acy"Shy hy Q 246 ‘ SUTINGTON =OST | , ln NX . - Me KT Sl ococ ct "og hoe de SATURDAY, Mey €, 1965 ~ UT oN LLY — ~ TT \ Nm oo page And {o & mo area iee Noe SL LEGS — “TET ee TNT . oT Te Poe Tee ee eet Jiems a i et ~~ CLE a tt boone -CHICAGS, May 7 (UPD—A]Saipan, wrote on their findings medics! report said today thatiin the Journal of the Amerifaliout atomic victims tests Milscarriages at the Bikinijcan suffered and more} a Medical Association. They studied the effects of slowerio2 Marsheil Islands residents: crowih rate than normal dur-/10 years after they were acing later years. cidentally exposed to fallout t The report also said the vic-lradiation. They also surveyed tims’ general health and death a group of relatives who were rate have been about the isame as for Bikini residents,not on Rongelap Island at che iwho were not present at the,time of the detonation and lttime of the 1954 tests. |who |later returned. It said no definite radiation, Benign effects were noted on birt |were m ‘ iraic, aging, leukemia, nancy or genotype. ; malig- thyroid removed h! a ‘teen-a ze Dr. Robert A. Conard, ofiyears from Rongelap aficr nodules three, girls exposure, 10, they \Bro okhaven Nations! Lubora-(said. No nodules were detect‘tory, Upton, N.Y., and Arobatijed in 75 unexposed children. \ Hicking, of the Trust Terri-/This year, three more cases af tory of the Pacific islands, nodules have appeared, | The report said other possi‘ble residual radiation effects included slight retardation of Statural growth and bone ma- turation in boys exposed at less than five years of age;) ‘greater incidence of miscarri-' ‘ages in exposed women during! the first four years; plete recovery of incom-! some pe-: ripheral blood elements: and increased nevus-like (skin growth) lesions in previous beta radiation skin burn areas. The report said there were 13 miscariages in 32 births among the exposed women,: and only 8 in 38 births among! the unexposed women. | =e “=r kz re ne