Mia 

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Pacific Island 

 Disappears After 

 H-Bomb Blast 



(Continued from Page 1) 



> Vfide at the top. The captain 

 told us it was at least 15 miles 

 straight up into the sky. The 

 actual shape of it was like a 

 mushroom and a funnel, or even 

 better it looked like a head of 

 cauliflower— lots of white smoke 

 with three rings of smoke. 

 Each ring was bigger. It was 

 even close to being beautiful. 



"Maybe you have noticed 

 clouds in the sky that looked 

 soft enough to lay. Well, these 

 three rings looked like that, big 

 and billowy. The clouds stay- 

 ed shaped for about 10 minutes. 

 Then started to break up and 

 dissolve. During this period we 

 could see parts of trees and lots* 

 of earth being dropped into the 

 water and back on the island." 



SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Nov. 11 

 (#) — Another letter came to 

 light today on a report that an 

 atomic or hydrogen bomb had 

 been exploded in the Pacific re- 

 cently. 



Seaman Second Class Roger 

 G. Cordry, 19, of Springield, 

 wrote his parents that his ship 

 was 32 miles from the blast, but 

 still felt the heat given off. He 

 said the explosion was great 

 and beautiful." 



Cordry's letter was published r 

 in the Springfield News and 

 Leader. 



Cordry said the explosion was 

 on the island of Engebe "only 

 a dot north of Eniwetok in 

 the Marshall Islands. 



<( Take a caulifower and set 

 it on a toad-stool and you would 

 get a miniature picture similar 

 to what we were honored to 

 see," Cordry wrote. "Take your 

 miniature picture and put an 

 orange-red core to it and then 

 outline each piece of the cauli- 

 flower with an orange-red pen- 

 cil and you still have a small 

 part of the colorfiui scene." 



GUAM DAILY NEWS 



Lie Resigns As UN 

 Secretary General 



(Continued from Page 1) 

 secretary general who is the unani- 

 mous choice of the five great 

 powers, the Security Council and 

 of the General Assembly, may be 

 more helpful than I can be. On 

 the other hand, if the world situa- 

 tion should go from bad to worse, 

 at least I would not want the po- 

 sition of secretary general to hind- 

 er in the slightest degree any hope 

 of reaching a new understanding 

 that would prevent world disaster." 



The Russians have refused to 

 recognized Lie as secretary general 

 since his first, five-year term end- 

 ed Feb. 1, 1951. They refused to 

 vote him an extension when the 

 council took it uo on November 

 1950, and the U.S. threatened to 

 veto anyone else. This difficulty 

 was surmounted by having the veto 

 free assembly extended his original 

 term to 1954. 



Since then Lie has come under 

 fire of the senate group headed by 

 Sen. Pat McCarran which has been 

 investigating the activities of Am- 

 erican Communisms in the U.N. Sen. 

 Eastland CD-Miss.), a member of 

 the committee, chared Lie with 

 laxness in dealing with the situa- 

 tion. He drew an angrv counter- 

 blast from the secretary general. 



Associates said Lie was over- 



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