REGISTER   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   E-MAIL ALERTS   |   HELP |   SIGN OUT    

Home   |   Print edition   |   Advertising  |   Buyers Guide   |   Jobs   |   Events calendar   |   RSS feeds
  • Table of contents
  • Past issues

yellow star Featured Jobs

  • Search jobs
  • Post jobs
Letters

Science in Franco's Spain

 

 

March 2002 page 14

I was pleasantly surprised to see a full two-page article devoted to Spanish physicists ( Physics Today, August 2001, page 20).

In 1964, I was a research collaborator in the neutron diffraction group at Brookhaven National Laboratory. I came back to Spain in 1975, just after Francisco Franco died, and found a number of colleagues, including Julio Palacios, Luis Bru, Nicolas Cabrera, Fernando Agulló, Basilio Jiménez, and Federico Garcia Moliner, doing significant work in solid-state physics. Of course, in the following years, research activity in both theoretical and experimental physics increased greatly in Spain. But the initial impetus was already quite visible in 1976.

So I think it is a little unfair for Toni Feder to begin her article by suggesting that Franco's government was doing nothing to promote physics in Spain. Franco's image in his final years was more one of a benign elder statesman than a fascist dictator. Perhaps Franco's unforgivable sin was that he won a decisive victory over communism--decisive for his country and for Western Europe. He did this with the help of Texas Oil Co president Torkhild Rieber,1 who extended credit to the nationalists during the war and gave them all the oil they needed.2 Among Franco's good deeds was the establishment of the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas. A plaque in the CSIC building on Serrano Street in Madrid commemorates this act.

References

    1. R. La Cierva, Historia total de la Guerra de España, Editorial Fénix, Madrid (1997).
    2. R. La Cierva, Hacienda pública Española 46, 115 (1977).

Julio Gonzalo
(julio.gonzalo@uam.es)
Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
Madrid, Spain
  • Article Tools
  • Enlarge text   Enlarge text
  • Shrink text   Shrink text
  • Printer-friendly formatPrinter-friendly format
  • Download PDFDownload PDF
  • E-mail this articleE-mail this article
  • Comment on this articleWrite a letter to the editor
  • Free this month
  • The Puzzle of Global Sea-Level Rise
  • A Personal Reflection on University Research Funding
  • Math and Science Suffer in Education Bill
  • New Books
  • Letters
  • Most popular articles
  • Month-long calculation resolves an 82-year-old quantum paradox
    September 2009
  • Friction, force chains, and falling fruit
    September 2009
  • US electricity grid still vulnerable to electromagnetic pulses
    September 2009
  • A ghost image violates a Bell inequality
    August 2009
  • Request product info

     

     


    SERVICES
    Physics Today Jobs
    Physics Today Buyers Guide
    Research Today
    NEWS
    News Picks
    We Hear That Society News
    Event Calendar
    Obituaries
    THE MAGAZINE
    This month in print
    Past Issues
    Institutional subscriptions
    Information for advertsers
    READER SERVICE
    Register
    Sign in
    Subscribe
    Email alert
    MORE INFO
    Contact us
    About Physics Today
    Privacy Policy
    Terms & Conditions
    Copyright © 2009 by the American Institute of Physics - All rights reserved