m !, . . ,, ~. Ascertainsourcesof informationleakage,if any. 2. Adjust classification grades when and if the state of public information so indicated. For the purposes of summary, press coverage may be divided intc: Articles repeating or amplifying official releases; articles speculating as to the time of the test and articlesdealingwith conjectures as to the nature of the experiments. The first group ded- m with authorized information are of no moment here. }!ewspaperdiscussion centering on the exact time of the tests did not succeed in approximating the dates of the test. The most reveal- ing statements on this point appeared during the first week of Aprfi. correspondent, The New York Herald Tribune, through its ‘l!ashington reported on 6 Aprilthat “importantnew developmentsin atomic weapons will be demonstratedsoon to members of the Congressional Atomic Energy Committee who have been invited to fly out to the new provingground at Eniwetokfor the occasion.ll No specific time was mentioned. However, on 2 and 3 April, the ‘WashingtonPost, the Nashtigton Star, the Balttiore Sun and the Dallas Morning News all carried an Associated Press report from Honolulu stating ‘%hat initial phases of atomic test may have been under way at Wiwetok for two weeks.11 Buck All quoted the Honolulu Advertiserwhose Staff‘l!riter Buchwachhad, on 30Uarch 1948, reportedthe prior departure(7 ~rch 1948) of the USSIJt.McKiriley and the othervesselsfrom Qahu while4 Russianmerchantvesselswere dockedat Honol~u. In none of these reporting was there a sufficientlycloseapproximation of test time, 63 SectionII .* ,.,. .,* a-. ~:

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