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In reply to the discussion: OK - how many of you actually DID the "Duck and Cover Drill" in school? [View all]L. Coyote
(51,134 posts)168. Where? Fallout from US testing in Nevada killed Utah residents.
Toxic Utah: A land littered with poisons
Utah has paid high price for U.S. military might
By Lee Davidson and Joe Bauman - Deseret News staff writers - Feb. 12, 2001
Utah has paid high price for U.S. military might
By Lee Davidson and Joe Bauman - Deseret News staff writers - Feb. 12, 2001
The Cold War was hot in Utah, though few realized it.
The government chose the remote, low-population state for secretive weapons tests that bombarded it with nerve gas, germ weaponry and radioactive fallout.
Oleta Nelson of Cedar City was among the thousands of unwitting civilian casualties in Utah.
Fallout from atomic bomb tests in Nevada conducted by design of federal officials only when the wind was blowing toward Utah killed her after 12 years of agony from brain cancer. The fallout hit not only southern Utah, but also the heavily populated Wasatch Front a fact few suspect.
Another casualty was Ray Peck's family in Skull Valley. They were likely hit with low doses of the nerve gas from a Dugway Proving Ground test that accidentally killed 6,000 sheep near their home in 1968. The Pecks lived but haven't been the same since. .................
The government chose the remote, low-population state for secretive weapons tests that bombarded it with nerve gas, germ weaponry and radioactive fallout.
Oleta Nelson of Cedar City was among the thousands of unwitting civilian casualties in Utah.
Fallout from atomic bomb tests in Nevada conducted by design of federal officials only when the wind was blowing toward Utah killed her after 12 years of agony from brain cancer. The fallout hit not only southern Utah, but also the heavily populated Wasatch Front a fact few suspect.
Another casualty was Ray Peck's family in Skull Valley. They were likely hit with low doses of the nerve gas from a Dugway Proving Ground test that accidentally killed 6,000 sheep near their home in 1968. The Pecks lived but haven't been the same since. .................
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I lived on base in ok during the Cuban misleading crisis. There was a base lockdown, the guys were o
notdarkyet
Apr 2017
#44
That's what I remember, hiding under your desk with your arms over your head. Mrs. Price's 2nd grade
Rhiannon12866
Apr 2017
#195
Did it several times. One of my friend's father would not let him make snow ice cream.
Lint Head
Apr 2017
#38
I did, from about 1955 until about 1962. We also gathered in the hallway a couple of times a year.
George II
Apr 2017
#40
1961 in Department of Defense schools in Germany. 1962, too, another base in Germany.
japple
Apr 2017
#43
Moi aussi. Born in 1949. Mid-50's drills. School hallways, also. Local park has an air-raid bunker.
WinkyDink
Apr 2017
#56
Posts make me think of what actual war does to children and anxieties & horrors
delisen
Apr 2017
#108
Both Mr. Tikki and I did...and because we lived near nuclear reactors we did the mock....
Tikki
Apr 2017
#110
We did duck and cover. Also, one time they had a"drill" where a bunch of moms
Amaryllis
Apr 2017
#121
I lived in Jackson, MS from 1948 -1963. We did tornado drills in schools, which given
Grammy23
Apr 2017
#185
I don't ever recall doing that, and I was in school at that time.
PoindexterOglethorpe
Apr 2017
#131
Did both the hallway and under-the-desk versions in the late 50s and early 60s.
3catwoman3
Apr 2017
#156
I'm the right age, but I have no memory of ever doing the duck and cover drill
Brother Buzz
Apr 2017
#174
Born in '47, San Fernando Valley, "practice bomb drill" when sirens went off...
Hekate
Apr 2017
#179
Went to school 1954-1966 in rural eastern Ohio never did any duck and cover. With
doc03
Apr 2017
#186