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Saul Levine Memorial Scholarship Fund |
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The
Nuclear Installations Safety Division
has established a Saul Levine Memorial Scholarship Fund, to be
used to support the graduate education of worthy nuclear engineering
students.
Saul
Levine was one of the pioneers in understanding the safety of
nuclear reactors. One of his most prominent contributions was
supporting Professor Norman Rasmussen in directing the pioneering
"Reactor Safety Study" (WASH-1400) in 1973-1975. Rasmussen wrote a
marvelous eulogy for Levine that was published in the Proceedings of
ANS Topical Meeting "PSA'85", which was held 20 years ago, shortly
after Saul's premature death. Rasmussen's eulogy is reprinted below
in its entirety as perhaps the best way to convey the importance of
Saul's contribution to the early discipline of PSA: |

Saul Levine
1923-1984 |
"I knew Saul Levine for nearly 30 years. However,
it was during the work on the "Reactor Safety Study" that we became
close friends. The smartest decision I ever made was to ask then
Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission James Schlesinger to assign
Saul to help me direct that effort. Although I thought very highly
of Saul at that time, I soon came to realize that I had underrated
him. I know of no one who had a better insight into the broad issues
of reactor safety. In addition, he had the ability to organize and
carry out a |
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major project within the constraints of the government bureaucracy
-- a know-how that I lacked and which was essential to the success
of that project. As we all know, the final report of the project,
the "Reactor Safety Study" (WASH-1400), is sometimes referred to as
the Rasmussen Report. It more properly should be referred to as the
Levine-Rasmussen report. "
History tells us that Newton once said, "If I have seen farther than
others, it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants."
During the work on the Safety Study I developed my own variation on
that quote, which is, "If you are facing a difficult problem, it is
a lot easier if you have a giant working at your side." To me, Saul
was a giant, both technically and personally. Our profession has
lost one of its important contributors and one of its best thinkers
on our most difficult problems. In addition, a great many of us have
lost a valued personal friend. We shall sorely miss him, but the
impact he had on each of us who were his friends will always be with
us."
Norman C. Rasmussen |
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Tax-deductible donations to the Saul Levine
Memorial Scholarship Fund may be made by personal check, made out to
American Nuclear Society. Please, mark on the check: "for the Saul
Levine Memorial Scholarship Fund". Send it to:
American Nuclear Society
Attention: Sharon Kerrick
555 North Kensington Avenue
LaGrange Park, IL 60526 USA
If sufficient funds are contributed to the Saul
Levine Memorial Scholarship prior to 2006, the scholarship will be
established in perpetuity; otherwise, a limited-term scholarship
will be established starting in 2006. In either event, all
contributions to the fund will be used to support the Saul Levine
Memorial Scholarship. |
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Raymond DiSalvo Memorial Scholarship
Fund |
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The
Nuclear Installations Safety Division supports the Raymond DiSalvo Memorial Scholarship Fund, to be
used to aid the undergraduate education of worthy nuclear engineering
students.
DiSalvo, an atomic safety specialist, was part of the team that
sought to control damage at the Three Mile Island plant in
Pennsylvania in 1979. An expert in reactor safety, he also
conducted research in ways to prevent and limit damage in toxic
chemical accidents.
Raymond DiSalvo joined the American Nuclear
Society in 1974 and very quickly became an active and important
participant in their technical conferences. He was highly respected
by his colleagues for his expertise in several areas on nuclear
energy such as risk assessment, human factors, and waste
management. His contributions to the ANS went beyond the purely
technical realm to include leadership and governance. He was very
active in the ANS Nuclear Reactor Safety Division as a member of
both the Program Committee and the Executive Committee.
Raymond DiSalvo died on October 26, 1990 at the
age of 44. |
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Tax-deductible donations to the Raymond DiSalvo
Memorial Scholarship Fund may be made by personal check, made out to
American Nuclear Society. Please, mark on the check: "for the
Raymond DiSalvo Memorial Scholarship Fund". Send it to:
American Nuclear Society
Attention: Sharon Kerrick
555 North Kensington Avenue
LaGrange Park, IL 60526 USA
CLICK
HERE to access the Eligibility Requirements and Application Form
related to this scholarship. |
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Copyright 2007 - American Nuclear
Society
Nuclear Installations Safety
Division
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