geophysical surveys, V-10 

 technology, transfer, V-1 1-13 



Atomic Energy Commission, V-12 



Atomic Energy Commission Advisory Committee 

 on Non-Nuclcar Technology, V-1 3 



classified information, V-1 3 



deflnition, V-1 1 



Department of Defense, V-1 3 



Mutual Security and Export Control Acts, V-1 3 



National Commission on Technology, Automa- 

 tion and Economic Progress, V-12 



"need to know," V-1 3 



person-to-person contact, V-12 



recommendation, V-1 1-13 



Senate Small Business Committee, V-1 3 

 Research and Statistics Committee, fishing, control, 



VIII-58 

 Research, approach 



action programs, lack of understanding, 1-12 



adolescence, 1-18 



change, need, 1-2, 1 2 



claim on nation's science resources, 1-2 



competitive field 



buyers, 1-13 



products, 1-19 



sellers, 1-19 

 complexity, 1-2, 19 

 dichotomies, 1-19 

 diversity, 1-18 



ecological understanding, 1-2 

 funding, diverse, 1-2, 18 

 growth, 1-2, 14, 19 

 intellectual manpower, 1-2 

 interdependence of disciplines, 1-19 

 Johnson, President Lyndon B., comment, I-ll 

 National security, 1-14 

 organization, 1-20-21 

 recommendation, 1-2-3, 19 

 scientific competence, 1-2, 13 

 student interest, 1-42 

 technological problems, I-ll 

 unity, 1-18 

 Research, basic science 



geophysical surveys, disturbance to fishermen, 1-27 



Humphrey, Vice President Hubert H., comment, 1-20 



ignorance, 1-24 



intellectual curiosity, 1-20 



Kennedy, President John F., comment, 1-24 



nearshore water, 1-3-4, 24-27 



pollution, 1-27-28 



recommendations, 1-2-5, 24-35 



scientific manpower, 1-20 



study programs, proposed 



estuaries, coastal waters and Great Lakes, 1-24-25 



living and mineral resources, 1-24 



monitoring and prediction of ocean movement 

 1-24, 32-33 



National Security, 1-5, 23 

 waste, management and control, 1-27-28 

 Research facilities 



committees; Federal 



Interagency Committee on Oceanography, the 

 Federal Council for Science and Tech- 

 nology, 1-17 

 Marine Council, 1-17 

 cunent (see also Agencies, Federal) 



Chesapeake Bay Institute of Johns Hopkins Uni- 

 versity, I-l 8 

 Duke University Marine Laboratory, 1-18 

 Lamont Geological Observatory, 1-18 

 Oregon State University, 1-18 

 Scripps Institution of Oceanography, 1-18 

 University of Chicago, 1-18 

 University of Miami, 1-18 

 University of Washington, 1-18 

 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, 1-18 

 Yale University, 1-18 

 in-house laboratories, 1-2, 15 

 past 



National Academy of Science, I-l 2 

 President's Science Advisory Committee, I-l 2 

 sea and shore based, 1-18 

 Res nullius, areas beyond the continental shelves, VIII-20- 



21 

 Resolution on Resources of the Sea 



Economic and Social Council, VIII-26 

 Introduction and Summary, observations by Secretary- 

 General, VIII-26 

 requirements 



education and training, marine, VIII-26 

 program of international cooperation, VIII-25-26 

 Resolution on "Special Situations Relating to Coastal 

 Fisheries" 

 coastal State, preferential treatment, VIII-36 

 fishing, control, VIII-32 

 Resource Assay Equipment Development Program, 



VII-238 

 Resources, mineral (see Mineral resources) 

 Resources, natural, VI-26-27 (see also Multipurpose technol- 

 ogy) 

 Restoration, Great Lakes (see Great Lakes restoration) 

 Revelle, Roger, II-2 

 Reynolds Metals, capital sources, V-9 

 Rhode Island Marshland Zoning Act, wildlife and nutrient 



rich areas, III-37 

 "Right of innocent passage," internal waters and territorial 



sea, VIII-11-12, 70 

 River and Harbor Act of 1899, III-34 

 coastal area 



immediate action, III-5 

 boundaries, ownership, III-l 15 

 regulatory authority, III-l 31 

 dredging and filling, 111-36 

 pollution, III-54-55 

 Robben Island, pelagic sealing, VIII-118 

 R. V. Acona, 1-57 

 R. V. Anton Brunn, 1-57 

 R. V. Eltanin, 1-57 

 RiV Virginia City, VI-148 



43 



