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A 2000 Los Alamos report [1] recorded 60 criticality accidents between 1945 and 1999. These caused 21 deaths: seven in the United States, ten in the Soviet Union, two in Japan, one in Argentina, and one in Yugoslavia. Nine have been due to process accidents, and the others from reactor and critical experiment accidents.
Part of a series on: Yugoslavs; By region; Canada; Serbia; United States; Culture; Yugoslav studies; Architecture; Art; Cinema. Films; Coffee culture; Music ...
A criticality accident occurred on December 30, 1958, at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) in Los Alamos, New Mexico, in the United States It is one of 60 known criticality events that have occurred globally outside the controlled conditions of a nuclear reactor or test; though it was the third such event that took place in 1958 after events on June 16 [1] at the Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge ...
On 15 October 1958, there was a criticality accident at one of the research reactors. Six workers received large doses of radiation. One died shortly afterwards; [10] the other five received the first ever bone marrow transplants in Europe.
15 October 1958: Vinča, Yugoslavia. There was a criticality incident in a newly installed reactor. Six young researchers received high doses of radiation, and were subsequently treated at "Kiri" institute in Paris where one of them died. [citation needed] 30 December 1958: Cecil Kelley criticality accident at Los Alamos National Laboratory ...
Under Siege (1992) – movie about arms dealers who take over a U.S. Navy battleship, and attempt to sell the ship's nuclear-tipped Tomahawk Cruise Missiles on the black market; Vikram (1986) – Indian action adventure film by Rajasekhar about a Research and Analysis Wing agent who has to retrieve AgniPutra, a stolen nuclear-capable Indian ICBM.
Title Director Cast Genre Notes 1980: Ko to tamo peva: Slobodan Šijan: Pavle Vujisić Dragan Nikolić Bata Stojković Boro Stjepanović: Comedy drama: Won Special Jury Award at Montréal World Film Festival (1981) Voted as Best Yugoslav Movie of 1947–95 Period by members of the Yugoslavian Board of the Academy of Film Art and Science (AFUN) (1996).
On the morning of 6 April 1941 in Belgrade, the capital of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, two bon vivants, Petar Popara, nicknamed Crni (Blacky) and Marko Dren, head home. They pass through Kalemegdan and shout salutes to Marko's brother Ivan, an animal keeper in the Belgrade Zoo .