- - aft 1 . The three said their law suit was prompted last Aw . '. gust by a recent Energy Research and Development Administration report which said the island was still . “ ' 7a SN HE SAIDTHEY SUFFERFROM a Tack‘of adequate” ° sehools and medical facilities... contaminated by radioactivity. . Earlier reports gave the islands a ‘clean bill and . about 75 residents are back on the atoll. “We realized they (Federal agencies) weren't really ed ee telling us the truth. Then we filed the law suit,” said . Ne Note. The suit asks for, among other things, temporary relocation of the 75 residents, a more thorough studyof © the risks of radiation and immediate medical examina- ’ tions for the 75. Whatdo the three hope for the atolliin the future? : “IT SHOULD BE LIKE BEFORE weleft,” said’ Balos, who wasone year old in 1946. “When we return, it should be like the other atolls in the Pacific.”7.--. . Note said, *“‘We understand the U.S. willnot accom- ‘ modate all our desires for rebuilding the Bikini we ; want. . “We know whatever they give us is what we"re going wow ty howe ' to ge oe tw 4 Kessibuki, at 65 the oldest of the three,said, “The * real Bikini is gone. “Four small islands are completely gone. Some of ' the other islands we used to harvest taro roots are only . reef and coral — no soil on them. “Even though all involved will try their best to rebuild Bikini, it won't be the. same place as.it was be- ° fore.” me 7 + oo . ee “eer wom pcwewnnswes—— Las owe a mee