Tuesday, June 14, 1983/The BattaIion/Page 9 hotographer claims ladiation ruined health Warped by Scott McCullar rAR. WARS. RETURNS JOKE COVTIVU&S..- / United Press International iPPLETON — A former Air Srce Captain who filmed nuc- explosions from the open tloor of a cargo plane says the gvernment has finally agreed ( tests to determine if radiation 1 juined his health. ■ Beverly Grunert, 67, took notion and still pictures of 15 nuclear explosions from 1952 to 195' sometimes Hying through fcfl mushroom clouds from the ts. H Since he left the service he las suffered skin cancer, Irnhysema, ulcers, aneurysms jh< blackouts. His weight drop- faom Y75 pounds to \\0 nds and he had to have most his stomach removed, liinert said Sunday that after uiu t 15 years of frustration and iso i doors, the government Snail' has agreed to test him to eeif radiation is what ruined his health. Grunert believes it is. “Within myself I’m pretty cer tain, but I can’t get anybody to confirm it,” Grunert said in a telephone interview. Veterans Administration hospitals turned him away, and private physi cians said they were unable to link his maladies to radiation. “They said they didn’t have enough data at the time to link it to radiation,” Grunert said. “We always question and they always say they don’t have enough data on it.” The government has been no help, he said. His doctors have written the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. His wife wrote the surgeon general. “Their letters came back saying there was no record of anything happening from expo sure,” Grunert said. Grunert said he and others took pictures through the open door of a cargo plane and were given nothing by the Air Force to guard against radiation. He said that in 50 percent of his missions they flew through the mushroom cloud. “The only thing they gave us was a white garment — almost like a Ku Klux Klan uniform — to reflect off the heat,” Grunert said. “But we never got the heat up that high.” Grunert said in a test known as Operation Castle at Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands, there was a miscalculation of the blast and the plane rocked as it was engulfed in the mushroom cloud. Three months later, at the age of 39, his dark brown hair turned white, he said. He said he was given little warning of the dangers of radia tion by his superiors. r yoo weigh 16 TONS, Mt) WHAT DO YOU GET? MOTHER DAV OLDER AMD THE PEEPER IM...J3 HOLD IT, XABBA! EITHER SET W FRIENDS FREE OR I'LL DESTROY THE TOY MERCHANDIZING RIGHTS TO EVERY CREATURE IN HERE? / ..AMD LET US LAH\EWT FOR THE. POOR SOULS WHO WISHED TO KNOW NOTHING OFTEDI'S PLOT UNTIL THEY'D SEEN IT, Mb THEN INVARIABLY, SOMEWHERE, THEY HAPPENED TO SEE... fWHAT?? OH NOt! THE "LUKE DIS^ COVERS DARTH VADE.R IS REALLY HIS FATHER" THEME?? J Nuclear protests planned Body found in stream * 1 * 1 1 pen tilled as producer actice, R United Press International |0S ANGELES — A decom- Rd corpse found in a forest Bam bed has been identified |ariety show producer Roy ander Radin, who dis- ared a month ago while pging a multimillion dollar to finance a new film studio. Working with dental records n in Sunday from New 'ork, the coroner’s office deter- Bed positively that the gun- axy, he sB victim listed as John Doe chances lo.94 was that of the Radin, 33. it anycuBhe body was found last Fri- t up. "fly by a forest ranger and a 1 bekeeper in the Angeles Wa re any mtcfl ire in tkl chances as tional Forest near Gorman, just off Interstate 5 about 65 miles north of Los Angeles. An auto psy showed Radin died of a sing le gunshot wound. Radin disappeared May 13 while en route to a dinner meet ing in Beverly Hills. He was re ported missing four days later by his secretary, Jonathan Lawson. John O’Grady, a Hollywood private investigator hired by Radio’s mother to find the mis sing man, said the family is in shock and was in seclusion in Cleveland. O’Grady said Radin was in Los Angeles to find $35 million in backing for a new film studio and was reluctant to go to the dinner meeting. The detective said Radin postponed the meeting once in attempts to find a restaurant with tight security measures. Radin was last seen leaving the Plaza Suite Hotel in Hollywood in a limousine with a woman not identified by police. Radin never arrived at the re staurant. The woman told police they quarreled in the car. She said Radin got out on Sunset Boulevard and was not seen again. United Press International The Mobilization for Survival and other groups opposed to nuclear weapons plan a new round of protests in the United States and Europe focusing on first-strike weapons. Organizers said Sunday the protests would be held in at least 50 American cities in 30 states during Father’s Day weekend, but one official warned that pro testers will not be allowed to de monstrate at the nation’s de fense facilities. “We recognize these demon strators have a constitutional right to be heard. That’s one reason we’re here — to protect that right,” said Col. Gary H. Mears, commander of Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, N.M. “However, we can’t allow any political activity or demon stration to take place on Kirt land, and at the time of the plan ned demonstration Kirtland Air Force Base will take whatever security measures are approp riate.” Several nuclear weapons faci lities are based at Kirtland, in cluding Sandia Laboratories. Mears did not specify what mea sures might be taken to keep protesters away. Protests were also planned in Europe, where the Defense De partment intends to deploy Per- shing-2 weapons this fall. The Mobilization for Survival said demonstrations would be held J une 20 — the Internation al Day of Nuclear Disarmament — in Austria, England, Ger many and France. In the United States, demonstrations were planned for Chicago; Min neapolis; Omaha, Neb.; Salt Lake City; Albany, N.Y.; Gro ton, Conn.; Orlando, Fla., and dozens of other cities. In Los Angeles, the Santa Monica-Venice Alliance for Sur vival said the group would hold a Father’s Day peace rally next Sunday at the West Los Angeles Federal Building during which demonstrators would sign a Father’s Day card for Dr. Ed ward Teller, “father of the hyd rogen bomb.” The protests center on a new generation of weapons with a first-strike capability, a Mobili zation for Survival spokesman said. The spokesman identified four weapons systems as having first-strike abilities: the MX mis sile, the cruise missile, the Per- shing-2 missile and the Trident submarine. Baptists to debate school prayer \utralian talks with Reagan ut 3 billioi nd travel • i ■■ United Press International 1011 M ■ ASHINGTON ~ President iuetoDeac*g an we i come( j Australian nt j| son rinit Minister Robert Hawke to when its! White House Monday for N .jetted: 5 intended to reaffirm ng ties between their nations I stress convergent view- its on economic and security icerns. t Hawke and Reagan, during [hours of meetings that in- ied a working lunch, were (ected to concentrate on as of general agreement that S Kt to what one senior U.S. pial called the solid relation- [between the two nations. Xhe two leaders posed briefly that C# photographers in the sun- iched Rose Garden, as tem- itures soared toward the 90- ree mark. u.v, —though U.S.-Australian re fall on iBn have not been free from icans, « vealthy| change. fatnife s under S* ■ir full $ Treasury taxable ir Li! y n j tec j p ress International already rtf HOUSTON — The dead pes of a man and woman, jarently killed with a pickaxe icdded in the woman’s chest, untains erc found early Monday in icomes ^ e '' northwest Houston apart- $109,400'H 11 ’ police said. .f 14.ri KjPolice said the apartment lay have been ransacked, but United Press International PITTSBURGH — Voluntary school prayer will be a key issue at the national meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention this week, church leaders say. Some pastors say the conven tion may try to repeal a resolu tion supporting a constitutional amendment that would allow voluntary prayer in public schools. Opponents of the resolution, approved in the New Orleans convention last year, claim it takes away religious liberty. But the Rev. Jimmy Draper, convention president, predicted Sunday a calm meeting this week in Pittsburgh, in contrast to the stormy sessions of recent years. Church leaders hope the 17,000 messengers — what the Baptists call their convention de legates who represent over 13 million churchgoers — will avoid the heated battles of past meetings between conservative and moderate factions over bib lical authority. The conseratives believe in literal interpretation of the Bible which they deem infallible. Moderates say the Bible is sub ject to interpretation. “We realize we still have some tremendous theological ques tions,” said Draper, fundamen talist leader of the 7,000- member First Baptist Church of Euless, just outside Dallas. “But I think there has been an easing of the tensions,” he said. 181. partment' ie present of the T tension in recent years, potential sore points were expected to be ignored during discussions in tended to underscore friend ship between allies. Hawke and his Labor Party emerged victorious from na tional elections in March that ousted Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser. The approach he used was not unlike the one used by Reagan in 1980, promising poli cies that he said would provide the best basis for his people to work together to come out of the depths of a serious recession. Hawke also is a strong sup porter of Israel. The agenda of his meeting with Reagan in cluded the situation in the Mid dle East and such other foreign policy issues as East-West rela tions and arms control. In the background lie con cerns about competing trade in terests, relations with Vietnam and an unsettling controversy over U.S. intelligence activities in Australia. Most are likely to be ignored or papered over. Australia has a trade deficit of several billion dollars in its eco nomic relations with the United States and is said to object to some of the countermeasures taken by the U.S. government in response to protectionist poli cies by other countries. In foreign policy, the Austra lian Labor Party platform prop oses resumption of aid to Viet nam. The Reagan administra tion believes that such a step to ward normalization should not be taken until Vietnam is willing to moderate its behavior in Kampuchea, formerly Cam bodia. Landing gear light alarms pilot, crew United Press International KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Emergency equipment was put on standby status early Monday for an Ozark DC-9 flight en route from Las Vegas to Kansas City International Airport, but the plane landed safely, author ities said. Ron Cop, regional duty offic er with the Federal Aviation Administration, said the crew of Flight 601 initially thought that a tire blew out on takeoff from Las Vegas. Chuck Ehlert, director of public affairs for Ozark Air Lines in St. Louis, said the plane carrying 96 passengers on take off from Las Vegas apparently threw rubber off a tire when it struck a switch in a wheel well. When the crew attempted to lower the landing gear on approach to Kansas City Inter national their controls indicated that the landing gear was not in place, although it was safe for landing, Ehler said. NOW OPEN The newest in Video Games & Music Pole Position—Chexx—Mappy Mad Planets—Millipede & More! 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