In the three nearest luminous galaxies, the Milky Way System, the Andromeda
Galaxy and NGC 5128 the brightest globular clusters are rounder than the
faintest ones. On the other hand (contrary to some previous results) the
flattening of individual LMC clusters is found to be independent of their
luminosities. This suggests the possibility that the relationship between the
flattening and luminosity of clusters might depend on host galaxy luminosity.
No significant differences are found between the intrinsic flattening
distributions of Galactic old halo, Galactic young halo and Galactic bulge/disk
clusters. Such a dependence might perhaps have been expected if tidal forces
(which are largest at small Galactocentric distances) removed angular momentum
from globular clusters. The preliminary conclusion by Norris that clusters with
blue horizontal branches are more flattened than red HB clusters is not
confirmed by the larger data base that is now available. In other words there
is no evidence for the puzzling claimed correlation between the flattening and
the horizontal branch morphology of Galactic globular clusters.Comment: 20 pages text + tables; 5 postscript figures. Astronomical Journal,
in pres