544 



Lang. T. G. 1966 Hydrodynamic analysis of cetacean performance. In : Whales, 



Dolphins, and l'orix>ises, pp. 410-432 (Etl. K. S. Norris) U. of Calif. Press. 



A detailed discussion of cetacean hydrolynaniic i)erforniance, presented at the 



First International Symposimn on Cetacean Research held in Washington, D.C., 



in August 1963. 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Herald, E. S. 1969 A field and aquarium study of the blind river dolphin 



(Platanista gangetica) NUC TP 153 (a technical publication of the Naval 



Undersea Research and Development Center). 

 Kenny, J. E. 1969 Using dolphins for undersea surveys? Ocean Industry, Feb. 



1969. 

 Account of work by W. E. Evans, Naval Undersea Re.search and Development 

 Center, on tracking radio-tagged dolphins. 

 Wood, P. G. et al 1966 Round Table : Practical Problems. In : Whales, Dolphins, 



and Porix)ises, pp. 649-673 (Ed. K. S. Norris) U. of Calif. Press. 

 A round-table discussion on capture, transport, holding facilities, health care, 

 and psychological factors, at the First International Symposium on Cetacean 

 Research in Washington. D.C. in August 1963. 

 Evans. W. E. and E. S. Herald 1970 Underwater calls of a captive Amazon 



manatee, Trichcchus inunquis. Journal Mammalogy 5i ( 4 ) : 820-823. 

 Wood, F. G. et al 1970 Behavioral inter-actions between porpoises and sharks. 



In: Investigations on Cetacea, pp. 264-279 (Ed. G. Pilleri) Institute of 



Brain Anatomy. Berne. Switzerland. 

 Sometimes poriJoises attack sharks, sometimes sharks attack (and eat) por- 

 poises, and sometimes mutual tolerance is exhibited. The relationship of porpoises 

 and sharks is still inadequately understood. 

 Herald. E. S. et al 1969 Blind river dolphin : first side-swimming cetacean. Science 



166: 1402-1410. 

 Blind river dolphins ("susu") from the Indus River of Pakistan swim on 

 their sides. Presumably, this permits a lateral echolocation sweep of the bottom. 

 Underwater sound emissions of pulse trains are produced continuously. 

 Evans. W. E. 1970 Uses of advanced space technology and upgrading the future 



of oceanography. AIAA Paper No. 70-1273. 

 Two species of small whales equipped with small radio telemetry packages 

 so that their movements could be tracked have provided information on the 

 animals' physical environment as a function of depth. Further data have been 

 derived on areas of high biologic productivity and underwater topographical 

 features. Telemetering via satellite would greatly extend the utility of this 

 technique to oceanology. 



Canadlan and Ambjiican Wolf Defendeirs. 



Carmel Valley, Calif., September J, 1971. 



There is nothing to be gained by recapping for you, and for others all too 

 familiar with the facts, the horrors implicit in man's relationship with all living 

 creatures. 



Our beautiful world is running with blood ; every creature on earth is terrified 

 of human beings ; his life is one long agony of fear, or suffering, or impending 

 horrible death. 



There is a sickness abroad in our world, a moral, psychological sickness. Dr. 

 Abraham Maslow. Chairman of the Department of Psychology at Brandeis Uni- 

 versity, in his epochal contribution to the understanding of human nature, has 

 brought this moral sickness into sharp focus. 



Dr. Maslow has explored the essential differences between the healthy, the 

 ideal, the fulfilled himaan being, and the sick, the imperfect, the undeveloped 

 human being. 



According to Dr. Maslow. an important characteristic of fully developed people 

 is their ability to perceive other people, and the world, as not existing for their 

 gratification, "but as valuable in themselves, to be studied, appreciated, loved : 

 Maslow's "ideal human being" simply does not have to see the world around him 

 as "for" him. it is "for" itself ; for the healthy human being neither people, nor 

 nature, are tools, nor suppliers. 



In the light of this profound thinking the notion that nature is there for us to 

 use. to exploit, like a gigantic super-market where we can take what we can pay 

 for with our weapons, our technology, our power, is the gros.sest sickness. 



The slaughter of the seals is only one of the more spectacular examples of 

 this sick thinking which caUs itself "use," "management," "control." 



