 
Kodak 
may be going under,  but apparently they could have started their own nuclear war if they  wanted, just six years ago. Down in a basement in Rochester, NY, they  had a nuclear reactor loaded with 3.5 pounds of enriched uranium—the  same kind they use in atomic warheads. But why did Kodak have a hidden  nuclear reactor loaded with weapons-grade uranium? And how did they get  permission to own it, let alone install it in a basement in the middle  of a densely populated city? 
 Nobody really knows. Kodak  officials now admit that they never made any public announcement about  it. In fact, nobody in the city—officials, police or firemen—or in the  state of New York or anywhere else knew about it until it was recently  leaked by an ex-employee. Its existence and whereabouts were purposely  kept vague and only a few engineers and Federal employees really knew  about the project.
 It's extremely strange that Kodak  managed to get something like this. According to Miles Pomper, from the  Center for Nonproliferation Studies in Washington. it's "such an odd  situation because private companies just don't have this material."  While 3.5 pounds of weapons-grade uranium is not enough to create a  nuclear bomb, illegal arm merchants are seeking small amounts like this  to put them for sale in the black market—which is why the United States  has such a tight control on this material. The government doesn't want  Iran or al-Qaeda getting their hands all over the atomic candy for  obvious reasons.
 Kodak's purpose for the reactor  wasn't sinister: they used it to check materials for impurities as well  as neutron radiography testing. The reactor, a Californium Neutron Flux  multiplier (CFX) was acquired in 1974 and loaded with three and a half  pounds of enriched uranium plates placed around a californium-252 core.
 The reactor was installed in a  closely guarded, two-foot-thick concrete walled underground bunker in  the company's headquarters, where it was fed tests using a pneumatic  system. According to the company, no employees were ever in contact with  the reactor. Apparently, it was operated by atomic fairies and  unicorns.
 It wasn't until 2006, well after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, that it was decided to dismantle it.
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