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A Tale of Two Articles
1 day ago ago from Energy from Thorium
Here are two articles. Both are in the New York Times. Both are written by Matthew Wald. Both are about "nuclear power" (meaning light-water reactors in this case). But they are separated in time by twenty years: The Nuclear Industry Tries Again, Nov. 29, 1989 Every plant of the more than 100 ordered since 1973 has been canceled, and many others are approaching retirement. But reactor manufacturers say that fears of global warming - the ...
Related contentCalifornia Spurs America’s Youngest Workers to Create Their Own Jobs: Extreme Entrepreneurship Tour Paves the Way
12 hours ago ago from Paying for College
The power of the entrepreneurial spirit took California by storm this Fall when The Extreme Entrepreneurship Tour launched its month-long series of exciting events at 18 community colleges across the state. The tour was presented by the California Community Colleges Economic Workforce Development Program. (PRWeb Dec 22, 2009) Read the full story at http://www.prweb.com/releases/2009/12/prweb3371364.htm Bookmark To:
Related contentMoney Is the Real Green Power:
5 hours ago ago from BHPBilliton
Money Is the Real Green Power: The hoax of eco-friendly nuclear energy SPINWATCH Karl Grossman , January/February 2008, FAIR Nuclear advocates in government and the nuclear industry are engaged in a massive, heavily financed drive to revive atomic power in the United States—with most of the mainstream media either not questioning or actually assisting in the promotion.“With a very few notable exceptions, such as the Los Angeles Times, ...
Related contentNuclear Power Gets Media Makeover
5 hours ago ago from BHPBilliton
FAIR Extra! July/August 2001 Nuclear Power Gets Media MakeoverEnergy crisis sparks atomic hypeBy Karen Charman Nuclear Follies, a February 11, 1985 cover story in Forbes, declared U.S. nuclear power the largest managerial disaster in business history. With $125 billion invested, the magazine wrote, only the blind, or the biased, can now think that most of the money has been well spent. It is a defeat for the U.S. consumer and for the ...
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