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Contributing Member
Well I must admit I have never heard of the atomic powered aircraft that is real fanciful stuff just what the world needs flying atomic reactors!
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12-26-2016 11:11 AM
# ADS
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
CINDERS
Well I must admit I have never heard of the atomic powered aircraft that is real fanciful stuff just what the world needs flying atomic reactors!

He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Mark in Rochester For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
Wow, if the Enterprise had had that on board, Spock would not have had to die....
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Thank You to matthanne1 For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
As a child of the 50's I vividly remember the two opposing views of atomic energy. On one hand we were drilled in school how to hide under our desks to be safe from atomic attack. (I early decided that this was a farce after reading a Mad Magazine that parodied the posters: "In case of attack bend over, put your head between your legs and kiss your *** goodbye"), and articles and news stories touting atomic powered everything including airplanes.
---------- Post added at 06:20 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:17 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
us019255
and kiss your *** goodby
Another example of the changes in our society. The PC police have this website censoring words that were published in a magazine in the '50's.
Ed reluctantly no longer in the Bitterroot
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Moderator
(M1 Garand/M14/M1A Rifles)
I grew up one ridge over from Oak Rdge, TN, the U.S. capital of nuclear energy and nuclear material weaponization. There were obsolescent nuclear reactors displayed on the street corners in that city. Not a joke. It was a first strike soviet nuclear target throughout the cold war. Oak Ridge had an interceptor squadron parked on the airfield a mile away from me that defended it throughout the fifties and sixties. I had an uncle who was a nuclear chemist on the Manhattan project, friends who worked in the labs and plants. I knew how to operate a remote articulator (mechanical arm) before I got into junior high. They didn't even bother teaching us the nuclear survival drills. Too close. 
Bob
"It is said, 'Go not to the elves for counsel for they will say both no and yes.' "
Frodo Baggins to Gildor Inglorion, The Fellowship of the Ring
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Bob Womack
They didn't even bother teaching us the nuclear survival drills
A crazy time for sure. Lots of stuff said and done by the government that made absolutely no sense. In Mpls-St. Paul, as all cities, there were evacuation route signs on main roads. In case of an attack warning we were supposed to evacuate the city in cars. Now we have all seen the clogged roads when people try to leave a coastal area when a hurricane comes. One of my college classmates in St Paul, calculated that the center of the Twin Cities was the Ford bridge over the Mississippi, his plan was to walk there and sit on it until the bomb went off. One of these plans did save a bunch of lives in a suburb. There is a subdivision that was built where each house had a fallout shelter. A tornado hit it with no loss of life because the residents had gone to the shelters.
Ed reluctantly no longer in the Bitterroot
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