http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wmr98MtyZfUOn this day, Erika Strong's and Lindsey Horton's Marshall Islands High School classes went on a field trip to participate in the Nuclear Victims Day 2006 activities at Assumption High, where students put together displays. Learn a little about this little-known slice of U.S. history in the Pacific involving nuclear testing and the Marshallese people who continue to remember to this day.
Its a bit rough, evident in the space "___" where a number is supposed to be to indicate the number of nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. in the Marshall Islands between 1946 - 1958 (not 1954 - 1963, as indicated in the clip). That "___" is supposed to be 67.
A bit more info...
"The most famous test, the Bravo shot, detonated at Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1954, was a 15-megaton hydrogen bomb more than 1,000 times as powerful as the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. From its $20 billion investment in the NTP, the U.S. gained a much more sophisticated understanding of nuclear weapons and the health effects of exposure to excessive doses of radioactive fallout. Consequently, the U.S. bolstered its military and political position in the early years of the Cold War." - excerpt from www.rmiembassyus.org