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Meet Japanese Girl Scouts visitors on Thursday

Posted at 5:59 am July 30, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Japanese Girl Scouts Visitors

Naka Troop 37 Girl Scouts will visit Oak Ridge this month. Pictured above in front row from left to right are Aya Kusumi, Yuna Umino, Kaho Otsuki, Chiaki Sasashima, Ryoko Usui, Sumika Hara, and Ayaka Namatame.
Leaders in back from left to right are Michiyo Namba, Nozomi Takane, Shoko Oyake, Hatsue Kashimura, and Fujiko Fujisaku. (Submitted photos)

 

Submitted

The Oak Ridge Girl Scouts service unit, in cooperation with the Oak Ridge Sister City Support Organization, will be hosting a group of 12 girls and leaders from our sister city of Naka-shi, Japan. Current Girl Scouts and girls interested in joining a Girl Scouts troop are invited to come meet our Japanese sisters and help with a local Girl Scout service project.

On Thursday, July 31, the Japanese girls and their U.S. hostesses will be cleaning and dressing dolls for the Holiday Bureau’s “Dolls for Daisy” project. This meeting will be at the Oak Ridge Children’s library auditorium from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Girls are invited to come help with the dolls, welcome the Japanese Girl Scouts, and register for local troops for the upcoming school year. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News Tagged With: Girl Scouts, Japan, Jerry Luckmann, Naka-shi, Oak Ridge Girl Scouts, Sister City Support Organization

Remembering Howard H. Baker Jr., former U.S. senator, Reagan chief of staff

Posted at 2:06 pm June 30, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff 1 Comment

Howard Baker

Howard Baker

KNOXVILLE—Howard H. Baker Jr., former U.S. senator and founder of UT’s Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, died on Thursday, June 26. He was 88.

Baker earned his law degree from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, in 1949. UT’s Baker Center was founded in 2003 as a nonpartisan institute devoted to education and research concerning public policy and civic engagement. Baker received the university’s first honorary doctorate in spring 2005.

“Our country has lost a great statesman and a great Tennessean,” UT Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek said. “Senator Baker will live on in our hearts forever as a man who believed that government was to serve the people.”

Baker’s body will lie in state at the Baker Center at 1640 Cumberland Avenue in Knoxville, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Monday, June 30. His funeral will be on Tuesday, July 1, at First Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, Tennessee, where he was born. Huntsville is in Scott County, north of Oak Ridge and Anderson County.

Matt Murray, director of the Baker Center, said the senator’s work will continue to influence students and inspire aspiring public servants for generations to come. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Federal, Government, Top Stories Tagged With: Baker Center, Bill Haslam, Bob Corker, chief of staff, Chuck Fleischmann, civic engagement, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, College of Law, Cynthia "Cissy" Baker, Darek Baker, Democrat, Doug Blaze, Howard H. Baker Jr., Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, Howard Henry Baker Jr., Huntsville, Japan, Jimmy G. Cheek, Joe DiPietro, Joy Dirksen, Lamar Alexander, Matt Murray, Nancy Kassebaum, Panama Canal Treaty, public policy, public servant, Republican, Ronald Reagan, Senate, Senate majority leader, Senate minority leader, Senate Watergate Committee, Sept. 11, terrorist attacks, The Great Conciliator, U.S. ambassador, U.S. Navy, University of Tennessee, Watergate, Watergate hearings, White House

Girl Scouts host Japanese GS troop from sister city

Posted at 8:08 pm May 12, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Girl Scouts Pancake Breakfast

From left to right, Oak Ridge Girl Scouts Jordan Oxendine, Becca Bahl, Ahna Wurm, and Zaeleigh Holbrook invite everyone to support the Girl Scouts Pancake Breakfast on Saturday. (Submitted photo)

 

Submitted

Daisy, Brownie, Junior, Cadette, Senior and Ambassador Girl Scouts invite the community to their Pancake Breakfast on Saturday, May 17. The event will be held at Aubrey’s, 481 S. Illinois Ave. from 8 to 10 a.m.

Guests will be greeted with “Brownie Smiles” and will enjoy stacks of fresh pancakes, scrambled eggs, and bacon. Special servers are the girl hostesses for the Japanese Girl Scouts from our sister city, Naka, Japan. Twelve Japanese Girl Scouts and leaders will be visiting Oak Ridge from July 28-Aug. 2. During this visit, the Naka girls and their hostesses will camp at GS Camp Tanasi and earn the Secret City Heritage patch.

Pancake breakfast tickets are $5 each. Proceeds benefit the Oak Ridge GS service unit and the Naka Girl Scout visit. To purchase tickets, call (865) 483-3958. Tickets will also be available at the door.

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News Tagged With: Aubrey's, Camp Tanasi, Girls Scouts, Japan, Naka, pancake breakfast, Secret City Heritage, Sister City

Sister City group has April 25 dinner for middle school exchanges with Japan

Posted at 8:56 am April 19, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge Naka-shi Middle School Exchange

Participants in the Oak Ridge/ Naka-shi, Japan 2013 Middle school exchange, frolic in the ocean on the Japanese coast. (Submitted photos)

The Sister City Support Organization, in cooperation with the City of Oak Ridge and Oak Ridge Schools, has sponsored the visit of middle school students to our sister city of Naka-shi, Japan, for 22 years.

In support of the 2014 Middle School exchange, the Sister City Support Organization is hosting a spaghetti supper on Friday, April 25. The supper will be held at the First United Methodist Church from 5:30-8 p.m. Student exchange participants and SCSO board members will don Japanese “happy coats” and kimonos to serve the main course and an array of delicious homemade desserts. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Education, Front Page News, K-12 Tagged With: City of Oak Ridge, Japan, Jerry Luckmann, middle school exchange, middle school students, Naka-shi, Oak Ridge Schools, SCSO, Sister City Support Organization, spaghetti supper

Chief engineer for U.S. ITER at ORNL to give project overview on Tuesday

Posted at 9:21 am March 10, 2014
By Oak Ridge Today Staff Leave a Comment

Brad Nelson

Brad Nelson

The chief engineer for the U.S. ITER Project at Oak Ridge National Laboratory will give a project overview on Tuesday.

Brad Nelson is the chief engineer for the U.S. International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor Project. His Tuesday talk will be the first in a series of three presentations on the U.S. ITER project to Friends of ORNL, with Hans Vogel speaking on April 8 and Graeme Murdoch speaking on May 13.

The New Yorker published a story on ITER in its March 3 edition titled “A Star in a Bottle” by Raffi Khatchadourian.

Nelson’s Tuesday presentation during a Friends of ORNL luncheon lecture starts at noon at the University of Tennessee Resource Center in Oak Ridge. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Front Page News, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Science Tagged With: A Star in a Bottle, Brad Nelson, Cadarache, China, European Union, France, Friends of ORNL, fusion, fusion device, fusion power, Graeme Murdoch, Hans Vogel, hardware, India, International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor, ITER, Japan, Korea, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Office of Science, ORNL, Raffi Khatchadourian, Russia, The New Yorker, U.S. Department of Energy, U.S. ITER, United States, University of Tennessee Resource Center

Friendship Bell closed while city makes repairs

Posted at 12:21 pm December 3, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Friendship Bell Repairs

A symbol of the friendship between Oak Ridge and Japan, the 20-year-old Friendship Bell at Alvin K. Bissell Park is closed while the city make repairs to the structure holding up the bell.

A 20-year-old symbol of the friendship between Oak Ridge and Japan is closed while the city makes structural repairs.

The Friendship Bell at Alvin K. Bissell Park was designed in Oak Ridge and cast in Japan in 1993. It’s mounted inside a wooden pavilion at the park in central Oak Ridge, but there is some rot in the wooden columns holding up the bell, said Jon Hetrick, Oak Ridge Parks Division supervisor. A structural engineer and an architect are evaluating the pavilion’s condition, and the city is waiting for their report.

Oak Ridge and Japan have a history dating back 70 years, when Manhattan Project production sites in the Secret City enriched uranium for the first atomic bomb used in war. That bomb, code-named “Little Boy,” was detonated over Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, three days before a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki and just days before World War II ended. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Alvin K. Bissell Park, atomic bomb, Friendship Bell, Hiroshima, Japan, Jon Hetrick, Manhattan Project, Nagasaki, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge Community Foundation, World War II

Chinese supercomputer still No. 1, ORNL’s Titan No. 2

Posted at 9:00 am November 18, 2013
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Titan Supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Titan at Oak Ridge National Laboratory stayed at No. 2 in a Top 500 ranking of the world’s most powerful supercomputers released Monday morning. (Photo courtesy of ORNL)

A Chinese supercomputer kept its top ranking, and Titan at Oak Ridge National Laboratory stayed at No. 2 in a Top 500 ranking of the world’s most powerful supercomputers released Monday morning.

The top two spots were unchanged from the semiannual rankings released five months ago in June, when Tianhe-2, a supercomputer developed by China’s National University of Defense Technology, bumped Titan from the top spot. The ORNL supercomputer had been named No. 1 one year ago.

The rankings released Monday at the SC13 conference in Denver, Colo., said Tianhe-2 is capable of performing 33.86 petaflops. That’s 33.86 quadrillion calculations per second, on what is known as a Linpack benchmark test.

Titan is a Cray XK7 system that achieved 17.59 petaflops. Titan is one of the most energy-efficient systems on the list, consuming a total of 8.21 megawatts and delivering 2.143 gigaflops per watt, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Science, Top Stories Tagged With: AICS, Argonne National Laboratory, Austin, BlueGene/Q, China, Computer Science and Mathematics Division, Cray XC30, Cray XK7, CSCS, Europe, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Fujitsu, Germany, IBM BlueGene/Q, Intel Xeon Phi, Jack Dongarra, Japan, JUQEEN, K computer, Kobe, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Leibniz Rechenzentrum, Linpack benchmark, Lugano, Mira, National University of Defense Technology, NVIDIA GPU, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, Piz Daint, RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science, SC13, Sequoia, Stampede, supercomputer, SuperMUC, Swiss National Supercomputing Centre, Switzerland, Texas Advanced Computing Center, Thom Mason, Tianhe-2, Titan, Top10, Top500, U.S. Department of Energy, University of Tennessee, University of Texas, Vulcan

OREPA commemorates Nagasaki bombing with peace lantern ceremony

Posted at 5:03 pm August 9, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Ralph Hutchison

Ralph Hutchison

The Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance will commemorate the bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, on Aug. 9, 1945, with a peace lantern ceremony this evening at Sequoyah Hills Park in Knoxville.

The ceremony begins at 8 p.m. and will include Buddhist drumming and chanting, traditional Japanese folk dancing, music, shadow puppets, and, at 8:45pm, the launching of peace lanterns, a press release said. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: bombing, Japan, Nagasaki, nuclear weapons, Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, OREPA, peace lantern ceremony, Ralph Hutchison, Sequoyah Hills Park

Y-12 protesters work to change nuclear policy, prevent another Hiroshima

Posted at 3:27 pm August 6, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

OREPA Peace Cranes at Y-12

Sharon O’Hara-Bruce of Lake Orion, Mich., ties a peace crane to a fence set up in front of the Y-12 National Security during a Tuesday morning ceremony recalling the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, near the end of World War II.

A few dozen demonstrators from across the eastern United States gathered near the Y-12 National Security Complex on Tuesday morning to remember the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, near the end of World War II 68 years ago.

Some traveled hundreds of miles by bicycle and car to get to Oak Ridge, where they questioned the nation’s current energy policy and preparations for nuclear war. Four riders arrived after a 458-mile, nine-day “Bikes Not Bombs” trip from Cincinnati to Oak Ridge.

“It’s consciousness-raising and concern for the priorities of our society,” said Tim Kraus of Cincinnati, part of the support group for the “Bikes Not Bombs” trip, which was organized by Footprints for Peace. “What we’re doing is not sustainable.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: atomic bomb, Bikes Not Bombs, East Bear Creek Road, Footprints for Peace, Hiroshima, Japan, Jim Toren, Little Boy, Nagasaki, Names and Remembrance, nuclear war, nuclear weapon, Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, Ralph Hutchison, Scarboro Road, Sharon O'Hara-Bruce, Tim Kraus, uranium, uranium processing facility, World War II, Y-12 National Security Complex

Tuesday morning ceremony near Y-12 recalls Hiroshima bombing

Posted at 12:14 pm August 5, 2013
By John Huotari 1 Comment

OREPA Protest at Y-12 National Security Complex

A Tuesday morning ceremony in front of the Y-12 National Security Complex will recall the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, near the end of World War II. Y-12 enriched uranium for the bomb. Pictured above are protesters at last year’s annual event.

A Tuesday morning ceremony near the Y-12 National Security Complex will recall the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, on Aug. 6, 1945, during World War II, organizers said.

The annual event at the front of Y-12 includes a Names and Remembrance Ceremony. It’s sponsored by the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance.

Organizers say they will “raise voices in solidarity with survivors of the bombing of Hiroshima who say, ‘Never Again!’” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Federal, Government, Nonprofits, Top Stories, Y-12 National Security Complex Tagged With: bombing, calutrons, Fat Man, highly enriched uranium, Hiroshima, Japan, Little Boy, Nagasaki, Names and Remembrance Ceremony, Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance, OREPA, plutonium, Ralph Hutchison, World War II, Y-12 National Security Complex

Chinese supercomputer bumps ORNL’s Titan from No. 1 spot

Posted at 12:32 pm June 17, 2013
By John Huotari 3 Comments

Tianhe-2 Lights

Lights on the Chinese Tianhe-2 supercomputer, which has a theoretical peak that is twice as fast as the Titan supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. (Photo courtesy Jack Dongarra)

A Chinese supercomputer has bumped the Titan supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory from the No. 1 spot on a semiannual ranking of the world’s most powerful supercomputers.

The Tianhe-2, which was developed by China’s National University of Defense Technology, is capable of 33.86 petaflops, or more than 33,000 trillion calculations per second.

Now ranked No. 2, Titan was able to perform 17,000 trillion calculations per second, or 17.59 petaflops, according to the list published in November. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Science, Top Stories Tagged With: 2013 International Supercomputing Conference, AICS, Argonne National Laboratory, Asia, BlueGene/Q, China, Cray XK7, DOE, Europe, France, Fujitsu, Germany, Guangzho, IBM, Intel Xeon IvyBridge, Jack Dongarra, Japan, K computer, Kobe, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Leipzig, Milky Way-2, Mira, National Supercomputer Center, National University of Defense Technology, NVIDIA, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, ORNL, petaflops, RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science, Sequoia, supercomputer, Tianhe-1A, Tianhe-2, Titan, Top500, U.S. Department of Energy, United Kingdom, United States, University of Tennessee, Xeon Phi

City historian to discuss last eight days of World War II

Posted at 11:18 pm March 31, 2013
By John Huotari 1 Comment

Bill Wilcox and Clifton Truman Daniel

Oak Ridge City Historian Bill Wilcox, left, with Clifton Truman Daniel, grandson of President Harry S. Truman, who made the decision to use atomic bombs on Japan at the end of World War II. Wilcox helped Daniel with background information for his new book on the decision to use the bombs. (Submitted photo)

Oak Ridge City Historian Bill Wilcox will discuss the last eight days of World War II during a presentation next week.

It starts at 7 p.m. Thursday, April 11, at the Wildcat Den at the Midtown Community Center.

“Most Oak Ridgers know the story of Oak Ridge’s founding in 1942 as part of the Manhattan Project and about how the uranium 235 for the world’s first atomic bomb used in warfare, ‘Little Boy,’ helped end World War II,” said a press release from the Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association. “Helped is correct. The two atomic bombs really did help, but even after Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was no agreement in Japan’s ruling circle on surrender.” [Read more…]

Filed Under: Community, Nonprofits, Top Stories Tagged With: Bill Wilcox, Emperor, Japan, Japanese Supreme Council, Little Boy, Manhattan Project, Midtown Community Center, Oak Ridge Heritage and Preservation Association, ORHPA, surrender, World War II

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Classifieds

Availability of the draft environmental assessment for off-site depleted uranium manufacturing (DOE/EA-2252)

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announces the … [Read More...]

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AVAILABILITY OF THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT FOR THE OFFSITE HOUSING OF THE Y-12 DEVELOPMENT … [Read More...]

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