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"Provocative U.S. Nuclear Chief Faces Political Test"
Reuters, 12/12/2011"The embattled chief of the U.S. nuclear safety regulator found some powerful political support on Saturday ahead of Capitol Hill hearings next week that will scrutinize his bid to enact sweeping safety reforms."
"Japan Split on Hope for Vast Radiation Cleanup"
NY Times, 12/07/2011"Those who fled Futaba are among the nearly 90,000 people evacuated from a 12-mile zone around the Fukushima Daiichi plant and another area to the northwest contaminated when a plume from the plant scattered radioactive cesium and iodine. Now, Japan is drawing up plans for a cleanup that is both monumental and unprecedented, in the hopes that those displaced can go home."
"More Radioactive Water Leaks at Japanese Plant"
NY Times, 12/05/2011"TOKYO — At least 45 tons of highly radioactive water have leaked from a purification facility at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station, and some of it may have reached the Pacific Ocean, the plant’s operator said Sunday."
"Uranium Mining -- The Virginia Battleground"
Natural Resources News Service, 12/05/2011"The Virginia General Assembly is expected to vote next year on whether to lift a 30-year moratorium on uranium mining in the state."
"Study Shows Worse Picture of Meltdown in Japan"
NY Times, 12/01/2011"TOKYO — Molten nuclear fuel may have bored into the floor of at least one of the reactors at the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, the complex’s operator said Wednesday, citing a new simulation of the accident that crippled the plant in March."
"Massachusetts: Effort to Close Reactor Is Denied"
NY Times, 11/30/2011"A licensing panel at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has turned down the state’s effort to block renewal of the operating license of a reactor because of the Fukushima Daichi accident in Japan."
Matthew Wald reports for the New York Times November 29, 2011.
"Nuclear Power Goes Rogue"
Newsweek, 11/30/2011"As the full cost of the Fukushima nuclear accident continues to climb—Japanese officials now peg it at $64 billion or more—nuclear power’s future is literally headed south. Developed countries are slowing or shuttering their nuclear-power programs, while states to their south, in the world’s hotspots (think the Middle East and Far East), are pushing to build reactors of their own."
"Laptop Wi-Fi Said To Nuke Sperm, But Caveats Abound"
Reuters, 11/29/2011"The digital age has left men's nether parts in a squeeze, if you believe the latest science on semen, laptops and wireless connections."
"Cesium From Fukushima Plant Fell All Over Japan"
Asahi Shimbun, 11/28/2011"Radioactive substances from the crippled Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant have now been confirmed in all prefectures, including Uruma, Okinawa Prefecture, about 1,700 kilometers from the plant, according to the science ministry."
"A New Urgency to the Problem of Storing Nuclear Waste"
NY Times, 11/28/2011"AUSTIN, TEXAS — The nuclear disaster in Fukushima, Japan, earlier this year caused many countries to rethink their appetite for nuclear power. It is also, in subtler ways, altering the fraught discussion of what to do with nuclear plants’ wastes."
"New Crack at Crystal River Nuclear Plant Casts Doubt on Repair Plan"
St. Petersburg Times, 11/21/2011"On July 26, monitors detected something amiss in the already crippled building that shields the reactor at Progress Energy's nuclear plant. The pile of shattered concrete outside meant the utility faced a new problem. The building was still falling apart — a development Progress was in no hurry to reveal to state regulators."
"Around the Fukushima Plant, a World Left Behind"
Wash Post, 11/21/2011"Namie, JAPAN — Eight months ago, people left this place in haste. Families raced from their homes without closing the front doors. They left half-finished wine bottles on their kitchen tables and sneakers in their foyers. They jumped in their cars without taking pets and left cows hitched to milking stanchions.
Now the land stands empty, frozen in time, virtually untouched since the March 11 disaster that created a wasteland in the 12-mile circle of farmland that surrounds the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.
"Utility Reform Eluding Japan After Nuclear Plant Disaster"
NY Times, 11/18/2011"In a direct act of rebellion against Tokyo Electric Power Company, which owns the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant, the local government in Tokyo is moving swiftly to build a huge natural gas facility that would generate as much electricity as a nuclear reactor."
"TSA Puts Off Safety Study of X-Ray Body Scanners"
ProPublica, 11/18/2011After promising Senators that he would conduct new studies of the health effects of airport X-ray scanners, TSA Administrator John Pistole seemed to say yesterday that the agency did not need to do the study.
"Europe Bans X-Ray Body Scanners Used at U.S. Airports"
ProPublica, 11/17/2011"The European Union on Monday prohibited the use of X-ray body scanners in European airports, parting ways with the U.S. Transportation Security Administration, which has deployed hundreds of the scanners as a way to screen millions of airline passengers for explosives hidden under clothing."

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