The plates and dishes, I think, are called 'Fiestaware', and you can indeed find them on eBay. They are often bright orange, and the color is sometimes called 'radioactive', but I think in reference to the strong color, not to the fact that they are ACTUALLY radioactive.
I'm going to go on record as being skeptical of the Radioactive Boy Scout. I remember some sci.chem discussions a while back where many people were skeptical of the story. Supposedly, nobody could find ANY documentation of the affair other than the book (and Harper's magazine article, I think) written by the original author. (Other sources got all their info from the first one.)
Some of the claims the scout made seemed implausible, I was particularly skeptical of the claim to have made large amounts of radioactivity (not just separating sources from e.g. smoke detectors, but actually breeding it), and some other posters, who said that they were familiar with thermite reactions (I'm not, I've never performed one) said that the scout's account of such sounded bogus.
My personal guess is that the scout did do lots of chemistry experiments involving radioactivity, but exaggerated a bunch when talking to the author of these reports.