The Michigan Daily-Sataurday, March 29, 1980-Page 7 WW U atomic bomb survivors recount experiences and warn of present dangers MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1980 Richard Wyatt St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Washington, D.C. "Cat Studies in Psychosis" MHRI CONFERENCE ROOM 1057 3:45 to 5:00 p.m. TEA 3:15 p.m. MHRI Lounge By ELEONORA DI LISCIA "My wife was out shopping. When the explosion came she was blown away 20 feet ... When I found her, half the skin of her face was burnt and water was accumulating beneath the skin. She was severely burnt," said Shiji Ikeda in a somber voice. Thirty-five years after the bombing of Hiroshima Ikeda tells of the pain and anguish he experience as a resident of that city on August 6, 1945. Ikeda and two others who endured long-term trauma due to their exposure to the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, spoke to 30 listeners in the First *Presbyterian Church Thursday night as part of a nation-wide tour to warn Americans of the dangers of nuclear arms. IKEDA GAVE a detailed, 20-minute account of the Hiroshima bombing. "On that morning, I was stan- ding in my backyard with my newborn boy in my ar- ms. Just then when I looked up I saw far away a B-29 bomber flying above us through thin clouds. Then came flash - bluish white - all over the sky. I ducked and ran into the house with my baby, so it took three or four seconds for the shock waves to reach our house. Then I fell, I couldn't discern anything," he said. Takeko Takeshita, who also lived in Hiroshima at the time of the incident, also described the bombing with Ikeda acting as her interpreter. "With just one A-bomb our whole city was reduced to ashes," she said. "Many were instantly killed. My father and brother died an instant death. My mother came back home with four or five two-inch nails driven into her feet and was severely wounded. I looked for the bodies of my father and younger brother and went to the center of the explosion. There I found piles and piles of dead bodies." Of the victims, Takeshita said, "I saw lots of people with falling and peeling skins that turned into blackish red or sometimes purple. In a day or two, wounds began to cover their skin." THE IMMEDIATE horror involved in the atom bomb attacks on Japan was not the only issue ad- dressed. The speakers told of serious health problems they say they have encountered as a result of their exposure to radiation. Some time after the bombing, Takeshita married and bore a son. When the child was 14 months old, he died of leukemia, a tragedy she says was caused by the radiation. She didn't specify any other serious problems she has since suffered from the radiation "but still, I cannot tell at any moment the devil will come again," she added. Dorothy Wondrash, another of the speakers, said her husband was sent to Nagasaki with the U.S. Marines to supervise the civilians, during which time he did not wear protective clothing. She said that his exposure to the radiation forced him to have one of his legs amputated several years later. - WRESTLING CONSCIENCE LOOKING BACK March 31-7:30 p.m. Conference Room 5-Michigan Union A discussion of various views of war (just war, CRUSADE, pacifism, and NUCLEAR WAR). Presentations will include a brief history of registration and the draft in the U.S., CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION and resistance to militar- ism. How is our present decision-making influenced by history? * Oil platform collapses in the North Atlantic. SORTING OUT MAKING A STAND COMMITMENT TO ACTION April 7-7:30 p.m. Conference Room 4-Michigan Union April 14-7:30 p.m. Conference Room 4-Michigan Union April 21-7:30 p.m. Conference Room 5-Michigan Union (Continued from Page 1) constant maintenance checks, a spokesman for Phillips said. NORWEGIAN PRIME Minister Odvar Nordli, who flew to the disaster site after conferring with his cabinet, announced the formation of a commission of inquiry to investigate the cause of the accident, which Phillips said was a mystery. A company spokesman said the platform was built to withstand waves up to 99 feet high and winds far worse than those blowing at the time of the accident. "We have no idea what caused the disaster," the Phillips spokesma said. "We only know that one of the pontoon legs collapsed." HUNDRED OF MEN panicked and "quite a few" were trapped in jammed doorways while the four-story-high oil rig was sinking in the icy North Sea, survivors said. Olaf Skotheim, a Norwegian, said there was "total panic." "Everyone was trying to get out of the narrow rooms, down the long corridors and up the narrow, steep stairs," he said. ANOTHER SURVIVOR, Olav Eorshein, said, "People panicked as everyone was rushing for the doors. I believe quite a few were trapped inside because the doors were jammed ..." Many men blundered in darkness from a packed movie theater when the lights went out. Some of the 228 men aboard the rig escaped into the sea and probably died in the freezing waves and 78 mph winds. Some survivors used their shoes to bail water from their life rafts. The rig, with its dormitories, dining and recreation rooms and movie theater, was an oasis of comfort for merin who toil in one of the grimmest work places on earth-the icy, dark and usually stormy North Sea. A rescue workers who flew over the scene yesterday said all that was visible in the now calm sea were the four remaining legs. "They looked just like soft teddy bears' feet," he said in amazement. "There is nothing above the waterline out there to make you realize there was every anything wrong." It has been found tht one person in 20 had an extra rib. The condition is three times more common in men than in women. Me dieval end Rena is sine Cegiu MARC Studnt Fleeing Fll #dWinter1980-81 Would you like . to live in an elegant neo-Tudor mansion (East Quad)? Dining hall, library, cultural events, interesting asso- ciates, old-world ambience. The Medieval and Renaissance Collegium is now accept- ing reservation for student accommodations in the MARC Residence House, effective September 1980. if you are a MARC con- centrator or if you are interested in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, you are eligible to live in the Marc House. For information or to reserve a room for the Fall, call BOTH the Housing Office (763- 3164, 1011 SAB) AND the MARC office (763-2066, 206 Tyler, East Quad) with your name and address. Act now on your reservation. Only a limited number of places are available. PRESENTED BY THE SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES NE'W GROUND: A COMING OF AGE FOR NATURAL RESOURCES FILM SERIES: MARCH 31-APRIL 4 Each evening at 7 P.M. AUDITORIUM B ANGELL HALL-FREE ADMISSION MARCH 31: Mzima: Portrait of a Spring (MCGraw Hill, 1973) and The Other Way (E. F. Schumacher) (BBC, Time-Life, 1974) APRIL 1: At the Crossroads (Stouffer Productions, 1975) and The Right Whale: An Endangered Species (National Geographic, 1976) and A Great White Bird (NFBC, 1976) APRIL 2: The Rengwable Tree (NOVA, 1979) and Where Did The Colorado Go? (NOVA) APRIL 3: Tragedy or Triumph? (U.N. Journal Films, 1975) and The New Alchemists (MFBC, 1975) and Farming and the Land (Image Resources, 1977) APRIL 4: City Farmstead (Energy Productions, 1977) and The Energy Crunch: The Best Way Out (CBS, 1979 and Solar Promise (1980) GUEST AND LECTURE PANEL SERIES APRIL 7-10, 1980 Pendleton Room, Michigan Union 7 P.M. OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR DETAILS CONTACT THE DEAN'S OFFICE, 3516 Dana Bidg., 764-2550 (ALL FIRMS COURTESY OF MICHIGAN MEDIA) i Sponsored by: Wesley Foundation, Guild House, Lord of Light Lutheran Canterbury Lot, PRGM, and the Office to Ethicssand Religion. F Who reads it g? " COOL CATS r . Doily Photo by JOHN HAGEN M ama mia. Apprehensive contestants prepare to gorge themselves with pizza yesterday during the Count of Antipasto's "I-Eta-Pi" contest held in honor of Greek Week. Other happenings related to the event included a bed race down East University and an All-American Pep Rally held on the Diag. Do a Free a Favor: Recycle Your Daily WANT TO PRACTICE A FOREIGN LANGUAGE? We speak Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portugese, Romanian, & Spanish at the FRIEND'S INTERNA- TIONAL CO-OP. See our classified ad. RIP " FAT CATS " ALL cats! (smart ones, that is) y i -VI MY 1TIP I w (