208 
DR. FREDICKSON: Thank you, Dr. Hudson. 
Several others have asked to speak, but I must reserve the chairman's 
right to attempt to preserve the symmetry of the meeting, and also to see 
that you get to lunch. 
I began with a quotation from Justice Frankfurter, that you recall, to 
the effect that the history of liberty is the history of the observation of 
procedural safeguards. I want to thank the committee, and commend it for 
stepping forward in the direction of that challenge. 
I am very grateful to you, indeed, for the time and effort that you 
have given us. No less so am I to the experts who were on our agenda, and 
who gave so much assistance to us, and no less so am I grateful to the mem- 
bers of the public who also participated, many of them — all of them, so far 
as NIH was concerned — at their own expense. 
We are really not an inner circle and an outer circle. We are all one 
in this matter. I extend my gratitude to you for this instructive and im- 
portant day and a half that we have spent. All of you are very busy, and 
you observe that I don't have a minute to lose. So this session is now 
adj ourned. 
[Thereupon, at 12:30 p.m., February 10, the meeting was adjourned.] 
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