Wirtschaft: Chronology of nuclear accidents worldwide

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Chronology of nuclear accidents worldwide

Reference: CNN-Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) — Following is a chronology of major nuclear incidents over the last 40 years. Some have come to light only since the end of the Cold War.

October 7, 1957 – Fire destroyed the core of a plutonium-producing reactor at Britain’s Windscale nuclear complex — since renamed Sellafield — sending clouds of radioactivity into the atmosphere. An official report said the leaked radiation could have caused dozens of cancer deaths.

1957/8 – A serious accident occurred during the winter of 1957-58 near the town of Kyshtym in the Urals. A Russian scientist who first reported the disaster estimated that hundreds died from radiation sickness.

January 3, 1961 – Three technicians died at a U.S. plant in Idaho Falls in an accident at an experimental reactor.

July 4, 1961 – The captain and seven crew members died when radiation spread through the Soviet Union’s first nuclear-powered submarine. A pipe in the control system of one of the two reactors had ruptured.

1965 – The U.S. Atomic Energy Commission deliberately produced a low intensity radioactive cloud from a nuclear reactor over Los Angeles.

October 5, 1966 – The core of an experimental reactor near Detroit partly melted when a sodium cooling system failed.

October 17, 1969 – In Saint-Laurent, France, a fuel-loading error sparked a partial meltdown at a gas-cooled power reactor.

1974 – Reported explosion in a Soviet breeder plant at Shevchenko on the Caspian Sea.

December 7, 1975 – An accident occurred at the Lubmin nuclear power complex near Greifswald on the Baltic coast in former East Germany. A short-circuit caused by an electrician’s mistake started a fire. Some news reports said there was almost a meltdown of the reactor core.

March 28, 1979 – America’s worst nuclear accident occurred at the Three Mile Island plant near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. A partial meltdown of one of the reactors forced the evacuation of residents after radioactive gas leaked into the atmosphere.

Aug 7, 1979 – Highly enriched uranium spewed out of a top-secret nuclear fuel plant in Tennessee.
Around 1,000 people were contaminated with up to five times as much radiation as they would normally receive in a year.

April 25, 1981 – Officials said around 45 workers were exposed to radioactivity during repairs to a problem-ridden plant at Tsuruga, Japan.

November 1983 – Britain’s Sellafield plant accidentally discharged radioactive waste into the Irish Sea, prompting environmentalists to demand its closure.

August 10, 1985 – An explosion devastated the Shkotovo-22 ship repair facility which services Soviet navy nuclear-powered vessels. Ten people were killed and many died later from radiation exposure.

January 6, 1986 – One worker died and 100 were injured at a plant in Oklahoma when a cylinder of nuclear material burst after being improperly heated.

April 26, 1986 – Date of the world’s worst nuclear accident. An explosion and fire at the Chernobyl nuclear plant spewed radiation over much of Europe. Thirty-one people died in the immediate aftermath of the explosion. Hundreds of thousands of people were moved from the area and a similar number were believed to have suffered from the effects of radiation.

March 24, 1992 – Radioactive iodine and inert gases escaped into the atmosphere after a loss of pressure in a reactor channel at the Sosnovy Bor station near St Petersburg in Russia, triggering international concern.

November 1992 – In France’s most serious nuclear accident, three workers were contaminated after entering a nuclear particle accelerator in Forbach without protective clothing. Executives were jailed in 1993 for failing to take proper safety measures.

November 1995 – At Chernobyl, serious contamination occurred when fuel was being removed from one of the reactors. One person received the equivalent of a year’s permitted radiation.

November 1995 – Two to three tons of sodium leaked from the secondary cooling system of Japan’s Monju prototype fast-breeder nuclear reactor in a

Notiz: Blitzanlagen in Hamburg Stand: 1998/09/24

Blitzanlagen in Hamburg

Stand: 1998/09/24

Geschwindigkeit: Tempo 50

– Bergedorfer Str. – Heckkatenweg (Ortseinwaerts Bergedorf)
– Bramfelder Chaussee / Königsberger Str.
– Cuxhavener Str. (Francoper Str. und Rehrstieg / a)
– Osdorfer Landstr. – Am Botterbarg (a)
– Osdorfer Landstr. – Höhe Staples (frührer MaxiPapier / a)
– Osterfeldstr. – Höhe Jägerlauf (we)
– Robert-Schumann-Brücke – Richtung Horn
– Schleswiger Damm – Höhe Modezentrum
(hinter der Rotlichtanlage stadtauswärts)
– Sülldorfer Landstr. – Forsteck (a)Geschwindigkeit: Andere Tempobeschränkungen
– A1 Tunnel Moorfleet (b / 100km/h)

Rotlicht

– An der Alster – Kreuzung Holzdamm (a)
– Billhorner Brückenstr. – Kreuzung Amsinckstr.
– Billstedter Hauptstr. – Kreuzung Schiffbeker Weg
– Bramfelder Straße – Kreuzung Habichtstr.
– Dehnhaide – Kreuzung Krausestr.
– Holstenhofweg – Ahrensburger Straße (Richtung Süden)
– Holstenkamp – Kreuzung Kieler Starße/Fruchtallee (e)
– Jenfelder Allee – Kreuzung Rodigallee
– Julius-Vosseler-Str. – Kreuzung Koppelstr. (os)
– Max-Brauer-Allee – Kreuzung Holstenstr.
– Nordschleswiger Str.
– Osdorfer Weg – An der A7, Abfahrt Bahrenfeld (e)
– Ost-West-Str. – Kreuzung Rödingsmarkt (we)
– Schleswiger Damm – Höhe A7 (a / vor der anderen Anlage!)
– Straßburger Str. – Kreuzung Nordschleswiger Str.
– Wartenau – Kreuzung Eilenau Richtung Hamm

Legende

(a) – Stadtauswärts
(b) – Beide Richtungen
(e) – Stadteinwärts
(n) – Neu
(os) – Richtung Osten
(we) – Richtung Westen

Ein Einhalten der Verkehrsregeln vermindert die Gefährdung von Leib und Leben und schont den Geldbeutel.

Wirtschaft: Beginner’s Guide to IPOs

Gehört zu: Wirtschaft, Consulting

Beginner’s Guide to IPOs

http://www.ipocentral.com/features/begin.html
Although investing in IPOs (initial public offerings) is not for the faint of heart or the shallow of wallet, learning about the ups and downs of these fledgling and not-so-fledgling companies can be an eye-opener for anyone.We’ve assembled several links to information that will help potential investors understand the terminology and risks associated with IPO investing.

IPO Overview and Questions

Frequently Asked Questions: This is a compilation of some basic questions posed to us by our visitors. Go read it.

The ABCs of IPOs: This is a special four-part series that aims to debunk the myths around IPOs by examining how they work. (from CBS MarketWatch).

  • One: Speak the language.
  • Two: Know the process.
  • Three: A look at the prospectus.
  • Four: Play the game.

Meet the S-1: An introduction to the content and format of an S-1 SEC filing.
Slides from G. WIlliam Schwert’s Finance 423 session on Initial Public Offerings: (William E. Simon Graduate School of Business Administration, University of Rochester).

Humor: Asian Room Service

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Asian Room Service

Be warned, you’re going to find yourself talking “funny” for a while after reading this. It was nominated best email of 1997.
A telephonic exchange between a hotel guest and roomservice, at a hotel in Asia, which was recorded and published in the Far East Economic Review…..
Room Service: “Morny. Ruin sorbees”
Guest: “Sorry, I thought I dialled room-service”
RS: “Rye..Ruin sorbees..morny! Djewish to odor sunteen??”
Guest: “Uh..yes..I’d like some bacon and eggs”
RS: “Ow July den?”
G: “What??”
RS: “Ow July den?…pry,boy, pooch?”
G: “Oh, the eggs! How do I like them? Sorry, scrambled please.”
RS: “Ow July dee bayhcem…crease?”
G: “Crisp will be fine”
RS: “Hokay. An San tos?”
G: “What?”
RS: “San tos. July San tos?”
G: “I don’t think so”
RS: “No? Judo one toes??”
G: “I feel really bad about this, but I don’t know what ‘judo one toes’ means.”
RS: “Toes! toes!…why djew Don Juan toes? Ow bow singlish mopping we bother?”
G: “English muffin!! I’ve got it! You were saying ‘Toast.’ Fine. Yes, an English muffin will be fine.”
RS: “We bother?”
G: “No..just put the bother on the side.”
RS: “Wad?”
G: “I mean butter…just put it on the side.”
RS: “Copy?”
G: “Sorry?”
RS: “Copy…tea…mill?”
G: “Yes. Coffee please, and that’s all.”
RS: “One Minnie. Ass ruin torino fee, strangle ache, crease baychem, tossy singlish mopping we bother honey sigh, and copy….rye??”
G: “Whatever you say”
RS: “Tendjewberrymud”
G : “You’re welcome”