Posts Tagged ‘Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports’

Attend a 2012 Readex ETC training session

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with web-based historical content unavailable elsewhere, the latest and most useful product features and functionality, and online access and storage support.

In addition, as part of the ETC program we feature regularly scheduled training sessions that are highly valued by many of our customers. These online sessions provide guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. Faculty and students are welcome to attend, and ample time is provided for questions.

Our spring 2012 training schedule is now available. Register for one or more of the sessions today!

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The Top-Ten Readex Blog Posts of 2011

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Of the 75 or so posts published here this year, these were the ten most-read: 

February 27, 1923. Miss Alice Reighly, Anti-Flirt Club president, Wash., D.C.

1. Preserving the Library in the Digital Age

2. In Praise of Librarians and Archivists

3. Researching Nat Turner’s Slave Revolt in American (and African American) Newspapers

4. 100 Years Ago: A Look Back at 1911

5. Anti-Flirtation: There Ought to Be a Law

6. The Bomarc Missile Plutonium Spill Crisis: Exercises in Propaganda and Containment in 1960 and Beyond

7. “Information Wanted” Advertisements: Searching for African American Family Members

8. Law & Disorder: Urbana University Students Bring an 1857 Court Case to Life

9. Civil War Imagery on Clipper Ship Sailing Cards

10. Remembering the Triangle Shirtwaist Company Fire on its 100th Anniversary

Thank you for reading the Readex Blog. We want to hear from our readers. To leave comments, or to propose a topic for a future blog post, please use the space below or write to dloiterstein@readex.com.  To subscribe to the Readex Blog, please use our RSS feed. We’ll see you back here in 2012. Happy New Year!

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A uniquely valuable archive of translated foreign materials

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

 

Discover Joint Publications Research Service Reports

China has emerged as a global power. We can all recite the formidable facts: most populous state on earth. Second largest global economy. World’s largest military. But what do we really know about a culture half a world away, the machinations of the country’s ruling party, or the day-to-day lives of its citizens? Where can one find authentic accounts that provide unfiltered insight into a nation’s socioeconomic, political, environmental, military, religious, and scientific issues and events-including those that reveal the naked truth about China’s inexorable rise?

Enter Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994, the ideal resource for developing a holistic understanding of cultures across the globe. This digital collection features English-language translations of foreign-language monographs, reports, serials, journals and newspapers from regions throughout the world—four million pages from 130,000+ reports, all told. Much of the information is quite rare; in fact, few libraries or institutions outside of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Library of Congress hold a complete collection. With an emphasis on communist and developing countries, this fully searchable resource is an essential tool for students and scholars at academic institutions worldwide.

The comprehensive Readex digital edition of JPRS Reports, 1957-1994, is now available by request for live preview. It features an intuitive interface that includes digital full-text searching, metadata search assistance and an individual bibliographic record for each JPRS Report. In addition, JPRS Reports, 1957-1994, will be cross-searchable with the Readex digital edition of Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, 1941-1996.

For more information or to arrange a product trial, contact Readex at 800.762.8182, sales@readex.com or use this form.

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Hello, Comrade Philby

Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

Kim Philby on USSR commemorative stamp

In “Just Browsing: Cool Items from the Past,” I shared several unexpected items I recently stumbled upon in America’s Historical Newspapers.

I don’t however expect to find such wonderful things in Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports. What’s cool there comes more from the benefits of hindsight than sheer surprise. And that backward look lets the propagandistic nature of some of the documents shine through.

One I recently read is the somewhat hagiographic interview with Kim Philby, the former high-ranking member of British intelligence agent who spied for and later defected to the Soviet Union. The interview, first published in the Russian daily newspaper Izvestiya on Dec. 19, 1967, was translated into English for publication in FBIS supplement “MATERIALS ON 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF SOVIET STATE SECURITY ORGANS, FBIS-FRB-68-007-S on 1968-01-10. Supplement number 2”

Titled “Hello, Comrade Philby,” the article starts with a street scene in chilly Moscow:

Click to open page 1 in PDF.

“It was on a frosty morning, and the haze of the night had not yet departed from the snow-covered streets. The trees on Gogol Avenue were covered with hoarfrost. Muskovites rubbing their cheeks and stamping their feet stood in a queue at a trolleybus stop. A new day began with all its worries and fuss. Cars were also in a hurry, one outrunning the other.

“A man of medium height, no longer young, but still strong, leisurely strolls over the sidewalk inhaling the frozen air. He wears a warm, fur-lined overcoat and a fur cap. The man sincerely enjoys this morning, the frost, and the rapid stream of pedestrians. Sometimes people bump into him. ‘Pardon me,’ they say in a hurry. ‘Never mind,’ he replies, speaking with a light accent. He looks with interest at the little boys with rucksacks on their backs who are throwing snowballs at each other on the avenue. He always smiles, this man with a kind and frank face.

“Who is he? Why does he smile? What unusual thing has he discovered on the avenue, in the frost-covered trees, on that ordinary Moscow morning? The little children on the avenue, the passers-by on the sidewalk, the fashionable girls — to which of them would it occur that the person smiling at them this morning has had a most amazing life history? He used to be called a puzzle of a man, and his life was called a rebus. There were many years, whole dozens of years, 30 years of endless puzzles, a life as intricate as a labyrinth.”

It then segues into a description of a 1951 meeting in Washington, D.C., at which Allen Dulles, Frank Wisner and other American intelligence leaders awaited an important British guest. Arriving exactly on schedule, Philby took his place at their table. He listened carefully to the outline of a major operation in which dissidents would infiltrate an Eastern European country, and he offered suggestions to help polish the plan. The article explains that this top-secret operation failed because Dulles:

“…even in his most nightmarish dreams […] would not have imagined that on that August morning a cadre worker of the Soviet intelligence service was sitting at the table opposite him in the office. The Soviet intelligence agent had accomplished another task of the Center.

“And now it was our turn to sit at a table with Kim Philby,” the article continues, providing a further description of the Soviet spy:

“He is very calm and slow[,] his large grey head with hair parted in the middle rests on strong shoulders, his masculine, weatherbeaten face is softened by bright, slightly twinkled eyes. When he smiles, wrinkles run from the corners of his eyes to the temples, giving his face an even warmer expression.”

The interview, with copious direct quotes from Kim Philby, follows. Where he was born, his education, his career before recruitment in the Soviet and then the British intelligence services are covered.

“It was in my work in the Soviet intelligence service that I found the form of this struggle. I thought at that time, and still think, that in this work I served my own British people, too.”

He tells the following from his days as a reporter during the Spanish Civil War, at which point his coverage was favorable to Franco.

“At that time I lived in Bilbao. Once, an officer from Franco’s staff came to me, seated me in his car, and drove me to the fascist headquarters in Burgos. They showed me into a hall in which there was a group of ridiculously bombastic generals. In the center was the ‘Generalissimo’ himself. I noticed at that time that all of them, including Franco himself, were rather short men. I was introduced. After a couple of minutes, the ‘caudillo’ extraordinarily solemnly presented this very same, cross to me. It later came in very handy for my work: of all Western journalists, I was one of the few awarded with this exotic order. When joining the British ‘intelligence service,’ the cross, too, played its role.”

Philby also discusses his pre-World War II activities in Germany and his wartime rise in the British service. After the war he was sent to Turkey, where his life was hectic. It’s busy when you’re working both sides of the street.

“It was much easier for James Bond in the novels of my old friend Ian Fleming; he still managed to find time for merry holidays and love affairs,” joked Philby.

I love the next question the interviewer poses: “You mean you knew Fleming also?”

“Of course, since he also worked in the secret service as deputy director of naval intelligence. Also employed in intelligence was Graham Greene, who was also a colleague of mine at that time. Today he is a truly great and respected writer.”

A quick discussion of Philby’s taste in literature follows, and then it’s back to his career. When asked about American intelligence elite, he gives dismissive estimates of two CIA directors—Allen Dulles (“considerate in dealing with people, but essentially showed a haughty attitude toward them”) and Richard Helms (“more politician than a specialist in his business”). Philby continues:

“But one person who really made an indelible impression on me,” he continued, “was [FBI Director J. Edgar] Hoover’s deputy, Mr. Ladd. This astoundingly dull person was quite seriously trying to convince me that Franklin Roosevelt, the former president, had been a Komintern agent!”

The interview concludes with this ringing statement:

“We congratulate him with all our hearts on the occasion of the coming jubilee, the 50th anniversary of the VCHK-KGB organs, the holiday of the Soviet Cheka members. This is his holiday too, after all.”

The rest of the FBIS Supplement is cool, too. The articles come from Pravda, Red Star, Soviet Union, Trud as well as Izvestiya—all packaged together to let U.S. government readers see a wide degree of coverage of the anniversary. It opens with a speech to KGB personnel by KGB director Yuri Andropov, who would become leader of the U.S.S.R. fifteen years later:

“Remarkable Chekist cadres, inspired by the ideals of October, grew up and were tempered in the struggle against the enemies of Soviet power. The image of the Chekist as a passionate revolutionary, a man of crystal-clear honesty and vast personal courage, relentless in the struggle against the enemies, stern in his duty, but human and ready to sacrifice himself for the people’s cause to which he has devoted his life—an image which prevails among the people—is associated precisely with the activity of these men.”

Andropov’s style makes the Philby article read as if it came out of movie fan magazine.

For more information about Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, please contact readexmarketing@readex.com.  To request a free trial for your institution, please use this form.

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Have you attended a Readex ETC training session yet?

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with web-based historical content unavailable elsewhere, the latest and most useful product features and functionality, and online access and storage support. In addition, as part of the ETC program we feature regularly scheduled training sessions that are highly valued by many of our customers.

Led by experienced product experts, these online sessions provide guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. Faculty and students are welcome to attend, and ample time is provided for questions.

Following is our 2011 Training Schedule. Register for one or more of the sessions today!

America’s Historical Imprints

Including Early American Imprints, Series I and II: Evans and Shaw-Shoemaker, 1639-1819; Supplements from the Library Company of Philadelphia; and American Broadsides and Ephemera, 1760-1900. Sign up for training, or learn more about this collection.

America’s Historical Newspapers and World Newspaper Archive

Including Early American Newspapers, American Ethnic Newspapers, 20th-Century American Newspapers, American Newspaper Archives and World Newspaper Archive. Sign up for training, or learn more about America’s Historical Newspapers or World Newspaper Archive.

America’s Historical Periodicals

Including African American Periodicals—the largest database of its kind and the inaugural collection in America’s Historical Periodicals. Sign up for training, or learn more about this collection.

America’s Historical Government Publications

Largely untapped by traditional research, these collections—U.S. Congressional Serial Set, American State Papers, House and Senate Journals and Senate Executive Journals—enable students and scholars to study, as never before, events as they unfolded and decisions as they were made. Sign up for training, or learn more about this collection.

Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS), 1941-1996

The FBIS Daily Report has been the United States’ principal historical record of political open source intelligence for nearly 70 years. This one-of-a-kind archive of foreign broadcasts and news provides fascinating insight into the second half of the 20th century. Sign up for training, or learn more about this collection.

The Civil War: Antebellum Period to Reconstruction

This thematic subset of the Archive of Americana features primary materials from America’s Historical Newspapers, American Broadsides and Ephemera, and the U.S. Congressional Serial Set. Sign up for training, or learn more about this collection.

Other Training Options

In addition to the scheduled sessions above, Readex offers institutions participating in the ETC program the opportunity to request customized Webinars for its staff, faculty and students, as well as on-site training from a Readex expert. Contact bkolcun@readex.com for more information.

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2011 Update 2

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures that your library receives the latest and most useful features and functionality, and its training component provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

From the Marietta Journal (September 11, 1890)

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The ETC releases for April through August 2011 are complete and include:

  • U.S. Congressional Serial Set: House and Senate Journals from 1969, 91st Congress, 1st session; House and Senate Journals from 1970, 91st Congress, 2nd session.
  • FBIS Reports: Central Eurasia, 1993 (April, May, June): 52 issues, 6,005 pages, 12,064 articles; Central Eurasia, 1993 (July, August): 29 issues, 2,886 pages, 5,596 articles

Releases will continue throughout 2011 on a monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, U.S. Congressional Serial Set, and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.

A new fall schedule of Webinar-based training sessions for all Readex digital collections is available to ETC participants. See our sign-up page to register for a convenient session.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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The Bomarc Missile Plutonium Spill Crisis: Exercises in Propaganda and Containment in 1960 and Beyond

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

According to the Boeing Corporation’s history of its Bomarc missile,

Source: Boeing.com

“…the supersonic Bomarc missiles (IM-99A and IM-99B) were the world’s first long-range anti-aircraft missiles, and the first missiles that Boeing mass produced. The program also represented the first time Boeing designed and built launch facilities. It used analog computers, some of which were built by Boeing and had been developed for GAPA [Ground-to-Air Pilotless Aircraft] experiments during World War II. Authorized by the Air Force in 1949, the F-99 Bomarc prototype was the result of coordinated research between Boeing (Bo) and the University of Michigan Aeronautical Research Center (marc) [hence the portmanteau name ‘Bomarc’]. 

“The missiles were housed on a constant combat-ready basis in individual launch shelters in remote areas. The alert signal could fire the missiles around the country in 30 seconds. The Model A had a range of 200 miles, and the B, which followed, could fly 400 miles. The production IM-99A first flew on Feb. 24, 1955. Boeing built 700 Bomarc missiles between 1957 and 1964, as well as 420 launch systems. Bomarc was retired from active service during the early 1970s.”

And here is how the Wikipedia article continues the Bomarc story leading to one near nuclear catastrophe:

“The operational IM-99A missiles were based horizontally in semi-hardened shelters (‘coffins’). After the launch order, the shelter’s roof would slide open, and the missile raised to the vertical. After the missile was supplied with fuel for the booster rocket, it would be launched by the Aerojet General LR59-AJ-13 booster. After supersonic speed was reached, the Marquardt RJ43-MA-3 ramjets would ignite and propel the missile to its cruise speed and altitude of Mach 2.8 at 20000 m (65000 ft). Within a year of becoming operational, a Bomarc-A with a nuclear warhead caught fire at McGuire AFB on 7 June 1960 following the explosive rupture of its onboard helium tank. While the missile’s explosives didn’t detonate, the heat melted the warhead, releasing plutonium which the fire crews then spread around. The Air Force and the Atomic Energy Commission cleaned up the site and covered it with concrete.”

News of the Bomarc fire spread like wildfire around the United States and around the world. First, here is an account from the June 8, 1960 issue of the Trenton Evening Times, Trenton being only 18 miles south of McGuire Air Force Base, the site of the melting warhead.

Click to open in PDF.

As far away as Washington state, the Seattle Daily Times on that same day reported New York was calm despite the radiation fear.

Click to open in PDF.

Also on June 8, the Springfield (Massachussetts) Union printed a number of stories about the Bomarc incident, including the following one meant to reassure the public. It surely represents the Air Force’s official view that there was no danger of further radioactive contamination at that time.

Click to open in PDF.

The next day, June 9, the Dallas Morning News claimed the cause of the fire was not announced, if it was even known.

Click to open in PDF.

Also on June 9, however, the East German radio transmission Deutschlandsender tried to turn the late-breaking Bomarc story to its own advantage in its cold war against its rival, the Federal Republic of Germany, by focusing on the inherent risks posed by atomic weapons. Only the facts?

Click to read full item in PDF.

The Soviet propaganda machine also moved quickly on June 9 to capitalize on the Bomarc story with a response to it by commentator Leonid Vetrov:

Click to read full item in PDF.

And on June 11, 1960 the Soviets claimed a New York City evacuation had occurred or at least many inhabitants had fled the city!

Click to open full item in PDF.

The New Orleans Times Picayune for its June 13, 1960 edition picked up an item from Izvestia, an open letter by long-standing Soviet commentator V. Kudryatsev  to America on the explosion at the Bomarc site. It is perhaps interesting to wonder why this item was not picked up by FBIS, or was it not printed in the FBIS Daily Report because it was an AP story?

Click to open in PDF.

The Augusta (Georgia) Chronicle of June 24, 1960 printed an Associated Press story from Washington, D.C., which attributed the cause of the fire to a bursting helium gas bottle.

Click to open in PDF.

Nor was that the end of the Bomarc fiasco. After 40 years the contamination, though perhaps contained, had not vanished away. Here from the year 2000 is an investigative account published almost eleven years ago on the front page of the Philadelphia Inquirer (source: NewsBank):

Plutonium Spill Neither Gone Nor Forgotten, 40 Years Later

On June 7, 1960, a nuclear-tipped missile burst into flames on its launcher at an Air Force base nestled in the heart of New Jersey’s Pine Barrens, triggering sirens that shattered the afternoon stillness and sent a brief, nervous shock through the region.

Airmen poured water on the burning BOMARC missile and put the fire out within an hour.

With international tensions high over the downing of Gary Powers’ U-2 spy plane over the Soviet Union the month before, the incident seemed minor in comparison, and attention shifted elsewhere.

But 40 years later, an estimated 300 grams, or 101/2 ounces, of plutonium from the melted warhead remain in the sandy soil, entombed in asphalt and concrete—a radioactive relic of the Cold War and just one of the toxic hot spots from the era that dot the nation.

The Air Force has allocated $6 million to clean up the site on the eastern edge of the Fort Dix Military Reservation, but the plans to cart away 10,000 cubic yards of soil, concrete and steel have stalled because surrounding communities do not want radioactive waste shipped through them.

And one radiation expert wonders if it should be moved at all, saying that stirring up the site during an intrusive cleanup might pose a greater risk.

The Air Force calls the site RW-01, or Radioactive Waste-01, and its history offers a window to a time when trust in the government was high and a nuclear accident was easily forgotten.

BOMARC stands for Boeing Michigan Aeronautical Research Center—a collaboration between Boeing and the University of Michigan, which developed the missile for the Air Force.

The first models of the weapon had a range of 230 miles and were armed with 10-kiloton warheads that were supposed to knock Soviet bombers out of the sky with a blast half as powerful as that of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, said Donald Bender, a Cold War military historian. The missiles flew at altitudes of up to 70,000 feet with speeds approaching 3,000 m.p.h.

Ten BOMARC bases were set up throughout the United States and Canada. The first opened on 75 acres of Fort Dix just east of Route 539 in Plumsted Township, Ocean County, under the command of the 46th Air Defense Missile Squadron at McGuire Air Force Base.

The base had 56 missiles, each stored under its own concrete shelter with a movable roof. Each 45-foot-long rocket – called a “pilotless interceptor” – was kept on its launcher for quick firing.

On June 7, 1960, a high-pressure helium tank inside Shelter No. 204 exploded and ruptured the BOMARC’s liquid-fuel tank, sparking a fire.

Sirens sounded, and emergency warnings rippled outward. In the initial confusion, the state police thought a nuclear warhead had exploded. Officials in Philadelphia ordered tests for radioactive fallout in the air or water. None was detected.

Although the flames were extinguished within an hour, airmen poured water on the smoldering rocket for 15 hours, spreading plutonium in a plume extending more than 120 yards from the missile shelter.

It was, by most accounts, one of the worst publicly acknowledged nuclear accidents up to that time.

The story generated banner headlines in The Inquirer on June 8, but in New York, the Times played it below articles on a subway fire and the defeat of two Tammany Hall politicians in a primary election.

The stories reported that a “small amount” of radioactive material “was scattered in the immediate area of the shelter,” and that there was no threat to the public. There was no mention of plutonium 239, which can cause cancer if particles are ingested.

By June 10, the story had disappeared from the front pages. The 1961 Evening Bulletin Almanac did not even note the incident in its month-by-month summary of the top events of 1960.

The Air Force capped the contaminated soil with concrete and asphalt, and the fire at the base became a footnote in the history of the Cold War.

Bertram Gratz, 62, of Evesham, still recalls June 7, 1960.

Gratz, then an Army reservist at Fort Dix for advanced infantry training, was returning from the machine-gun range with his squad when “all hell broke loose” as they hiked past the missile base.

“We were tired and all sweaty and dirty,” said Gratz, a 1959 graduate of Villanova University originally from Collegeville. “We saw this puff of black smoke come up. . . . There were sirens going off all over the place.”

Gratz, who was the squad leader, had read about the BOMARC missile – the Air Force had publicized the addition of the weapon to its arsenal – and feared the men were in harm’s way.

“This thing, I believe, had a bursting radius of 1,000 yards. The fireball would have engulfed us if we stayed where we were. I said, ‘Drop that stuff [machine guns, ammunition and tripods] and let’s get the hell out of here.’ “

They ran to the protection of a sand berm.

Gratz said one of the men tuned a transistor radio to WIBG-AM, a Philadelphia rock station. The station reported an alert at McGuire Air Force Base.

“And here we were looking at the smoke go up,” said Gratz, now a salesman of gas-powered appliances and fireplaces.

Katherine Sibley, associate professor of history at St. Joseph’s University and author of The Cold War, said the fire occurred at a time of profound international tensions.

Not only had Gary Powers been shot down in May, but the fear of nuclear attack was real. Schools still were conducting “duck and cover” air-raid drills, and Americans could buy prefab fallout shelters for $1,195.

“People were less likely to question what their government told them,” Sibley said. “People were so afraid of a Soviet attack, the last thing they were going to do was question their country’s defense.”

The BOMARC missile was part of that defense.

Because damage was limited and no casualties resulted from the fire, the story faded in the midst of the presidential-election campaign that pitted John F. Kennedy against Richard M. Nixon, concerns about Cuba’s Fidel Castro, and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev’s shoe-pounding performance at the United Nations.

As Sibley noted, the public distrust generated by Vietnam and Watergate, the environmental consciousness embodied in Earth Day, and the fear of domestic nuclear accidents that was realized in Three Mile Island were all in the future.

“Back then, it was no big thing,” said David Gray, 52, who was 12 when the fire occurred and still lives near the base. “I never really gave it much thought.”

The base closed in 1972.

The story came alive briefly in 1985, when Gov. Tom Kean and his environmental commissioner, Robert Hughey, voiced concern after learning about the base and what had happened there.

Although the fire was no secret, the nature of the contamination had been concealed until 1973, and military reports on monitoring of the base never percolated to the upper levels of state government. Instead, Kean and Hughey learned about it when federal officials suggested using the base as a storage site for radon-contaminated soil from North Jersey.

Military reports maintained that the plutonium had been contained, and that radiation levels were safe. But one 1977 Army study – disputed in a 1981 Air Force report but acknowledged in the base cleanup plan – said some of the plutonium apparently had “migrated” on surface water across Route 539.

Of particular concern was the fact that the base sits on top of the Kirkwood-Cohansey Aquifer, but federal officials have said tests show that the plutonium has not affected the groundwater, 50 feet below the surface in that area.

“They test our water every year to make sure it doesn’t get into our wells,” said George Mostrangeli, who lives two miles away on Route 539. “We don’t drink the water out here anyway. We prefer the bottled stuff.”

The state Department of Environmental Protection in 1985 said it wanted to check the health records of Air Force personnel who served at the base. But Lorretta O’Donnell, an agency spokeswoman, said the agency had not received anything from the Air Force.

Janice Carlson, a spokeswoman for the Air Force’s Air Mobility Command, said health surveys had been done of 46th Squadron veterans, but the exact nature of the surveys was not clear. Her office was trying to gather information about the surveys, but it was not available by last night, two weeks after The Inquirer requested it.

Under the current cleanup plan, Chem-Nuclear Systems LLC of Columbia, S.C., is to put contaminated soil and other debris into containers that are to be sealed and trucked to a still-undetermined railhead.

The containers, which can hold 10 cubic yards or 12 tons of material, are then to be loaded into gondola cars and hauled to a disposal site for low-level radiation in the Utah desert 80 miles west of Salt Lake City.

If current estimates hold, about 150 gondola cars will be needed to take away the waste holding what once amounted to enough plutonium to fill a golf ball or even half a shot glass.

The biggest problem has been finding a railhead where the containers can be loaded onto the train cars.
The Air Force had hoped to use the Conrail line in Lakehurst Borough, about 10 miles away by road, but Mayor Stephen F. Childers said no in February because of concerns the plutonium could become airborne.

A closer, but older, rail line at the Heritage Mineral tract in Manchester Township also was considered, but Mayor Michael Fressola rejected the plan last month.

Carlson said no start date had been set for the work while military officials consider options that might meet the approval of local officials.

But Fressola said he believed it was safer to leave the plutonium alone.

That view was shared by Andrew Karmar, the radiation safety officer at the University of Rochester in New York, who said that there are other toxic substances more dangerous than plutonium, and that removing it posed a greater risk than leaving it where it is.

“It’s probably as safe as it’s going to be,” said Karmar, a recognized radiation expert.

He said the money for the project would provide a greater social benefit if used for immunizations or highway-safety measures.

And finally, this June 8, 2010 article from New Jersey’s Burlington County Times reports that the Bomarc cleanup was almost finished some 50 years after the fact (source: NewsBank):

Environmental disaster – Fifty years ago, a fire at a missile base in the Pinelands released plutonium across the 75-acre site. The cleanup is expected to be declared complete later this year.

Fifty years ago, a missile base located deep in the Pine Barrens on Fort Dix was considered a key part of the nation’s defense against a Soviet nuclear strike.

The base was called the Boeing Michigan Aeronautical Research Center (BOMARC), but research was not its primary mission. In the event of a Soviet attack, the base was expected to launch dozens of nuclear-tipped missiles that would travel at supersonic speed to destroy whole squadrons of enemy bombers before they reached U.S. shores.

But disaster struck on the afternoon of June 7, 1960, when, just a few months after the base opened, a fire started in one of the missile launchers, melting the missile’s warhead and releasing plutonium into the air and across much of the 75-acre site.

At first the world believed a nuclear firestorm had erupted in the Pine Barrens, not far from the border between Burlington and Ocean counties.

The panic subsided quickly as the military insisted the radioactive release was contained and of no danger to the surrounding populace.

Five decades later, the fire is little more than a footnote in the region’s history and the base a mere reminder of the bygone Cold War era when nuclear attack seemed possible.

The missiles are long gone, and the shelters and buildings that made up the base are rust-covered and vacant since the site closed in 1972.

Most of the radioactive material also has been removed, thanks to a multimillion-dollar cleanup undertaken by the military in 2002 to excavate most of the contaminated soil and debris and ship it by rail to a disposal site in Utah.

Low levels of radiation still remain but pose little to no risk to the environment, according to military assessments.

In fact, the biggest concern about the site is no longer radiation, but trichloroethylene (TCE) and other volatile organic compounds that have seeped into the ground. The compounds are believed to have come from cleaning solvents used at the missile base during its brief period of operation.

The contamination is not considered a health risk because there are no drinking water wells nearby, but the military has been monitoring the plume for several years and is considering its options for a possible cleanup, according to Mike Tamn, a Pemberton Township resident who chairs the Restoration Advisory Board that acts as a liaison between what is now the Joint Base McGuire -Dix-Lakehurst and surrounding communities.

“The TCE has spread considerably. There’s a process under consideration that could possibly stop it (from spreading further), but it’s not exactly cheap,” Tamn said.

By comparison, he said the military’s initial response to the 1960 incident was simply to pour cement over the area where the missile fire occurred.

“The standards and theory concerning radiation were a lot different then. At the time, the established theory was that you could wash it away,” he said.

Tamn, who began working as a civilian employee on McGuire Air Force Base about a week after the fire, recalled a lot of secrecy about the missile base.

“You couldn’t worry about it because you couldn’t discuss it,” he said. “It was still the Cold War, which was very hot at the time. There were parts of the base that were closed and you couldn’t even ask about them.”

Newspaper reports at the time described the initial panic when word spread that a nuclear missile had detonated in the Pines.

The June 9 edition of the Mount Holly Herald described how residents in Burlington and Ocean counties were alarmed by reports of “an atomic warhead explosion with scattered radioactive debris” in the area of the BOMARC base, which is about 8 miles east of the border in Plumsted Township, Ocean County.

The paper described “a deluge of Civil Defense, Health Department and military officials and reporters” descending on the evacuated base as state police tried to set up roadblocks in an 8-mile radius around the site.

“Geiger counters clicked and air filtering devices whirred as calls from as far away as London, England, swamped the McGuire Information Services Office requesting information on the atomic explosion,” the paper reported.

But the fear and interest in the story quickly died down and the fire largely was forgotten until 1985, when Gov. Tom Kean called for a cleanup after learning about a proposal to ship radon-contaminated soil from North Jersey communities to the BOMARC site.

Tamn said the restoration board continued the push through May 2002, when the cleanup began. About 22,000 cubic yards of radioactive soil were removed, costing $23.2 million. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection is expected to declare the cleanup complete and adequate later this year, according to public affairs officials at the joint base.

Tamn said the restoration advisory board largely was pleased with the cleanup, noting that it would be impossible to remove all the contamination from the fire.

Richard Bizub, director of water programs for the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, said the advocacy group is still concerned about the groundwater contamination.

“It is a threat because the plume is moving toward the Colliers Mills Wildlife Management Area (in Ocean County),” Bizub said. “We would have liked that cleaned up in a more efficient manner.”

Public affairs officials at the joint base said the TCE plume is expected to be addressed in a feasibility study being developed by the base and state DEP. The study is expected to offer “various remedial alternatives.” The proposed remedy will be made available for public review and comment.

Bizub said the fire was one of the largest environmental disasters in the environmentally sensitive Pinelands, which did not become federally protected until 1978.

“The whole program predated the Pinelands process by about 19 years,” he said.

Tamn agreed that the fire was unprecedented.

“That was the only situation I know of like it, which is probably one reason why there was so much confusion. It had never occurred before, so nobody knew how to handle it,” he said.

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ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content): Overview and 2011 Update 1

Friday, April 1st, 2011

ETC (Enhancements, Training and Content) is an ongoing, multifaceted program that provides Readex customers with one-of-a-kind historical content unavailable online elsewhere. In addition, the ETC program ensures the latest and most useful features and functionality, and provides guidance and suggestions for making the most of your Readex collections. ETC also covers online access and storage support.

Just as Readex is committed to providing its customers with the highest level of ongoing support and maintenance, it is also committed to ensuring that its definitive and comprehensive digital collections continue to grow through the addition of highly relevant new content and features. The ETC program enables you to be certain that you are providing your users and patrons with the most complete and robust digital edition of every Readex collection available at your institution. Through ETC, new content that brings significant enrichment and up-to-date interface functionalities and features will be added periodically. In this manner, ETC will continuously enrich your Readex collections by providing added value and content for your users and patrons for years to come.

The ETC releases for January, February and March 2011 were completed and included: 

ETC releases will continue throughout 2011 on monthly basis, including additional content for Early American Newspapers, U.S. Congressional Serial Set and Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1974-1996.  Webinar-based training sessions are still available to ETC participants this spring for all Readex digital collections.  See our updated sign-up page for descriptions of each training session.

Questions or comments? Please feel free to post them here or email me directly at bkolcun@readex.com.

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Special Prepublication Savings on FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1974

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

From North Africa to the Middle East to South Asia and beyond

Since 1941 the U.S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) has been recording, transcribing and translating intercepted radio broadcasts from foreign governments, official news services, and clandestine broadcasts from occupied territories. Now a comprehensive digital edition of this unique archive is available for students and scholars of world history and political science. 

 

 The historical precedents to topics in today’s headlines from Libya, Egypt and the Middle East

Available until June 30, 2011 at special prepublication savings, FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1974—the essential first module of FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1996—covers a sweeping range of events still resonating in countries from Afghanistan to Yemen, including:

  • 1941 – In Iran, the Shah’s pro-Axis allegiance leads to Anglo-Russian occupation
  • 1948 – In the Middle East, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan and Syria attack Israel
  • 1952 – In Egypt, Gamal Abdul Nasser leads coup known as July 23 Revolution
  • 1962 – In Yemen, army officers seize power, sparking civil war
  • 1964 – In Sudan, the “October Revolution” establishes an Islamist-led government
  • 1965 – In Algeria, Colonel Boumedienne overthrows Ben Bella, pledging to end corruption
  • 1971 – In Bahrain, agreement signed to permit the U.S. to rent naval and military facilities

Unique insight into events from every region of the world

Also available now are two complementary modules: FBIS Daily Reports, 1974-1996 and FBIS Daily Report Annexes, 1974-1996. Beginning in early 1974, these reports cover the peace agreement between Egypt and Israel, Soviet intervention in Afghanistan, assassination of Indira Gandhi, student takeover of Tiananmen Square, freeing of Nelson Mandela, beginning of Rwandan genocide and much more.

Special Prepublication Savings on FBIS Daily Reports, 1941-1974.

(Best discount ends June 30, 2011.)

Request a preview today!

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Announcing Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

Readex to Launch Digital Edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994

Hard-to-find reports support research into 20th-century science and history, including international political events and research developments

MARCH 1, 2011 (NAPLES, FL) — A digital edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994, will be released by Readex, a division of NewsBank, in late summer 2011. This unique new resource—fully searchable for the first time—will feature English translations of foreign-language monographs, reports, serials, journal articles, newspaper articles, and radio and television broadcasts from regions throughout the world. With an emphasis on communist and third-world countries, JPRS contains a wealth of hard-to-find scientific, technical, and social science materials translated from many languages; in fact, few libraries or institutions outside of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Library of Congress hold a complete microform edition, especially for the first two decades following the founding of JPRS.

Featuring four million pages from more than 130,000 reports, the Readex digital edition of Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports, 1957-1994 will enable researchers to explore a vast corpus of foreign material. These reports, some of which are quite rare, are ideal for researching military, socioeconomic, political, environmental, scientific and technical issues and events. The comprehensive Readex digital edition will feature an intuitive interface that includes digital full-text searching, metadata search assistance and an individual bibliographic record for each JPRS Report. In addition, JPRS Reports, 1957-1994, will be cross-searchable with the Readex digital edition of Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, 1941-1996.

“The breadth and depth of this collection is astonishing, making it an exceptional tool for the study of history of science, global economics, agriculture, health, political culture, international relations, and military affairs,” says August A. Imholtz, Jr., Readex Vice President, Government Publications. “Non-technical materials include translations of little-known material on religion in China in the late 1950s, biographies of members of East Bloc Communist Parties, and even the works of dissident Soviet poets.”

JPRS was established in March 1957 as part of the United States Department of Commerce’s Office of Technical Services, about six months before the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1. Acting as a unit within the Central Intelligence Agency, JPRS staffers prepared translations for the use of U.S. Government officials, various agencies, and the research and industrial communities. During the Cold War, the reports were primarily translations rather than analysis or commentary, with an emphasis on scientific and technical topics. Over time, however, that scope expanded to cover environmental concerns, world health issues, nuclear proliferation, and more.

About Readex, a division of NewsBank

For more than 60 years, the Readex name has been synonymous with research in historical materials and government documents. Recognized by librarians, students and scholars for its efforts to transform academic scholarship, Readex offers a wealth of Web-based collections in the humanities and social sciences, including the Archive of Americana, a family of historical collections featuring searchable books, pamphlets, newspapers, and government documents printed in America over three centuries; World Newspaper Archive, created in partnership with the Center for Research Libraries; and Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports, the U.S. government’s fundamental record of political and historical open source intelligence between 1941 and 1996.

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For more information, contact Readex Marketing Director David Loiterstein by calling 1.203.421.0152 or emailing dloiterstein@readex.com.

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