Retired
engineering professor and nuclear
power pioneer dies at
86
University Park,
Pa. — Warren
Frank Witzig, age 86, one of the pioneers of
nuclear power in the United States and retired professor
of nuclear engineering and former department head at
Penn State, died June 14 in State College, Pa. The Penn
State Nuclear Engineering Society recently honored him
as a ''visionary and innovator in the establishment of
the United States nuclear power industry.''
Witzig conducted research in areas of reactor design and
safety, fuel cycle, nuclear safeguards, rad-waste disposal,
emergency planning and radiation monitoring. He became
professor and department head of nuclear engineering at
Penn State in 1967. Witzig was responsible for one of the
earliest student programs in nuclear engineering in the
United States. He established the undergraduate and associate
degree programs and initiated the continuing education
program on radiation, nuclear safety and environmental
effects for public education. He supervised the Triga Mark
II Reactor, Cobalt-60 Facility, and Low-level Radiation
Monitoring Laboratory, all in the Breazeale Reactor Building.
Retiring from the University in 1986, he served on the
GPUN Board of Directors, the Nuclear Oversite Committee
for the Board of Directors of PSE&G (Salem I, II and
Hope Creek), the Texas Utilities Nuclear Safety Commission
for Comanche Peak Reactors I and II, the TVA Nuclear Safety
Review Board (Watts Bar), the Seabrook Blue Ribbon Committee
on Emergency Evacuation, and the National Nuclear Accreditation
Board of INPO. Witzig chaired the Westinghouse GoCo Sites
Nuclear Safety and Environmental Institute Board of Directors
from 1988 to 1993.
In 1989 Gov. Richard Thornburgh called him into the service
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania during the emergency
shutdown of Three Mile Island II. In June 1992, Witzig
presented the paper, ''The Value of a Nuclear Safety and
Environmental Committee,'' at the Ukraine Academy of Science
at Chelyabinski State University. He toured the site of
the explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Witzig had been a lifelong advocate of nuclear energy
as a clean, safe and efficient source of energy and also
for the training, accreditation and oversite of nuclear
operators. During World War II, he worked on the Manhattan
District program on high vacuum systems, heat transfer,
mass spectroscopy and ionic centrifuge. He served as the
first experimenter in the Materials Testing Reaction and
later as engineering manager of in-pile tests for the naval
reaction program in Hanford, Chalk River, and the MTR-ETR
complex. Witzig served as senior engineer and took the
USS Nautilus, the world's first nuclear-powered ship's
reactor critical in 1954 and also developed engineering
used in the Skipjack and George Washington series of nuclear
submarines, which have been the backbone of the U.S. nuclear
navy.
Witzig was the co-author of the first FSAR for the Nautilus
and numerous classified reports. In 1960 he co-founded
Nuclear Utilities Services Corp. in Washington D.C., where
he served as senior vice president and member of the board
of directors. The corporation grew from a two-man organization
to the largest independent group of nuclear consultants
in the nation.
He held overall responsibility for technical direction
of work related to the application of nuclear energy for
the production of electricity, small military reactors,
test reactors, the use of nuclear reactors and isotopes
in aerospace. He traveled worldwide in his consulting practice.
Among Witzig's honors are Fellow, American Nuclear Society;
Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science;
Sigma Xi, Sigma Pi Sigma, and Eta Kappa Nu honor societies;
Special Citation for an Engineering Educator in Excellence
in Engineering Education, EEI Power Engineering; Who's
Who in Engineering and America; and Penn State's Outstanding
Service Award for retirees.
Visitation will be from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday, June 17, at
Koch Funeral Home, 2401 S. Atherton St., State College,
Pa. A celebration of life service will be held at the State
College Presbyterian Church, 132 W. Beaver Ave., at 10
a.m. Monday, June 18, with the Rev. Joel Blunk officiating.
A private family graveside service will be at Graysville
Cemetery, Graysville, Huntingdon County. In lieu of flowers,
memorial contributions may be made to the Bernadette and
Warren F. Witzig Nuclear Engineering Scholarship at the
Pennsylvania State University, 1 Old Main, University Park,
Pa. 16802.
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