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Edité par NY: Jump at the Sun/Hyperion, 2001
ISBN 10 : 0786805218ISBN 13 : 9780786805211
Vendeur : Shirley K. Mapes, Books, Omaha, NE, Etats-Unis
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Very Good. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. Stated lst edition. Paintings by Michele Wood. 48 pages. Very good plus condition in very good dust jacket. Dj has a short edge tear and a few edge nicks.
Edité par Alyson Publications, Boston, 1991
ISBN 10 : 1555831869ISBN 13 : 9781555831868
Vendeur : Bolerium Books Inc., San Francisco, CA, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Hardcover. xx, 328p., b&w photos, very good first edition in cloth and edgeworn, unclipped dust jacket.
Edité par The University of Texas Press, Austin, TX, 1993
Vendeur : gearbooks, The Bronx, NY, Etats-Unis
Magazine / Périodique
Soft Cover. Etat : Good. 149 pp. No. 16, Spring 1993 issue only! ISSN 0894-9832. Solidly bound copy with minimal external wear, crisp pages and clean text. Creases on bottom corner of cover and pages. Stain on front cover.
Edité par Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Inc., Chicago, 1950
Vendeur : Singularity Rare & Fine, Baldwinsville, NY, Etats-Unis
Livre Edition originale
Soft cover. Etat : Near Fine. 1st Edition. Near Fine; see scans and description. Chicago: Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Inc. The scarce January,1950 issue of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, that being Volume VI, Number 1. The famous and historic Doomsday Clock - shown on each cover since 1947, two years after the publication's inception - here shows the time to be three minutes of midnight as of mid-1950. That's about as close as it ever got, and one can see from the article titles (see scan of contents) that these always-good-citizen scientists - the first group to publish against Nuclear weapons in a scholarly manner - were extremely skittish in early '50. Quarto, illustrated staple-bound wraps, 32 pp. (pages1 through 32 for the annual volume, pages then being numbered after that fashion of the time). Near Fine, with no salient flaws at all. Orange cover - using a golden-age-of-sci-fi style of font in the case of this particular issue - is vivid, and very modest age-toning to interior pages is less than would ordinarily be expected. See all scans. Solidly bound and bright. A stout example. Established in 1945 by biophysicist Eugene Rabinowitch and physicist Hyman Goldsmith in response to a correctly-perceived demand for nuclear information at the time by the general public, The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists is without doubt the most historically significant non-technical publication on the subject of "'global security and public policy issues related to the dangers posed by nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction, climate change,[2] and emerging technologies and diseases". Hence, over the years, BAS has become a geopolitical instrument, rather than a nuclear watchdog alone.This early in the bulletin's history, full-size illustrations were rare; here, only the ads on the inside covers are full page. But where else would you see an ad declaring 'The Fume Hood of the Future.is Yours Today'? That's in case you have you have issues handling your radioactive isotopes. See scan of that ad. Feature articles in this vintage1950 issue: The City of Washington and an Atomic Bomb Attack; Conquest of the United States by Germany; AEC Reactor Program; The Perils of Being Important; Role of the National Laboratories; International Control of Atomic Energy; Atomic Armistice; more. See scan of contents. Contributors include Sir Robert Watson-Watt; Hans J. Morgenthau; Samuel K. Allison; Henry D. Smyth; Leo Szilard; David F. Cavers; Cuthbert Daniel and John L. Balderston; Francis W. Carpenter; the editors and others. Very, very scarce piece of activist history at the beginning of a tense era. The original monthly softcover issue, and in superior condition. Ships in a new, sturdy, protective box, of course - not a bag. LPR34.