42
DR.
CDR.

BUGHER:

4

These people did bathe rather promptly

CONARD:

Some of them did, but the majority of

them did not bathe until they vere/contaminated on the
destroyers on fe way back to Rongelap.

DR. BUGHER:

The Japanese mostly bathe in teacups

or rice bowls, and their immediate symptoms tended to be
rather severe.

They continued.

So that those who went to

sleep had some trouble getting their eyelids open.

They

Alderson Reporting Company
Washington, D. C.

were pretty well stuck together.
10

CDR. CONARD:

11

DR. BUGHER:

12

We had no reports of that kind.
It would bear on how much of the

calcium oxide had been passed through a hydrated phase_to

13

carbonate.

The carbonate in itself whould not be irritating

14

in the slightest.

DR. DUNNING:

15

Wouldn't the time between the exposurd

16

and the onset of the burns be so great to speak against them

17

being chemical burns?

18

CDR, CONARD:

19

DR. BUGHER:

20
21

Yes.
The lesions appearing two two weeks

later are purely beta rays.
events.

I am thinking of the immediate

The Japanese fishermen were considerably closer

22

to the detonation site than the Rongelap people.

23

if they were where they said they were,

ARC

At least,

they were decidedly

closer.
Bepartic ts

eg
tray

4
:
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tortar
His

ARCHIVES

DR. BOND:

Dr. Bugher, when Dr. Zsuzuki was in

Select target paragraph3