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<br />MR. KROEGER: <br /> <br />MR. ROBINS: <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />MR. BERTHELSON: <br /> <br />MR. KROEGER: <br /> <br />MR. BERTHELSON: <br /> <br />I <br /> <br />MR. KROEGER c <br /> <br />MR. TEN EYCK: <br /> <br />MR. KROEGER: <br /> <br />MR. SPARKS: <br /> <br />"Does it look encouraging?" <br /> <br />"Yes, it does. <br />closely together. <br />answer yet." <br /> <br />Everybody is cooperating <br />We just haven't got the <br /> <br />"Could I make a comment here?" <br /> <br />"Yes, go ahead." <br /> <br />"I don't want to throw cold water on <br />Robie's remarks, but I sometimes wonder how <br />encouraging these sessions have been. I have <br />had some discussions with the Yellow Jacket <br />people lately and we are still pretty much <br />convinced that the damages are not any where <br />near the claims being made. We keep talking <br />about remedies instead of trying to get to <br />the guts of the problem and find out whose <br />ox is being gored and how much. <br /> <br />This is just a matter of information. I <br />handed Tom Ten Eyck a letter from the Yellow <br />Jacket Conservancy District today. They are <br />proposing to have the Soil Conservation <br />Service make an unbiased study of the problem. <br />Whether it has any merit or not, it is a mat- <br />ter of information. We are soliciting Tom's <br />help and anybody else's to make an unbiased <br />study of the carrying capacity of these lands <br />to determine how much mitigation they are <br />entitled to. Whether it has any merit or <br />not, we don't know. But we are at least at <br />the stage where nobody seems to be able to <br />move this thing and get a decision. We are <br />still expecting Tom to make one though." <br /> <br />"Tom, do you wish to remain quiet?" <br /> <br />"I think at the moment no comment is in <br />order." <br /> <br />"Thank you, Robie." <br /> <br />"I might. if I may. make several comments <br />