and two members of the Committee reciprocated by singing or
chanting in their own languages.

The Committee was then taken on

a tour of the Old-Age Home and found it to be one of the best such
facilities it had visited.

It was new and airy, the rooms and corridors

were sunny and the accommodations were clean and comfortable.

Parti-

cularly, because of its location, it was also quiet and restful.
The Sister explained that 80% of the cost of the Home is from the
central government and the rest from donations.

They had accommodations

for 150, with 50 on the waiting list and 100 beds planned.

‘The tour

included visiting the living quarters, therapy rooms, nandicraft work
areas, auditorium, and cafeteria.

At the end of the tour, the residents

and staff sang a song for the Committee as it boarded the bus for the
return trip to Nagasaki.
4A-BOMB MUSEUM
As in Hiroshima, it is difficult to imagine today that Nagasaki
once reeled under the blows of an atomic bomb.
Nagasaki is modern and picturesque.

A seaport city,

‘There are great shipways within

the city's limits and the sight of half of a 300,000-ton tanker sliding
down the ways into the sea was eloquent testimony to the rebirth of
Nagasaki from its own ashes.

As in Hirgshima, uowever, there are still

reminders.
Located within view of the hypocenter, the Nagasaki A-Bomb
Museum contains the same terrible evidence of the terrible destruction
and death caused by the bomb;

[O14bbT

oarticularly poignant and ironic were

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