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“appears willing to pay $25,000 as com-

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pensation for radiation-related illness and

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$100,000 in death benefits.

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But the question persists: how much

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is enough? If ‘Rongelap had been a com‘munity near the atomic testing ground in
Nevada, some attorneys argue, the settle-

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ments would be far higher. Others ques-

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tion whether a big money payment would
‘be meaningful, given the depressed econo‘my ‘of the Marshalls, or even desirable.
‘Some individuals might become wealthy
wand certain atolls would get a permanent :

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subsidy, but what would this mean to the

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Another Bikini?
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As these questions are thrashed out,
the rest of the world starts to watch. The
“problems in the Northern Marshalls begin
to look jike

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first-class human rights

“Life is starting all over, said Chief Johones Peter (above), the leader cf the Enewetak people. Food,

issue. (The Russians appear to be aware

water and bosic cmenities are short on faptan, the initial “residence island” for the returning islenders.

Communist bloc wonder if the Soviet's

ment.

of this, but some scientists outside the

Yet, residents seem willing to wait and see whal the massive clean up effort will do to their environ-

‘nuclear test site in Siberia didn’t also
involve migrations and contamination.)
The kind of people who have to
think about nuclear war or atomic devices
getting into the hands of terrorists or:
unstable Third World nations look to the
Northem Marshalls as possibly being a

scene from the future. Widespread radio-

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Encwetak's nuclear tests were detonated here at Ground
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desolate crater is filled with crystal-clear Pacific waters. A sign, written in English and Marshallese, for-

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