REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING SESSION, RV-018
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP96-00789R001500180001-6
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
10
Document Creation Date:
November 4, 2016
Document Release Date:
July 13, 1998
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
February 12, 1985
Content Type:
FORM
File:
Attachment | Size |
---|---|
CIA-RDP96-00789R001500180001-6.pdf | 1.03 MB |
Body:
Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789R001500180001-6
REMOTE VIEWING TRAINING SESSION
*****;';****************';*';*';*********~' *****************.;***~';~';4::';4:**~';********
* Remote Viewer : LB
* Interviewer : FA
Observer(s)
,. *
*
* *
Date 02/12/85
Starting Time : 1325 hours, local
Site # . 0084
Site Acquisit.: CRV (CRV ERV PRV ARV BRV Other
Working Mode CT (GT HE Other
Feedback class: C ( A B C Other
* *
*** *****'; ***';**';'c***'c***'c********* ;xx~c9;~s**** *****~e~:x~;~cx4;x~;****x9e~ex~;***
Ending time : 1356 hours, local
Notes : 56 30'N 169 38' 15"W
Highest stage : 02
Evaluation
Actual : Pribilof Islands, St. George, Alaska
RV summ.: Land/water interface, land is flat.Rocks, rising-very tall,
green, cold, wind sounds, misty-AOL feels like a cliff
*
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N'.F i; C' Ui`1A AU CARXICI(
4vIIA. ?~.. GEQG i.1Pr'f '.HT f: '..'i IU%
1\ivrrictds c!f the I:ic,?th Pac=ific, fur
teals;roilow two n-tfr.ttion routes,
to C.alifvcitin anti Japan. In the spring
70 percent of the WO:-Id population of
1.4 rnilliort fir!-seal's cortgregat s on the
Priln!ofC. 'o breed. The uninhabited
voico^ic islands ware discovered
in 1?86 I?y Gerascim Prihylov, who
hroteghtAleutian Island natives
to harvest seal pelts.
visit St. Paul each summer. There's alimitto
ho:v man}- the island can handle."
The "humaniacs,"as some Aleuts call the
preser at?tionists, concede that seals die most
quickly and with the least trauma when
killed by stunning and sticking. But they
>?eject to the harvest on grounds of unnec
essat,v killing and the high cost to the
government v of the Pribilof program, The
federal government spends 5.3 million dol-
lars a year-75 percent of Pribilof income.
Walter Kirkness, director of the Pribilof
Islands Program for the National Marine
Fisheries Service, offers a rebuttal. "If we
halt sealing, it would lead to abrogation of
the treaty. As a result, we could easily see the
return of free-for-all slaughter of seals at sea
without any international controls at all.
That would be devastating to the seals."
Mike Zarharof had an even more basic
objection: "Instead of worrying about seals,
which are in no danger of extinction, why
not worry about an honest-to-goodness en-
dangered species --the Aleut people?"
Since the Russians first gained sway over
Alaska, Aleuts have decreased from an esti-
mated 20,000 to a mere 3,200. White man's
diseases wiped out many. So did a Russian
disregard for native lives.
Under U. S. administration, a repressive
bureaucracy brought little progress until, in
1971, the federal government settled aborig-
inal claims for land and compensation and
gave Alaska's Aleuts, Eskimos, and Indians
a means to control their lot. The settlement
established profit-making corporations for
each native village and region, with every
villager a shareholder. For St. Paul's Tan-
adgusix, the chief profit makers are hotels
and a restaurant.
Islanders won a reprieve for sealing when
Congress extended the fur seal treaty
through 1994. They were helped by the Sier-
ra Club and National Audubon Society,
which supported the treaty and looked upon
it as a hallmark of wildlife conservatidn and
management.
But a new threat to the islanders' econom-
ic well-being has suddenly loomed.
"It's called Reaganomics," said Agafon