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June 15, 1984 - Image 57

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1984-06-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

BOOKS



The day after

Friday, June 15, 1984

LOCKS & BAGELS

kW's/et
Model #880

FREE

NOW ONLY!

1 Dozen
Bagels
with purchase of
ktuikeet
security deadlock

coupon for

security deadlock

$45

Continued from Page 80

installed
Reg. '56

important to prevent a nuclear war
than to plan to minimize its conse-
quences."
According to the Federal Emer-
gency Management Agency's fall-out
manual, those minimizing efforts
might include having non-
denominational religious services as
soon as a shelter is filled, but the
same agency warns that survivors
may have to forego religious services
for the dead.
The government's "Fall-Out
Shelter Management Guide" in-
cludes a coloring page for youngsters,
With instructions to color only those
items needed in a fall-out shelter.
Presumably, the wagon and birthday
cake will not be needed.
The guide also includes sugges-
tions on how to sleep in a shelter,
with sample sleeping patterns group-
ing single men at one end of a shelter,
single women at the other, and fam-
ily groups in between. The guide
suggests that persons sleep in an al-
ternating head-to-toe arrangement
"to decrease the spread of respiratory
ailments."
Zuckerman said that the more
memorable plans he uncovered dur-
ing his three years of research in-
cluded the nuclear attack plans of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
and the Alternate Reconstitution
Base teams of the Strategic Air
Command.
The Kansas City Fed has leased
office space 650-feet below the sur-
face of the earth in a Hutchinson,
Kan. salt mine. Each day, records of
the day's transactions are stored at
the unusual bank "branch". A bank
official could not have been more
proud as he showed me through the
facilities," Zuckerman reported.
On the military side, Zuckerman
was struck by the Strategic Air
Command's plans for continuing to
fight a war after its bases are de-
stroyed.
"I was invited to attend the an-
nual nuclear war games, called
Global Shield, at a SAC base in
Maine. I spent the night flying in an
aerial tanker which refueled a B-52
bomber over Greenland. The next
morning, after returning to the base,
a siren sounded. It indicated that the
base had been destroyed in a nuclear
attack.
"Ninety percent of the base per-

sonnel then returned to their normal
jobs because they were no longer par-
ticipating in Global Shield = they
had been 'killed' in the attack. But._
the rest, the Alternate Reconstitu-
tion Base team, packed up buses and
trailer§ tarrying food, supplies,' spare •

Brass Finish

parts, bombs and fuel, and went off to
hide in the woods somewhere."
Zuckerman explained that the
Alternate Reconstitution Base teams
have specific instructions to deploy in
non-target areas. Their mission is to
meet returning U.S. bombers either
at civilian airports or on interstate
highways, refuel and re-arm them
and keep the war going.
A free-lance writer now based in
New York, Zuckerman said The Day
After World War III is his first book.
"Most free-lance assignments keep

THE DAY

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THE U.S. GOVERNMENT'S
PLANS FOR SURVIVING

A NUCLEAR WAR

New Aid For
Gleaner Students

Part of the cover from Edward
Zuckerman's new book, published by
Viking Press.

you busy for a week or a month," he
said, "But I just couldn't get this one
out of my mind." He was awarded an
Alicia Patterson Foundation felloW-
ship in 1981 to work on the book, and
a portion of it published in Esquire.
won him the 1983 Livingston Award
for national affairs journalism.
A 1966 graduate of Mumford
High School and the son of Louis and
Rochelle Zuckerman of Southfield,
Zuckerman was given a partial start
on his writing career by working for
The Jewish News in 1965. "I wrote
the `Mumford Musings' column about
events around the high school," he
said, "and I came in once a week to
. sort photographic plates."
Zuckerman went on to earn a de-
gree in English and edit the school
paper at Cornell University, and he
has been a free=lance writer for 10
years.

Stuart Raider
Representative

Greg Dawson
Representative

The Gleaners are helping to shape a
better world by granting student loans
and $1,000 scholarships. Do you qual-
ify for such a loan? Call today, and ask
for free literature on these fraternal
benefits.

Carole M. Shaw
Representative

Jordan Raider
Manager

Allan Goldberg
Representative

David Sok
Supervisor

Raider-Dennis Agency, 17117 W. Nine Mile, Suite 333, Southfield

PHONE 559-2250

wed

LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY

P.O. SOX I MN

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Mal" 1111C111041111

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57

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