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B Reactor Tours a Hot Ticket PDF Print E-mail
In order to meet strong public demand, the Department of Energy has plans to offer 48 public tours to Hanford’s B Reactor this year, double the number in 2007.  The season’s first two-thousand seats were made available at midnight on Monday, March 17, and by 6:00 PM, every one of those seats was filled. The public once demonstrated its keen interest in atomic history. 

Visitors in 2008 will not only be able to marvel at the engineering of the B Reactor, they will also be able to take advantage of new interpretative exhibits. With grant funds from the M. J. Murdock Charitable Foundation and the Department of Energy, the Atomic Heritage Foundation enlisted the help of Lockheed Martin and MEIER Enterprises, Inc., and significant input from the B Reactor Museum Association and other local partners, to develop these exhibits.  With first-hand accounts by Roger Rohrbacher, Steve Buckingham and other veterans, the exhibits explain how the B Reactor worked and provide a window into the lives of the people who built it as part of the Manhattan Project in World War II.

This year’s tours will take place in April, July, August and September.  Anyone wishing to go on a tour, but who was unable to book a place, can hope for cancellations up until the date of the tour.  Openings will be posted on DOE’s Hanford website, www.hanford.gov.  If you can’t make one of the tours check out some of the exhibit vignettes available through our website.

Read more in the Tri-City Herald.

 
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Atomic Story of the Week

It was very exciting times. And of course when the bomb was dropped in August ‘45, the town went wild. It was absolutely crazy. As was generally reported in the papers, very few of the people here knew that we were working on a bomb, and just about no one knew what the status was, as relatively young engineers... it was not possible for us to know how much material was needed for a weapon or anything else. We weren’t sophisticated physicists like Oppenheimer and the rest of them out in Los Alamos.

BOB KUPP, OAK RIDGE

 
 
 

Did You Know?

Box 1663, Santa Fe, NM, was the "blind" address used for all correspondence to and from Los Alamos. during the Manhattan Project. The actual name Los Alamos was prohibited from showing up on any letters or parcels. The address shown on the birth certificates of the children born at the Los Alamos Engineers Hospital during the war years was indicated as "Box 1663."
 
 

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