FIELD REPORT
Even without the recent spy scandals,
fires, protests, and nuclear bomb data found behind the photocopier,
Los Alamos is one of the most interesting places in America.
Haunting native ruins and cliff dwellings abut nuclear bomb
technical areas; Robert Oppenheimer's house lurks behind shrubbery;
and engineers full of secrets stand in line with their arugula
at the grocery store. And then there is the Black Hole. Field
Researcher Charles Barile filed this report on a visit to
this locally famous feature of remarkable Los Alamos, New
Mexico.
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Its impossible to avoid the pull
when you come within sight of the Black Hole of Los
Alamos.
CLUI photo
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The advertisement in the Northern New Mexico Thrifty Nickel
Want Ad newspaper features a weekly listing for 'The Black
Hole - An Unusual Place.' Owned and operated by Ed Grothus,
76, since 1969, the ad refers to a surplus emporium he has
dubbed 'The Eighth Wonder of the World.' 'The Black Hole'
is a 25,000 square foot discount priced mecca that offers
for sale electronic and mechanical equipment that spans the
entire history of the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL).
The LANL, located in close proximity to 'The Black Hole,'
is responsible for the design, development and safekeeping
of the United States nuclear arsenal and is spread over 43
square miles and houses fifteen nuclear reactors including
the oldest operating fission unit in the country.
The surplus detritus of the LANL accumulated
at 'The Black Hole,' is combination junkyard and museum, overflows
both a former Shop'N' Cart grocery store and an Evangelical
Lutheran Church and spills onto property that covers five
acres. Grothus has collected, purchased and bartered a dramatic
array of surplus, production overrun and never used LANL paraphernalia.
Among the unique artifacts on display are the 1939 model Philco
radio purportedly owned by J. Robert Oppeneimer (blocking
the door of the former market's walk-in freezer), several
of the first-ever commercially manufactured adding machines
that were used by Enrico Fermi and other top physicists for
the preliminary calculations in creating the original atomic
bomb, drawers full of authentic 40's era brass badges used
by lower level 'B' class lab employees for gate clearance,
and motion picture cameras designed to record early bomb blasts
that exposed one million 'frames' per second. More recent
vintage stock includes nearly every model of IBM Selectric
typewriter as well as 80's and 90's lab components including
then state-of-the-art oscilloscopes and laser assemblies.
Creating and constantly expanding this vast,
moldering collection has made Grothus, a devoted 'peacenik,'
something of an embarrassment to the local weapons-based community.
A 51-year resident of Los Alamos, Grothus spent 20 years as
an LANL machinist in the Weapons Group measuring the ultra-precise
conventional explosive forces necessary to detonate the early
fission devices. Undergoing an "epiphany" in 1969
at the height of the Viet Nam conflict, he has spent the ensuing
years as the self-appointed conscience of Los Alamos, railing
vociferously against the creation and use of nuclear weapons.
Most recently arrested (along with anti-bomb activists Martin
Sheen and Dr. Helen Caldicott) in August 1999 for a rally
that trespassed onto lab property, Grothus' philosophy is
encapusulated in his constant, mantra-like insistence that
"one bomb is too many" and his fervent hope for
nuclear disarmament. "Truman's biggest mistake was not
approving the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,"
Grothus expounds, "It was when he changed the name of
the War Department to the Department of Defense. Who can argue
with approving funding for defense?"
Considering the irony that Grothus makes his
living upon the excess of the laboratory whose mission he
radically opposes, he explains that "tons" of barely-used
computers, testing equipment and medical-related supplies
have been donated to ill-equipped and poorly funded university
science departments nationwide and to technologically deprived
countries such as Costa Rica. "Los Alamos is so damn
rich and overfunded that it just seems right to spread this
stuff around a bit and take care of the little guys who could
never get this kind of high-quality equipment."
Taking stock of the enormous mounds of materiel
from the front door of 'The Black Hole,' Grothus pointed out
a specially cast, never used lucite block measuring 4' x 8'
x 6' earmarked for testing gamma ray radiation shielding and
manufactured at the cost of $1 per square inch. Reflecting
on it and other enormous piles of lab discards including a
late 50's era early computer punch tape keyboard and scores
of file cabinets secured with bank vault style combination
locks, he shook his head and lamented: "Why couldn't
God have made me a sports fan?"
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Grothus and period
Smith Corona adding machines used by Enrico Fermi for
atomic bomb yield calculations.
CLUI photo
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(NOTE: The author's
visit to 'The Black Hole' occurred on Thursday, May 4, 2000,
the first day of the devesting fire that - informed sources
report - very nearly reached barrels of low-level radiation
and chemical waste at the Los Alamos National Laboratory's
Technical Area 54. While Grothus guided visitors across his
property early that afternoon, he pointed out the initial
flames and smoke of the prescribed burn on an adjacent ridge
and contemptously (and presciently) derided the U.S. Forest
Service policy of 'controlled fires.' Although nearly 300
homes were lost and the fire destroyed a handful of the Lab's
historic buildings from the 1940's where parts of the first
atomic bomb were assembled, 'The Black Hole' survived intact
and continues its daily sales operations.)