national Battalion/Page 7 February 9, 1982 rmy radiation records War P^ d medic says By Scott McCullar - membenl United Press International SACRAMENTO — The gov- nment kept two sets of records one phony and the other Accurate — of radiation expo sure to soldiers in atomic tests in ANCELil Nevada in 1956 and 1957, a for- jndjjf, mer Army medic says. „g ■ Van R. Brandon, facing a , threatof treason, broke 25 years - 1 !lt t of silence Sunday at a news con- ‘ P' ni ' lr ' ference to say he followed orders when he prepared the prepa bogus records hiding high levels of radiation exposure to soldiers at the Yucca Flat, Nev., test site. Two of Brandon’s seven chil dren were born mentally re- prded, two others have de veloped arthritis and one of his wo grandchildren had her ood changed at birth. He says ic believes their problems are villbef di 16 to his own radiation expo- sure. He said he was worried other veterans exposed to the Kdiation and their families CAL iJBjght have similar problems. Genetic!»|j arn es Freeman, a Pentagon Spokesman in Washington, said so a fim he had no comment on the news rel. Hinference or on an earlier in terview, in which Brandon said ,, 11 uBs seven-man, top secret Com- “Bned Operations Nuclear \ ALPHi ledical Evaluation Team kept com petit): [wo sets of ledgers to record adiation readings from film s worn by soldiers at the 7:30 p.m®st site. ■n The badges were designed to ecord the levels of radiation to pch the men wearing them, [ho were sometimes marched to S’ound zero, had been exposed. , v;vi JiB “One set was to show that no E. KyleA one received an exposure above Be approved dosimeter read- Individi lain flooil : .len Max 'lCE,C0i g and pttj liors. SAME ing,” he said. “The other set of books was to show what the actual reading was. Sometimes the badges actual ly measured radiation expo sures below the limit. In those cases, the true levels were re corded in both the real and phony books. But two tests — in June 1956 and April 1957 — were the dir tiest ones, he said. “Things were very highly con taminated,” Brandon said. “I mean the ground zero was hot for weeks afterwards. They didn’t march people through ground zero, but they got them close.” Brandon, 45, who now lives in Marysville, Calif., said when he left the Army in 1961 he was warned that if he told anyone of his experiences “I could be charged with treason under the National Security Act.” Barry Kail of the National Association of Atomic Veterans, based in Burlington, Iowa, said most test documents have been declassified and there are few legal risks in talking. Brandon, who has suffered from degenerative discogenic spine disease since November 1979, said he was denied veter ans benefits. He said officials de nied the existence of the top sec ret medic unit he says he was in. Brandon joined the military in January 1954 at the age of 17 and was sent as a medic to Korea and later joined the top-secret CONMET team. After receiving training near the Bikini nuclear test site, he was flown to Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas. His team commuted by H-2 1 helicopter to the Yucca Flat test site, where the first test he worked was in February 1956. At his own request, Brandon left the testing program in 1956, returning in 1957 for a test to train a new crew. He was hospit alized injuly of 1957. He said he lost most of his teeth in 1968 because of internal nerve damage. O’Hare gets top airport ranking United Press International COLUMBUS, Ohio — The president of the Aviation Safety Institute ranks Cleveland Hop kins as the worst airport in the United States and Chicago’s O’Hare Airport as the best. John Galipault, a long-time aviation watchdog and founder of the 9-year-old non-profit in stitute, bases his rankings on air traffic control, runway and air port configuration, disaster pre paredness, congestion and weather. Galipault’s top five airports are Chicago O’Hare, Dallas-Fort Worth, Atlanta, Minneapolis-St. Paul and New York Kennedy. The five worst are Cleveland Hopkins, Washington National, St. Louis, San Diego and Los Angeles. Galipault praised O’Hare for its excellent air control and run- N: Re« )itch sofl| Public interests focus for Texas AFL-CIO at 7 p.m-l ){ upCODEl United Press International USTIN — Given Texas’ con- n.n sign jservative nature and a right-to- i he libtiP r or ^ philosophy that seems ' ritten in stone, the state’s labor nions are not expending all their dfforts in organizing Texas industries. C.AL t | Although the Texas AFL- ipeakonil niO represents 300,000 mem- iry. This*) ) ers an ei has experienced a 100 the Brffl )ercent growth since 1969, it has )ecome a champion of citizen iOlRuiiife rights and by one estimate o gj pends about 80 percent of its d ‘ f 1, time protecting the public in- erest. scussinp “\y e ar e chartered by the na- y, with Rii i ona i organization to provide gineerins xilitical and legislative services to our members,” said Harry lubbard, the Texas AFL-CIO resident for the last nine years. During the legislative session he Texas AFL-CIO pushed for nly one employee-related bill, one that provided workers’ com- and ranch group’s efforts involved fighting bills ;aker Br: has roM Relight * p.m. ini ensation to farm ywillbfitj jaborers. The ostly involved fighting 0 3ter :ty calling for higher interest rates and working for passage of generic drug legislation. The right-to-work provision remains in the Texas Constitu- ion, but inroads still are being made to help union workers, Hubbard said. “In the past eight or 10 years we’ve not done anything in Texas to repeal the right-to- work law,” he said. “Collective bargaining is what’s important. Right-to-work has nothing to do with the collective bargaining system. Gains have been made in Texas through collective bar gaining.” Hubbard said statistics reveal that productivity is increased by 25 percent in most situations where employees are given col lective bargaining authority by P their employers. “We’ve forced labor and man agement to come closer and clos er together,” he said. “It’s been proven that productivity is going to thrive, and that’s going to offset the right-to-work law.” Hubbard said the organiza tion probably would provide ab out $100,000 this year to cam paign for political candidates. But one candidate who will not receive help or endorsement from the union group is Gov. Bill Clements. The state organization had trouble during the 1960s with former Gov. John Connally, Hubbard said. But, he said rela tions improved under former Governors Preston Smith and Dolph Briscoe, both of whom were receptive to input from the labor organization. The story is different with Clements, who Hubbard said was unwilling to cooperate with the Texas AFL-CIO. “When he was elected we sought an audience with him, and he gave it to us,” Hubbard said. “We told him we had not supported him, but we were sin cere in trying to help in any way we could. “But the only coordinated effort we’ve gotten is that he has replaced every appointee Bris coe made that was a union person.” Hubbard also is concerned about Clements’ desire to solve all major problems in the state with citizen task forces. “He has fast brought the state to be governed by task force,” Hubbard said. Hubbard also is concerned about the appointments to those task forces. He said that recently the U.S. Health Department de termined that Texas had an un usually high number of work- related injuries. Clements desig nated a task force to study the problem, but Hubbard said he neglected to name a single per son who represents employees to the task force. "Tk rn/vrE: o Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN 822-6105 Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m.-l p.m. Wednesday: LUNCH SPECIALS — BEEF TIPS/NOODLES — $2.95 HAPPY HOUR: 4:00 p.m.-7:Q0 p.m. 10:00 p.m.-12:00 p.m. Attention all Engineering Students... STUDENT ENGINEERS COUNCIL PRESENTS < c CAREER DEVELOPMENT IN ENGINEERING” Feb. 17-18, 1982 9:30-5:00 MSC Room 212 & 224 Second Floor STUDENTS WILL TALK DIRECTLY TO COMPANY REPRE SENTATIVES ABOUT CAREER OPPORTUNITIES. way configuration, its six run ways that allow three simul taneous approaches in good weather and its handling of more air traffic than any airport in the world. Hopkins, he said, is an old aiport that handles large volumes of traffic with only one principal runway, which often forces planes into holding pat terns. He also said that parallel runways are rough and too close together and weather is a con stant problem. Galipault, 51, has logged more than 7,500 hours of flight time since 1946 as a navigation trainer for the U.S. Air Force, a pilot for the New York Air Na tional Guard and an aviation in structor at Ohio State Universi ty. Galipault has also served as a consultant to industry and milit ary aviation groups. aTm FLAGS 2'x3' NYLON with your class number Contact Jon Burt 260-1477 or Tom Joseph 260-6150 SIGMA IOTA EPSILON MstMna&t&nuzMni Mono** Society presents a speaker from Anderson & Co. Management Consulting Team Room #308 Rudder Feb. 9 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Open to nil Business Majors After the speaker, stick around and see if you are quali fied to join. AND 3.00 in Management 3.00 overall Required a/. ^L. vL- vL- vlr vL- vt* *1* vL^ vl* vL- sif •Xf vlf -Xf vL* rF ■Xf •s!^ *X; Xf Xe "Xf ■Xr *X; Xf Xf Xf Xf X^ Xf Xe Xf X** X* 0 T % dr* “T* 'T* -X" v. i - - - - -- " " oo -■ j * “The mountains in winter provide a rugged test of * £ strength and individuality. I learned that I can choose f | to reach my goals. ” Amity SEMINARS 15 student averags class siza 5 Specialist Instructors Convenient weekend classes EXCLUSIVE MATH REFRESHER “Our 18 hour seminar for the Feb. 20 LSAT meets Feb. 12, 13, 14.” For information call 800*243*4767 COLORADO OUTWARD BOUND BACK COUNTRY SKIING * Co-sponsored with MSC Outdoor Recreation. | $ Ski adventurously Spring Break at a special* | discount rate — $430 total. Sign up in #216H| | MSC or contact Morris Salge at 779-9095. **>i<********************* *********************** 40 COMPANIES REPRESENTED ..\tfe eVL ’s Backstage Food Festival Italian Cusine Specials Lasagna Chicken Cacctiatore Veal Marsala Antipasta Tuesday, February 9th Complimenting Wine Chianti Bardolino Authentic Music Backstage 319 University Dr.