Remembering Chernobyl

Remembering Chernobyl

The Chernobyl disaster had only been publicized because the Soviet Union couldn’t hide it.  If the USSR had its way, Chernobyl would have been tucked in that file of previously unreported Soviet disasters, like failed moon launches, humanitarian disasters, even another nuclear accident 29 years earlier.  It was only when radiation readings rose throughout Scandinavia and meteorologists tracked back wind patterns did suspicion fall on the four reactor power plant 80 miles north of Kiev, a city the size of Chicago.
 
Initially, reporting on Chernobyl was a challenge for NBC News. (Soviet Life had featured Chernobyl, ironically enough, in an article on the Soviet Union’s great nuclear safety record!) Then, a freelance “journalist” with exclusive video of the reactor on fire approached three of the four networks’ bureaus in Rome. Apologies abounded.

Ultimately, the Soviets opened up. There were reports on Soviet television and in Soviet newspapers and scientific journals.  The eeriest part of the trip, no doubt, was watching the clean-up at Pripyat, the mini-city of 55,000 that surrounded the nuclear power plant. By Soviet standards, it was paradise. High rise towers with roomy apartments surrounded by parks, including an amusement park and a sports park that had been ceremoniously opened the morning of the accident but never used.

Two years after the accident, an army of clean-up workers were still carting away things like school desks from the local school, preparing to dismantle the steel cars from the ferris wheel at that park, all of it accompanied by classic music pumped out over an area-wide p.a. system…to help the workers avoid going crazy from the deathly silence of a city abandoned on a spring day two years earlier.  The workers were from all over the Soviet Union, drawn by the double salary, the double pensions, good housing. They talked of drinking vast volumes of red wine, ostensibly as an antidote for radiation, but no doubt for more banal medicinal purposes.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

 

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32545640

 

(Via MSNBC)

Antarctica, 1961: A Soviet Surgeon Has to Remove His Own Appendix

Antarctica, 1961: A Soviet Surgeon Has to Remove His Own Appendix

In 1961, Leonid Rogozov was stationed at a newly constructed Russian base in Antarctica. Transportation was impossible. Operating mostly by feeling around, Rogozov worked for an hour and 45 minutes, cutting himself open and removing the appendix. The men he’d chosen as assistants watched as the “calm and focused” doctor completed the operation, resting every five minutes for a few seconds as he battled vertigo and weakness. He recalled the operation in a journal entry:

“I worked without gloves. I work mainly by touch. With horror I notice the dark stain at its base. At the worst moment of removing the appendix I flagged: my heart seized up and noticeably slowed; my hands felt like rubber. Just a little reminder that humans can complete some pretty amazing physical feats when their lives hang in the balance.”

 

(Via The Atlantic Monthly)

Rocket genius behind Russia’s triumph

Rocket genius behind Russia’s triumph

Fifty years ago, Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space. Sergei Korolev built the rocket that took him. In doing so, Yuri Gagarin became the first human being to journey into space.

A gifted engineer and designer, Korolev developed the first intercontinental missile and then launched the world’s first satellite, Sputnik 1.

Yuri Gagarin was born on March 9, 1934, in Klushino, in the Smolensk region, 160km west of Moscow.  Twenty pilots were selected, but the early version of the Vostok capsule was so cramped, only those under 168cm could get in it. The slightly built Gagarin fitted in nicely.

Then it was announced Gagarin had landed safely. On January 14, 1966, Korolev died, aged 59, during routine surgery.

Yuri Gagarin’s famous flight came perilously close to disaster.

News of Gagarin’s flight swept round the globe. “Man in space!” the London Evening News announced. Next morning’s US headlines included the classic: “Soviets put man in space.  Spokesman says US asleep.”

(Via NZ Herald)