FRIDAY
¥
SJ
Ny
te
oO
\
MORNING SESSION
ASAT.
Octover 6, 1967
=
-
BRUES:
Dr. Donaldson, you have us at your mercy!
w
This morning we should be able to have free rum of our
aonrn
Mr, Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen:
scientific acumen plus the widest breadth of our imagination,
for if we are to talk about the environment and man's rela.
wow
DONALDSON:
we all have very specific comments and very specific opinions
10
about how man relates to his environment,
tionship to his environment in the field of ecology, I'm sure
i1
In the area of weapons testing, I'm sure we have
12
an equal number of opinions of the effect of the weapons
13
testing upon man and his environment.
14
at his word specifically that we were not to write speeches;
15
we weren't to deliver orations, but after 41 years as a school-
16
teacher I'm specifically tempted by almost heritage, for my
17
mother and my grandfather were also schoolteachers, to deliver
13
that morning lecture that should come 22 minutes from now
19
on normal schedule,
20
21
22
FREMONT-SMITH:
practice!
[Laughter]
DONALDSON:
I toook our convener
We have 30 years of interrupting
We expect to challenge your 47 years.
Looking around, there are many school-
23
teachers I notice in this gathering,
24
use the professor's prerogative to interrupt at any occasion,
25
So I'm sure they will
Well, to more or less set the scene, I should like
26
to, with your permission, somewhat limit the parts of the
27
world we are going to talk about,
28
If you will just turn on the first slide, please,
29
[Slides]
Well, each of us again have our own
30
immediate interpretation of what we think of as environzental |
31
contamination,
32
many of our problers we would
33
the Oak Ridge establishment and eventually to the Savannah
Stafford Warran
I think if we go back to the source area for
go to the
Hanford work or to
DOE/JUCLA
|
.-