People and ideas that helped shape the first 100 years of higher education in the Last Frontier.
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People and ideas that helped shape the first 100 years of higher education in the Last Frontier.
Wow, I look like such an adult. #nanooknation #uaf100 #uaf #culinarystudentlife #uafctc #classof2017 #uafgrad17
This year’s ice arch built by students in the UAF College of Engineering and Mines.
The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission decided in 1958 that it would be a good idea to use six nuclear blasts to excavate a harbor near Point Hope, Alaska. The commission called it Project Chariot. The next year, the University of Alaska got a $107,000 contract from the AEC to study the environmental impacts of the proposal. The university, demonstrating its enthusiasm for the idea, granted an honorary doctorate to Edward Teller, the "father of the H-bomb," who was then directing an AEC lab in Livermore, California. As the environmental research progressed, several university scientists objected to the way AEC officials downplayed the risks of radioactive fallout. In 1961, biologist Les Viereck resigned from the contract work in protest. His decision cost him his teaching job -- the university administration declined to keep him on staff. The next year, biology Professor William Pruitt was fired after he resisted modifications to his report to the AEC and publicly criticized the proposal. The AEC dropped Project Chariot in August 1962 in response to the growing criticism from scientists, environmental activists and Alaska Native peoples.
Some of the people and ideas that shaped the first 100 years of higher education in Alaska.
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