To: JustPiper
Share what?
2,727 posted on
03/05/2004 8:05:42 AM PST by
Calpernia
(http://members.cox.net/classicweb/Heroes/heroes.htm)
To: Calpernia
This is a weekly size-up by the Washington staff of Scripps
Howard News Service.
The Energy Department's inspector general says the U.S.
government can't account for 14,000 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.
The material, which could be used to make nuclear weapons, has been distributed to 33 nations since the Atoms for Peace program started in the mid-1950s. What ultimately happened to it all is a mystery, the inspector general says.
{{This story is so well hidden. That is so the gubermint can say we told the public, kinda, sorta like those intent on divorce things in the local paper not found!}}
2,867 posted on
03/05/2004 10:20:32 PM PST by
JustPiper
(The fly cannot be driven away by getting angry at it)
To: Calpernia
This is a weekly size-up by the Washington staff of Scripps Howard News Service.
The Energy Department's inspector general says the U.S.
government can't account for 14,000 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.
The material, which could be used to make nuclear weapons, has been distributed to 33 nations since the Atoms for Peace program started in the mid-1950s. What ultimately happened to it all is a mystery, the inspector general says.
{{This story is so well hidden. That is so the gubermint can say we told the public, kinda, sorta like those intent on divorce things in the local paper not found!}}
2,868 posted on
03/05/2004 10:20:38 PM PST by
JustPiper
(The fly cannot be driven away by getting angry at it)
To: Calpernia
This is a weekly size-up by the Washington staff of Scripps Howard News Service.
The Energy Department's inspector general says the U.S.
government can't account for 14,000 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.
The material, which could be used to make nuclear weapons, has been distributed to 33 nations since the Atoms for Peace program started in the mid-1950s. What ultimately happened to it all is a mystery, the inspector general says.
{{This story is so well hidden. That is so the gubermint can say we told the public, kinda, sorta like those intent on divorce things in the local paper not found!}}
2,869 posted on
03/05/2004 10:20:44 PM PST by
JustPiper
(The fly cannot be driven away by getting angry at it)
To: Calpernia
This is a weekly size-up by the Washington staff of Scripps Howard News Service.
The Energy Department's inspector general says the U.S.
government can't account for 14,000 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.
The material, which could be used to make nuclear weapons, has been distributed to 33 nations since the Atoms for Peace program started in the mid-1950s. What ultimately happened to it all is a mystery, the inspector general says.
{{This story is so well hidden. That is so the gubermint can say we told the public, kinda, sorta like those intent on divorce things in the local paper not found!}}
2,870 posted on
03/05/2004 10:20:46 PM PST by
JustPiper
(The fly cannot be driven away by getting angry at it)
To: Calpernia
This is a weekly size-up by the Washington staff of Scripps Howard News Service.
The Energy Department's inspector general says the U.S.
government can't account for 14,000 kilograms of highly enriched uranium.
The material, which could be used to make nuclear weapons, has been distributed to 33 nations since the Atoms for Peace program started in the mid-1950s. What ultimately happened to it all is a mystery, the inspector general says.
{{This story is so well hidden. That is so the gubermint can say we told the public, kinda, sorta like those intent on divorce things in the local paper not found!}}
2,871 posted on
03/05/2004 10:20:46 PM PST by
JustPiper
(The fly cannot be driven away by getting angry at it)
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