Press Release 
          
          
          
            
               
                |  | League 
                    of Women VotersOf Ocean County, NJ
 
 | 
               
                |  
                    For Immediate ReleaseFebruary 2008
 |  
                    CONTACT: Gail Marsh Saxer(732) 914-0154
 gmsaxer@comcast.net
 | 
               
                | “Pros and Cons of the Public Health Effects of Radiation 
                    at Oyster Creek”
 Alec Baldwin, Actor/Activist to 
                    Address Ocean County Citizens
 | 
               
                |  | 
            
          
          
             
              | WHO: | League of Women Voters of Ocean County and the 
                  Ocean County Library | 
             
              | WHEN: | Wednesday, February 20, 2008 at 6:30 p.m. | 
             
              | WHERE: | Toms River Branch of the Ocean County Library, 
                  Mancini Hall, 101 Washington Street, Toms River, NJ | 
             
              | WHAT: | Pros and Cons of the Public Health Effects 
                  of Radiation at Oyster Creek | 
          
         
         The League of Women Voters of Ocean County and the Ocean 
          County Library will cosponsor a Community Dialogue about radiation emission 
          at the Oyster Creek Nuclear Plant and its effect on the health and safety 
          of Ocean County citizens. 
         Confirmed panelists are Joseph J. Mangano, MPH, MBA, Executive 
          Director of the Radiation and Public Health Project in New York, Dr. 
          Donald B. Louria, Professor and Chairman Emeritus of the Department 
          of Preventive Medicine Community Health at UMDNJ in Newark and Alec 
          Baldwin, actor/activist.
         Also invited are Dr.Letty Goodman Lutzker, Chief of Nuclear 
          Medicine, Saint Barnabas Medical Center, Livingston, NJ, representatives 
          from the Nuclear Energy Institute in Washington, DC, from New Jersey 
          Affordable, Clear, Reliable Energy Coalition (NJACRE), the lobbying 
          firm hired by Exelon, from AmerGen (Oyster Creek Nuclear Plant,) from 
          the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC, and from CASEnergy, a Washington 
          DC organization that supports nuclear power, from the Health Physics 
          Society and from the American Nuclear Society. To date, none of theses 
          organizations have a staff person available to participate in the Community 
          Dialogue.
        
           
            | WHY: | Since the atomic age began, there has been 
                considerable debate about the health risks of low-dose exposures 
                to atomic bomb test fallout and emissions from nuclear reactors. 
                With advances in research technology, studies document increased 
                rates of childhood cancer near nuclear facilities; confirm the 
                previous underestimation of risks by as much as 10 times; and 
                the elevated risk to fetus and infants. Past 
                studies were based on results of testing adult males and did not 
                include women, pregnant women or fetuses and infants. This group 
                is the most vulnerable. | 
        
        
          Information on the Speakers
        Alec Baldwin 
          is a graduate of New York University, and an accomplished actor in film, 
          theatre, and television. He has long been involved in public issues, 
          including health and the environment.
          For nearly a decade, he has devoted much time to the issue of radiation 
          health risks. He was a Board member of the Long Island-based Standing 
          for Truth About Radiation, which helped in the permanent closing of 
          nuclear reactors at the Brookhaven National Laboratory.
          Mr. Baldwin has been a long-time supporter of the Radiation and Public 
          Health Project research group, especially in its study of radioactive 
          Strontium-90 in baby teeth. He has taken a particular interest in the 
          Oyster Creek nuclear reactor and has made numerous visits to the Garden 
          State to speak out publicly against the hazards of keeping it running.
         Joseph J. 
          Mangano, MPH, MBA, is a health researcher and Executive Director 
          of the Radiation and Public Health Project (RPHP), which conducts research 
          and education on health risks of nuclear reactors. Mr. Mangano has served 
          RPHP since 1989. He has published 23 articles in medical journals that 
          have been reviewed and approved for publication by experts. He is author 
          of the book “Low Level Radiation and Immune System Damage: An 
          Atomic Era Legacy” (Lewis 1998), and co-author of “The Enemy 
          Within: Nuclear Reactors” (Four Walls Eight Windows 1996). His 
          work has found a consistent pattern of increased cancer rates after 
          nuclear reactors begun operating, and decreased rates after they shut 
          down.
          Mr. Mangano played a major role in the RPHP study of Strontium-90 in 
          baby teeth, the only study ever to examine radioactivity levels in bodies 
          of Americans living near nuclear plants. The study found the highest 
          Sr-90 levels closest to plants, rising levels since the late 1980s, 
          and high levels in children with cancer.
          Mr. Mangano has participated in 20 press conferences and presented testimony 
          to 17 government panels. He has also written 25 editorials in U.S. newspapers 
          in 2006-2007, most of them discussing the health risks of building new 
          nuclear reactors. Because of his efforts, RPHP work has been extensively 
          covered by media including The New York Times, USA Today, CNN, NPR and 
          BBC. He received master’s degrees in public health from the University 
          of North Carolina and in business administration from Fordham University.
        Donald B. Louria, MD 
          is Professor and Chairman Emeritus of the Department of Preventive Medicine 
          and Community Health at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of 
          New Jersey-New Jersey Medical School.
          Dr Louria earned his medical degree at Harvard Medical School and served 
          an internship and residency in Medicine at The New York Hospital in 
          New York City. Before joining UMDNJ, he was Associate Professor in Medicine 
          at Cornell University Medical College and Director of the Infectious 
          Disease Service on the Cornell Division at Bellevue Hospital.
          Dr Louria is a Fellow of the American College of Epidemiology, the Infectious 
          Disease Society of America, the American College of Preventive Medicine, 
          a Master of the American College of Physicians, and a member of the 
          American Society for Clinical Investigation.
          He is recipient of the Rosenthal Foundation Award of the American College 
          of Physicians, the Dennis J. Sullivan Award of the New Jersey Public 
          Health Association, and the New Jersey Governor’s Award.
          Dr Louria’s major research and clinical interests are: fungal 
          infections; superinfection; infections in aging; infections in compromised 
          host; drug abuse; heath promotion-disease prevention; HIV epidemiology. 
          In recent years, as a futurist, he has focused on: the consequences 
          of extraordinary life extension; and the need for systems thinking in 
          our educational system if the society is to thrive.
          Dr Louria’s program of health promotion and disease prevention, 
          the Healthful Life Program, is now law in New Jersey as the Health Wellness 
          Promotion Act. He served two terms as Chair of the Advisory Board to 
          the Act.
          Dr Louria is the author of six books, two short stories, eighty-five 
          chapters in texts or monographs, and over three hundred fifty articles 
          in peer reviewed medical journals.
          Currently, he is Chair of the New Jersey Higher Education Partnership 
          for Sustainability Committee at UMDNJ, and has just submitted a comprehensive 
          energy conservation and environmental protection program to the administration 
          of UMDNJ for implementation. He is a Board member of the Nuclear Policy 
          Research Institute and is now involved in developing a road map for 
          a sustainable energy future in the United States and around the world.
         - end -