well as a summary of findings over the years since 1954.

These include:

acute

effects, malignancies, degenerative diseases, growth and development, thyroid,
eye,

skin,

blood,

dental,

aging,

groupings and special studies.

radionuclide intake from environment,

blood

Also included are appendices which give

statistical data for the areas studied,

as well as case histories of those

persons operated on for thyroid abnormalities.

The reports, documented with

footnotes, appear to be exhaustively thorough, highly professional and extremely
detailed.
concise.

In addition to all this, the language of the reports is clear and
In short, they are well written, illustrated in an interesting fashion,

well laid out, and carefully edited.

Generally speaking, if there is a "flaw"

in the reports themselves, it is due not to the report or its contents, but
rather due to the nature of the subject matter covered.

For the most part they

are so technical in nature and replete with scientific data as to be virtually
incomprehensible to the layman -- however, the summaries of work carried out,
and of past medical findings are generally understandable and valuable to the
average reader.

Specifically, however, the Committee finds certain threads of

reasoning, assumption, and exposition running through the reports which it finds
both frustrating and somewhat disconcerting.

One of these is inherent to the

basically conservative nature of scientific investigation and seems to permeate
medical and scientific expositions concerning relatively new fields of inquiry.
It appears to be a basic tenet -- and not necessarily an unwarranted one -that scientists are loath to make conclusions with any sort of finality about
their findings and the implications of such, unless there is voluminous statistical data to support such definite conclusions.

Thus,

for example, many times

the reader will encounter such statements as "although these findings appear to

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