Sentences with phrase «atomic bomb survivors»

Krzysztof Wodiczko discusses his 1999 project, Hiroshima Projection, which involved projecting the hands of atomic bomb survivors onto the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, one of the few structures still standing after the blast.
«Although risk from radiation dose levels in the range of medical imaging procedures is small, it is real as evidenced from atomic bomb survivors and nuclear industry workers showing significantly increased risk of malignancy after exposure to doses in the range of diagnostic CT,» said Dr. Leswick.
Atomic bomb survivors in Hiroshima and Nagasaki on Friday welcomed a pledge by the leaders of two Koreas to achieve a Korean Peninsula free of nuclear weapons.
In Nagasaki, where the second atomic bomb was dropped after Hiroshima in the final stage of World War II, atomic bomb survivors voiced their hopes for the denuclearization of the peninsula.
Japanese atomic bomb survivors irradiated 8 - 25 weeks after ovulation subsequently suffered reduced IQ [Otake and Schull, 1998].
8/5/16 While Barack Obama's historic visit to Hiroshima as the first sitting U.S. president in May highlighted again the need to eliminate nuclear weapons, Japan's major anti-nuclear group, which has led the movement for 60 years at home and abroad, sees a rocky road ahead as its membership declines with the passing of atomic bomb survivors.
NASA estimates risk based on data from atomic bomb survivors and nuclear reactor workers.
«I want the Japanese government to lead the discussions» to achieve the goal of denuclearization, Koichi Kawano, 78, a member of a group supporting the atomic bomb survivors, said.
Who's right about radiation / After more than forty years of study, there is still no evidence of harmful mutations in the children of Japan's atomic bomb survivors.
Based on studies of atomic bomb survivors, Chernobyl victims, and airline pilots exposed to more cosmic rays at high altitudes, it appears that fruits and vegetables may decrease radiation - induced chromosome damage.
A new exhibition at the Harvard Graduate School of Education's Monroe C. Gutman Library, «With Hiroshima Eyes: The Hibakusha Art of Junko Kayashige,» depicts a series of evocative images inspired by Kayashige's experience as a «Hibakusha,» an atomic bomb survivor.
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