
If you were the owner and director of an aquarium, what better name could you possibly have than “Moby.” Dr. Moby Solangi, owner and director for the Marine Life Oceanarium in Gulfport, MS, is a very happy man today. The Times explains why:
Amid all the stories of devastation and death emerging from Hurricane Katrina, one happy chapter was written yesterday — courtesy of eight bottlenose dolphins.They had lived in a marine aquarium for decades and were domesticated — three were born in captivity — but were washed miles out to sea when the hurricane hit Mississippi. Their owner feared that they lacked the skills of the wild to survive in the Gulf of Mexico.
But in a feat of navigation that has stunned their trainers, all eight have been discovered huddled together in fetid water a few hundred yards from land, having found their way back to the site in Gulfport where their aquarium once stood.
Their owner, Moby Solangi, speaking to The Times from a boat as he fed the dolphins last night, said: “We thought they were lost. They have all been in captivity for between 30 and 40 years. We didn’t think they had any navigation skills, and yet they are back here. We never thought we would find them, all together, so quickly.”
The chart on the right displays body weight vs. brain weight in some common animals. The farther to the northwest of the solid central line, the more intelligent the creature. As you can see there isn’t much of a difference between the owner of the aquarium and his prized dolphins. These dolphins did exactly what I would have done: wait out the storm in a pack and then try to find my way home. They’ve lost weight and they’ll get no help from FEMA (although you can help), but at least they survived and are now chillin’ at the Holiday Inn (sippin’ some Hen’). Voice of America has the video.





We may now have our own
This morning, the NYC Council Committee on Transportation held a
hearing in relation to the suspension of 



