MILAN 



ADAMS: It might be important to notice the proportional 

 adjustment of their diet. 



HART: These men were eating a normal white man's diet. 



HANNON: Your controls were in the same place? 



HART: There were no controls in this case. It was just the 

 Eskimo compared to DuBois standards. 



ADAMS'. I do not feel, as Dr. Rodahl pointed out in the recent 

 reviews, that anxiety plays too much of a ix)le in these basal meta- 

 bolic rates. In repeated examinations you would expect the effects 

 of anxiety to be reflected by a successive reduction in the meta- 

 bolic rate. Thus it may have an effect in one or two measurements, 

 but not after a series. 



HART: That is my impression. 



MILAN: Dr. Hannon, there has been considerable interest in 

 the vascular responses of people who have been acclimatized or 

 habituated to a cold bath, and Dr. Eagan has some information that 

 was obtained onthesubjects we had here last winter. I wonder, since 

 we have some time left, if he might present some of the data he 

 obtained . 



HANNON: All right. 



380 



