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Making a real killing : Rocky Flats and the nuclear West / Len Ackland.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press, 1999.Edition: 1st edDescription: xi, 308 p. : ill., maps, portsISBN:
  • 0826318770 (hc : alk. paper)
DDC classification:
  • 363.17990978883 21
LOC classification:
  • UF534.C6 A25 1999
Contents:
Review: "Just as huge nuclear explosions result from small spheres of plutonium, the story of the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant near Denver, Colorado, is much larger than itself. It is about the Church family, who came west seeking gold in 1861, stayed to raise cattle, watched the federal government take a large piece of its land for the weapons plant in 1951 - and now is busily developing real estate in the booming suburbs next to the contaminated plant site. It is about the government and private corporations that produced the deadliest devices in history for thirty-seven years, concealed problems behind the wall of national security secrecy, and came close to a Chernobyl-scale disaster during a 1969 fire. It is about plant managers who cut corners to maintain weapons production, workers who saw themselves as loyal Cold War soldiers, and citizen activists who challenged the plant's very existence.
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Includes index.

Ch. 1. Rich Pastures -- Ch. 2. Big Ed and the Bomb -- Ch. 3. A $45 Million Plant -- Ch. 4. Behind the Fences -- Ch. 5. Neutrons Trotting Around -- Ch. 6. Expect a Fire, but Produce -- Ch. 7. Arms Race and Waste -- Ch. 8. Close Call - The Mother's Day Fire -- Ch. 9. A Magnet for Scientists and Activists -- Ch. 10. Local Hazard, Global Threat -- Ch. 11. Under Siege -- Ch. 12. Whistleblowers and the Feds -- Ch. 13. Shutdown -- Ch. 14. Infinity Rooms.

"Just as huge nuclear explosions result from small spheres of plutonium, the story of the Rocky Flats nuclear weapons plant near Denver, Colorado, is much larger than itself. It is about the Church family, who came west seeking gold in 1861, stayed to raise cattle, watched the federal government take a large piece of its land for the weapons plant in 1951 - and now is busily developing real estate in the booming suburbs next to the contaminated plant site. It is about the government and private corporations that produced the deadliest devices in history for thirty-seven years, concealed problems behind the wall of national security secrecy, and came close to a Chernobyl-scale disaster during a 1969 fire. It is about plant managers who cut corners to maintain weapons production, workers who saw themselves as loyal Cold War soldiers, and citizen activists who challenged the plant's very existence.

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