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New Scientist on MSNHypnotic art has its roots in the terrifying reality of nuclear bombsIn his Atomic series, artist James Stanford showcases "the spectacle and the horror" of growing up near a nuclear bomb ...
The president’s halt of foreign aid upended two U.S. programs that help the International Atomic Energy Agency find clues about Iran’s drive to build atomic bombs. By William J. Broad In 2003 ...
Abe Shizuko, a 93-year-old Hiroshima hibakusha, has keloid scars on her face and the right side of her body. A-bomb survivors call the 10-year period following the world's first atomic bombing ...
NAGASAKI—Atomic bomb survivors gathered at Nagasaki Peace ... holding a photograph of his keloid scars in his right hand. He concluded the speech by saying, “May there be No More Hiroshimas ...
In “Hadashi no Gen,” Gen is ridiculed at his school because his hair fell out due to the effects of radiation from the atomic bomb. Kenji Hayashida, 85, has been traumatized by keloid scars ...
When the atomic bomb survivor visited a beach one day with his two children, his daughter saw the scars on his back and began to cry. That drove Taniguchi's determination to share the horrors he ...
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