuel tank, which contained supercold liquid oxygen and hydrogen. Another puzzle is why the bulky, swept-winged "bird" showed greater lift than expected on descent, which carried it half a mile beyond its intended landing spot at Edwards Air Force Base in California. A small glitch was caused by the failure of the shuttle's zero...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Loafing on the Last Lap | 5/11/1981 | See Source »

Cheesemakers are always trying to find something profitable to make from whey, the liquid part of milk left behind in producing cheeses. For every pound of cheese there are 9 lbs. of whey, or nearly 40 billion lbs. in America each year. Half has industrial uses, but half goes to waste. Environmental laws forbid dumping it in rivers. So some major cheesemakers maintain vast, costly, smelly lagoons of decomposing whey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Poles Apart | 4/27/1981 | See Source »

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