The Effects of the Bomb: Hiroshima Nagasaki
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ATOMIC BOMB PHYSICAL DAMAGE - NAGASAKI - 01-23-1946 - 01-28-1946 - MUTED - COLORIZE
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description 9 LS Showing in the foreground the failure of girder and bracing due to fire, in background shows fire damage to large storage tank. 9 MC Pan from base to upper section of bent column showing structural collapse brought on by blast pressure. Column is bent toward the S on the SE side of building A. 8 LS Of building I located 4300 feet from zero at 358 degrees to 1 degrees looking W on S wall of building, this view shows complete displacement of S wall and roof. 9 MC Looking W along S wall of building I as seen from the SW corner this view shows the location of the original wall, as well as its present displacement. 9 LS Looking W at the NE corner of building I showing the structural damage inflicted on the building and the extent the N wall has been bowed. 10 LS Of the E wall of building I showing structural collapse and the degree the main member has been displaced. 10 MS Taken from the E wall looking W along the main beam of building I showing the extent to which it has been distorted and structural damage inflicted upon main roof members. 9 MS Taken from the center of second bay from S wall looking E showing the collapsed S wall superimposed on torpedo components. 10 LS Of inside of N wall looking W showing bow of wall and work benches along N side of building L. 9 CU Of tail assembly of torpedo still in assembly blocks in fourth bay of S wall, about 100 feet from W wall of the building. 12 LS Of the SW corner of building I looking E at the displaced S wall. 10 LS Of building K taken from SE corner showing concrete walls still standing but roof collapsed. Building K is a light reinforced structure and is located 4200 feet from zero at 359 degrees. 15 MS Pan shot taken in interior of building K at a point where the NS fire wall joins the S wall of the building, this is a view looking NE across the E section of building K and shows a piece of heavy equipment, probably a compressor, which has been displaced from its foundation as a result of the structural collapse of the roof. 9 LS Taken on the N side of building looking E and shows the manner in which the blast affected the steel casement window frames on the N side of building K or on the side farthest from zero. The steel casement window frames in some cases were completely blown out of their original position and in other cases were badly bowed, despite the protection which building L afforded building K. 10 LS Of the W quarter of building I looking N from building K showing structural damage to four separate members on the W end of building I, as well as redisplacement and complete failure of S wall. 7 MS Of the interior of building K taken from SW corner of building looking NE showing roof members superimposed on the track normally traversed by an overhead crane. 10 MS A white marble tombstone located on the N edge of cemetery located on the crest of the Motomachi slope showing the effect of blast. White granite headstone marked Margarita Boroni. 9 CS Showing the W side of the monument. The capstone and the pedestal have been knocked from the base. The stone base on which the main pedestal rested has been moved. 10 MCS From W side of monument showing the movement of one block across the top of the base. 10 MS Interior of unidentified building (USSBS Target J showing the steel frame roof, minus its galvanized roofing, note the mass of debris inside the building. 9 MCU Rubble strewn interior of building, note the electric generators. 11 MLS Near zero, a group of school children led by their teacher are shown walking under a Torui arch. 9 LS Post a zero point. Post is approx. 1-3 of the way into the frame. The Catholic Cathedral is in the upper R corner of the frame. Shot approx. 300 feet from zero at 300 degrees looking E. Rubble in the foreground. 10 MLS Of zero showing two new houses in the background being constructed about 200 feet behind the post marked zero. This shot taken looking due N. 9 MCU Of two women with heavy bundles strapped to their backs walking along retainer wall E of zero approx. 150 feet. Camera pans to woman as she approaches and they exit frame L. 12 LS Pan from L to R showing in the foreground debris. Taken from zero facing W. Chenzei School in the background. Action in the foreground of carts and people traveling along the road. 8 MLS Taken from zero looking E. In upper R corner can be seen the Cathedral. Pan along the retainer wall to a couple of children playing. 14 MLS Taken from zero looking E. In upper R corner can be seen the Cathedral. Pan along the levee to two children playing and a continued pan down to the bridge over a small stream (retake of above scene. 9 LS Of dirt road leading to Cathedral approx. 200 feet from zero in a N direction at approx. 300 degrees. Showing houses under construction on the L and debris and man on bike going down the road toward the bridge. 12 LS Pan of Shirayama Scho
Enola Gay B-29 Drops Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima
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2015 April / Hibakusha Stories Morning Session 3/5
Morning Session
Presentation by
Yasuaki Yamashita, Nagasaki A-Bomb Survivor
HD, 16min 04sec, in English
at Japan Society, April 28, 2015 in New York City
Presented by
Japan Society, Hibakusha Stories, Youth Arts New York, Peace Boat
Video Prepared by
East River Films Inc
About Yasuaki Yamashita:
“When the A-Bomb fell on Nagasaki, August 9, 1945, I was 6 years old and living there with my family in a typical Japanese-style wooden frame house with sliding interior partitions (shoji) and exterior glass windows. Normally on a hot summer day I would go to the mountain with friends of my age to catch dragon flies and cicadas. However, on this day I was playing at home. Nearby my mother was preparing the mid-day meal. Suddenly, at precisely 11:02, we were blinded by an intense light like 1,000 simultaneous flashes of lightening. My mother pushed me to the ground and covered me with her body. We heard the roar of a great wind and flying debris of the house collapsed on top of us. Then there was silence.
“Our house was 2.5 km. (1.5 miles) from the epicenter. My sister who was in another part of the house was cut by flying splinters of glass. A playmate who went to the mountain that day was exposed to the great blast of heat caused by the detonation of the bomb. His body was badly burned and he died a few days later. My father was recruited to help clean up the destruction in the center of Nagasaki. At the time we didn’t know about the dangers of radiation that would later cause his death.
“The A-Bomb had turned the center of Nagasaki into an inferno of death and devastation. Communications and transportation were disrupted. There was no food in the city and we were starving. One week after the explosion we walked through the rubble of the city center where fires still burned on our way to the countryside where relatives would share what little food they had. Some years later I worked in the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital. It was very painful to see the survivors still suffering from the effects of burns and radiation.
“Since moving to Mexico in 1968, I have accepted many invitations to speak about my A-Bomb experience at various institutions. These have included schools, universities, cultural centers, a committee of the Mexican Senate, and the San Diego Museum of Photographic Arts. In 2010 I gave my testimony at a memorial ceremony organized by the Mexico City Government on the occasion of the 65th Anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Atomic Bombs. I feel that it is important to keep alive the memory of the suffering, devastation, and death that nuclear weapons can cause in the hope that no one will ever use them again. I worry because each year there are fewer and fewer people still alive who can speak about this memory from personal experience.”
Japanese Architecture - Honkyouji buddhist temple
This is Honkyouji buddhist temple(本逕寺) in Hiroshima Prefecture.
Honkyouji buddhist is modern architecture and it is in the center of town.
There is a bomb trees in the precincts of the temple.
#Japan #temple #Japanesearchitecture
ATOMIC BOMB PHYSICAL DAMAGE - GENERAL VIEW - HIROSHIMA 03-21-1946 - 04-08-1946 - MUTED - COLORIZED
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LS Looking E-NE from atop tank #1 showing both sides of a street which acted as a firebreak. On the W side of the street can be seen the rubble and burned-over area. Across the street can be seen the structure which was not affected by fire. Street measures 30 feet from curb to curb and 74 feet from building front to building front. The building is located approx. 6900 feet from zero at 150 degrees. The street runs from N-NE to S-SW through the Minami Machi district and characteristic of firebreaks on the fringe or periphery of areas razed by fire. LS Pan L to R looking S-SE along the street showing razed areas on the W side of the street and areas unaffected by fire on E side of the street. LS Looking SW showing the E face of building 41, located 1625 feet from zero at 137 degrees. The effect of blast is clearly visible in the absence of window casing and the displacement of the stone columns of the roof failing. LS Looking NW at the S and E faces of a two-story brick load bearing wall structure roof which is totally collapsed and walls which are partially collapsed. This building is located 4500 feet from zero at 44 degrees. LS Looking W showing the S and E faces of a two-story brick building whose sides are partially collapsed. The brick load bearing walled structure was affected by blast and destroyed by fire. It is located 4600 feet from zero at 43 degrees. LS Looking S showing the E and N faces of a two-story brick building. The brick load bearing walls are partially collapsed and the roof is totally collapsed. This structure was affected by blast and destroyed by fire. This building is located 3800 feet from zero at 55 degrees. LS Looking S at the E and N walls of a two-story structure which was affected by blast and destroyed by fire. This building is located 3900 feet from zero at 57 degrees. LS Pan L to R looking SW from the top of building 23 showing buildings 14 and 13 and an area of devastation that lies between the main NS streetcar line and the Motoyasu River. LS Pan L to R looking W-NW from top of building 23 showing the area of devastation S of building 12 and 13. LS Pan L to R looking NW from buildings 12 to 11 to 10 as seen from the top of building 23. LS Pan L to R looking NW as seen from the top of building 23, showing buildings 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, and 6. LS Pan L to R looking N-NW and panning to N showing buildings 9, 6, 20, and 19 as seen from top of building 23. LS Looking N-NE across Takeya Cho, Hakushima-Kitama Tanaka Machi and Hiratsuka Cho, as seen from point located 4250 feet from zero at 149 degrees. Dolly shot taken moving N along a road showing the same area shown above. MLS Looking NW showing the S and E faces of a light steel frame structure used as an auditorium at the Tenma Grade School. The roof structure is sagging as result of blast and fire. Building is located 2735 feet from zero at 283 degrees. MS Looking N showing manner in which the steel frame structure has been displaced towards the W. MS Looking N showing the leaning in the center of the building. MLS Pan R to L looking N showing displacement towards the W as result of blast. The failure of horizontal wooden bracing at the peak contributed to its weakness. MS Showing the displacement of the E side of the structure towards the W. MS Looking N showing E end of the building. MS Looking E showing the W and S face of a tombstone in a cemetery located 1425 feet from zero at 151 degrees just S of building 24. MS Looking at a similar type of tombstone approx. 25 feet further S. This view shows NW side of the stone. During the instant that the upperportion of the monument was thrown out of equilibrium by blast, red brick and other flying debris was forced under it thus preventing the stone from settling back to its original position. ECU Two shots of the brick and the debris which were forced under the stone at the instant it was rocked towards the SE by the blast. MS Showing the position in which the upper portion of the monument came to rest. MS Looking E showing a similar type monument located approx. 50 feet to the SE to the above one. It is still intact. MLS Looking NW showing a portion of the cemetery surrounding blasted trees. Tree trunks and roots in Kikutsuji Cemetery . LS Looking NE at the Teikoku Textile Factory as seen from Hiroshima Airfield. Located approx. 8500 feet from zero at 176 degrees. MLS Pan L to R looking NE at S and W faces of reinforced concrete resisitive warehouse located 5750 feet from zero at 204 degrees. LS Looking NE showing W and S faces of reinforced concrete frame building, located 4725 feet from zero at 206 degrees, which was destroyed by fire. Shanties have been erected on the inside. LS Pan L to R from atop building 59, Higashi Police Station, located 4050 feet from zero at 89 degrees. Panning from S to SW showing area of devastation on both E and W bank of Kyobashi River includin
The Incredible Japanese Prison Break
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We do videos on intriguing & thought-provoking Asiany topics, including stereotypes, history, culture & geography.
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[The Incredible Japanese Prison Break]
Aomori, Japan. 1936. Prisoner Yoshie Shiratori had had enough.
He was forced to confess to a murder he did not commit, falsely imprisoned in Aomori Prison, beaten and tortured every night by prison guards, and, now worse, prosecutors were seeking the death penalty. In his mind, it was time to go; but Aomori Prison wasn’t the easiest to escape.
Regardless, Yoshie Shiratori had nothing to lose, and so at 5:30 am he made his move. He knew there would be a 15 minute gap in the patrol time as he had studied the guards’ routine for months; and when the coast was clear, he pulled out a metal wire (which he had smuggled in from the bathhouse) and started to pick the lock. (This was originally the metal support ring that was wrapped around the bathing buckets inmates used to wash themselves).
His hands were stiff from the wintry cold, but after a few minutes of picking, he had success, and his cell door swung open. But he wasn’t out of the woods yet, because there were more locked doors ahead. He knew he only had a few minutes left before the guards would return, and so he wasted no time attempting to pick his way through the remaining security doors.
Now fortunately for him, he was able to make it out of the facility, but the bad news was that he was only halfway to freedom. You see, he was still well within the search perimeter, which meant at any moment the alarm could go off and he’d still be caught.
At 5:45am the guards returned, peering into his cell; and this is what they saw - Shiratori sound asleep in his futon bed. ...
2015 April / Hibakusha Stories Afternoon Session 3/5
Afternoon Session
Presentation by
Yasuaki Yamashita, Nagasaki A-Bomb Survivor
HD, 17min 45sec, in English
at Japan Society, April 28, 2015 in New York City
Presented by
Japan Society, Hibakusha Stories, Youth Arts New York, Peace Boat
Video Prepared by
East River Films Inc
About Yasuaki Yamashita:
“When the A-Bomb fell on Nagasaki, August 9, 1945, I was 6 years old and living there with my family in a typical Japanese-style wooden frame house with sliding interior partitions (shoji) and exterior glass windows. Normally on a hot summer day I would go to the mountain with friends of my age to catch dragon flies and cicadas. However, on this day I was playing at home. Nearby my mother was preparing the mid-day meal. Suddenly, at precisely 11:02, we were blinded by an intense light like 1,000 simultaneous flashes of lightening. My mother pushed me to the ground and covered me with her body. We heard the roar of a great wind and flying debris of the house collapsed on top of us. Then there was silence.
“Our house was 2.5 km. (1.5 miles) from the epicenter. My sister who was in another part of the house was cut by flying splinters of glass. A playmate who went to the mountain that day was exposed to the great blast of heat caused by the detonation of the bomb. His body was badly burned and he died a few days later. My father was recruited to help clean up the destruction in the center of Nagasaki. At the time we didn’t know about the dangers of radiation that would later cause his death.
“The A-Bomb had turned the center of Nagasaki into an inferno of death and devastation. Communications and transportation were disrupted. There was no food in the city and we were starving. One week after the explosion we walked through the rubble of the city center where fires still burned on our way to the countryside where relatives would share what little food they had. Some years later I worked in the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Hospital. It was very painful to see the survivors still suffering from the effects of burns and radiation.
“Since moving to Mexico in 1968, I have accepted many invitations to speak about my A-Bomb experience at various institutions. These have included schools, universities, cultural centers, a committee of the Mexican Senate, and the San Diego Museum of Photographic Arts. In 2010 I gave my testimony at a memorial ceremony organized by the Mexico City Government on the occasion of the 65th Anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki Atomic Bombs. I feel that it is important to keep alive the memory of the suffering, devastation, and death that nuclear weapons can cause in the hope that no one will ever use them again. I worry because each year there are fewer and fewer people still alive who can speak about this memory from personal experience.”
Bonsai: Another Special Gift of Trees from Japan
In 1976, Japan presented 53 bonsai trees to the United States as a Bicentennial gift. The trees led to the founding of the National Bonsai and Penjing Museum at the U.S. National Arboretum, which was later augmented by bonsai from China, North America and elsewhere. Three authors discussed how the national collection of bonsai inspired their books.
Speaker Biography: Ann McClellan is author of Bonsai and Penjing, Ambassadors of Peace and Beauty, which provides a comprehensive overview of the national bonsai collection.
Speaker Biography: Stephen Voss is the author of In Training, which features insightful photography related to bonsai.
Speaker Biography: In her children's book, The Peace Trees from Hiroshima, Sandra Moore tells the story of Yamaki Pine, a bonsai in training since 1625.
For transcript and more information, visit
A Memoir of Los Alamos in World War II with Murray Peshkin
As an undergraduate physics student turned soldier, Dr. Peshkin was lucky to be sent to Los Alamos, where he worked most of the time as Richard Feynman's personal computer. In this colloquium, he will describe some aspects of the project and its aftermath and their context in the country at that time, all as illustrated by the limited experience of one then-very-young scientist.
Tale of Two Cities 1946 - Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1945
This movie is part of the collection: Prelinger Archives
Producer: U.S. War Department
Sponsor: U.S. War Department
Creative Commons license: Public Domain
Little Boy
Little Boy was the codename for the type of atomic bomb dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 by the Boeing B-29 Superfortress Enola Gay, piloted by Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr., commander of the 509th Composite Group of the United States Army Air Forces. It was the first atomic bomb to be used as a weapon. The Hiroshima bombing was the second artificial nuclear explosion in history, after the Trinity test, and the first uranium-based detonation. Approximately 600 to 860 milligrams (9.3 to 13.3 grains) of matter in the bomb was converted into the energy of heat and radiation. It exploded with an energy of 16 kilotons of TNT (67 TJ).
Little Boy was developed by Lieutenant Commander Francis Birch's group of Captain William S. Parsons's Ordnance (O) Division at the Manhattan Project's Los Alamos Laboratory during World War II. Parsons flew on the Hiroshima mission as weaponeer. The Little Boy was a development of the unsuccessful Thin Man nuclear bomb. Like Thin Man, it was a gun-type fission weapon, but derived its explosive power from the nuclear fission of uranium-235. This was accomplished by shooting a hollow cylinder of uranium over another hollow enriched uranium cylinder by means of a charge of nitrocellulose propellant powder. It contained 64 kg (141 lb) of enriched uranium, of which less than a kilogram underwent nuclear fission. Its components were fabricated at three different plants so that no one would have a copy of the complete design.
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United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
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Cases for Political Art | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios
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This week we explore some of the most powerful artworks ever made, making the case for political art one work at a time. Pablo Picasso's Guernica, Kathe Kollwitz's prints, Kazimir Malevich's Black Square, Iri and Toshi Maruki's Hiroshima Panels, and Martha Rosler's House Beautiful: Bringing the War Home photomontages. What do you think of as political art?
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World War II: The Blitz on Hamburg - Full Documentary
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When Bomber Harris announced to the world that Hitler was about to ‘Reap the Whirlwind’ the people of Hamburg had no idea that their city would be set in flames by a firestorm from hell.
This is a true story of that 1,000 bomber raid, a harrowing tale of devastation told by the aircrew and citizens of Hamburg.
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Mary’s Apparitions for the World: Akita
Each week I’ve been presenting one of Mary’s modern apparitions as pieces in a mosaic because Mary’s apparitions are interconnected. They are building into supra-apparition with a super message. Akita is an approved apparition, and American, English-speaking Catholics have had an advantage in learning about this far away oriental story through the selfless apostolate of the 101 Foundation. This isn’t by good luck or coincidence. Mary indicated the United States in her main message when she used an English term instead of a Japanese term. We’ll get to that this morning.
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** If you would like to watch a 9 minute YouTube video describing the events of Akita in English
** If you would like to read (and/or download) a Precious Blood prayerbook
** If you would like a digital text of Mary’ locutions to Fr. Gobbi (PDF, DOC, ODT, RTF):
** If you would like to purchase the book of Mary’s locutions to Fr. Gobbi, “Our Lady Speaks to her Beloved Priests”:
** To see other topics in this “MarianNews” youtube channel
-- Learn how Mary interprets the book of Revelation
-- Learn about other Marian apparitions
-- Be inspired to live a deeper union with the Blessed Mother
** Visit the “MarianNews” website
--for more information on the Order of the Mother of God which Mary wants to use to help all Christians in the last times, namely to pass through the “time” of the chastisement and then to evangelize the world in the new and wonderful “time” of the Eucharistic reign of Jesus and Mary
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World War II Remembered: The Impact of War Then and Now
November 12, 2012
Veterans Day Program
World War II Remembered: The Impact of War Then and Now
Room 003, Rockefeller Center
4:30 PM
Booksigning of World War II Remembered and refreshments will follow panel.
Panelists: Kendal of Hanover Residents
Clinton Gardner '44
A member of the Dartmouth class of 1944, Clint Gardner served four years in the army as an officer in antiaircraft artillery. He was wounded in the D-Day invasion of Normandy and again in the Battle of the Bulge. Shortly before the war in Europe ended he was put in charge of the just-liberated Buchenwald Concentration camp. He had reached the rank of captain when he returned to finish Dartmouth in 1946-7. In 1956 he and his wife Libby founded a national mail order company called Shopping International, a venture based in Norwich, Vermont, that sent them on buying trips to more than 40 countries.
Mary Mecklin Jenkins
The daughter of a Dartmouth professor, Mary grew up in Hanover. Two months after graduating from college, she married brand new Second Lieutenant, John Jenkins, and went with him to a B-29 Air Force base in Victoria, Kansas where he was an intelligence officer. After the war, while raising four children, Mary was president of a local League of Woman Voters in Connecticut, the first woman moderator of Westport's Representative Town Meeting, and served on the town's Planning and Zoning Commission and Board of Finance. Recipient of a grant from the West German government to study German women in politics, Mary also went to the Soviet Union twice on exchanges sponsored by Bridges for Peace: US-USSR.
Robert Christie
At the tender age of 16, in 1940 Robert Christie matriculated at Norwich University, the Military College of Vermont and oldest private military college in the nation. He enlisted in the U.S. Army immediately after Pearl Harbor, and after being called to active duty, he spent a year as an enlisted man and eventually graduated form OCS at Fort Knox as a 2nd lieutenant in Armor. His military service was in Europe as a tank unit commander in Germany from the onset of the Battle of the Bulge until the war's end in 1945. Bob was separated from service in 1946 as a company commander. Forty months later he returned to Norwich to get his BS, and with the help of the GI Bill of Rights, graduated from State University of NY College of Medicine at NYC. Dr. Christie interned and had residencies at DHMC, and for three years practiced general medicine in Northfield, VT. He later specialized in pathology and laboratory medicine, directed eight hospital laboratories in NH and VT, and served on the DMS faculty.
Moderator: John Boger '13
Jim Eckles' Interview
Jim Eckles has worked for decades for the White Sands Missile Range Public Affairs Office, managing open houses and tours of the Trinity site, where the world’s first nuclear test took place. In this interview, Eckles describes the history of Trinity site. He discusses the ranchers who lived on it before the Manhattan Project took over, the buildings used by the scientists, and what it was like to live on the site before and during the war. He provides an overview of the Trinity Test and the “Gadget,” 100 ton TNT test, and the making of “Jumbo.” Eckles also discusses some of the key workers at Trinity site, including scientists, technicians, photographers, and MPs. He also explains some of the controversy around the site, including radiation levels, concerns over fallout from the test, and the atomic bombings of Japan.
For the interview transcript:
Eldredge Prize Lecture with Amy Lyford | Smithsonian American Art Museum
Join Occidental College Professor Amy Lyford, winner of SAAM's 2015 Charles C. Eldredge Prize, as she discusses Isamu Noguchi, Asian America, and Artistic Identity in Postwar New York.
Funding for the Charles C. Eldredge Prize is provided by the American Art Forum.