Day 018 - 26 Jul 94 - Page 63
1 -----
2 Q. No, look at L, please?
A. L, certainly.
3
Q. Was it Weisse Schutt who did the German research?
4 A. That was the bleeding efficiency, that paper.
5 Q. No, L, Effect of Slaughter on the Spontaneous and Evoked
Activity of the Brain?
6 A. Right, I understand.
7 Q. I think -----
A. Yes.
8
Q. I hope yours is too, is it?
9 A. I am up with you. I apologise, but I do not think we
have the relevant paper in the file.
10
Q. We have not. Can you just fish it out from the Gregory
11 archives?
A. Yes. Would you like me to try and crystallize the
12 points that are relevant?
13 Q. No, I think we had better to wait and see whether the
defendants are going to -----
14
MR. JUSTICE BELL: If I might suggest, are you going back to
15 Bristol tonight?
A. No, it depends on how long -----
16
MR. RAMPTON: Not if he is still here tomorrow.
17
MR. JUSTICE BELL: I have gone up to Bristol day by day many
18 times. You will not because, of course, there is the
problem with the trains. But anyway you are staying in
19 London?
A. If I am required in this court tomorrow, I will be
20 staying overnight.
21 Q. I am sure you will be required here tomorrow.
A. OK. I will be staying over then.
22
Q. Can you get the paper faxed up to you?
23 A. Yes, I have a publication list, have I not -- yes,
I can.
24
MR. RAMPTON: There is a list of your publications?
25 A. Can I interrupt just one second -- I can get a paper
faxed up to us which summarises the situation, is that
26 adequate -- or the Schutt Abraham work, a lot of it is in
German.
27
MR. RAMPTON: Yes. Schutt Abraham.
28 A. But I can give you the summary or conclusions of the
work that we have done which is analogous to her work and
29 comments on the interpretations she used.
30 MR. JUSTICE BELL: It is difficult for me to say because, for
all I know -- I do not know yet, and I am disinclined to
