Page 6--Friday, June 20, 1980-The Michigan Daily NUCLEAR HORRORS RECALLED Panel hears Hiroshima survivors p WASHINGTON (AP)-Survivors of the atomic bomb blast that destroyed Hiroshima told a Senate panel yesterday of watching "lines and lines of people, burned, swollen, bloody" and pleaded for "a better way to keep peace in this world." At a hearing before the Labor and Human Resources subcommittee on the health care effects of radioactive fallout, Florence Garnett, who was 13 and lived near Hiroshima at the time of the 1945 bombing, described people standing dead in the streets or upright on bicycles "charred to death." * GENE MASANORI Fujita of Seattle said he and some school friends went into a shelter after hearing the American B-29s overhead before the atomic bomb fell on Hiroshima. When the bomb exploded, Fujita said he felt like "pressurized hot air was trying to squeeze my body." He said after a few minutes he left the shelter and was stunned by what was left of his city. "There were people with skin hanging from their hands. There was a lot of groaning and moaning and people walked around in a daze," he "THERE WAS A mother whose legs were cut and bruised," he said, "She had two children who were burned over 80 per cent of their bodies, and the little girl was screaming, 'Please kill me! Please kill me! I can't stand the pain!"'. When the bomb exploded, Garnett, now of Monterey Park, Calif., said she was playing in a school yard "and the air was so hot I thought I would die." She said she searched the rubble two weeks for her grandparents and brother. Finally, she said she found her grandparents crushed under the kitchen floor. She said she dug their bodies out, piled up newspapers and 4 THREE EYEWITNESSES TO the bombing of Hiroshima on Aug. 9, 1945 testify in Washington yesterday before a Senate subcommittee on Labor and Human Resources chaired by Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.). From left are Esuko Bundy, Florence Garnett, and Gene Masanori Fujita; not pictured is a fourth eyewitness, Shigeko Sasamori. cremated them. "LATER I HEARD that somebody say my younger brother sitting under a tree, burned all over his body, begging for water," Garnett emotionally recalled. Esuko Bundy, now of Ft. Wayne, Ind., was 7 when the bomb hit. She said she was knockedunconscious. Afterwards, she said, she and other members of her family wandered toward the city and saw "lines and lines of people, burned, swollen, bloody." Shigeko Sasamori, 13 then, said she heard the "airplane and saw something drop out. I told my friend to look up ... Then I felt as if I was in a big fire." "People I saw looked more like monsters, with their burns. I never saw so much horror," she said. She said that when her parents finally found her, they didn't recognize her. "My mother said she couldn't see where my face was. They called out to me and I answered my name." The hearing was called by Sen. Edward Kennedy, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, who used the forum to campaign against the spread of nuclear weapons. Carter OKs nuclear fuel export to India 4 FromAP and UPI WASHINGTON-President Carter has agreed to export 38 tons of nuclear fuel to India, reversing a decision of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and raising cries on Capitol Hill of an ad- ministration "flip-flop" on its nuclear policy. The decision to stand by a 1963 agreement and supply new fuel for the Indian atomic reactor at Tarapur out- side Bombay was announced at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing yesterday by Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher. CHRISTOPHER SAID the decision was made to shore up relations with the government of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi at a time when the United States is seeking a united front in South Asia and Southwest Asia against, the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Christopher also said the State Department has no evidence India plans further nuclear tests, but he said nil nnie . 4,-r chnm n to Tnimwoul atom bomb. The decision is highly controversial on Capitol Hill because India/detonated a nuclear explosion in 1974. refuses to open all of its nuclear facilities to inter- national inspection, and declines to rule out future nuclear explosions. IN THE HOUSE, Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) announced he and 34 .other House members have introduced a resolution to veto Carter's decision to ship the nuclear fuel to India. "The House will block the sale of uranium to India by a large vote," Markey said at a news conference. "I predict the Senate will also override the president. Several senators said the decision blows a large hole in the ad- ministration's nuclear non- proliferation policy. Christopher said that the decision ac- tually will help the cause of nuclear non-proliferation because India will continue to respect the restrictions on its nuclear activities that are set in the 1963 agreement. 4 A .I NOW PERFORMING AT (R) THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 4