Deere auelteur SO eNe Be tliels ket elaN 11 
his ethical concept of nature and pointed out that by the year 2,000 all 
available water will have to be used twice daily (the Ohio River water 
is now being used 3% times). Assistant Secretary of the Interior Cain 
defined ecology: “Who eats whom — nothing but togetherness.” 
North American migrant birds from 7,000,000 square miles were shown 
to concentrate in 1,000,000 square miles in Latin America where they are 
unprotected and more vulnerable to insecticides and hunting. 
Sandy Sprunt’s Bald Eagle Survey reported a slow decline in the 
national population, with especially sharp declines along the sea and lake 
shores. Human pressures, loss of big tree habitat, shooting (73 dead — 44 of 
known cause, 33 of these shot!), and evironmental pollution were said to 
be the causes. 
“Man vs. His Environment” was dramatized by architect-planner Nat 
Owings who toured concentrated cities, leaving wild areas to his sensitive, 
conservationist wife, Margaret Owings. The problem was brilliantly briefed 
by State Representative Z‘berg and U. S. Representative Cohelan. Wild 
Life Films — “New Zealand Spring,” by Dr. Olin S. Pettigill, and “Gala- 
pagos — Wild Eden,” presented by R. T. Peterson, colored the evenings. 
Field trips were taken to the Sacramento River Delta by houseboat: 
Whistling Swans, the Sierras, 3 Dippers and Whiteheaded Woodpecker, 
and the Giant Calaverus Redwoods. 
Before we could return we were drawn back to the center of Condor 
country and Grapevine Pass where soaring above three Golden Eagles 
we saw our biggest (942 foot) thrill, the California Condor. 
Back in Grand Marias State Park near East St. Louis, Ill, we hunted 
down the non-transient European Tree Swallow. For the trip: 208 species 
with 46 lifers. And when we say the Illinois Audubon Society was “behind 
us” for this convention, we refer to the orange and black bumper sticker 
which followed us for 7,000 miles and proclaimed IAS to man and bird 
through the entire southeast. 
Sao J sinden ive wOcr Pare Liou S 02 
A New Address for Editorial Material 
THE AUDUBON BULLETIN’s veteran editorial director, Paul Lobik, of Glen Ellyn, success- 
fully located a candidate for the editing and produciion of 1967’s issues. Beginning 
with this issue, the new BULLETIN editor is D. William Bennett, and the editorial address 
is 49 Valley Road, Highland Park, III. 60035. 
Major manuscripts — and, certainly, short features and significant photographs — 
are welcomed from members and non-members alike. (But, the editor warns, material 
must be typewritten and double-spaced, and none can be returned, if not used, unless 
a self-addressed, stamped envelope is included.) 
Members and others also are encouraged to submit ‘Letters To The Editor’’ on 
IAS affairs, on birding, and upon any other subject within the BULLETIN’s scope. All 
will be considered for publication. 
(Na a SS NE SR SR SRE RSLS CARINE SERRE SES ES a SR RS SS SESE RES EET SS 
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