197 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
197 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
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The Possible Effects of Nuclear Weapons & a Realistic Scenario for the
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Days after the Initial Offensive
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(NOTE FROM SYSOP - this article has some SERIOUS errors, omissions, and
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falsehoods in it. I will try to add some footnotes on these later. I'm sure the
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author tried to do the best job he could. However, if the work that you use as
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a reference is wrong, your summation will be just as wrong.)
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The largest bomb of the Second World War exploded with a force
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equivalent to thirteen kilotons, thirteen thousand tons, of dynamite
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(TNT). This bomb was called "Little Boy". The ironic thing about the
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name is that when the bomb is compared to the warheads of today, the only
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word that comes to mind is little. Most of our modern warheads are a
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hundred times as powerful, or more.
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To give you a little perspective, let's say that a fifteen kiloton
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nuclear missile exploded over New York City while most of the population
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was out to lunch. A report from the Secretary-General of the United
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Nations says out of the eight million people in the city, approximately
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one million people will die on the first day. If a one megaton bomb was
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exploded over Detroit, approximately 640,000 people would die immediately.
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If a twenty-five megaton bomb exploded, approximately 3.2 million people
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would die out of the four million people living there.(1) A megaton is
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equivalent to a million tons of TNT. It would take 10,000 railroad
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freight cars to carry one million tons of TNT.(2)
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The following is the possible outcome of an explosion of a one megaton
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nuclear warhead over the city of Detroit, Michigan. At ground zero,
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directly underneath the bomb, there would be a crater measuring one
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thousand feet wide and two hundred feet deep.(3) There would be a highly
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radioactive rim extending two thousand feet from the center,(4) this would
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keep unprotected persons from entering this circle for nearly twenty-five
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years. Up to 1.7 miles from the center you would not see any signs of
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buildings. All buildings within this circle would be completely destroyed.
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Between 1.7 and 2.7 miles from the center, you might be able to see the
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infrastructures of the more heavily built buildings.(6) There would be
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almost no survivors until after 2.7 miles from ground zero.(6) Up until
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approximately eight miles out, houses would be flattened from the
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over-pressure produced by the bomb.(7) From 2.7 to 4.7 miles, all light
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walled structures would be destroyed and the contents of the top floors of
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the strongest buildings would be blown out into the street.(8) The
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over-pressure, about five pounds per square inch, would cause the windows
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and frames of all buildings to be blown out.(9) In the band from 4.7
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miles to 6.3 miles out, the 3 p.s.i. over-pressure would cause people to be
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blown out of modern office buildings and would cause millions of flying
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projectiles. These projectiles are capable of killing anyone they hit.
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The winds would cause people to be blown against walls with a force many
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times greater than gravity.(10) Up to fifteen miles from the explosion,
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the winds would cause objects to fly with a force capable of fracturing
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the skull (of a human) fifty percent of the time.(11) The bomb would
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cause the death of approximately 640,000 people on the first day.(12)
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There are approximately 2.75 billion people in the world. The NUCLEAR
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ALMANAC says that approximately 20 - 160 million civilians would be
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immediately killed by a nuclear attack on present United States' strategic
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weapon bases by one megaton warheads (as you know, the Soviets have 100
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megaton warheads). the radioactive cloud produced by these weapons would
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cover about fifty percent of the United States.(13) Approximately 25
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million more people would die to cancer and genetic defects caused by the
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nuclear weapons. Added to what is the predicted deaths of other
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countries, the total deaths would be from 120 to 260 million people.(14)
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This means that from 4.3 to 9.5 percent of the Earth's population would be
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killed within a couple of years after the war. (Remember, radiation causes
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sterilization. This was not placed into the above calculations.)
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In 1958 there was a study on the possible fatalities in the United
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States during a hypothetical nuclear war. The explosive power totaled
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2,500 megatons and the population 175 million persons. They figured that
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on the first day 42 million people would die. By the seventh day 17
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million more would die. On the fourteenth day there would be a total of 71
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million people dead and by the sixtieth, 83 million people would have died
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in the U.S.(Remember: the strategy of the time was military targets, now
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we go after large civilian populations, large industrial areas, etc.)
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There would be 25 million injured and 67 million left uninjured.(15) It
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is predicted that up to 2/3 of the injured would eventually die from their
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injuries. Almost half of the population of the United States would die.
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A so-called limited attack by the Soviet Union on ten U.S. refineries
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using about two percent of the nation's nuclear arsenal would kill more
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than 5 million U.S. citizens.(16)
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The following is a summary of a fictional account of what may happen
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after a nuclear attack:
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Almost right after the attack, people from all over crowded into the
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rural towns. They were escaping from the destroyed cities, looking for
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food, shelter, clothing, and medical attention. They had nothing except
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the clothes on their back. They had no where to go. After the first few
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days the hospitals closed their doors to new patients. Not only because
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of the high radioactivity outside, but they just did not have any room.
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The very sick were left to die. The others were left to fend for
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themselves.
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Radio communications were nearly wiped out. The President came on the
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air once in a while.(Chances are no one would hear him: EMP) he would
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usually talk about the "cease-fire". He kept telling them about how the
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Soviets were hurt just as much as the U.S. He told them 100 million
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people were killed. He said the government was doing all they
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could.(Let's remember, the Pres. is a rather nice distance underground and
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most likely not seeing true reports on what is going on.)
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Food became scarce. People raided the grocery stores and the houses of
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the people living in shelters. Some were stealing the farmers' cattle. A
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few went out into the woods to try to find the few remaining wild animals.
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About two weeks after the explosions, the food did all but run out.
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People looked to the government, or what was left of it. The president
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said they were doing all they could.
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In the spring, people changed their attitude. Crops were planted.
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Some even tried to rebuild the cities and factories. The government tried
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to stop the barter system and reinstate currency. People found the money
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worthless and kept trading. Some thought things were going to get better.
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When winter came around, the food ran out. People started eating dogs,
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cats, and rats; animals by their habitat were protected from the
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fallout.(also cockroaches) The weak, the old, and young started to die.
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The first winter took its toll on the living. People were rebelling.
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The government came together to figure out what to do. They could not
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come up with a decision that would agree with everyone. By then, no one
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knew what to do. The life they were used to: cars, computers, the office,
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golf, schools, the Superbowl, parties, all disappeared. What was left?
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Chaos.(17)
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It is interesting how after our civilization becomes so technologically
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advanced and complex, we could destroy it all in a matter of moments. Our
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lifestyles would go back to the horse and buggy era. Most of our
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complexities, i.e. computers, would be forgotten. We would learn how to
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farm and care for animals. We probably would not be able to rebuild our
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previous civilization until after a few generations. The survivors would
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concentrate on survival, not worrying about selling stock for IBM or even
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going to school. There would be no use for them. Our country would be
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set back a couple of hundred years. People might even deny our previous
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civilization, and turn back to a more simple life: one in which there
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would be no offices, no taxation, no hostility. We might even become
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friends with the Soviets.
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Hopefully, we, the people of this planet, will one day realize the
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dangers of nuclear war, and will stop it. Hopefully everyone on this
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planet will become on family, working for the betterment of all. Maybe
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we will one day become the perfect civilization that only Karl Marx, Plato,
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and other philosophers have dreamed of.
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Notes
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1 Congress of the U.S., Office of Technology Assessment, THE EFFECTS OF
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NUCLEAR WAR, 1980, pp. 27-33
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2 ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA, 1985 ed., s.v. "Nuclear Weapons."
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3 Neville Brown, NUCLEAR WAR: THE IMPENDING STRATEGIC DEADLOCK, (New
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York: Frederick A. Praeger, Inc., Publishers, 1964), p. 14
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4 Ibid.
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5 Congress of the U.S., pp. 27-33
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6 Ibid.
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7 Jack Dennis, ed., THE NUCLEAR ALMANAC (Reading, Mas.: Addison - Wesley
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Publishing Company, Inc., 1984), p. 101
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8 Congress of the U.S., p. 31
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9 Ibid.
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10 Dennis, p. 102
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11 Ibid., p. 101
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12 Congress of the U.S., p. 27-33
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13 Dennis, p. 154
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14 Ibid.
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15 Linus Pauling, NO MORE WAR! (New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1983),
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p. 154
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16 Dennis, p. 153
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17 Congress of the U.S., pp. 124-138
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Works Cited
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Brown, Neville. NUCLEAR WAR: THE IMPENDING STRATEGIC DEADLOCK. New York:
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Frederick A. Praeger, Inc., Publishers, 1964
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Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment. THE
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EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR WAR. Washington: GPO, 1980
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Dennis, Jack, ed. THE NUCLEAR ALMANAC. Reading, Mas.: Addison - Wesley
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Publishing Company, Inc., 1984
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Foster, Jr., John S. "Nuclear Weapons". ENCYCLOPEDIA AMERICANA. 1985 ed.
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Pauling, Linus. NO MORE WAR!. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1983
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What you have just read was written by yours truly in December of 1986
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for people who have limited knowledge pertaining to nuclear weapons, etc.
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To keep the feeling of the original script, I only made changes in
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punctuation and added words in (). I apologize for some of them, it's
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late and I am tired. I am sooner or later going to write another
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"article" with newer data and maybe more info pertaining to blast effects,
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radiation levels, current armament and strategies. I hope this will be
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helpful. I will gladly accept any pros, cons or general howdies, etc.
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from anyone who has read it. I'm Fred Witsl. Give a holler.
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F.W.
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