the remains and pictures of St. Mary in Grief, of St.
John and of the
images of angels at Urakami Cathedral blackened and disfigured by
the heat, radiation and shock of the blast.
ATOMIC DISEASE INSTITUTE, NAGASAKI UNIVERSITY
The Committee met with Dr. Shunzo Okajima, Director of the
Institute.
He explained that of an est*-ated population of 9,000 in
the Nishiyama District, about 500 people had been affected hy fallout.
Three hundred of these had been studied in order to get rrom them a group
of 80 to study.
the soil
He said that there is little radiation remaining in
that low,
although significant amounts of radiation could
still be found in the study group.
ke indicated that this group
showed a higher frequency of chromosome aberrations than a comparison
group.
Although not exposed to direct radiation from the bomb, maxi-
mum exposure was estimated to be about 30 rads.
He said that the
people don't seem to mind the tests and that--relatively speaking--
body burden counts were high, they were very small, in the order of
1/2000th of threshold.
He indicated that his institute
is
preparing
a study entitled "Radioactivity and Fallout Effect Survey, Nishiyama
Residents and Comparison Subjects, Nagasaki," which would be published
within the next several months.
TOKYO
The Special Joint Committee departed
Wednesday, June 28, 1972.
After arriving, it contacted Dr. Kumatori
G2
1014bb8
from Nagasaki for Tokyo on