Woodbury Student To Help With Japan Nuke Cleanup

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MTSU and Fukushima University students gather for a photo after a May 8 dinner at the Japanese Consul General’s residence in Nashville. From left on the front row are Bridgette Gleaves; Janae Matikke; Yuchun Schmidt, wife of Dr. David Schmidt; Julie Vandel; Yoko Sato, wife of Consul General Hiroshi Sato; Preston Nails; Noiko Mori; Chiaki Shima; Saori Endo; and Consul Megumi Osugi Stepien; and kneeling in front, Keiko Halbert, executive assistant to the Consul General. On the back row from left are Hisonori Maeda, consul for economic affairs; Mark Wester; Dr. Doug Heffington, director of MTSU’s Global Studies Program; Dr. David Schmidt, director of MTSU’s Office of International Affairs; General Consul Hiroshi Sato; Seth Graves, Japanese speech contest winner from MTSU; Justin Bingham; Caitlin Mayo; Takia Richardson; Kaitlyn Huppmann; and Deputy Consul General Shigenobu Kobayashi. (photo submitted)

MURFREESBORO — A contingent of 10 students and two professors from Middle Tennessee State University will leave Nashville early Monday, June 4, to participate in the cleanup and rebuilding mission in Fukushima, Japan.
 
The group includes Woodbury’s Caitlin Mayo.
 
On March 11, 2011, an earthquake registering 9.0 on the Richter scale created a tsunami that killed nearly 16,000 people and left more than 3,000 missing on the main island of Honshu. In addition, ocean waves engulfed the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, sending three reactors into meltdown.
 
“MTSU has assessed the current situation and consulted with Fukushima University,” says Dr. David Schmidt, vice provost for international affairs. “At no time while engaged in program-related activities will students be in areas where the U.S. government recommends its citizens avoid travel.”
 
The triple catastrophe left behind an estimated 23 million tons of debris in the hardest-hit coastal areas of Iwate, Miyagi and Fukushima prefectures alone. The Japanese government announced Feb. 21 that the country has cleaned up only five percent of the rubble more than a year later.
 
The MTSU students will hear presentations from Fukushima University students, work with other volunteers to clear debris and prepare meals in the Soma district. At the program’s conclusion, they will exchange observations with the Fukushima students.
 
Not only are the MTSU students intrigued by the opportunity to witness a national disaster firsthand, but they are compelled to help by persistent images of the damaged lives left behind.
 
“I remember a Japanese woman crying over her lost family member at a function I went to in Nashville,” says Preston Nalls, a mass-communication major from Franklin. “All I could do was just watch … as other Japanese comforted her. I didn’t know her, so although I felt compelled to say something, I just clenched my fist and grieved for her from afar.”
 
“Sure, we are only going to Fukushima, but that will resonate all over Japan,” adds Justin Bingham, a liberal-studies major from Murfreesboro. “So, in a way, we 10 students are going to help an entire nation. That’s something worth smiling about.”
 
Each student will pay a fee of $1,000 to cover all instruction fees, lodging and international airfare from Nashville to Japan. The group is slated to return June 15.
 
This education-abroad program is a joint effort of MTSU International Affairs and Fukushima University with support from the Japanese Ministry of Education. For more information, contact the MTSU Office of International Affairs at 615-904-8190 or Schmidt at david.schmidt@mtsu.edu.

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June 01, 2012 at 10:39am
I won't question the noble intentions of this endeavor but I will question the health safety of the students.

“At no time while engaged in program-related activities will students be in areas where the U.S. government recommends its citizens avoid travel.” as reported in this article.

We should always believe what the government says?

Anyone who has followed the non-mainstream media and even some Japanese reports knows that the Fukushima disaster has released many times more radiation than Chernobyl and it continues with no end in sight.

My opinion is that this is potentially a very dangerous situation for the students. One where the effects would not be seen for years.

I wish them well.
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