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2024-07-01 -Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
A John Wayne flop has been linked to high cancer rates. A new documentary aims to tell the community's story.
[HILL] The 1956 movie "The Conqueror" is infamous among cinephiles, both for its casting of John Wayne as the Mongolian warlord Genghis Khan and for a suspicious number of deaths that followed its filming downwind of a nuclear test site. Nearly 70 years later, the makers of the documentary "The Conqueror: Hollywood Fallout" hope to tell the story of the affected "downwinder" community in St. George, Utah, near where the film shot as their federal compensation for radiation exposure is on the line.

At the time "The Conqueror" filmed in the Utah desert just outside the town, St. George was 137 miles downwind from the Nevada Test Site, where the federal government conducted more than 900 nuclear tests.

The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) for years insisted to locals there was no danger, and when ranchers’ sheep began mysteriously dying, the federal government blamed it on the ranchers’ negligence.

But after the movie was shot, observers noted the high rate of cancer among people involved with the filming: 91 of 220 crew members developed the illness, and 46 died. Director Dick Powell and stars Wayne, Susan Hayward and Agnes Moorehead all eventually died of cancer as well, while Pedro Armendáriz Sr., an accomplished Mexican actor and the only nonwhite member of the film’s main cast, died by suicide when his cancer became terminal.

Local Paiute Native Americans were used as extras for crowd and battle scenes, but no records were kept of cancer rates among them.
Posted by Besoeker 2024-07-01 04:01|| || Front Page|| [11136 views ]  Top

#1 ....This has been known - or at least suspected - for decades. And of course, the Duke's multi-pack a day cigarette habit couldn't have had anything to do with it.

Mike
Posted by MikeKozlowski  2024-07-01 06:41||   2024-07-01 06:41|| Front Page Top

#2 Too bad the Mediterranean Diet wasn't in vogue then.
Posted by DooDahMan 2024-07-01 07:05||   2024-07-01 07:05|| Front Page Top

#3 
Check out "Cold War Warriors" and the Savannah River Plant (Aiken SC.) or the Hartford (Site W) plant in remote Washington State. The Cancer / Death rates at these, were Mega x's higher than the UTAH incident.

At the Savannah River plant alone, there were 30++ very serious incidents and highly elevated levels of cancer among workers and area residents. I personally have seen many a SRP worker (my Uncle included) in a Paper Suits. He died of Leukemia in the early 70's, and his wife of the same a few years later.

Note: Parts of nearby Ga experienced its share of related events also.
Posted by NN2N1 2024-07-01 07:31||   2024-07-01 07:31|| Front Page Top

#4 St. George sits at the top of the Virgin River canyon on the Colorado Plateau which rises approx 2000 ft from the Nevada desert.

The river channel serves as a chimney for the hot desert air which rises to the high desert plateau passing thru Hurricane UT, gateway to Zion and the Great Basin national parks.

"In the early 1950s, St. George received the brunt of the fallout of above-ground nuclear testing at the Yucca Flats/Nevada Test Site northwest of Las Vegas. Winds routinely carried the fallout of these tests directly through the St. George and southern Utah area."
Posted by Skidmark 2024-07-01 08:10||   2024-07-01 08:10|| Front Page Top

#5 /\ Does not appear to have negatively impacted home prices.
Posted by Besoeker 2024-07-01 08:20||   2024-07-01 08:20|| Front Page Top

#6 Oh, it's a beautiful spot if you're a desert rat.
@45 min drive from Las Vegas. I lived north of there a number of years in Cedar City UT, making oxidizer for the Space Shuttle.
Posted by Skidmark 2024-07-01 08:27||   2024-07-01 08:27|| Front Page Top

#7 Towns around the Hanford, WA site called themselves the "Downwinders" and not in a good way.
Posted by Mercutio 2024-07-01 08:45||   2024-07-01 08:45|| Front Page Top

#8 I first found about this in Richard Miller's "Under the Cloud" back in the early 90's...good book, btw.
Posted by Ulailet+Thud3602 2024-07-01 08:51||   2024-07-01 08:51|| Front Page Top

#9 Never been a study of all the downwind contamination from the 50-60s open air testing through the heartland.

All this not to be confused with all the annual deaths from skin cancer caused the by largest local continuous thermonuclear radiation from the Sun.
Posted by Procopius2k 2024-07-01 08:58||   2024-07-01 08:58|| Front Page Top

#10 /\ Ref 7: Towns around the Hanford, WA site called themselves the "Downwinders" and not in a good way.

Richland, WA "The Atomic City."
Posted by Besoeker 2024-07-01 09:14||   2024-07-01 09:14|| Front Page Top

#11 Speaking of St. George, Hurricane, Utah was like a time machine transition to a simpler, happier time in rural America 29+ years ago.
Posted by NoMoreBS 2024-07-01 13:33||   2024-07-01 13:33|| Front Page Top

09:43 Mullah Richard
09:27 Warthog
09:11 Mercutio
09:07 AlmostAnonymous5839
08:52 Matt
08:24 Matt
08:20 SteveS
07:43 Procopius2k
07:42 BrerRabbit
07:42 Procopius2k
07:39 Procopius2k
07:36 Procopius2k
07:35 Procopius2k
07:34 trailing wife
07:31 Procopius2k
07:30 NN2N1
07:22 NN2N1
07:18 trailing wife
07:14 Richard Aubrey
07:10 NN2N1
07:09 Besoeker
07:03 NN2N1
06:58 NN2N1
06:58 Besoeker









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