N ue B ‘Seamen ™ By‘Associated ‘Press:s “Th Bikini:‘Area ea. ham,:Democrat,.NorthCar lina, ranking-=Democrat ~« the~CongressionalyA:tom i ‘Committee,’suidttoday§ t} iin’ Bo27 TOKYO! March"Se:(Tues: -day).—(AP)—A Japanese se* captain said_today that n atomic blast inthe Bikini area March 1 showered .“snow-white ashes” on the United States *“exploded th moath’: ‘a -Hlermonucle: ot moe : “docoPress hanetea,SiStt United States ‘today:bifered ‘was-felt;age. 76alles itn a he ‘test ‘site,85eydaphne , i « TOKYO, Mareh.-17.—The topsflightAmerican"medica} nid‘tg23 Japanese fishermen . “Threedays Jater, - we..dis- rashesfrom .’a:“ supersétret “eovered sour: exposed7 skin 4 | turning reddish -black”.:‘and , \ plistering,”-- said Capt:‘Jean | Tsutsui of the 100-ton Daigo Fukuryu Maru, in an interview with the ‘newspaper Yomiuri. “It was ‘our first realization we were suffering from | atomic radiation burns.” ; One crewman was reported ‘still in serious’ condition at a “Tokyo hospital. \SAW FLASH. Tsutsul“said his *hoat“accidentally ‘wandered ‘into the Bikini atomic test area, ‘ignorant lof the impendifg atomic tests.”. On March -1, Tsutsui said fthere was.a brilliant orange-red astt on the horizon about 80 miles away. “Seven minutes’ later, we heard 8 deafening explosion and then saw in thenext, in- stant a huge mushroomform | in. the” ‘distant * sky.” hesaid. “About 90 minutes after | hee blast. snow-white -aghes oafsthe. bogaasietiing. @ Dam he? aahes Proc be a burned :and: blistered:,ity 'United Statessquelear.ttest-in ithePacific.” = } * 2 74 “ZUhited: States:‘Aiibaseador John :-Aillison: also’ proposed’ a joint, Japanese-American inves- tigation of the. March 1 incident fin’ the”Bikint-Eniwetok:-test region,“F * ae Only one‘of‘the:23 crew mem-! bers was considered in dangerous condition when their boat ‘arrived Sunday,.but all had entered a hospital’ today. Three were added to the “serious”list, but doctors said they expect all 23will live... , : Hydrogen Blast Suspected “The“intensity of the burns— skin blackening and hair falling out—and the men’s story.of the -blast stirred speculation that the March 1 test may have been a ‘thermonuclear (probably hydrogen) explosion, The crew mem-| berg‘reports indicate they were about 80 miles from the blast center. whe United States ‘embassy| said-a-team of three American and :three Japanese -doctors as-. sociated with the Atomic: Bomb, ualty Commission, in.- the’ atom-bombed.city.of Hirgshima: sill treat the- victims. ., <>. ~~ wadllison’s:offer--was_-the first pfficial -comment virom+the < Psont anae tthe,‘Atomie = “ergy? Commisaion* "announced \priefly. in Washington‘that an \“ptomic- ‘device’?adibeen: ex- :ploded in- mid-Pacific,“the first Jin: aseries oftests.“sb llacwee Interest in:“the:‘Jatest tests _ has -focused on;speculation that they, would ‘include a hydrogen bomb, the ‘most powerful explosion.ever set off by man. ‘On Match’ 11,.the AEC said that 28° Americans and 236 naitives. of. the “Marshall - Islands to “were unexpectedly exposed some radiation”, but suffered no burns and.‘‘all: were ;Teported rn well, - - weapon “marly”“ tinies™mor powerfulthanshee explosio test .of Nov.11952 Dali EE. qivs 23 men aboard his fishing boat for two hours. pene “WASHINGTON;-‘Mar 7, Representative.-Du __Japanese,Bost. 44 e +) sath 7 Ee ae ae Sewre shooting up rs eae Burned10 “a Bh hte saan March 17 ded’y elt ‘A‘A-Blast- CASTLE eg an HS sravwasttpentencnnanpsncmmtotninimaarcicsasn” ** Rnited;States: on-the “iacident;.- “-Official”“Discission (Planned , ; Spyedo“NewsAgericy_ said‘te Japanese Foreign Office intends to-take up the.matterwith the United: States:votffoially,Japa- ness officialseat.they.willashe gompensation:“for the’ victims. ¥iQne" nuclear specialist, Prof. Mitsuo ,Takeya,of Rikkyo. Uni-yersity, said the ;believes the blast may +have:been’, ak“hy- drogén-caliber bomb," basing his theory onthebelfef"a regular atomic, bomb :could- not have hurled ‘the radioactive debris 80 miles, He said the ashes. were pulyerized coral,.geet tnt, Th a * Other:sources.Ral othe auphe: ccsoieeal¢ ¥ inne meseer zieToeyork mafth: iSenate-Houseato! "group,hat lannounced last night<that aa United States has.the bomb— “thermonuclear”.is on scientific adjective for this nev 'weapon—and can deliverit any -where in the world... 7 .t Cole said it is a fair assump tion that Russia hasan H-bomb. Experts.‘Astonished Others in a position *to know, but who asked not.te be quoted by name, said a “warm-up” explosion of a hydrogen device in thePacific March 1astonished American stientists with a blast ‘at least 600 times -more power- ful than; the Hiroshima atomic bomb, They said it was three or four times Stronger. than had been expected. The Hiroshima ‘bomb, which caused 60,000 deaths, was-meas- used at,20,000sons. of:‘INT, The March 1-hydrogen explosion was measured:at between 12,000,000 and "14,000,000 A. ons-of:,SENT, it ‘was said-. These sources also ‘said It was tivetimes: greater (than. the_measure@™force pf what was believedto-be-tliefirst. H-bomb test;November:«,- 1952, Other . comparisons ‘with - the 1952 tests variedyie4% 1,Explosion’Described I "Those. ‘who “reported“the’ 600times-Hiroshimaeffect,‘also said | ‘of ‘the March-1 blast: y “#22 ~ The-blast was’set off from: a '150-foot tower-- and shot™a -nu‘clearcloud |more, than-317 Miles ‘into the ‘air, Veeeemales dem The shock ‘swas felt at ‘Kwa ‘Jalein Island; 176 miles away.. There was a fall-out. of -nuclear dust on an inhabited island 330 miles away, but in harmless quantities at that distance. © And, it was added;scientists| how believe they-can’ buildhy: ! drogen weapons -with* an-exPlosive power of 100,000,000 tons of TNT, ‘as compared with -the MO NAN ANN Aa ANN Ae

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