Robison: The number that would compare to the 500 that you referred to would be this column which says 400, but that is the maximum amount, the maximum exposed individual. Most people would get much less than that and that’s the number you would compare to 500 and that gets a little less every year but by the time you add up 30 years that’s how you get 2500. Okay? It is getting less every year but still you have to add year one, two, three, four, five, right up to thirty. And so that’s how you get to that number at the end of 30 years. Marshallese: Seems like yesterday, I remember now something I wanted to ask about our discussion yesterday. That at Rongelap, somebody living at the northern part of the atoll with the numbers you are using in your calculations as a base, 233 population in 1980, in the next 30 years, at some point in the discussion yesterday, might die. Die from cancer? I recall you saying that perhaps 3 I remember this coming out of the discussion when we were looking at the slides and the figures on the slides, seems to me that that figure came up 3 people. TAPE 6, SIDE 2 (Note a few words were lost when the tape was turned over) Robison: ...additional cancer. Marshallese: Bair’s point six to 3. Looks to me like the color in this picture of Rongelap island is just one down from the color of Naen. In other words we aren’t in that category but we’re in this category by living on the islands, the main island of Rongelap. He says that of everybody living at Naen you get the figure 3, might 3 more might die because of all of them living there. Well, Rongelap is the next spot over as far as contamination. So what’s it for us? ~: And it is point six. It is one-fifth of that. point six. 47 Less than one or