shot unless there was very good insurance of getting a lot out of the
test,
the

Dr, Rabi said it was important to find out what has happened to
<

es

ont
era clouds, He also informed Gen, Fields of the Committe

position on the EEE «220150, and that it would reconmend a
ae?8,

4
3

EES ¢<<t in’Nevada.

<

(Appendix C, item 2)

ee

“Mr, Tomei was excused from the meeting at this point,
There was some discussion of the number ofMiiaerrentty a: vailable

and also the continuation of the standing requiViment for 14-6,

Gen,

Fields indicated that he felt the Li-6 question should be reexamined,
after the test results were in and understood, before committing the
remaining $100 million to the Li-6 production program,

|

At 10:35 a.m. Dr, Libby, Mr. Nichols and Dr. Smyth joined the meetin;
3

|

Meeting

2-7 swith the
“+.

Commissioners
and
General
Manager

Mr. Campbell and Mr, 2uckert, who had entered a few minutes previously,
remained,

All members of the Committee and the Secretarywere present,

Mr. Tomei. was not present.
Dr. Rabi reviewed the Committee's reactions to the various matters

which had come before it at this meeting,

~

DOE ARCH

He. first mentioned the proposal to have only unclassifie

Policy
Miens

,

ng

HIVES h

work at Brookhaven, and, in connection with this, the AEC's policy on
aliens as stated in AEC 89/3.

He referred to the difficulty of delays in

AEC action on specific requests regarding aliens, and said that this was
hard on the morale of laboratory management.

Prompt negative action, if

necessary, would be better than six-month delays.

He asked if the policy

expressed in AEC 89/3 had been promulgated to the laboratories; Mr. Nicho?
Ted

eee

replied that a letter on the subject was going out to the field,

(Appendix C, item 3d)

ASS

Select target paragraph3