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         Kendall Henry W:     more books (24)
  1. A Distant Light: Scientists and Public Policy (Masters of Modern Physics) by Henry W. Kendall, 1999-10-22
  2. Muscles, Testing and Function by P.T. Henry Otis Kendall, B.S., P.T. Florence Peterson Kendall, et all 1971-03-22
  3. The Walker Spur of the Grandes Jorasses by Henry W. Kendall, 1963
  4. An assessment of the emergency core cooling systems rulemaking hearing, by Daniel F Ford, Henry W. Kendall, 1974-01-31
  5. The Risks of Nuclear Power Reactors, A Review of the NRC Reactor Safety Study WASH-1400 (NUREG-75/014) by Richard B. Hubbard, Gregory C. Minor Henry W. Kendall, 1969-01-01
  6. A Distant Light Scientists and Public Policy by Henry W.; Ris, H. Kendall, 2000-01-01
  7. Security and the Middle East: A Proposal to the President of the United States By Twenty Distinguished Americans by Henry A Atkinson, Margaret Culkin Banning, et all 1954
  8. 101 Rare Rags (Songbook) Timeless Works By Some of Ragtime's Greatest Composers by Joe Jordan - Percy Wenrich - Archie W. Scheu, Paul Pratt - Harry Austin Tierney - Edwin F. Kendall, et all 1988
  9. A discourse, on the death of Rev. Robert W. Hill,: Delivered February 3, 1856, in East Bloomfield, N.Y by Henry Kendall, 1856
  10. Sheep Husbandry: With An Account Of Different Breeds And General Directions In Regard To Summer And Winter Management, Breeding And The Treatment Of Diseases by Henry S. Randall, George W. Kendall, 2010-09-10
  11. Rose Lorraine and other poems by Henry; Williams, Rhys (illustrations) Kendall, 1945-01-01
  12. Sheep Husbandry: With An Account Of Different Breeds And General Directions In Regard To Summer And Winter Management, Breeding And The Treatment Of Diseases by Henry S. Randall, George W. Kendall, 2010-09-10
  13. The colleges best adapted to the spirit and institutions of our country: An address, delivered before the alumni of Hamilton college, in Clinton, New York, on Wednesday evening, June 29, 1881, by Henry Kendall, 1881
  14. Songs from the mountains by Henry Kendall, 1880

1. Henry W. Kendall Winner Of The 1990 Nobel Prize In Physics
henry W. kendall, a nobel Prize Laureate in Physics, at the nobelPrize Internet Archive. henry W. kendall. 1990 nobel Laureate in
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/1990b.html
H ENRY W K ENDALL
1990 Nobel Laureate in Physics
    for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics.
Background
    Born: 1926
    Residence: U.S.A.
    Affiliation: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Featured Internet Links Nobel News Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors

2. Index Of Nobel Laureates In Physics
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PRIZE LAUREATES IN PHYSICS. Name, Year Awarded.Alferov, Zhores I. 2000. Kastler, Alfred, 1966. kendall, henry W. 1990.
http://almaz.com/nobel/physics/alpha.html

3. Henry W. Kendall - Autobiography
henry W. kendall – Autobiography. My parents were henry P. kendall, a Bostonbusinessman, and Evelyn Way kendall, originally from Canada.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1990/kendall-autobio.html
I was born on December 9, 1926 in Boston, Massachusetts. My parents were Henry P. Kendall, a Boston businessman, and Evelyn Way Kendall, originally from Canada.
I lived in Boston until the early 1930s when the family - there were five, for by then I had a younger brother and a younger sister - moved to a small town outside Boston, where the three of us grew up and where I still live.
On the urging of Karl Compton, a family friend and then President of MIT, I applied for, and was accepted at that institution's school of physics in 1950. The years at graduate school were a continuing delight - the first sustained immersion in science at a full professional level. My thesis, carried out under the supervision of Martin Deutsch, was an attempt to measure the Lamb shift in positronium, a transient atom discovered by Deutsch a few years before. The attempt was unsuccessful but it served as a very interesting introduction to electromagnetic interactions and the power of the underlying theory.
The two years after receiving the PhD degree were spent as a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at MIT and at Brookhaven National Laboratory, followed by a trip west to join the research group of Robert Hofstadter and the faculty of the Stanford University physics department. Hofstadter was engaged in the study of the proton and neutron structure that was later to bring him

4. Henry W. Kendall - Nobel Lecture
henry W. kendall – nobel Lecture. Jerome I. Friedman Autobiography nobel LectureOther Resources. henry W. kendall Autobiography nobel Lecture Other Resources.
http://www.nobel.se/physics/laureates/1990/kendall-lecture.html
Deep inelastic scattering: experiments on the proton and the observation of scaling Nobel Lecture, December 8, 1990
From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1981-1990. The Lecture in pdf-format Download
Adobe Acrobat Reader is free software that lets you view and print Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) files. The Nobel Prize in Physics 1990
Press Release

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Other Resources
The 1990 Prize in:
Physics

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... Economic Sciences Find a Laureate: Last modified January 21, 2002 The Official Web Site of The Nobel Foundation

5. Henry Kendall, Nobel-winning Physicist, Dies During Scuba Expedition In Florida
Professor henry W. kendall, a 1990 nobel laureate in physics and longtime environmentalist,died on February 15 while exploring the wilderness he loved and
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/tt/1999/feb24/kendall.html
Published by the MIT News Office at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
February 24
Tech Talk Search MIT News ... MIT WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1999
Henry Kendall, Nobel-winning physicist, dies at age 72
Professor Henry W. Kendall, a 1990 Nobel laureate in physics and longtime environmentalist, died on February 15 while exploring the wilderness he loved and worked to preserve. He was 72 years old. Professor Kendall, who shared the Nobel prize with his MIT colleague, Professor Jerome Friedman, and Professor Richard Taylor of Stanford University, was taking photographs on a scuba expedition with a friend from the National Geographic Society at the Wakulla Springs State Park in Florida when he died. Fellow divers found him unconscious in six to 10 feet of water at about 5pm. He was flown to Tallahassee Memorial Hospital, where doctors pronounced him dead on arrival. Pending the final autopsy report, the Wakulla County Sheriff's Office said his death apparently resulted from abdominal hemorrhaging. "Henry Kendall's death is a terrible loss to MIT, the scientific community and the world at large," said Professor Friedman. "Henry was an outstanding scientist and an outstanding human being who worked tirelessly for the betterment of society. He always saw the big picture and identified the big problems. He used political and scientific activity effectively to advance such goals as arms control, nuclear safety and a better environment.

6. MIT Nobelist Henry Kendall Dies At 72 While Scuba Diving In Florida Lake
CAMBRIDGE, MAMIT Professor henry W. kendall of Sharon, MA, a 1990 nobel Laureatein physics and longtime environmentalist, died Monday while exploring the
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/1999/kendall.html

News Releases
Search MIT News Office Comments ... MIT
MIT Nobelist Henry Kendall dies at 72
while scuba diving in Florida lake
FEBRUARY 16, 1999
Contact information
CAMBRIDGE, MAMIT Professor Henry W. Kendall of Sharon, MA, a 1990 Nobel Laureate in physics and longtime environmentalist, died Monday while exploring the wilderness he loved and worked to preserve. He was 72 years old. Professor Kendall, who shared the Nobel with his MIT colleague, Professor Jerome Friedman, and Professor Richard Taylor of Stanford University, was taking photographs on a scuba expedition with a friend from the National Geographic Society at the Wakulla Springs State Park in Florida when he died. Fellow divers found him unconscious in 6 to 10 feet of water at about 5pm. He was flown to Tallahassee Memorial Hospital where doctors pronounced him dead on arrival. The medical examiner conducted an autopsy on Tuesday and ruled out drowning as a cause of death, according to a spokesman for the Wakulla County Sheriff's office. "We are looking at some other things at this time," the spokesman said, including the equipment Professor Kendall was using, indicating that his death was an accident. "Henry Kendall's death is a terrible loss to MIT, the scientific community and the world at large," said Professor Friedman. "Henry was an outstanding scientist and an outstanding human being who worked tirelessly for the betterment of society. He always saw the big picture and identified the big problems. He used political and scientific activity effectively to advance such goals as arms control, nuclear safety and a better environment.

7. Henry W. Kendall
(Infoplease.com)Category Reference Encyclopedias Infoplease.com Biographies H...... henry W. kendall Age 72. nobelwinning physicist who helped discover that protonsand neutrons, formerly thought to be the basic building blocks of matter, are
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0774531.html

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Biography Noteworthy People 1999 Deaths ... G - L Henry W. Kendall Age: Nobel-winning physicist who helped discover that protons and neutrons, formerly thought to be the basic building blocks of matter, are made up of quarks. Firmly against the development of nuclear weapons, he co-founded the Union of Concerned Scientists in 1969. Died: Wakulla Springs, Fla., February 15, 1999 DeForest Kelley G - L Carolyn Bessette Kennedy Search Infoplease Info search tips Search Biographies Bio search tips About Us Contact Us Link to Infoplease ... Privacy

8. Kendall, Henry W.
kendall, henry W. physicist, nobel laureate Birthplace Boston Born 1926 Died1999 Previous Kempis, Thomas à, Top of section K, Next Kennan, George F.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0301544.html

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Newsletter You've got info! Help Site Map Visit related sites from: Family Education Network Biography People K Kendall, Henry W. physicist, Nobel laureate Birthplace: Boston Born: Died: Kempis, K Kennan, George F. Search Infoplease Info search tips Search Biographies Bio search tips About Us Contact Us Link to Infoplease ... Privacy

9. Nobel Laureate Professor Dies In Diving Tragedy
nobel Laureate and Professor of Physics henry W. kendall PhD '55 died Monday. Hewas 72 years old. kendall was a renowned experimental particle physicist.
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V119/N6/kendall.6n.html
Nobel Laureate Professor Dies in Diving Tragedy
Courtesy MIT News Office Henry W. Kendall PhD '55 By Brett Altschul
Night Editor

Nobel Laureate and Professor of Physics Henry W. Kendall PhD '55 died Monday. He was 72 years old. Kendall was a renowned experimental particle physicist. He was also deeply involved in questions of nuclear waste dangers and disposal, as well as being a major nuclear arms control activist. Kendall died while scuba diving in Wakulla Springs State Park in Florida, where he was taking underwater photographs with a friend from the National Geographic Society. At about 5:00 p.m., other divers found him floating in water less than 10 feet deep. He was flown to Tallahassee Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival. The Wakulla County medical examiner found that Kendall had not drowned. The Boston Herald reported that the physicist had been using nonstandard, less wasteful scuba gear, and that he had failed to turn on his oxygen supply correctly, suffocating him.
Nobelist in touch with undergrads
As a physicist, Kendall was both a prolific researcher and a dedicated teacher, heavily involved in the undergraduate physics curriculum at MIT. "He was one of the last real hands-on professors," said David Robertson, a technical instructor in the physics department, who worked with Kendall for many years in the Freshman Physics Laboratory.

10. 2 Professors Win Nobel: Kendall, Friedman Confirmed Existence Of Quarks
Physics Professors Jerome I. Friedman and henry W. kendall PhD '55 were awarded the1990 nobel Prize in physics on Wednesday for their research confirming the
http://www-tech.mit.edu/V110/N43/nobel.43n.html
2 professors win Nobel:
Kendall, Friedman confirmed existence of quarks
By Reuven M. Lerner Physics Professors Jerome I. Friedman and Henry W. Kendall PhD '55 were awarded the 1990 Nobel Prize in physics on Wednesday for their research confirming the existence of quarks. Friedman, 60, and Kendall, 64, are the ninth and 10th Nobel laureates currently affiliated with MIT. The $700,000 award, which will be shared with Richard E. Taylor of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, was announced by the Swedish Academy of Sciences early Wednesday morning. Kendall answered questions regarding his research at a news conference later that day. Friedman, who was attending a conference in Fort Worth, TX, was told about the award by his wife. "It was so unbelievable, I literally thought I was still sleeping and that this was part of my dream," he said. President Charles M. Vest, who took office on Monday, expressed excitement about the award. "Professors Friedman and Kendall brought great distinction both to themselves and to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology," he said. "We're very pleased to be able to join today in celebrating their accomplishments, and congratulations to them on behalf of all their MIT colleagues." "We're ecstatic not just because it honors a great intellectual accomplishment, but because . . . they provide good examples that you can be a great scientist and a great humanist at the same time," said Professor Robert J. Birgeneau, head of the physics department.

11. ABCNEWS.com : Lee Dye: Remembering Henry Kendall
More on kendall Physics nobel Winner kendall Dies. in the public debates, the chancesof great injury to all humanity is much enhanced.” henry W. kendall.
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/science/DyeHard/dye990224.html
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12. WHOI Obituaruy Archives
henry W. kendall's family has established a fund to honor the memoryof the late physics professor and nobel Laureate, who died on Feb.
http://www.whoi.edu/media/obits/news_h.kendall.obit.html

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In Memoriam
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution announces with great sorrow the death February 15, 1999 of Honorary Trustee and Honorary Member of the Corporation Henry Way Kendall at age 72. Dr. Kendall died in a diving accident in Florida while on a National Geographic diving expedition of Wakulla Springs, the largest freshwater springs in the world.
Henry W. Kendall joined the Associates program in 1979 and was elected a Member of the WHOI Corporation in 1992 and a Trustee in 1994. In 1997 he became an Honorary Trustee and Honorary Member, and served on the Ad Hoc Ships Committee.
Henry Kendall was the Julius A. Stratton Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and a 1990 winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics. He was internationally recognized for his research on the internal structures of elementary particles and was one of the co-founders in 1969 of the Union of Concerned Scientists, of which he served as chairman for more than 25 years. He helped found the organization to assess and develop means to control the adverse effects of advanced nuclear technologies both on land and in space, and spent years working on nuclear reactor safety. He wrote and edited a number of books on the subject.
Kendall was born December 9, 1926 in Boston and received his B.S. degree in mathematics from Amherst College in 1950. He attended MIT, receiving a Ph.D. in nuclear and atomic physics in 1954. After graduation from MIT he was a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at Brookhaven National Laboratory and MIT from 1954 to 1956. He joined the faculty at Stanford University in 1956, serving for the next five years as a lecturer and assistant professor in the University's Physics Department before returning to the MIT Physics Department in 1961. He served as a Professor of Physics at MIT from 1967 to 1991, when he was named the Julius A. Stratton Professor of Physics.

13. APS Prizes And Awards - 1997 Nicholson Medal For Humanitarian Service Recipient
Background Dr. henry W. kendall is currently JA A particle physicist, he was,along with two colleagues, awarded the nobel prize in physics in 1990.
http://www.aps.org/praw/nicholso/97winner.html
Questions? Comments?
Menu Courtesy of milonic.co.uk/menu
1997 Nicholson Medal for Humanitarian Service to
Henry W. Kendall
M.I.T.
Citation:
"For his important role in creating and leading the Union of Concerned Scientists, which has had a lasting impact on many scientific issues of concern to society, and for his outstanding personal contributions to these areas and education at all levels." Background:
Dr. Henry W. Kendall is currently J. A. Stratton Professor of Physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology . He has served as the Chariman of the Board of the Union of Concerned Scientists since 1974 and was a founding member of the organization. A particle physicist, he was, along with two colleagues, awarded the Nobel prize in physics in 1990 Dr. Kendall has been active in writing, analysis and public activities on US energy and defense issues and in the global issues of environmental pressures, resource management and population growth. He is a co-author of numerous studies and books related to the nuclear arms race, nuclear power and renewable energy. His works include "Population, Environment and Resource Problems A Warning from World Scientists", prepared for the United Nations International Conference on Population and Development in September 1994, The Fallacy of Star Wars

14. 1990 Nobel Prize In Physics
nobel Prize in Physics. The prize was awarded jointly to Friedman, Jerome I., USA,Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, and; kendall, henry W.,
http://www2.slac.stanford.edu/vvc/nobel/1990nobel.html

1990 Nobel Prize in Physics
The prize was awarded jointly to:
  • Friedman, Jerome I., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, and Kendall, Henry W., U.S.A., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, and Taylor, Richard E. , Canada, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center , Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
"for their pioneering investigations concerning deep inelastic scattering of electrons on protons and bound neutrons, which have been of essential importance for the development of the quark model in particle physics."
Quarks Revealed: Structure Inside Protons and Neutrons
Experiments conducted from 1966-1978 by Richard Taylor (SLAC), Henry Kendall (MIT), and Jerome Friedman (MIT) studied how high-energy electrons bounce off the protons and neutrons in a target.
Dick Taylor in the "counting room" of the experiments one of the first to use computerized data collection. (1967) Their results showed more electrons bouncing back with high energy at large angles than could be explained if protons and neutrons were uniform spheres of matter. Surprisingly, the experiments revealed extremely small, dense objects moving around in the protons and neutrons. These tiny particles are the quarks.

15. Kendall, Henry W.
kendall, henry W. 1927, American physicist. A professor at the Massachusetts Instituteof Technology, kendall won the 1990 nobel Prize in Physics with Jerome
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  • 16. Nature Publishing Group
    Obituary henry W. kendall (192699) The range of henry kendall's accomplishmentsand avocations is In 1990, Friedman, kendall and Taylor were awarded a nobel
    http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v398/n6724/full/

    17. Henry W. Kendall - Wikipedia
    henry W. kendall. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Experimental particle physicist.Received the 1990 Physics nobel prize together with Jerome I. Friedman
    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_W._Kendall

    18. Physics News Update Number 4 - THE 1990 NOBEL PRIZE FOR PHYSICS
    THE 1990 nobel PRIZE FOR PHYSICS goes to henry W. kendall and Jerome I. Friedmanof MIT, and Richard Taylor of Stanford for their study of highenergy electron
    http://www.aip.org/enews/physnews/1990/split/pnu004-1.htm
    AIP HOME PAGE Online Journal Publishing Service AIP Journals Publishing Services Science Policy History Center Working at AIP Site Index Physics News Update
    The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
    Number 4 (Story #1), October 17, 1990 by Phillip F. Schewe and Ben Stein
    THE 1990 NOBEL PRIZE FOR PHYSICS goes to Henry W. Kendall and Jerome I. Friedman of MIT, and Richard Taylor of Stanford for their study of high-energy electron-proton collisions conducted at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) in the late 1960's. Their experiment demonstrated that quarks, the then supposed constituents of protons and neutrons, were not just mathematical constructs but real particles in their own right. The search for the elementary components of matter, a search dating back to antiquity, has in this century produced several significant results. In 1911 Ernest Rutherford showed that atoms consisted of a heavy nucleus and orbiting electrons. The nucleus in turn was found to be made up of neutrons and protons. In the 1950's and 1960's the discovery of numerous new particles, many of them living only fleetingly during high-energy collisions at accelerators, caused theorists to wonder if there weren't some additional underlying level of structure. In the quark model, formulated in the early 1960's by Murray Gell-Mann and others, all strongly interacting particles (hadrons) are thought to be composites made from even more elementary entities, the quarks. For example, baryons such as protons and neutrons are bound states consisting of three quarks while mesons are quark-antiquark states. But were the quarks anything more than a theoretical hypothesis?

    19. Pictures Gallery Of The Nobel Prize Winners In Physics
    Translate this page The nobel Prize in Physics. 1998. Robert B. Laughlin Horst L. Störmer Daniel C.Tsui 1990. Jerome I. Friedman henry W. kendall Richard E. Taylor 1989.
    http://www.th.physik.uni-frankfurt.de/~jr/physpicnobel.html
    The Nobel Prize in Physics
    Robert B. Laughlin
    Daniel C. Tsui
    Steven Chu
    ...
    Hannes Olof Gosta Alfven

    Louis Eugene Felix Neel
    Murray Gell-Mann
    Luis Walter Alvarez
    Hans Albrecht Bethe
    Alfred Kastler
    Richard Phillips Feynman

    Julian Seymour Schwinger

    Sin-Itiro Tomonaga
    Nikolai Gennadievich Basov
    Alexander Mikhailovich Prokhorov

    Charles Hard Townes
    Johannes Hans Daniel Jensen

    Maria Goeppert-Mayer
    ...
    Sir Edward Victor Appleton
    Percy Williams Bridgman
    Wolfgang Ernst Pauli
    Isidor Isaac Rabi
    Otto Stern
    None
    None
    None
    Ernest Orlando Lawrence
    Enrico Fermi
    Clinton Joseph Davisson

    Sir George Paget Thomson
    ...
    Sir James Chadwick
    None
    Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac
    Werner Karl Heisenberg
    None
    Sir Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman
    Prince Louis-Victor Pierre Raymond de Broglie
    Sir Owen Willans Richardson
    Arthur Holly Compton

    Charles Thomson Rees Wilson
    Jean Baptiste Perrin
    James Franck

    Gustav Ludwig Hertz
    Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
    Robert Andrews Millikan
    ...
    Albert Einstein
    Charles Eduard Guillaume
    Johannes Stark
    Max Karl Ernst Ludwig Planck
    Charles Glover Barkla
    None
    Sir William Henry Bragg
    Sir William Lawrence Bragg
    Max Theodor Felix von Laue
    Heike Kamerlingh Onnes
    ... Guglielmo Marconi
    Gabriel Jonas Lippmann
    Albert Abraham Michelson
    Sir Joseph John Thomson
    Philipp Eduard Anton Lenard
    John William Strutt (Lord Rayleigh)
    ...
    Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen
    Donated by Christopher Walker, University of Ulster

    20. Gw8
    Despite all the doors his nobel could have opened, kendall continued teaching freshman ofgreat injury to all humanity is much enhanced.” henry W. kendall.
    http://www.hprcc.unl.edu/nebraska/gw8.html
    http://abcnews.go.com/sections/science/DyeHard/dye990224.html Goodbye to a Conscience
    Remembering Physicist Henry W. Kendall
    Special to ABCNEWS.com
    Science can be both a curse and a blessing.
    The automobile gave us convenience, and air pollution. The atomic bomb ended World War II, but spawned the arms race. Medicines can mend lives, but a few have wrought unintended, devastating consequences
    Henry W. Kendall co-founded the Union of Concerned Scientists, which strives to improve humanity's stewardship of Earth.
    How much responsibility should scientists hold for the downside of their achievements?
    A lot, according to Henry W. Kendall, who died last week at the age of 72 while on an underwater filming expedition in Florida. His death — from internal bleeding, according to a preliminary report from the county coroner — ended a life dedicated to getting scientists involved in the world beyond their labs. Responsible for Public Awareness
    Many of his peers thought that scientists should stick with science and let others debate the consequences of their discoveries. Yet like the nuclear physicists who abhorred the legacy of the atomic bomb they created, Kendall believed scientists cannot afford to ignore the fallout from their efforts.
    A professor of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he repeatedly laid his reputation on the line to speak out on the risks entailed in scientific progress.

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