reasonably safe and all right. I have a question about a person who is not from that island, and that is not his home but if he were to come to that island and eat food from that island, what is that scenario? ~: If he comes to that island to visit for a short period of time and eats food from that island, in general we can say that that should have no adverse effect anywhere in the Marshalls, a few days. And as I said to Senator Ishmael John this morning, although we think that the people of Enewetak should not take their food continuously and regularly from Enjebi, of course if they have a food shortage, there is good food there and so long as that does not become a big part of their diet, that should present no problem. ~: Again, except for Bikini island, the northern Rongelap islands, and to some extent Enjebi, except for those few, all the places that were surveyed, no limitation at all. You should not be concerned about visiting, eating, living in any of those places. Buck to Marshallese: Marshallese: I am not sure All right, it sounds certain amount of radioactivity I understand it. like,it seems like we have had a in our islands as around the world which is natural and has always been there. Now, you in your technology have developed a way of producing additional radioactivity and yet you have brought it to our islands to experiment and test, and so it is almost like could we, could you be more immune, to say, harm from it since it is your product than we because it’s new to us? measles. I think it is sort of like We may have a threshold where we can and not be susceptible because we have had that all along and yet a population that had not had that would ’be real susceptible to harm from measles because they don’t have any immunity to it. Now does that work in the case of radiation? In other words would you have been less effected, because it is your product than we, and it was not our product? 39