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them questions which we've got to wrestle with, which we
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regard to be policy questions. Now, what Mr. Eney as
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Chairman does with them after he gets them, I'm going to
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leave up to him because that I feel is a little bit be-
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yond where I can answer the question.
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I do feel that we have made some progress in
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the direction of crystallization of issues. With the
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suggestion that Dr. Burdett has made, I think we further
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accomplished that purpose. I think what really is going
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to happen and, to be constructive in answer to the ques-
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tion, the Commission is going to be confronted with these
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things. It is going to have an appreciation of our prob-
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lem and then it is going to dump it right back into our
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laps to solve it. And where it is a matter of alternative
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they are going to ask us to suggest to them the alterna-
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tives. So, we are back on the road to resolving the
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problem.
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MR. KELVIN: That's what I was wondering. As
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I understood Mr. Eney, it is not mandatory that we present
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these problems to him unless we have" made up our minds
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as to what MS are going to recommend with respect to the
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