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| 1998 Darwin Award | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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THOMPSON, MANITOBA, CANADA. Telephone relay company
night watchman Edward Baker, 31, was killed early Christmas morning by excessive microwave
radiation exposure. He was apparently attempting to keep warm next to a telecommunications
feed-horn. Baker had been suspended on a safety violation once last year, according to
Northern Manitoba Signal Relay spokesperson Tanya Cooke. She noted that Baker's earlier
infraction was for defeating a safety shut-off switch and entering a restricted
maintenance catwalk in order to stand in front of the microwave dish. He had told
coworkers that it was the only way he could stay warm during his twelve-hour shift at the
station, where winter temperatures often dip to forty below zero. Microwaves can heat
water molecules within human tissue in the same way that they heat food in microwave
ovens. For his Christmas shift, Baker reportedly brought a twelve pack of beer and a
plastic lawn chair, which he positioned directly in line with the strongest microwave
beam. Baker had not been told about a tenfold boost in microwave power planned that night
to handle the anticipated increase in holiday long-distance calling traffic. Baker's body
was discovered by the daytime watchman, John Burns, who was greeted by an odor he mistook
for a Christmas roast he thought Baker must have Click here to go to the seven runners up to the 1998 Darwin Award.
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