to live only on Eneu, eat no food at all from Bikini, and maintain a diet consisting of approximately 50% local food from Eneu and 50% imported food. The people have also in- dicated that they would be willing to accept certain measure to insure that they do not violate DOE restrictions. One such measure should probably be the destruction of the 40 homes on Bikini Island, which could prove to be an attractive nuisance. “Another possible measure might be the destruction of the coconut trees on Bikini Island, although a decision on this action should be postponed until there is an opportunity to observe whether DOE restrictions are being followed. An essential element of an Eneu resettlement pro- gram will be the establishment of a regular shipsing schedule to bring imported food to Eneu. in June, At a Congressional hearing 1978, when people were still living on Bikini Island, witnesses testified that although monthly trips were scheduled to take food to Bikini, ships called on Bikini sporatically because the Trust Territory Government did not have enough ships available to service Bikini on a monthly basis. Jendrik Leviticus, who attended the hearing representing the people then living on Bikini, stated that "Ships...apparently did not arrive on any- thing approaching a monthly basis, and that caused the Bikinians to go into the interior parts of the island and eat the breadfruit,