The Michigan Dolly-Thursday, May 3, 1979--Page 5 Town suffers from 50's fall-out Cancer rate high in Utah town after atomic tests First of a three-part series ST. GEORGE, Utah (Reuter) - Fathers would awaken their children before dawn and take them to the top of Black Ridge, on the outskirts of this Mormon community, to watch the flash of an atomic explosion. The children would squeal with ex- citement as they felt the ground rumble beneath them and would hurry home to await the arrival of another "big red cloud." "IT WAS AN exciting time, especially for the children. This was the 1950s and people felt they were wit- nessing the birth of the atomic age," said Irma Thomas, who has lived in her, neat home here for 45 years and raised seven children. The reddish clouds, which took several hours to drift across the red desert of Nevada from the atomic testing site 150 miles west of here, carried radioactive fall-put from the explosions. Today, nearly 650 legal suits seeking compensation have been filed on behalf of the dead and the sick of this town and the surrounding area, claiming the fall- outs caused cancer, leukemia and other diseases. THE CLAIMS total more than a billion dollars and more suits are ex- pected to be filed, said an aide of for- mer Interior Secretary Stuart Udall, now a lawyer in Washington, who is helping to prepare the case for the inhabitants against the Department of Energy. "We were the guinea pigs, unknowing and unwitting guinea pigs," said Thomas, 72, who put aside her pottery 18 months ago and began writing to every official she could think of about the increasing number of cancer cases in her area. In this tight, little Mormon town tucked in the southwestern corner of Utah, people sometimes wear sacred 'Th old Atomic En'rg- Commi ssion did a r- markaiol' jol of sri-p- ing this n-hol' thing un dir th, rug-Irma Thomas, St. G,org', Utah r'sidnt. garments - known outside the church as modesty garments - beneath their clothes. People are slow to react and authority is respected. FEDERAL OFFICIALS have in- sisted there is no scientific evidence to IN THIS VIEW, the sun sets on the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant south of Harrisburg, Pa., where the worst nuclear accident in the United States took place just over a month ago. Residents are afraid radiation leaks may turn Harrisburg into a "fall-out" city similar to St. George, Utah, a town now suffering from the fall-out radiation of atomic testing in the fifties. link the number of cancer deaths to the atomic tests. "But I was sick with the way people were dropping off," said Thomas. "Within a radius of 300 yards of my home I counted 29 people who had died in the last few years of cancer, leukemia, Hodgkin's Disease and similar complaints.. "It was just dumbfounding and the same thing was happening all over town. "MY SISTER, across-the way died of breast cancer. Her husband is being treated for cancer in Salt Lake City," Thomas said. Pointing in another direction, she continued: "My brother and his family lived just over there. His wife died and he and one of their sons are ill now because of the tests. My youngest daughter has muscle damage and a weird blood disorder. There have been stillbirths and miscarriages in our family and my husband has had cancer for 15 years. "People round here called this place 'Fall-Out City.' I wrote to President Carter, Congressmen, doctors and scientists to have these tests ended and to set up a government clinic here so people could be tested for radiation," Thomas said. The now-defunct U.S. Atomic Energy Commission tested more than 80 atomic devices at its Nevada testing site during the 1950s and until 1962, when atmospheric tests were replaced by un- derground tests. ACCORDING TO an official report released last month to investigating congressmen, 31 of a long series of un- derground tests "vented" - radioac- tive gases escaped into the atmosphere - but there has been no such occurren- ce since 1971. Thomas, whose pottery gained recognition in Europe as well as in the United States, still laughs easily when she discusses her eampaign, but her strong voice expresses her deter- mination. "The old Atomic Energy Commission did a remarkable job of sweeping this whole thing under the rug," she said. "They would send in goodwill teams who had two favorite words for describing the amount of radiation - minimal and insignificant." SHE PRODUCED a commission pamphlet which contained a letter to the local people saying in part: "... Some of you have been exposed to potential risk from flash, blast or fall- out. You have accepted the incon- venience or the risk without fuss, without alarm or without panic. Your cooperation has helped achieve an unusual record of safety." A local lawyer, J. MacArthur Wright, said no one told the people about the dangers that could come in later years. Wright, whose small office has become a command post for gathering information on fall-out, said it was im- possible to estimate how many people See UTAH, Page 12 CONTACT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, folloW-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * includes a second pair of hard/enses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointmenl