174 CDR. CRONKITE: I have one comment on that. The regular routine stuff is that you can't do a lot of bone marrow aspirations on your people. You soon have lost your rapport unless there is a good reason to do it. I think they have to be done but I will be frank I do not Know when they ought to be done, and when would be the best time to start doing it. %& would like very much the advice of somebody who studied the changes in Japan, such as Valentine and Lawrence and Maloney, Alderson Reporting Company Washington, D. C 10 to get the appropriate time when to first do it. DR. BUGHER: 11 The Japanes have dne bone marrow 12 biopsies on their fishermen. 13 some of those, and they are quite interesting. 14 marrows apparently are continuing to show a persistent 15 depression even though the blood counts themselves frere moving 16 upward, That was a few weeks back. 17 marrow studies done early are in 18 19 20 CDR. CRONKITE: I have seen the sections of The bone In that case the bone themselves quite interesting. Could that material be made available? DR. BUGHER: JI can't promise Wat we can get available 21 from those people. 22 We don't have it, but we will try to get the material. 23 Part of it is an element of barter,too. ARC They say yes, with the greatest pleasure. We tade something that we have for something we want from them. 25 CDR, CRONKITE: We did not do bone marrow oe 192