lamont:
Okay, maybe I just shouldn't even be trying to do this, but I'm trying to sort out what GI3 says about decompression diving and apply it to diving within the NDL limits.
Well, as a variation on the "take a class" theme, you should go to the George Irvine lecture at 5th D in September. I was at the last one and George discussed this issue in detail.
The gist of what he said (and please be tolerant, it was a while ago and I didn't take notes) was that diving deeper on the second dive will clean out any bubbles you might have accumulated on the first.
He also said that if you follow the correct deco profiles, using deep stops and a graduated ascent, you should come out clean as a whistle. This renders a surface interval irrelevant for the purpose of offgassing, so you can treat your second dive as a standalone rather than a second, for purposes of setting your profile.
What he also said, however, was that this discussion was pointless in the context of recreational diving without gas switches. Unless you're breathing 50/50 at 70' and/or pure O2 at 20', you're not going to come out clean. Backgas, no matter what the mixture, though He does help on the cleanup, is not going to clean you up like high O2 mixes at deco stops.
If I'm misrepresenting any of this, feel free to correct it; like I said, it has been a while.
Hope that answers your question at least in part. But go get it from the horse's mouth. It's a great opportunity to meet the man in person and ask all kinds of questions!