Well, let's see. They blew the thing up with thermite and stayed away from the saucer. Many of these men had seen combat and knew what bomb-induced explosions can do. They were also very familiar with second dary explosions.
Now, given what they know, would you want to go over and "look through the hole" and risk the possibility of a secondary explosion?
Also, you have to understand the audiences in 1951. The American public was not acclimated to on-screen violence as we are today. In those days, newsreels were heavily censored during the war and afterwards because the news organizations were afraid people would go out and get popcorn rather than view a plethora of dead, dismembered bodies. Many in the audience were women, and others may have been war veterans who had see such gore and were suffering from Battle Fatigue, what we today call PTSD.
Now days, we see the results of extreme violence on the news broadcasts that come into our homes. So the censorship that didn't allow viewing of the hand was in line with the mores of the times.
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