14 Tees ASU DUB ONC Be iets Labo 
ie Sanctuary ju 
In recogmtion of the 75th anniversary of Illinois Audubon Society, 
the following members, friends, and organizations are added to 
the list of donors to the Sanctuary Fund. These names, too, will be 
permanently inscribed in an appropriate manner at the time the 
wildlife sanctuary 1s formally established. 
DR. & MRS. WALLACE KIRKLAND 
KISHWAUKEE AUDUBON SOCIETY 
MRS. C. 5. DeLONG 
NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY OF BARRINGTON 
ROBERT HAWLEY in memory of Roberta Hawley 
LAKE-COOK CHAPTER, I.A.S., in memory of Mrs. John 
O'Leary and Mrs. Frank Bernard 
SARAH M. ELLIOTT in memory of K. B. Frost 
MARION FRANCIS OWEN & FAMILY im memory of Kathryn 
Rahm, Lydia Rahm and Alice Rahm Owen. 
sences. Though Sen. Gaylord Nel- 
son of Wisconsin rated one hun- 
dred, Sen. Adlai Stevenson came 
in a close 96. Other senators with 
high rating were Case, Cranston, 
Kennedy, Mondale, Proxmire and 
Tunney. Seven were at zero: they 
were Howard Baker (who serves on 
the Watergate committee), Cotton, 
Curtis, Goldwater, McLellan, Sten- 
nis and Tower. Illinois congressmen 
who rated over 50 on the LCV 
chart were Anderson, Annunzio, 
Metcalfe, Yates, Murphy, Price and 
Railsback. The bad guys were Les- 
lie Arends, George Shipley, Ken- 
neth Gray, Ed Derwinski and Har- 
old Collier, while the worst was 
Phil Crane of the north shore (Wil- 
mette, Winnetka, Northbrook and 
Elk Grove). Crane had a pathetic 
five, | 
NORTHERN ENVIRONMENTAL 
COUNCIL (P.O. Box 89, Ashland, 
Wisconsin 54906) has warned of 
new efforts to establish Project 
Sanguine in Northern Michigan. 
Chased out of Wisconsin by En- 
vironmental groups and Senators 
Proxmire and Nelson, the U.S. 
Navy admirals are now trying to 
persuade Congress to spend more 
funds to begin a grid under the 
Upper Peninsula. It has been met 
with resolutions by county com- 
missions, conservation clubs and 
tourist associations. The project 
would tear up ten counties. The 
area affected lies in the same pre- 
cambrian granite as the former 
Wisconsin site. The Navy has asked 
for a $4 million study of Project 
Sanguine for Michigan, urged on 
by two Michigan state legislators 
who feel it will be an ‘economic 
boom” to the state. The Northern 
Michigan Wilderness Coalition 
leads the opposition. 
