:50:00
Get up!
:50:02
I've got you.
:50:06
Come on, up!
:50:09
You know, I don't think
it's going to work.
:50:20
There! That's a pretty clever
stretcher, huh?
:50:26
Hang in there, soldier.
You'll be fine.
:50:29
Hello! Does anybody know
where the hospital is?
:50:45
Please help me.
:50:47
Tend only to those who
show some chance of recovery.
:50:50
Yes, sir.
:50:52
We don't have
enough medicine for them...
:50:54
let alone all these others.
:50:57
Hey, somebody should
look at this soldier.
:50:59
He's real bad, I think.
:51:01
Another one.
:51:03
Tell me, boy,
was he vomiting blood...
:51:06
and complaining
that he was cold?
:51:08
Right. I guess that means you
know what's wrong with him.
:51:12
No use looking at this one.
:51:14
This soldier's dead.
:51:16
God help us.
:51:18
Is it possible that one bomb
could have done all this?
:51:20
The initial explosion
of the atomic bomb...
:51:22
claimed more than 100,000 lives.
:51:24
But that was only the beginning.
:51:26
The radiation remained...
:51:28
contaminating soldiers
cleaning up the city...
:51:30
as well as those relatives
of the victims...
:51:32
who came looking for them.
:51:34
For years afterwards...
:51:35
these people would suffer
from leukemia and cancer...
:51:39
part of the collateral damage
inflicted by the bomb.