The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 4, 1979-Page 7 Utah man: Radiation killed family Second of a three-part series ST. GEORGE, Utah (Reuter)- Elmer Pickett, who owns Elmer's Har- dware Store on the main street here, said his wife died of leukemia. And so did his niece. "Then there was my grandmother. She died of cancer. Two of her brothers in this area also died of cancer," he said. "SOME OF MY aunts died, a sister, sisters-in-law, the whole gambit." He thought for a moment and then he said: "Yes, ten of my immediate family have died of some form of can- cer since the authorities began testing atomic devices in Nevada'in the 1950s and early '60s.- Man elaims federal govt misled citizens axe to them, but those people in power who knowingly made this happen . . ." His words trail away as though he cannot bring his mind around to think of what form the punishment should take. GOVERNMENT officials have said there is no scientific evidence to link cancer deaths to the atomic test ex- plosions detonated at the Nevada I f il if you could (check rorv faimil Y /ia liri'(l in this tvrritorv you would fnd,, v incl,,,dd victimlis of ti> ,,t'st (tsting of atomic r vr tc 's in Ne'ada in thu, 1950's). (>rtainlv v"rory firilY I know has had casualti's. It mnst I/ thu- radia- tion. ' , -Elnr Pickett, ha rrwari' stor wotnir in St. G'orgi>, Utaoh "And I come from a long-living family. We have no background of can- cer in our family." PICKETT, A quiet, conservative man of standing in this Mormon community who thinks over his swords carefully before he utters them, grasped the ledge of his shop counter and said: "I really feel those who subjected us to the dangers of those tests, knowing the hazards, are guilty of murder ina sense and there should be some punishment. "I don't think we should take a meat- Commission tested more than 80 atomic devices in Nevada before atmospheric tests were replaced by underground tests in 1962. "SOME HOURS after there was an explosion, a huge dark red cloud would come over this area and dump its radioactive fall-out," Pickett said. "We were a little apprehensive to start with, but atomic energy officials assured us there was no danger. They said we did not have to worry because there was no more exposure than what testing site, 150 miles to the west. But nearly 650 legal suits seeking government compensation totalling more than a billion dollars have been filed in this area on the grounds that the tests caused cancer, leukemia, and other related diseases, according to lawyers preparing the cases. The now-defunct Atomic Energy you would get from an ordinary X-ray. "But we have found out since there was a lot more danger than they were admitting." IN 1951, the Atomic Energy Com- mission set the standard for civilian exposure to radiation at five roentgens, a scientific unit used to measure the amount of penetrating external radiation a year. Under present gover- nment standards, people should receive less than 0.5 roentgens a year. "I have an uncle who lives out of this area who has just celebrated his 100th birthday," Pickett said. "Many of my relatives living out of this area are in their 90s." "My grandfather and father were pioneer morticians as well as builders in this area. They were the only mor- ticians here until the late 1940s and, going back over their records of 25 to 30 years, we can't find any case of leukemia. "Then all at once this area was inun- dated with leukemia. My wife got leukemia and it took her in nine mon- ths. She was just 38 years old. "AND, DURING that time in 1960 when she was fighting her illness in a Salt Lake City hospital, I visited doc- tors and radiologists and they all said they were being inundated with leukemia cases out of southern Utah. "They felt the vases had to be caused by radiation and I said we had to get af- ter the government. But they said it would break you to even try. "They said they had already discussed the matter with officials and the government would not admit to anything," Pickett continued. "WE HAVE BEEN asking for an- swers for years and have been stonewalled. The government has denied anything it has done could cause any of this. "I feel if you could check every family who lived in this territory you would find they included victims of the tests, Certainly every family I know has had casualties. "It must be the radiation because that was the only thing that was dif- ferent in our way of life. "THIS IS A middle-class town of small farmers, stockmen and ranchers and small businessmen. A lot were not insured and the hospital and other costs have been crippling. I had a little bit of insurance but the costs have been high." Mr. Pickett, fearing his words might make him appear a rebel, quickly ad- ded nothing had really changed in this slow-moving town of 16,000 people in this southwestern corner of Utah. "We are still patriots who believe in this country. We believe we are way ahead of the second-best country," he said. PICKET'f FEARS anti-nuclear groups are intending to use the case of St. George to support their cause. "This is not the image we want," he said. "I feel we have got to have nuclear energy and I feel it can be developed to the point where it can be used safely," he said. "The question that faces all of us here is unanswerable - how do you replace a life? "But there is the tremendous dollar expense to be considered. Some form of compensation is needed. "But what is fair and just I would not like to hazard a guess. Certainly something has to be done," Pickett concluded. is preserved on The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library Township taxpayers must pay extra for farmland City taxpayers will not have to pay extra property taxes to the state, as a result of a Washtenaw County Board of Commissioners decision Monday night. Taxpayers in outlying townships will instead pick up the extra taxes, which will increase township taxes by two to four per cent over and above increases already envisioned by the county, ac- cording to chief County Tax Assessor George Kostishak. THE POSSIBILITY of extra taxes for Ann Arbor came up when the State Tax Commission (STC) decided recently that Washtenaw County had under- assessed the value of agricultural land in the county. The STC accepted county assessmen- ts for industrial, residential and com- mercial property, but did its own assessment of agricultural land. The STC assessment raised the state equalized value of agricultural proper- ty by about $27 million - resulting in about $117,000 in extra taxes for the county. The city would have had to come up with 39 per cent of the extra taxes if the Board of Commissioners had decided to distribute the extra taxes among all county taxpayers, since the city con- tributes that percentage of taxes to the total collected in the county. Instead, the board voted to place the burden of extra taxes on the taxpayers in the townships, where the agricultural land is. Needs ride out of town? Check the 9ahtU classifieds under transportation Come Out Of Your Hole and Over to BE L L'S Delicious Pizza .t k and Grinders ' ' S. State and Packard 995-0232 SUN-WED open til 1am THURSDAY til 2 FRIDAY and SATURDAY til 3 am