eJournal USA: Foreign Policy Agenda

Duck and Cover

Starring Bert the Turtle

Today's Nuclear Equation

CONTENTS
About This Issue
U.S. Firmly Committed to NPT
Controlling the World's Most Dangerous Weapon
How to Strengthen the NPT
Taking Legislative Aim at Weapons of Mass Destruction
Nuclear Terrorism: Weapons for Sale or Theft?
Libya Renounces Weapons of Mass Destruction
After Iran - Keeping Nuclear Energy Peaceful
North Korea: A Rogue State Outside the NPT Fold
New Players on the Scene: A.Q. Khan and the Nuclear Black Market
Not With a Whimper: Visions of Mass Destruction in Fiction and Film
Duck and Cover
Bibliography
Internet Resources
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In 1951, the newly established Federal Civil Defense Administration (FCDA) commissioned production of a film to instruct children how to react in the event of a nuclear attack. The result was Duck and Cover, a film lasting nine minutes that was shown in schools throughout the United States during the 1950s and beyond. It featured a cartoon character, Bert the Turtle, who "was very alert" and "knew just what to do: duck and cover." At the sound of an alarm or the flash of a brilliant light signaling a nuclear explosion, Bert would instantly tuck his body under his shell. Below, in a photo from November 21,1951, sixth-grade students and their teacher at Public School 152 in the Queens borough of New York City, act out a scene depicted in the film by crouching under or beside their desks.

People practicing for an attack
(Dan Grossi, AP World Wide Photos)
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(Sal Veder, AP World Wide Photos)

Other FCDA initiatives of the early 1950s led to creation of the Emergency Broadcast System, food stockpiles, civil defense classes, and public and private bomb shelters. At right, a mother and her children practice running to their steel-walled fallout shelter in the back yard of their Sacramento, California, home on October 5, 1961.

The FCDA commissioned other civil defense films, but Duck and Cover became the most famous of the genre. In 2004, the U.S. Library of Congress included it in the National Film Registry of "culturally, historically or aesthetically" significant motion pictures, a distinction it now shares with such feature-film classics as Birth of a Nation, Casablanca, and Schindler's List.

To see the Duck and Cover on your computer screen, access this Internet site:
http://usinfo.state.gov/journals/itps/0305/ijpe/fullversion.htm

Today's Nuclear Equation