BEWARE SUNSHINE WITH TEMPERATURE INVERSION OR CLOUDS WITH ACID RAIN ACIDOSIS ALERT: ACID RAIN EQUALS ACID AIR ALKALIZE OR DIE: COMBAT KILLER ACIDOSIS FMS/CFS/IBD/RHEUMATISM, OSTEOARTHRITIS, DIABETES, HYPOGLYCEMIA, ASTHMA, URINARY CANCERS, DEAD ATHLETES INTRODUCTION Knoxville/Oak Ridge has a 60+ year history of pollution from nuclear radation and related processes with many SuperFund sites, some with residential housing developments built on top of them. Radioactive garbage is burned in Oak Ridge and in downtown Knoxville, and has been for 60 years. Radioactive scrap metal from nuclear bomb factories in Oak Ridge was melted in downtown South Knoxville (David Witherspoon) for recycling into eating utensils, orthodontic appliances, dental mercury/silver amalgams, exercise equipment, jewelry and many other consumer items. Unregulated diesel exhaust pollution combines with other typres of air pollution to form deadly smog, especially on sunny days of temperature inversions. All this pollution remains trapped in the Tennessee Valley of Death between the Cumberland Plateau and the Great Smokey Mountains. "Weather" reports from local "News" corporations do their part to censor these facts of life from residents of Knoxville, Knox County and surrounding areas. Meanwhile, cancer rates skyrocket and acidosis deaths claim lives of young "healthy" people who just drop dead in their homes after breathing Knoxville's acidic air. This author has known two local people in their 30s die this way in the past 12 months. UNOFFICIAL CENSORED WEBSITE OF DEFUNCT KNOXVILLE GREEN PARTY USA TODAY08/19/2001 - Updated 10:49 PM ET
THE LARGEST INCREASE OF DEAD AIR IN THE USA
KNOX, ANDERSON, LOUDON, ROANE COUNTIES RANK IN TOP 90% OF USA
Smokey Mountains and Cumberland Plateau blocks exit of smog from E TN Valley. American Lung Association gave Knox County, TN an "F" for lack of air quality (2001) |
http://www.lungusa.org/press/envir/air_072301.html The EPA advisors are reviewing the summary of scientific literature about fine particle soot compiled by EPA scientists. This review is a preliminary step as EPA re-examines its current health standards. Six dozen new short-term studies from across the U.S. and around the world "confirm the effects of particle pollution on premature mortality, hospital admissions, emergency department visits, doctor's visits, respiratory and cardiac effects. New studies demonstrate that infants and children, especially asthmatic children, the elderly, and those with heart or lung disease are especially sensitive to the effects of fine particle pollution. DeLucia also called on EPA to set a meaningful new "coarse" particle standard to prevent health damage from bigger, but still respirable, chunks of soot. HOME OF ORNL NUKES
http://sites.netscape.net/gostryter/usdoenukeindex.html Knoxville TN is HQ of BFI/Waste Management/Allied Waste, owner of 10,000 garbage trucks, which owns Miller Industries/RoadOne, owner of 10,000 towing trucks and world's largest manufacturer of towing equipment, which had 25 subcontractors convicted in 1997 for RICO as members of Gambino and Genovese crime families in NY City, according to A&E TV, Investigative Reports with Bill Curtis, Modern Mobs, 2001. Garbage and scrap dealers currently embroiled in $500-Million lawsuit over contracting fraud at ORNL nuke plants over purchasing of radioactive scrap metal to resell to the public for consumer items. Plaintiff in lawsuit had business burned down by arson in 2001. Miller Industries and RoadOne currently sued in class action in federal court in Knoxville TN over illegal towing, extortion and car theft, and represented by Ambassador Howard Baker's international law firm of 250 lawyers, along with partner Cedar Bluff Towing in Knoxville (owner's son in Knoxville is world's top lawyer in towing class actions to sue state and local governments to deregulate towing prices, and lobby US Congress). www.bfi.com http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2001/08/20/aqi/metros.htm
US EPA (2001) 2-year old data
Riverside CA = 93 days (50% decreasing)
http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata/mapemis.html National-Scale Air Toxics Assessment
KNOX COUNTY, TN The Municipal Waste Combustors account for over 61 percent of the total dioxin emissions and almost 19 percent of the national man-made emissions of mercury. Hospital/Medical Infectious Waste Incinerators account for 11 percent of the total dioxin emissions and 10 percent of the national man-made emissions of mercury. http://www.usatoday.com/hphoto.htm#more USA TODAY
Checking ozone levels becoming routine for many By Patrick O'Driscoll As the summer's biggest heat wave swamped much of the USA this month,
buzzwords hung in the stifling air. "Spare the Air" in Sacramento.
"Ozone
Watch" in Houston. "Code Red" in Washington, Baltimore and Raleigh,
N.C.
"Nozone Action" in Indianapolis. "Smog Alert" in Cincinnati. "Ozone
Action"
in Chicago, St. Louis and Philadelphia. However you say it, August
is
the
peak of the nation's 6-month ozone "season," when summer heat and
sunlight
cook tailpipe exhaust, industrial emissions and other vaporous toxins
Joe Scuderi, a computer programmer and musician in Davis, Calif., gets
ozone alerts via e-mail from Sacramento's air quality agency. If there's
a
warning, he curbs his driving and jogging. "I've heard the pollution
index on
the radio sometimes, too, but they don't do it enough. I think it should
be part
of everything."
Diana Stewart, a school district staffer in suburban St. Louis, checks
one of
the Missouri Department of Transportation's message boards that flash
the
next day's ozone forecast along busy commuter routes. "I find myself
looking
for it," says Stewart, a jogger who also gets e-mail alerts. "Is it
going to be a
'green' day tomorrow, or a 'yellow' day or a 'red' day? Sucking bad
air
will
scare me away from running, even in the early morning."
In Chapel Hill, N.C., artist Helen Davis catches the air outlook on
her
public
radio station's morning newscast. "I'm not alarmist about it," she
says,
"but I
think about it. This is the first place I've lived that I was so aware
of it."
Driven by computer models, speedy Internet links and widespread
reporting
in print and on the airwaves, smog forecasts are seeping into cocktail
chat,
office water-cooler talk and dinner conversation. "Green Day," you
say?
We're talking clean air, dude, not the punk rock band.
Online, smogheads click on time-lapse area maps that swirl in yellow,
orange
and red to show where the day's ozone buildup is going. Web sites carry
the
next day's air predictions and an array of advice both for surviving
the
smog and helping to reduce it. Thousands of individuals and hundreds
of
schools, companies and offices get forecasts by e-mail.
"We're doing it now because people want it," says Richard "Chet" Wayland
of the Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Air Quality Planning
and
Standards. EPA's "Air Now" Web site (www.epa.gov/airnow) posts online
ozone forecasts and data for 161 cities in 39 states.
Even in healthy people, ozone can give lungs the equivalent of a
sunburn. High
in the stratosphere, the ozone layer shields Earth from solar radiation.
But at
the ground level, the colorless gas is smog's main ingredient, a
concoction of
nitrogen oxides (car and industrial exhaust) and hydrocarbon vapors
(gasoline, solvents and other volatile chemicals). It can reduce lung
capacity
and cause shortness of breath, coughing, headaches, nausea and eye
irritation.
It's worse for children, the elderly, asthmatics and others with lung
ailments.
Nationally, air pollution costs an estimated $50 billion a year in
health
expenses.
Responding to rising public interest, EPA last month added a national
ozone
forecast map, dotted with virtual stickpins that chart each city by
level of alert,
to its Web site. Daily forecasting in an understandable format "has
turned the
tide" in attracting people's attention, Wayland says. "The AQI has
made
it
simple."
Two years ago, the EPA revamped the way the agency reports how good
or
bad the air is. It replaced a system of parts-per-billion calculations
with an
easier, color-coded Air Quality Index AQI for short. Green means
"good," and yellow is "moderate." Orange is "unhealthy for sensitive
groups,"
red means "unhealthy" and purple is "very unhealthy."
For consumers of the new flood of daily air data, it's simply gold
Broadcast outlets and some newspapers, including USA TODAY,
now deliver the ozone outlook for dozens of cities. In St. Louis,&
KMOV-TV runs a "Green Day Giveaway" with prizes on days when&
the air level is "good." Sacramento's KCRA-TV displays animated
ozone maps that rival the flashy "Pinpoint Doppler radar" visuals that
anchor "WeatherCast3." They call them "Ozone Movies."
The Internet presence of air data has exploded. Besides EPA's site,
many states and some cities have forecast Web pages and links, from&
Sacramento (sparetheair.com) to Chicago (www.cleantheair.org).
Ditto for media outlets, from cable's The Weather Channel
(weather.com) to the "Weather Underground" site
(wunderground.com), which is popular with meteorology geeks.
Webcam sites such as Camnet (hazecam.net) show continuous views
of the air in urban and scenic locales from New York to Denver. EPA,
meanwhile, is talking with America Online, the nation's largest Internet
provider, about posting air quality data on AOL members' local home
pages.
In several cities, local air agencies, the American Lung Association (http://www.lungusa.org/air/)
and
others offer free forecasts and warnings via e-mail, pager, fax and
digital cellphone. School coaches subscribe for up-to-the-minute
guidance on whether to allow teams and marching bands to practice.
Day-care center nurses do the same to protect kids at play, especially
those with asthma.
Educational programs aim to indoctrinate children so that curbing
bad-air behavior will be second nature to them as adults.
Houston's "Andy the Airedale," a cartoon dog that teaches the AQI colors
to
kindergartners and first-graders, has spread to several other cities.
The
Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality District just created Save Planet
Polluto, a slick computer adventure game on CD-ROM and the Internet
(planetpolluto.com), in which "air cadets" in grades 4-8 learn about
air
pollution and clean up the home skies of the "Airidians" and alien
cities such as
Lung Angeles, El Gaso and NOxVille. Sacramento also hosts an online
pollution simulator, Smog City (www.sonomatech.com/SmogCity/), where
visitors can compute different AQIs by manipulating levels of urban
population, traffic, weather and industry.
In Kentucky, mechanical engineering professor Geoffrey Cobourn of the
University of Louisville built and put online his own computer model
to
forecast ozone pollution (www.apcd.org/aq/forecasts/ozone12.htm). A
local
TV weathercaster and air agencies in three cities now use it. So do
his
students, for class papers on air pollution forecasting.
Next up? Personal air forecasts. Next spring, the commercial meteorology
service Weather Central will begin beaming custom-tailored air quality
reports
in a free "Personal Microcast" via e-mail, pager or cellphone. EPA's
national
ozone maps are fine, says Weather Central President Terry Kelly, whose
service already sends individualized weather data to subscribers in
50
of the
nation's 200 TV markets. "But for their own health and activity needs,
people
need a lot more detail than that."
EPA's Wayland says that though air quality forecasting "is still where
forecasting for weather was maybe 40 years ago," it's improving. This
fall,
EPA will begin test forecasting for fine particulates, the miscroscopic
particles
that color smog and haze and pose a more serious threat to the lungs.
An information revolution is in the air
The quiet revolution in forecasting relies mostly on computers and
modems.
Dozens of air testing stations that once had to be checked in person
now
can
report automatically in "real time," updating at intervals from a minute
to an
hour. Computer models extrapolate the numbers into the maps, charts
and
lists to be posted on Web sites. Air agencies can instantly issue new
warnings
as ozone pollution worsens or cancel alerts if air quality improves.
Despite these advances, getting people actually to change their air
polluting
habits is still elusive. Houston, Sacramento, Indianapolis and other
cities do
periodic surveys to measure the effect of their anti-pollution
campaigns. All
typically report greater awareness of ozone warnings and common steps
to
curb bad air: limiting car trips, taking the bus, refueling cars and
mowing lawns
in the evening.
But most register no major movement to alter behaviors. "People are
not
going to do anything that is inconvenient," says Anne Mrok-Smith of
the
Houston-Galveston Area Council, an air quality group.
Houston became the butt of late-night TV jokes when it had the worst
ozone
pollution in America in 1999, beating even perennial front-runner Los
Angeles. But because its air doesn't carry as many of the tiny
particulates that
make smog brown and hazy, Houston has trouble convincing residents
there's
an air problem. "The days that we have the worst ozone are usually
just
the
most beautiful days," says Lily Wells, the council's chief air quality
planner.
L.A. cuts smog by 75% in 15 years
Ironically, air officials in Los Angeles don't promote public awareness
with
"Spare the Air" campaigns. Smog has been such an everyday issue in
L.A.
for
so long that "constantly urging people to carpool or do this or that
might get
old fairly fast here," says Bill Kelly of the South Coast Air Quality
Management District. L.A.'s strategy stricter regulation of cars,
industry,
consumer products and other pollution sources has cut smog by 75%
since 1985.
During the 1990s, air quality improved in most of the nation's more
than
260
metropolitan areas. But of the 34 areas with increasing pollution,
most
were
failing in ozone. Ozone also was the culprit for most of the bad air
days in the
94 largest metro areas in the '90s. The American Lung Association's
"State of
the Air" report, released in May and covering 1997-99, calculated that
more
than 141 million Americans live in areas that got an "F" for ozone
pollution.
Which is why, like most air quality officials, Kerry Shearer of the
Sacramento
air district has few illusions that today's greater awareness will
eliminate air
pollution any time soon. "Think how long it took for the anti-smoking
effort,"
Shearer says.
"We've been at it since 1989, but it's going to take a while," he says.
"Not
everybody is going to change. Not everybody agrees there is a problem."
© Copyright 2001 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.
http://www.epa.gov/enviro/html/tris/tris_overview.html The Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) contains information about more than
650 toxic chemicals that are being used, manufactured, treated,
transported, or released into the environment.
LOCKHEED MARTIN ENERGY SYS. U.S. DOE Y-12 PLANT
|
http://www.wbir.com/News/news.asp?ID=4021
EPA ASKING DOE FOR MORE DATA ON POLLUTION The EPA wants more data on pollution possibly linked to health problems in small communities near the government's Oak Ridge reservation. A letter had been sent to the Department of Energy outlining complaints received from the Coalition for a Healthy Environment. It asks for DOE's Oak Ridge office to devise a plan to address contamination issues. Coalition member Harry Williams says the group isn't happy with the thought of DOE leading the investigation. He would prefer the EPA take an independent look at the situation. Among the concerns are Roane County communities located along the Clinch River and near a former uranium-enrichment plant. It's still the site of an incinerator that burns radioactive and hazardous wastes. 8/15/01 5:51:13 PM
INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION OF THE EAST TENNESSEE TECHNOLOGY PARK Office of Environment, Safety and Health, U.S. Department of Energy (2000) Pollution above toxic levels surrounding Oak Ridge Nuclear Laboratory (ETTP) HTML Report (200 pages) PDF Report (200 pages) Verbatum from the declassified portion of the Report: "Conservative estimates indicated that 35,000 pounds of uranium were released into the air from all sources. 4,300 pounds of uranium a month was unaccounted for or released to the environment. ETTP operates an incinerator which handles radioactive, hazardous and uranium-contaminated PCB wastes. ETTP generated transuranic elements (isotopes with atomic numbers greater than uranium) such as neptunium-237 and plutonium-239; fission products such as techneitum-99; PCBs; toxic metals; and volatile organic compunds such as trichloroethene (TCE) and present risk to the public. Some contaminants migrated outside the Plant boundary. Waste disposal practices included direct discharge of radioactive materials, toxics and caustics to holding ponds and storm drains, and incineration and burial. Reports reflected a number of spills of nitric and hydrochloric acids, in one case 200 gallons. Numerous large fires and explosions were reported. It is impossible to characterize exposure because of inadequate surveys and incomplete records. Records indicate that as contamination levels increased, exposure controls were reduced. Contamination above limits was commonly detected. Operations have released a variety of contaminants into the environment, such as burial of low-level and hazardous waste in landfills and dumping directly into the Clinch River. Large amounts of contaminated equipment and scrap material were sold at public auction. Tens of thousands of pounds of flourine and hydrogen flouride were emitted annually. The investigation team identified over 600 releases of uranium hexaflouride, and a large, visible cloud was released outside a building. Exposure to 'intense clouds' of uranium powder dusts was prevalent and resulted in intense beta radiation fields. Each month dozens or workers were identified as having exposures exceeding plant control guides. Extensive contamination was prevalent. Records indicate many air samples in excess of Plant Allowable Limits. Both chemical and radiological materials have routinely been discharged from the Plant, from both sanitary sewage and storm water systems and materials were directly discharged in Mitchell Branch and Poplar Creek. One million pounds of blowdown water was discharged a day. The hexavalent chromium concentration in Poplar Creek is equal to the level regulated by the site's permit. Contents of 500 uranium hexafloride and other gas cylinders were emptied into the unlined holding pond by shooting the cylinders with high-powered rifles, and this pond discharged into Poplar Creek. Records confirm that radiation exceeded drinking water standards. Over 80,000 drums of pond sludge with low concentrations of uranium were generated in 1988. Ventilation was modified to discharge mercury fumes above the roof. Elevated levels of mercury were found in urinalyses. Records refer to the recovery of tons of mercury. Traps would blow out spilling mercury on the floor. Air sampling in the 1990s identified mercury levels several times the Threshold Limit Value. Continual and volumnous process leaks (blowoffs) were vented to the atmosphere. 4,300 pounds of uranium hexaflouride were released per month. Losses were excessive. 10,000 union grievances were filed and management disputed grievances concerning safety in favor of economic considerations. Many storm drains were not moitored before 1992, and routine and accidental wastes have adversely impacted the environment and the aquatic habitat. Weaknesses in the sampling and monitoring of air pollutant emissions raise concerns regarding the accuracy of public dose and exposure calculations. Environmental radiological protection and surveillance are not compliant with DOE Order. Few records reflect involvement by the Atomic Energy Commission in investigations of serious events. Levels of airborne radioactivity were as high as 35,800 dpm/ft3, and far exceeded the PAL of 2 dpm/ft3. [That's radiation levels over 17,000 times the maximum limit.] Airborne radioactivity far in excess of normal background levels was measured off-site as far as five miles away. A number of criticality and sub-criticality accident experiments were performed and posed a severe radiation hazard. Bladder cancer rates were seven times higher than for the general population, and stomach ulcers were 6.5 times greater. Inhalation of airborn radiation can increase the risk of future cancer." [verbatum from the Report] NOTE: This report only covered the K-25 plant, not the DOE National Nuclear Security Administration's Y-12 nuclear bombs factory, not the thousands of contaminated lab rats from ORNL's Y-12 nuclear bombs factory Mouse House that are incinerated at the University of Tennessee Medical Center in central Knoxville, and did not cover Top Secret "criticality" pollution, "referred to as 'special hazards'" (ie, "small" explosions due to accidental nuclear reactions), and "are discussed in a separate classifed document." The GOPS government of Tennessee previously gave ETTP/ORNL a clean bill of health in 1999. RALPH NADER ON NUKES: "High-level nuclear waste will be hazardous for more than 200,000 years. An Energy Department study found that a severe accident in a rural area could contaminate a 42-square-mile area, require over a year to 'clean up', and cost $620 million." US Dept of Energy Disaster Reports Y12 criticality appx 5mb Review of Criticality Safety - Field Report for the Oak Ridge Y-12 Plant Buildings 9212 and 9818, January 2000 ORNL Y-12 special agent fatality [heart attack on treadmill] Office of Oversight Review of the Occupational Medicine Program at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, September 1998 Type B Accident Investigation Board Report on the February 27, 1998 Shipping Violations Involving the Corehole 8 Project at
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennesee Type B Investigation Board Report on the June 19, 1997, Occupational Illness at the Y-12 Plant Oak Ridge, Tennessee |
Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments (ACHRE)http://gwis.circ.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/radiation/ US government at ORNL conducted secret Nazi experiments on Tennesseans as human guinea pigs into deadly hazards of nuclear radiation. ACHRE was created by President Clinton on January 15, 1994 to investigate and report on the use of human beings as subjects of federally funded research using ionizing radiation. ACHRE constructed a gopher site to provide public electronic access to information about its activities. Created by Executive Order and subject to the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), the Advisory Committee was obligated to provide public access to its activities, processes and papers. The Advisory Committee believed, however, that the nature of the subject it investigated and the human stories that comprise it placed on it a special responsibility to disseminate as broadly as possible the results of its investigations, the implications of that history for our own time, and its best judgment concerning the rights and responsibilities of those involved.
The National Security Archive obtained the data from the ACHRE gopher when the Advisory Committee was dissolved in October of 1995. The information acquired from the original internet site includes:
This data was obtained by the National Security Archive with the generous support of the W. Alton Jones Foundation (Charlottesville, VA). Introduction - The Atomic CenturyPart I - Ethics of Human Subjects Research: A Historical Perspective
Part II - Case Studies
Part III - Contemporary Projects
Part IV - Coming to Terms with the Past, Looking Ahead to the FutureStatement By Committee Member Jay KatzOfficial DocumentsAppendices
One-time Plutonium Bioassay Service for Nuclear Test Personnel Review Program The Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) (into which the Defense Special Weapons Agency consolidated) is the Executive Agent for the Nuclear Test Personnel Review (NTPR) Program, which serves veterans who participated in U.S. atmospheric nuclear tests or with the occupation forces of Hiroshima or Nagasaki, Japan. Since its inception in 1978, the NTPR Program has identified approximately 400,000-plus Department of Defense (DoD) personnel who participated in these activities. The primary purpose of the NTPR Program is to provide participation data and radiation dose information to veterans. DTRA made available a voluntary, one-time, limited plutonium bioassay test for eligible veterans in July 1998. Congress authorized funding for the testing in the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 1998. The funding was sufficient to test 100 eligible veterans. Eligible veterans are those who are confirmed participants of U.S. atmospheric nuclear tests or the occupation forces of Hiroshima or Nagasaki, Japan. The NTPR Program has received commitments for all the bioassays that can be offered. NTPR internal dose reconstructions are prepared following Title 32, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 218. The Government Printing Office has an Internet site (http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/cfr-table-search.html) to access the Code of Federal Regulations. If the bioassay result significantly exceeds the plutonium level of the veteran's NTPR-prepared internal dose reconstruction, the veteran's internal dose will be reevaluated. No veteran's internal dose assessment will be lowered as a result of the bioassay test. While it is premature to predict the outcome of all 100 bioassays, initial results of 39 bioassay measurements are consistent with previously compiled NTPR internal dose information. Upon the completion of the 100 bioassay samples, this one-time limited testing will be reviewed to assess its value. Questions or requests for further information may be directed to the following agencies: The NTPR toll-free telephone number is (800) 462-3683. The address is: Defense Threat Reduction Agency/Tel, (ATTN: TDANP/NTPR), 6801 Telegraph Road, Alexandria, VA 22310-3398; or internet (http://www.dtra.mil). The VA telephone number is (202) 273-8575. Their address is: Office of Public Health and Environmental Hazards (13), Department of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20420. MILITARY CORRUPTION DOT COM News articles and links for disabled and pissed-off veterans. KILLER MUSHROOMS The Years of Atmospheric Testing: 1945-1963 From 1945 to 1963 the U.S.A. conducted an extensive campaign of atmospheric nuclear tests, grouped into roughly 20 test "series." After 1963 when the Limited Test Ban Treaty was signed testing for the U.S., Soviet Union, and Great Britain moved underground. France continued atmospheric testing until 1974 and China did so until 1980. This page focuses mainly on U.S. testing because those documents are most readily available. Summary Table of U.S. Nuclear Test Series U.S. Nuclear Testing from Project TRINITY to the PLOWSHARE
Program Map
of. Nuclear Test Sites Worldwide Videos of Nuclear TestsNote: These video clips were digitized from the best available copies of U.S. Government films. For additional information about these films, see the Historical Nuclear Test Films page at the DOE Nevada Test Site. Crossroads
ABLE Test [160x120 Quicktime MOV, 1.9 MB] Buster-Jangle Test [160x120
Quicktime MOV, 3.3 MB] Ivy MIKE, slow-motion closeup of fireball [160x120
Quicktime MOV, 900 KB] Castle BRAVO test
[160x120 Quicktime MOV, 2.7 MB] Atmospheric Test Photo Web SitesGallery of Nuclear Test Photos [Mirror--Original
server has gone off-line indefinitely.] Nevada Test Site Historical Photos and
Films Other Web Sites about Nuclear TestingChart of Global Nuclear
Weapons tests, 1945-1996 Table of Known Nuclear Tests
Worldwide: 1945-1996 Nuclear Test Personnel Review Copyright © 1995-2000
Gregory Walker (gwalker@jump.net), Creator of
Trinity Atomic Web Site Most of the documents, photos, maps and videos presented here are from U.S. Government documents and believed to be in the public domain, unless specifically noted. Last updated: April 2, 2000. Historical footnote: Hundreds of American POWs died in the American bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. POTRET SEORANG YANG TERSELAMAT DARI BOM ATOM INTRODUCTION In 1945, a technology turned deadly. It could obliterate the world and has been man's scariest nightmare since. Attempts to control it has not been too successful despite more than 150 countries having signed the Comprehensive [Nuclear] Test Ban Treaty, including Malaysia recently. Throughout 1995-1996, a series of nuclear tests were conducted near Mururoa Atoll in South Pacific. Again in May 1998, similar nuclear tests were conducted in the South Asia, further threatening humankind. Abdul Razak Abdul Hamid, the only Malaysian to have survived the mass killing as a result of an Atomic Bomb explosion reminds us of his unforgetable experience. Includes list of speeches and published news articles. This website was developed as an integral part of the Malaysian Drug & Poison Net by Pusat Racun Negara, USM in conjunction with the 53th Anniversary of the Atomic Bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1998 at 8.15am. http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata/mapemis.html http://www.knoxnews.com/kns/local_news/article/0,1406,KNS_347_818659,00.html KNOXVILLE NEWS-SENTINEL Beryllium makers not liable for ill effects Oak Ridge workers' lawsuits dismissed By Laura Ayo A federal judge's dismissal of a lawsuit against manufacturers and distributors of beryllium used at nuclear weapons plants in Oak Ridge could mean the dismissal of similar lawsuits pending before the same judge, lawyers in the case said. "If the other plaintiffs asserted similar claims in connection with the same sites, I would think if it's in the same court and (before) the same judge, I don't see how those claims would not be disposed of the same way," said John Traficonte, litigation counsel for Cabot Corp. of Pennsylvania. "Logically, they would have to be." U.S. District Judge James Jarvis' order on Tuesday granting summary judgment to Cabot, Brush Wellman Inc. of Ohio, NGK Metal Corp. of Pennsylvania and Ceradyne Inc. of California dismisses one of 10 lawsuits pending before him. In the lawsuit brought in 1994 by Y-12 workers Troy Murphy Morgan, Corky Dean McCarter, Richard Emory Myers Sr. and Kathleen Beatty and in the other nine lawsuits, Y-12 or K-25 workers claim they contracted a debilitating respiratory illness called chronic beryllium disease or tested positive for beryllium sensitivity from being exposed to airborne beryllium dust and fumes while working at the plants. "In the remaining cases, there are motions filed similar to the ones filed in Morgan and the court's ruling should apply to those as well," said Jim Wright, who represents Ceradyne. But Wright and other lawyers in the case said they'd only be guessing if they tried to conclude what effect the ruling would have on the pending cases. Court records show, however, that a motion for voluntary dismissal of all claims against all defendants in one of the other lawsuits was filed about two weeks after Jarvis indicated he was granting summary judgment in the Morgan case. While Jarvis noted his decision in an Aug. 1 order, the order didn't become final until Tuesday when he issued a detailed 42-page opinion. Steve Jensen, one of the lawyers for the workers in the Morgan case and other cases, said he couldn't comment about pending litigation because an appeal is possible. Most of the 10 lawsuits complained that the manufacturers and distributors, as well as other similar companies and the federal government, deliberately concealed for decades the true health risks to those who worked with the substance. "Because the government and its contractors were the only parties in a position to warn the plaintiffs and protect them from the dangers of beryllium, the defendants had no duty to warn the plaintiffs," Jarvis ruled. "The duty was assumed by the United States and its contractors." The judge noted Congress recently enacted a compensation plan entitling plaintiffs and other injured beryllium workers to receive a $150,000 lump-sum payment and medical benefits (part of the Tennessee 2nd Injury Fund for Workers Compensation). Jarvis - like a Jefferson County, Colo., jury during a trial in a similar case in June - also rejected the workers' argument that the companies participated in a 50-year conspiracy to keep the actual dangers of beryllium exposure secret. Patrick Carpenter, a spokesman for Brush Wellman, said he received word late Wednesday that the plaintiffs' motion for new trial in the Colorado case had been denied. The judge also rejected the workers' arguments on two other issues. "We are extremely pleased that the District Court granted this motion," Brush Wellman wrote in a statement. "The Court can be commended for being thorough and reasoned in evaluating our position that Brush Wellman was not responsible for the health and safety of another company's employees." Laura Ayo may be reached at 865-342-6341 or ayo@knews.com. Copyright 2001 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. 1. Beryllium Related Legislation 2. National Beryllium Support Group 3. Office of Congressman Paul E. Kanjorski, United States Congress, United
States House of Representatives, 11th District 4. Beryllium Injuries Lawyers Brayton Purcell: Beryllium Workers and Chronic
Beryllium Disease 5. Office of Environment, Safety and Health 6. Congress to consider compensation 7. Some Historical Suggested Reading Pertaining to Chronic Beryllium
Diseases http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/nata/mapemis.html
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy KUB REACHES 2,000 SIGN-UPS, WINS FIRST GREEN POWER LEADERSHIP AWARD The Knoxville Utilities Board (KUB) continues to show their commitment to clean energy by reaching their goal of having 2,000 customers signed up for Green Power Switch by July 4th, 2001. KUB hosted a customer appreciation event to celebrate this accomplishment on August 2nd at Market Square. The event was a huge success and received media coverage from Knoxville's three major TV stations and the Knoxville News-Sentinel. Attendees were given free green snow cones. KUB held this activity both to mark their milestone and to challenge even more people and businesses to participate in the program. BUSHIT ALERT: KUB has no "Green Power" and publicly admits it has no intention of inventing any in the future. In fact, it abandoned its ugly Green HQ downtown, selling it for $500,000 to a criminal lawyer next door on Gay Street, to finance its old $15-million boob job and luxury palace on Gay Street, complete with VIP bedroom suites with jacuuzis and numerous VIP dining facilities with monogramed crystal goblets and fine bone china. KUB merely uses its "Green Power" donation scheme as propaganda to siphon money from political hacks extorted to contribute their paychecks in order to please the Republican Skull and Bones mayor and trial lawyer trying to stay one step ahead of impeachment, imprisonment and/or lynching. So mayor Ashe jumped at his promotion from fellow Bonesman George Bush Jr to take his Widenass to help loot Fannie Mae Savings and Loan. QUOTE OF THE DAY "It's beautiful, man!"
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