Laura S. Winn is a General Electric Company employee who prefers to get as far away from her work as possible. A technologist at the Hanford plutonium plant here, Laura is manipulating radioactive materials on the other side of a sturdy steel barrier. She watches her work through a thick window of leaded glass that provides more protection than the same thickness of steel. Atomic technicians also use periscopes, mirrors and water barriers to protect then from dangerous radiation while they work with "hot" materials at the plant operated by GE for the Atomic Energy Commission
Title: Laura S. Winn is a General Electric Company employee who prefers to get as far away from her work as possible. A technologist at the Hanford plutonium plant here, Laura is manipulating radioactive materials on the other side of a sturdy steel barrier. She watches her work through a thick window of leaded glass that provides more protection than the same thickness of steel. Atomic technicians also use periscopes, mirrors and water barriers to protect then from dangerous radiation while they work with "hot" materials at the plant operated by GE for the Atomic Energy Commission
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