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THE RADIOACTIVE BOY SCOUT: THE TRUE STORY OF A BOY AND HIS BACKYARD NUCLEAR REACTOR
Christian Science Monitor ^ | Tim Rauschenberg

Posted on 03/17/2004 4:47:34 AM PST by billorites

These days, the phrase "nuclear ambitions" is applied ominously to countries or heads of state. Yet it aptly describes an ordinary teenager in suburban Detroit named David Hahn. His experience is a frightening indication of how easily dangerous materials can be acquired - and hidden.

Despite growing up in an era of no-nukes activism, David wanted nothing more than to join the Curies in the annals of atomic history. That the radium they discovered eventually killed the Curies doesn't seem to have muted his enthusiasm.

David's aptitude for science was phenomenal. From a 1960s-era book of chemistry experiments, he quickly gleaned the principles and skills of manipulating reactions, and expanded his capabilities with long hours of research at the library.

His safety record was literally stunning. Taking only the barest precautions, he remained unfazed by accidents that turned his hair green, burned his skin, or knocked him out cold. Larger blunders alarmed his father and stepmother, but he learned to cover up his failures.

At school, he was a poor student and terrible speller (the wall of his potting-shed laboratory carried the admonition: "Caushon"). His occasional claims of chemical and, later, nuclear research were dismissed by parents and teachers as attempts to get attention.

And so it was that with ingenuity and supplemental information from letters to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 17-year-old David gathered and refined - mostly from household products - enough radioactive material to make a crude breeder reactor in his backyard.

It was small and would never create an appreciable amount of fissionable fuel, but by the time David disassembled the runaway experiment in 1994, his Geiger counter was detecting radiation from several houses away.

Journalist Ken Silverstein gathered material from extensive interviews with David and his family and from police and EPA reports about this backyard experiment. The story appeared as a Harper's Magazine article in 1998, and now Silverstein has expanded it into some 200 pages.

What emerges in that greater space is that David's pattern of grandiose plans followed by accidents and coverups mirrors the larger history of breeder reactors. In theory, breeders make more fuel than they use. In practice, as Silverstein notes, "the few attempts to build a breeder have resulted in some of the scariest episodes in the nuclear era."

Another problem that's agonizingly apparent is the emotional neglect of David by his family. His father spent time with him only on scouting trips. His adoring mother was too lost in alcohol and mental problems to be supportive. The personal tragedy here sounds as disturbing as the potential public disaster.

Tim Rauschenberger is on the Monitor's Web staff.

The Radioactive Boy Scout The True Story of a Boy and His Backyard Nuclear Reactor
By Ken Silverstein
Random House209 pp., $22.95


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bookreview; boyscout; nuclearreactors
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To: Steely Tom
"I was also heavily influenced by the marvellous "Amateur Scientist" feature in Scientific American. At that time it was "conducted" (his word) by someone named C. L. Strong"

These were compiled into a book about 30 years ago. It was one of my favorites when I was a pre-teen.


"In those days (mid '60s through early '70's), Scientific American was a fantastic magazine, nothing like the silly left-wing pseudo-magazine it had degenerated into."

Amen to that!

"Today I am an Electrical Engineer, with a masters degree. I write pattern recognition algorithms for machine vision."

That answers a question I had in a previous post. Keep up the good work.

41 posted on 03/17/2004 9:19:34 AM PST by Law is not justice but process
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To: Cooter
I stand corrected. It's been awhile since I read the article. Although I did remember he entered the Navy.
42 posted on 03/17/2004 9:40:11 AM PST by Chewbacca ("Turn off your machines! Walk off your jobs! Power to the People!" - The Ice Pirates)
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To: netmilsmom
>>>>This is the reason why Public School is a waste for kids. I'm sure that because this kid didn't fit in the round hole, he did not do well in school.<<<<<


I also think you are right. I went to amazon and see this posting showing what Hahn is doing now for vocation:


from amazon.com ---

I AM AMAZED AT THIS STORY AND BOOK...TOTALLY TRUE,
March 11, 2004

Reviewer: rickeeee (see more about me) from Milputtlu, Germany

David Hahn as a young boy somehow decided to build a nuclear reactor in his mother's garden shed. He came very close. His genius propelled him to secure the right equipment including coffee cans, wire, rubber balloons, common flour, and off the shelve items from Home Depot.

He actually built a real working nuclear reactor. All he needed was radioactive material that he collected from objects suck as glow in the dark paint, smoke detectors, and Three Mile Island surplus.

An overhead satellite that measures radioactivity measured extremely high levels of radioactivity emitting from his mothers garden shed in a little village in Michigan.

Hahn, now a 27 year old, works for a secret origination (EPA) that tracks other countries nuclear capabilities with the same satellite technology that exposed his creation ten years before. Hats off to Ken Silverstein for writing a riveting and radioactive book. A must read for everyone.

It should be noted that Mr. Hahn continues to emit a low level of radiation from four years of exposing himself. We wish him the best. He will never need a night light.

Signed,
Erica Phillips
(My flowers have never grown back)



Not sure if it's accurate or not but is interesting that he's apparently working at something interesting. I read the original story in Harpers a number of years ago and was fascinated, but wondered if he had ever been able to use his OJT attained knowledge.
43 posted on 03/17/2004 10:05:24 AM PST by all_mighty_dollar
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To: all_mighty_dollar
Not sure if it's accurate or not but is interesting that he's apparently working at something interesting.

I would bet that it is NOT accurate.

44 posted on 03/17/2004 10:08:27 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: all_mighty_dollar
An overhead satellite that measures radioactivity measured extremely high levels of radioactivity emitting from his mothers garden shed in a little village in Michigan.

Actually, the were called to investigate possible auto theft and found a toolbox marked as radioactive in his trunk.

45 posted on 03/17/2004 10:16:19 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: all_mighty_dollar
He actually built a real working nuclear reactor.

Not.

46 posted on 03/17/2004 10:17:16 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: all_mighty_dollar
Hats off to Ken Silverstein for writing a riveting and radioactive book. A must read for everyone.

I wonder how many books have been sold based on this latest hyping?

47 posted on 03/17/2004 10:18:42 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: patton
Yep. A blueish-green colour, actually.

Would that be from Cherenkov Radiation by any chance?

I am well versed in that glow from my work with P-32!

48 posted on 03/17/2004 10:21:13 AM PST by Itzlzha (The avalanche has already started...it is too late for the pebbles to vote!)
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To: billorites
There was a guy who fell into an operating "swimming pool" reactor (heavy water, blue Cherenkov glow).

He became so radioactive that he claimed that when he died, he'd have to be disposed of as 'low level nuclear waste'.

As I recall, he made a living of giving lectures on his experience and having people test him with geiger counters...

--Boris

49 posted on 03/17/2004 10:26:57 AM PST by boris (The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
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To: Itzlzha
Would that be from Cherenkov Radiation by any chance?

I am well versed in that glow from my work with P-32!

No. And what is P-32?

50 posted on 03/17/2004 10:27:20 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: cinFLA
Of his exposure to radioactivity he says, "I don't believe I took more than five years off my life.

ROFL! Better than smoking, I guess! Sadly, most on the Left don't think that individuals should be allowed to sacrifice their own years for their own passions.

51 posted on 03/17/2004 10:33:49 AM PST by Teacher317
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To: Teacher317
Sadly, most on the Left don't think that individuals should be allowed to sacrifice their own years for their own passions.

Unfortunately, the kid was a dangerouse idiot consumed only with his misdirected passion.

52 posted on 03/17/2004 10:40:32 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: all_mighty_dollar
Not sure if it's accurate or not but is interesting that he's apparently working at something interesting.

If you call swabbing decks in the navy interesting.

53 posted on 03/17/2004 10:48:03 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: billorites
It was small and would never create an appreciable amount of fissionable fuel, but by the time David disassembled the runaway experiment in 1994, his Geiger counter was detecting radiation from several houses away.

We only have the boy's word for it. A boy that flunked out of Jr. college and is a deck-hand in the Navy. What a bunch of crock!

54 posted on 03/17/2004 10:50:27 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: TheBattman
Although this story happened in 1995, I don't remember seeing/hearing/reading about it back then.

Could it be because no one was hyping a book back then?

55 posted on 03/17/2004 10:51:28 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: billorites
bump for later
56 posted on 03/17/2004 10:51:32 AM PST by Rebelbase (Guess which longtime poster admitted she was happy when JFK was assissinated?)
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To: Steely Tom
I think David Hahn should have gotten a medal from the President.

Why? For flunking out of jr college and becoming a deck swab in the navy?

57 posted on 03/17/2004 10:54:02 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: Law is not justice but process
Law,

Your story reminded me of something I read years ago, about an attorney who, as a young man (teenager) got to meet one of the great Justices of the supreme court, either Louis Brandeis or Learned Hand. Anyway, according to the story, the young man told the Justice that he wanted to be a lawyer, and asked what advice the Justice had for him. The reply was: before you go to law school, get your undergraduate degree in some technical field grounded in reality: physics or engineering, for example.

I always thought that was a great story, because it shows such an insight into how the law is just words, and all kinds of problems arise if those practicing it are completely disconnected from an understanding of physical reality.

I'm glad there are attorneys like you out there. I've met some real good ones myself.

(steely)

58 posted on 03/17/2004 10:54:06 AM PST by Steely Tom
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To: valkyrieanne
In an earlier age he could have become another Edison. Now he's just labelled as dysfunctional.

The dysfunctional ones are the ones that are believing all this book hype! There is NO evidence that such a reactor ever existed. He was caught on a police report of kids stealing tires off of cars.

59 posted on 03/17/2004 10:59:20 AM PST by cinFLA
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To: Steely Tom
I think David Hahn should have gotten a medal from the President.

As an expert in pattern recognition, you should have been able to recognize this as pure hype designed to sell a book.

60 posted on 03/17/2004 11:01:26 AM PST by cinFLA
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