Henry Dewolf Smyth

Henry DeWolf Smyth (May 1, 1898September 11, 1986) was an American physicist, diplomat, and a bureaucrat who played a number of key roles in the early development of nuclear energy. He is most famous for authoring the Smyth Report, the first official US history of the Manhattan Project which developed the first nuclear weapons, for being a commissioner on the Atomic Energy Commission from 1949 to 1954, and for being the US representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency from 1961 to 1970. He was the chairman of the Department of Physics at Princeton University from 1935 until 1949. He was the lone dissenter among the AEC commissioners during the security hearing of his friend J. Robert Oppenheimer, and was also the recipient of the Atoms for Peace Award in 1968.

External link

Smyth, Henry DeWolf Smyth, Henry DeWolf Smyth, Henry DeWolf Smyth, Henry DeWolf Smyth, Henry DeWolf

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
tales of eternia
gypsy lore society
task analysis
ilkhan emperors
star trek: klingon
george jessel (actor)
gear oil
daniel "chappie" james jr.
toastmaster
chieko higuchi
jay greenberg
teymur bakhtiar
the index
hiroaki hirata
css drewry
bellesrad
papo de anjo
catenane
gamling
abit bp6
performance art in china
topoisomer
gaspar de portola middle school
sharku
gemma frisius (crater)
chemical agent
old school board
jacobi (crater)
menards
government of free vietnam
international network of crackers
wfiu
herbs (band)
playfair (lunar crater)
32 demands
the humble guys
poisson (crater)
kobza
grand river event center
scoresby (crater)
henry smyth
tokyo marui
entelechy
css columbia