SW-58.26
                      solid waste management
available  information materials
                     total listing, 1966-1976

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          solid waste management
available  information  materials
       This bibliography (SW-S8.26), listing all reports published
         by the Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
             from January 1966 through June 1976,
                was compiled and indexed
                 by JULIE L. LARSEN
      us r ,,,-.-r...rv .-..'. p.-,-on Agency
       C
       u.s. environmental protection agency

                 September 1976

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U,S- Environmental  Fraction  Agency
      An environmental protection publication (SW-58.26) in the solid waste management series

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                                          foreword

     The importance of collecting and  making available the information pertaining  to solid-waste-related

research, demonstration projects, and other activities was emphasized by the specific authorization contained

in  Section  204(b) of the  1965 Solid Waste  Disposal Act, Public Law 89-272. The present  comprehensive

bibliography lists  publications  and other educational materials that have been published or collected by the

Office  of Solid Waste  Management Programs, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in response to  this

directive; its contents,  reflect  the entire scope of the work undertaken by EPA's solid waste program from

1966 to the present, are intended for the serious investigator.
                                                  -SHELDON MEYERS
                                                   Deputy Assistant Administrator
                                                   for Solid Waste Management
                                                111

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                               contents


introduction	   1

basic information materials on  solid waste management	3

exhibits	9

films	9

training programs	10

state  and regional solid waste  offices	10

subject index	11

office of solid  waste management programs (oswmp) publications  .  32

national technical information service  (ntis) reports	65

title index   	82

author index	98

order blanks  (oswmp materials,  n*is reports, swirs search
    requests)	104

solid  waste abstracts  (world's  literature search service)  (swirs)  .108

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                         solid waste management

                    available information materials
    The solid waste management information materials available from the U .S .
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are from various sources.   There are
EPA publications  and other materials reporting on results of the research,
development,  and demonstrations  authorized  by the  Solid Waste Disposal Act
of 1965, as amended.   This  far-reaching Federal  program  of  grants and
contracts has generated solid-waste-related projects in many fields from 1966 to
the present. Reports  from the grantees and contractors  are published  by EPA
as soon as  available.  Presentations and  policy  statements by key  personnel
and results of  technical investigations conducted  by EPA staff are  printed
by  EPA, or submitted to professional journals, so  that  the reports  will reach
the most appropriate  audience.  In the latter  case,  reprints  are  frequently
purchased and  distributed  by  EPA.  Conference  proceedings, findings of
various commissions  and study  groups and other collateral literature are also
made available as supplies permit.  Certain of the items have been grouped  in
various combinations in special information kits.

    In  addition to the titles  available from  EPA,  various library systems,
or  from the Superintendent of  Documents,  over  250  reports on  grant and
contract activities relating to  solid waste management  are available for pur-
chase from the Department of Commerce National Technical Information Service
(NTIS) . These  reports are  issued through NTIS to make the data most readily
available to the technical  community.  Author and subject indexes, including
both the Office of Solid Waste Management  Programs (OSWMP)  publications and
the NTIS reports  are in the back of this  catalog .  An integrated list of OSWMP
publications and NTIS reports, by title, is also included.

    We  also wish to call to the attention of our readers another  OSWMP litera-
ture research  tool—the  OSWMP information  retrieval  system  which  makes
available (in the form of  abstracts) worldwide coverage of the current  non-
OS WMP-generated literature on  solid  waste  management. A  description  of
OSWMP's  Solid  Waste  Information  Retrieval  System (SWIRS), with an  inquiry

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form that may be used in requesting  a SWIRS literature search, are in the
back of the book, as well as an NTIS order form, and  an OSWMP information-
materials request form.

    In gathering and publishing this  information on solid waste management,
EPA hopes to assist those engaged in the  task of finding  ways  to  manage
the Nation's  burden of solid  wastes  while  at  the same time contributing to
efforts for  resource and energy conservation and  land  protection.

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        basic information  materials on solid waste management
      The following materials have been selected from this catalog to provide an orientation to some of the
issues related to the national effort to improve solid waste management' resource/energy conservation, solid
waste systems management and land protection, hazardous wastes management, and waste reduction. To
ordei, see films section and order form for OSWMP publications in this catalog.
                         overall solid waste management issues
oswmp
order nos.*
171.  The Solid Waste  Disposal  Act, Title II of Public Law 89-272--89th  Congress, S.306--
        October 20,  1965;  as  amended by the Resource Recovery Act  of 1970,  Public Law 91-512--
        91st Congress,  H.R.11833--0ctober 26, 1970; by Public Law  93-14--93rd Congress, H.R.
        5446--April  9,  1973  (To extend the amended Solid Waste Disposal  Act--for one yearJ;
        and by Public  Law  93-611--93rd Congress, H.R.  16045--January 2,  1975  (To amend the
        Solid Waste  Disposal  Act to authorize appropriations for fiscal  year  1975).  Environ-
        mental Protection  Publication SW-1.3.   [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection
        Agency, Office  of  Solid Waste Management Programs, 1975.   14 p.

327.  The States'  roles in solid waste management; a task force report.  T. Anderson et al.
        Lexington, Council of State Governments, 1973.  58 p.   Reprinted,  [Cincinnati], U.S.
        Environmental  Protection Agency, July 1973.

373.  Basic issues on  solid waste management affecting county government. National Association
        of Counties.   [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, May 1973.  40 p.

331.  Cities and the nation's disposal crisis.  Washington, National League of Cities and U.S.
        Conference of Mayors, Mar. 1973.  46 p.   Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
        Protection Agency, June 1973.

390.  Decision-makers guide in  solid waste management.  2d ed.   Environmental Protection
        Publication  SW-500.   Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office,  1976.  158 p.

525.  Solid waste management: horizons unlimited.   R.  E. Train.  Presented  at International
        Waste Equipment and Technology Exposition, Chicage, June 2,  1976.   Washington, U.S.
        Environmental  Protection Agency.  16 p.

526.  Status of solid waste management in the United States.  S. Meyers. Presented at 2d
        International Congress  of the International Solid Wastes Association, Padua, June
        24, 1976.  Washington,  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency.   (In press.)


                             resource/energy conservation

344.  Recycling and  the consumer; solid waste management.   Environmental Protection Publi-
        cation SW-117.   [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection  Agency, 1974.  12 p.

378.  Energy conservation  through improved solid waste management.   R. A. Lowe, M. Loube,
        and F.  A. Smith.   Environmental Protection Publication  SW-125.   [Washington], U.S.
        Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  39 p.
      *See order  form for OSWMP publications in back of catalog.

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order nos.
432.  A nationwide survey of resource recovery activities.  L.  Mcfiwen.  Environmental Protec-
        Publication SW-142.1.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1976,
        (In press,)

448.  Resource recovery and waste reduction; third report to Congress.  U.S.  Environmental Pro-
        tection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.   Environmental Protection
        Publication SW-16I.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975.   96 p.

473.  Source separation for materials recovery; guideline;:.  U.S. Environmental  Protection
        Agency.  Federal Register,  41(80):16950-16956, Apr. 23, 1976.

486.  Residential paper recovery; a municipal implementation guide.   P.  Hansen.   Environmental
        Protection Publication SW-155, [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,
        1975.  26 p.

490.  Guidelines for procurement of products that  contain recycled  material.   U.S. Environ-
        mental Protection Agency.  Federal Register, 41(10}:2356-2363, Jan.  15,  1976.

498.  Quantity and compositian of post-consumer solid waste: material  flow estimates for 1973
        and baseline future projections.  F. A. Smith.  Waste Age,  7(4):2,6-8,10, Apr. 1976.

503.  Saving the energy in solid waste; environmental information.   Washington,  U.S.  Environ-
        mental Protection Agency, [1976].  4 p.  [Fact sheet.]

505.  Waste reduction and resource recovery—there's room for both.   N.  Humber.   Waste Age,
        6(11):38,40-41,44, Nov.  1975.

510.  Demonstrating source separation in Somerville and Marblehead,  Massachusetts.
        P.  Hansen and J. Ramsey.   Waste Age, 7(2):26-27,48, Feb.  1976.


reports on  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency demonstration grants
for energy  and materials recovery

264.  Energy recovery from waste; solid waste as supplementary fuel  in power plant boilers.
        R.  A. Lowe.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d.ii.  Washington.  U.S.
        Government Printing Office,  1973.  24 p.

387.  Refuse as a supplementary fuel for power plants—November 1973 through March 1974;
        interim progress report.   G. W. Sutterfield.  Environmental  Protection Publication
        SW-36d.iii. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  July 1974.  25 p.

408.  Recovering resources from solid waste using  wet-processing: EPA's  FranKlin, Ohio,
        demonstration project.  D.  G. Arella.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-47d.
        Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1974.  26 p.

431.  Baltimore demonstrates gas  pyrolysis; resource recovery from solid waste.   D. B. Sussman.
        Environmental Protection Publication SW-75d.i.  Washington,  U.S. Government Printing
        Office, 1975.  24 p.

442.  San Diego County demonstrates  pyrolysis of solid waste to recover liquid fuel,  metals,
        and glass.  S. J. Levy.   Environmental Protection Publication SW-80d.2.   Washington,
        U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975.  27 p.

528.  Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.: status report on resource
        recovery technology: demonstrating resource recovery.  S. Lingle, ed.  Waste Age,
        7(6):19,22,26,42,44-46,  June 1976.



                                       waste reduction

353.  Resource recovery and source reduction; second report to Congress.  U.S. Environmental
        Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.   Environmental Protec-
        tion Publication SW-L22.   Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1974.   112 p.

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order nos.
364~!Environmental protection, residuals management, and resources—the future Is now.
        A. Darnay.  Presented at Annual Meeting of National Packaging Association, Boca  Raton,
        Fla., Mar 12-16, 1974.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974.  23 p.

416.  Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl Stores program.  [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental
        Protection Agency,  [1974].  3 p.

447.  Source reduction fact sheet; reducing waste at its source, program of International
        Paper Company and Wells Dairy.  Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.   May
        1975. 2 p.

448.  Resource recovery and waste reduction; third report to Congress.  U.S.  Environmental
        Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.  Environmental  Protec-
        tion Publication SW-161.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1975.   96 p.

456.  Reduce; targets, means and impacts of source reduction.  D.  Wahl and G.  Allison.   League
        of Women Voters Publication No. 576.  Washington, League of Women  Voters  of the  United
        States, 1975.  47 p.

459.  Statement of Honorable John R. Quarles, Jr., Deputy Administrator, Environmental Protec-
        tion Agency, before the Subcommittee on the Environment, Committee on Commerce,  United
        States Senate, May 7, 1974.  J. R. Quarles, Jr.   Washington, U.S.  Environmental  Pro-
        tection Agency, 1975.  14 p.

460.  Win the war on waste.  R. E. Train.  Presented at  3d National Congress  on Waste Manage-
        ment Technology and Resource Recovery, San Francisco, Nov.  14, 1974.   [Washington,
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.]  15 p.

461.  Proceedings; 1975 Conference on Waste Reduction, April 2-3,  1975,  Washington,  D.C.
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of  Solid Waste Management  Programs.
        Environmental Protection Publiation SW-7p.  Washington,  U.S. Government Printing
        Office, 1975.  152 p.

462.  Questions and answers; returnable beverage containers for  beer and soft  drinks.  [Wash-
        ington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of  Solid Waste Management
        Programs], July 1975.  [13 p.]

463.  Solid waste management; guidelines for beverage containers.   U.S.  Environmental  Protec-
        tion Agency.  Federal Register, 40(220):52968-52969, Nov.  13, 1975.

487.  Beverage containers: the Vermont experience.  M. Loube.  Environmental  Protection
        Publication SW-139.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1975.   16  p.

500.  Reduce the incentive to waste.  J. H. Skinner.  Paper No.  7d.   Presented  at  80th Nation-
        al Meeting, American Institute of Chemical Engineers,  Boston, Sept. 8,  1975.   9  p.

505.  Waste reduction and resource recovery—there's room for both.   N.  Humber.   Waste Age,
        6(11):38,40-41,44, Nov. 1975.
            solid waste  systems management  and land protection

47.    Sanitary landfill facts.   2d ed.   T.  J.  Sorg  and H.  L. Hickman, Jr.  Public Health Ser-
        vice Publication No.  1792.   Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.  30 p.

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order nos.

287.  Sanitary landfill design and operation.   I).  R.  Bruriner and  D.  J.  Keller.   Environmental
        Protection Publicatian SW-6Sts.   Washington,  U.S.  Government Printing-  Office,  1972.
        59 p.

385.  Thermal processing and land disposal of solid waste;  guidelines.   Federal  Register,
        39(158):29327-29338, Aug. 14,  1974.

409.  A five-stage improvement process for solid waste collection systems.   K. A.  Shuster.
        Environmental Protection Publication SW-131.   Washington, U.S.  Government  Printing
        Office, 1974.  38 p.

504.  Guidelines for the storage and collection of residential, commercial,  and  institutional
        solid waste.  U.S. Environmemtal Protection Agency.   Federal Pegister, 41(31) .'6766-
        6772, Feb. 13, 1976.

510.  Demonstrating multimaterial source separation in Somerville and Marblehead,  Massachusetts.
        P.  Hansen and J.  Ramsey.   Waste  Age,  7(2} : 26-27,48,  Feb.  1976.

Motion picture:

      The big pickup.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOOc.  [28  min, 16  mm,  sound,
        color, 1974.]  Describes America's $5-bil lion-a-ye;ir chore — collecting solid waste.
        Shows the garbage collector's  problems and illustrates  new techniques  that can improve
        efficiency and effectiveness.

Training programs:

      Operation responsible; training  for safe refuse collection.  Refuse  collectors suffer  10
        to 15 times as many injuries as  the average worker.   This three-part safety training
        package,  aimed at reducing such  injuries,  includes  a ]6-mm film (20  min, sound,,
        color); an instructor's manual with 24 color slides., 35 mm;  and a  trainee's manual
        with 241  color slides, 35 mm.

      Training for sanitary landfill operations.  Even the  best planned and  most carefully
        engineered sanitary landfills  will fail to meet current standards  if the personnel
        charged with daily operation are not full/ trained  in their  assigned duties.   This
        three-part training package includes a 16-mm film (22 min, sound,  color);  an
        instructor's manual with 206 color slides,  35 mm;  and a trainee's  manual with  10
        color slides, 35 mm.  (A few sets of this  training  program are  available on a  free
        loan basis to government agencies from Solid Waste  Information  Materials Control
        Section,  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268.)


                             hazardous waste  management

345.  Disposal of hazardous wastes; report to Congress.  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,
        Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.   Environmental Protection Publication
        SW-115.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974.   110 p.

376.  Pesticides and pesticide containers; regulations for acceptance and  recommended  procedures
        for disposal and storage.  Federal Register,  39(85):15235-15241, May 1,  1974.

398.  Pesticides and pesticide containers; proposed regulations for prohibition  of certain  acts
        regarding disposal and storage.   Federal Register,  59(200):36867-36870,  Oct 15,  1974.

399.  Federal program for hazardous waste management.  J.  P. Lehman.  Waste  Age, 5(6):6-7,
        66-68, Sept. 1974.

406.  Hospital wastes.  I. Kiefer.  Environmental  Protection Publication StV-129.  Washington,
        U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974.  36 p.

450.  Hazardous wastes.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-138.  Washington, U.S.
        Government Printing Office, 1975.  24 p.

452.  Hazardous wastes and their management; environmental  information.  Washington,  U.S.
        Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975.  3 p.

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516.  PCB-containing wastes (industrial facilities.),  recommended  procedures  for  disposal.
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.   Feicra'  Kcfisler,  4 1 (t>4 ) : ! 4 I 34- 14135 ,
        Apr. 1, 1976.

slide show

      Hazardous wastes, the gross national byproduct.   Environmental  Protection  Publication
        SW-502.  [18 mm, 35 mm, sound, color,  1975.]   Depicts  damage from improper hazardous
        waste disposal on the land.   Identifies sources of the  waste, gives  quantities and
        types of waste being generated, and explains  the effect of  exposure  to hazardous
        materials.   Available methods of management  of  hazardous  wastes  are  described, as well
        as the status of hazardous waste programs.


         teaching  materials (junior high  and high school students)

overall solid waste  issues

314.  Don't leave it all to the experts; the citizen's  role in  environmental decision making.
        Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office,  Nov.  1972.   20  p.

335.* There lived a wicked dragon.  M.  Finan.   Environmental  Protection  Publication SW-105.
        Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office,  1973.   30  p.   [Coloring book.]

430.* Habfa una vez un dragon malvado.   M. Finan.   Environmental  Protection  Publication
        SW-105s.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency, 1975.  31  p.  [Coloring
        book, Spanish version of "There Lived a Wicked  Dragon."]

525.  Solid waste management:  horizons  unlimited.   R. E.  Train.   Presented at  International
        Waste Equipment and Technology  Exposition,  Chicago, June  2,  1976.  Washington, U.S.
        Environmental Protection Agency.  16 p.

526.  Status of solid waste management  in the United  States.  S.  Meyers.  Presented at 2d
        International Congress of the International  Solid  Wastes  Association,  Padua, June 24,
        1976.  Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.   (In press.)
resource/energy conservation

333.  The salvage industry;  what it is--how it  works.   I.  Kiefer.   Environmental Protection
        Publication SW-29C.1.  Washington,  U.S.  Government Printing Office,  1973.   32 p.
        [Condensation.]

403.  Recycling and the consumer;  solid waste management.   Environmental Protection
        Publication SW-117.1.  [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency,  1974.
        [16-3/4 x 22-in.  two-sided sheet with information  about  recycling as well as illu-
        strations of five recyclable materials,  which  can  be  made  into a mobile.]

466.* What you can do to recycle more paper.  Environmental' Protection Publication  SW-143.
        [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1975.   [12 p.]

503.  Saving the energy in solid waste;  environmental  information.   Washington, U.S. Environ-
        mental Protection Agency,  [1976],  4 p.

motion picture:*

      The village green.   Environmental Protection Publication SW-8tg.   [15 rain, 16 mm, sound,
        color, 1974.   Cleared for TV.]   Documents  a  successful and  self-sustaining  recycling
        center in New York City sponsored by the Environmental Action Coalition.
      *Suitable for elementary school.

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 systems management

299.* The processing and recovery of Jon Thomas--cool call   T.  Marceleno.   Washington,  U.S.
        Government Printing Office, 1972.   [34 p.]

motion pictures:*

      The big pickup.  Ervironmentai Protection Publication SW-lOOc.   [28  mm,  16 mm,  sound,
        color, 1974.]   Describes America's $5-t>i 1 lion-a-year chore--collecting solid  waste.
        Shows the garbage collector's problems and  illustrates  new techniques  that can  improve
        efficiency and effectiveness.

      Portrait of the san-man.   Environmental Protection Publication  SW-6tg.l.   [16 rrln,  16  mm,
        sound, 1974.   Cleared for TV.]  Based on interviews with the  men who collect New  York
        City's tons of garbage every day.

hazardous wastes

406.  Hospital wastes.  I. l>iefer.  Environmental  Protection Publication SW-129.   Washington,
        U.S.  Government  Drinting Office, 1974.  36  p.

450.  Hazardous wastes.   Environmental Protection  Publication SW-138.   Washington, U.S. Govern-
        ment  Printing Office, 1975.  24 p.

452.  Hazardous wastes and their management;  environmental  i/iformtion.   Washington,  U.S.
        Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975.   3 p.

slide show:

      Hazardous wastes,  the gross national  byproduct.  Environmental  Protection Publication
        SW-502.   [18 min, 35 mm, sound, color, 1975.]  Depicts  damage from improper hazard-
        ous  waste disposal on the land.  Identifies sources of  the waste,  gives quantities
        and  types of waste being generated, and explains 1 he effect of exposure to hazardous
        materials.  Available methods of management of hazardous wastes are described,  as
        well  as the status of hazardous waste programs.


waste reduction

313.  Waste  not,  want not.  Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1972.   [9 x 13-in.
        poster.]

392.  Malgastar causa necesidad.  Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1974.
        [9 x 13-in.  poster; Spanish version of "Waste not,  want not."]

416.  Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl  Store1;  program.   [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental
        Protection Agency, [;.974].  3 p.

447.  Source reduction fact s.heet; reducing waste  at its source, program of International Paper
        Company and Wells Dairy.  Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  May 1975.
        2 P-

456.  Reduce; targets, means and impacts of source  reduction.  D. Wahl  and G.  Allison.  League
        of Women Voters  Publication No. 576.   Washington, League of Women  Voters of the United
        States,  1975.  47 p.
      *Suitable for elementary school.

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                                          exhibits

      For information on exhibits, write to Solid Waste Information, U.S.  Environmental  Protec-
tion Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio  45268.   Please include your phone nwnbef and address.

Protect the good earth.   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972.  [2 x 2-1/2 ft,  portable
      exhibit, 3 panels, carrying wt 35 lb.]

Solid waste--a valuable resource.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.   [3-1/3 x 5 ft,
      permanent exhibit, 6 panels, shipping wt 500 lb.]
                                             films

    The  following films may be borrowed from RHR Filmedia, Inc.,  1212 Avenue of the
Americas,  New York,  New  York   10036.   Allow 6 weeks  for scheduling.

The big pickup.   Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOOc.   Describes  America's  $5-billion-
      a-year chore—collecting solid waste.   Shows the garbage  collector's problems  and illus-
      trates new techniques that can improve efficiency and effectiveness.  [28 min,  16 mm,
      sound, color, 1974.]

The green box.  The residents of Chilton County, Alabama, switched  from rat-infested  open
      dumps to a trash collection system utilizing green containers that were  emptied  every
      second day.  Portrays an approach specifically  tailored  for rural areas.   [17  mm,  16  mm,
      sound, color, 1970.   Cleared for TV.]

      The following motion picture and slide show may be borrowed from Solid Waste Information,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio  4S268.   Allow 4 weeks  for scheduling.

Hazardous wastes, the gross national byproduct.   Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-502.
      Depicts damage from improper hazardous waste disposal on  the  land.   Identifies  sources
      of the waste, gives quantities and types of waste being  generated,  and explains  the
      effect of exposure to hazardous materials.  Available methods of management of hazardous
      wastes are described, as well as the status of  hazardous  waste programs.   [18-min,
      35-mm slide show,  sound, color, 1975.]

Portrait of the san-man.   Environmental Protection Publication  SW-6tg.l.   Actual interviews
      with the men who collect New York City's tons of garbage  every day.   [16  min,  16 mm,
      sound, 1974.  Cleared for TV.]

      The following film  may  be borrowed from  RHR Filmedia,  Inc., 1212 Avenue of the
Americas,  New York,  New  York  10036, or purchased  from the  National Audiovisual Center,
General  Services Administration, Washington, D.C.  20409.  Prices  are listed with each
film.   Allow 6 weeks for scheduling of films from  RHR Filmedia, Inc., and 4 weeks for
films  from the National Audiovisual Center.

Sanitary landfill; one part earth to, four parts refuse.  Environmental Protection Publication
      SW-99c.  Describes the well-planned landfill--from site  selection to use  of the  completed
      fill.  Designed with technical audiences in mind; includes consideration  of equipment
      types, climate,  operating procedures,  and topographical  and soil conditions.  [24 min,
      16 mm, sound, color,  1969.   Cleared for TV.  $97.75]

      The following films may be rented or purchased  from the  National Audiovisual Center,
General Services Administration,  Washington, D.C.  20409.  Allow 4  weeks  for scheduling.

Hazardous wastes, the gross national byproduct.   Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-502.
      Depicts damage from improper hazardous waste disposal on  the  land.   Identifies  sources
      of waste,  gives  quantities and types of waste being generated, and explains the  effect

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      of exposure to hazardous materials.  Available methods of management of hazardous  wastes
      are described, as  well  as  the status of hazardous waste programs.   [18-min,  35-mm  slide
      show, sound, color,  1975.]

Operation responsible;  safe refuse collection.  Dramatizes the problems  and responsibilities
      of solid waste collectors  and the importance to the community of professional  solid
      waste collection.  Aimed primarily at motivating the employees to  safe work  techniques,
      it lays the groundwork  for the technical sessions of a training course for refuse
      collectors.  (See  Training Programs, following.)  [20 rain, 16 mm,  sound, color,  1972.
      Cleared for TV.   $75]

Sanitary landfill--you're  the operator.  Through the device of an interview with a visiting
      newsman, a sanitary  landfill foreman gives you an inside look at his job.  Interesting
      to citizen groups  and those concerned with improving conditions in the sanitation
      industry.  Serves  as the introduction to a technical training program for landfill
      personnel.  (See  Training  Programs, following.'I  [22 min, 16 mm, sound, color, 1973.
      Cleared for TV.   $70]

The village green.  Environmental Protection Publication Slv-8tg.  Documents a successful
      and self-sustaining  recycling center in New York City sponsored by the Environmental
      Action Coalition.   [15  mm, 16 mm, sound, coloi , 1974.  Cleared for TV.  $"79]

      A few copies of the  first  three  items above arc available on a free loan basis to  govern-
ment agencies from Solid Waste  Information, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  Cincinnati,
Ohio  45268.
                                 training  programs
      These training programs  may be  purchased from the National Audiovisual Center, General
Services Administration,  Washington,  D.C.   20409.

Operation responsible;  "raining  for safe refuse collection.  Refuse collectors suffer 10 to
      15 times as many  injuries  as the  average worker.  This three-part safety training package
      aimed at reducing such injuries includes a  16-mm motion picture (20 min, sound, color);
      an instructor's manual with 24  color  slides, 35 mm; and a trainee's manual with 241
      color slides, 35  rum.

Training for sanitary landfill operations.   Even  the best planned and most carefully engineered
      sanitary landfills  will  fail to meet  current standards if the personnel charged with
      daily operations  are  not fully  trained  in their assigned duties.  This three-part
      training package  includes  a 16-mm motion picture (22 mm, sound, color); an instructor's
      manual with 206 color slides, 35  mm;  and a  trainee's manual with 10 color slides, 35 urn.
      (A few sets of this training program  .ire available on a free loan basis to government
      agencies from Solid Waste  Information,  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati,
      Ohio, 45268.)


                     state and regional solid waste  offices

      Order from Solid  Waste Information, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati,
Ohio  45268.

393.  State solid waste management agencies.   [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
        Agency.  [List, updated  periodically.]

439.  [Regional solid waste management  representatives.  Washington, U.S. Environmental
        Protection Agency.]  1 p.  [List, updated periodically. |


                                           10

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subject index

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                                            subject index
  Numbers  following entries  are order numbers, by which the publications are listed in  this
catalog.   In general,  the higher the number, the more current is the publication; i.e.,  1975
OSWMP  reports start with  no.  426, and  3976 reports start with no.  490.   PB  numbers refer
to EPA's reports on work  performed under grant or contract on solid wasrte management which
are  available  through  the  National  Technical  Information Service;  these are  listed  in  a
separate section.
Accession Bulletin; Solid Waste Information Retrieval
   System, 195
Accounting systems for solid waste management, 86, 111,
   153, 176, 182, 451, 493, PB-249 74?'
Activated caibon from refuse, 431, PB-221  172, PB-229 246
Activated sludge process for disposal of hazardous wastes.
   PB-224 583
Aerobic treatment of organic wastes, 297, PB-222 029,
   PB-222 031, PB-222 396, PB-225 160. PB-233 441
Agricultural uses of solid waste. See Composting
Agricultural wastes, 104, 120
   generation, PB-222 467
      in California, 175
      in New York State, 233
   photosynthetic reclamation, PB-222 454
   See also Composting; Livestock wastes; Plant residue
      decomposition  in soil
Air classification of solid waste?, 102, 256
Air pollution
   controls, effects on solid waste generation, PB-238 819
   film. See The Tlnrd Pollution in Films section of catalog
   from burning solid wastes, 30, 62, 100, 175, 213, 264,
      292,448,467
      Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245 674
      St. Louis plant, 412.  PB-243 634
   from landfills, 494
Airport solid wastes, PB-219 372
Akron, Ohio, solid waste management system, 423
Alcohol from cellulose wastes, PB-221 239
Alkali wastes, PB-244  382
Aluminum
   recycling and recovery, 225, 261, 308, 353, 448, 491,
      PB-208 674, PB-212 729, PB-235 770
      forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
      markets. See Markets for recycled and recovered
         materials
      specifications for recovered aluminum, PB-242 540
      taxes affecting  use of lecycled aluminum, PB-240 988
   transportation rates for virgir and secondary materials,
      PB-233 871
Ames, Iowa, solid waste system, 466-467
Anaerobic digestion of solid waste to methane, 178, 378,
   448,458
Analysis of solid wastes. See Composition and analysis
Animal processing industry wastes, 20
Animal wastes. See Livestock wastes
Antilitter:
   campaign of Keep  America Beautiful, Inc., 318, 455
   legislation, 455
   See also Litter
Application for a chemical waste land disposal facility
   demonstration grant, PB-249 747
Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, Oklahoma,
   PB-234 612
Arkadelphia City Dump, Arkansas, PB-243 029
Arsenic wastes, PB-224 585
Asphalt-glass aggregate as paving, 261, 431, PB-222 052
Assistance available under the Solid Waste Disposal Act. .fee
   Federal grants for solid waste management
Associations and organizations for resource recovery, 470
Atlanta household refuse compactor demonstration project,
   PB-234 605
Atlanta solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Attitudes of citizens on refuse problems. See Public opinion
   or refuse problems
Automobile disposal, 6, 30, 106, PB-221 879
   aerial and automotive reconnaissance for dumping sites,
      277
   in small communities, 354
   in Washington, D.C., 191
   President's  message on the environment  (1970), 129
   mycling, 275, 353, PB-223 034
   upgrading automotive scrap steel, PB-223 740
   Sec also Salvaging and salvage markets; Steel, scrap

                         B

Bacteria destruction in incinerators. See Pathogens in
   incinerator residue
Bagging, 60, 248, 270, 390, PB-212 590
   film. See In the Bag in Films section of catalog
Baldwin County, Alabama, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Baling and balefijls, 248, 252, 390, PB-214 960, PB-247 185
   Tezuka, Japan, compression system, 69
   See also Compaction of solid waste; Shredding; Size
      reduction of solid wastes
Baltimore solid waste management system,  123, 283, 353,
   417,431,PB-228 161
   gas pyrolysis, 353, 431
Bark waste, recycling, PB-221 876
Battelle Memorial Institute classification of hazardous
   substances, 489
Batteries industries land-destined wastes, PB-241 204
Beverage containers, 326, 353, 405, 424, 448, 456, 461-462,
   PB-213341
   deposit laws, 325, 396, 421, 461-462, 487
      economic impacts of returnables, 325, 353, 456,
         461462, 487
      effect on'
         industry, 325, 461-462, 487
         resource recovery, 505
      Oregon's bottle bill, 325, 396, 421, 461-462
      speech by Russell  Train, 460
      slatement by John Quarles, Jr., before the
         Subcommittee on the Environment (1974), 459
      Vermont beverage container law, 462, 487
   Eco Pak Milk Carton, 447, 461
   energy savings with returnables, 326, 378, 405,
      PB-213  341
                                                     12

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Beverage containers (continued)
   environmental impacts, 332, 405
   plastic, 261
   Proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources Conference on
      Design of Consumer Containers for Re-use or Disposal
      (1971), 261
   recycling nonreturnables, 225
   standards and guidelines (proposed), 463
   water-disposable glass, 236, 261
   See also Packaging and containers; Tin cans
Bibliographies on solid waste management, 127-128, 203,
   231, 257-258, 281-282
   collection and disposal, 35-39
   disease and solid waste, 48
   Federal contract research, 85
   Federal demonstration grant projects (1971), 232
   Federal research and training grants (1970), 190
   film list,  349
   hazardous wastes, 475, PB-224 595
   hospital solid wastes, PB-227 708
   local ordinances,  253
   Office of Solid Waste Management Programs publications,
      203
   patents (abstracts), 1, 317, 319
   resource recovery, 470
   sanitary landfill, 46-47, 384, PB-213 487
   SWRS, Accession Bulletin, 195
   waste oil disposal, PB-237 61 8
Biodegradability  of plastics, 199, 254, 324, PB-213 488
Biological treatment of wastes, 178, 345
   cellulose wastes, 178, 295, PB-223 625
   hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
   livestock wastes, 297, PB-221 171, PB-222 396
   with photosynthetic bacteria, PB-222 454
Bird hazards to aircraft near solid waste disposal sites,  355
Boilers (electric utility) with capacity for burning waste as
   fuel, PB-239 392
   See also Energy recovery from waste—steam and
      electricity from solid wastes
Booz-Allen Applied Research, Inc., classification of
   hazardous substances, 489
Bowerman classifier, PB-208 674
Braintree, Massachusetts, solid waste management system,
   PB-234612
Brevard County,  Florida, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Brookhaven, New York, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Broward County, Florida, solid  waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Buffalo, New York, crusher facility, PB-225 159
Bulky refuse, PB-221 731, PB-228 119
   See also Wood wastes
Bulletin of courses in solid waste management training
   (1971-1972), 208
Bullitt County, Kentucky, aerial and automotive
   reconnaissance for dumps, 277
Bumper sticker, 414
Bureau of Solid Waste Management. See Office of Solid
   Waste Management Programs
Cadmium wastes, PB-224 585, PB-241 204
Calculator for sanitary landfills, 351
California
   classification of hazardous substances, 489
   solid waste management study and plan, 175
Carbon (activated) from refuse, 431, PB-221 172,
   PB-229 246
Carbon black from tires, PB-234 602
Carbon content of solid wastes, 193
Cascade County, Montana, solid waste disposal, 118
Cellulose wastes, PB-223 625
   activated carbon from, PB-221 172, PB-229 246
   alcohol from, PB-221 239
   degradation in composting, 126, 205, PB-215 722
   levulinic acid from, PB-229 246
   liquefaction, PB-239 509
   protein from, 119, 186, 254, 295, PB-222 115,
       PB-223 873
   sugar from, PB-221 877, PB-229 246
   See also Wood wastes
Cement-waste glass products, 261
Characteristics of solid waste. See Composition and analysis
   of solid wastes
Chemical oxygen demand in compost, 206
Chemical research in solid waste management, 134
Chemical warfare materiel wastes, 162, PB-224 586
Chemical wastes, 415, 418, 450, 475, PB-221 464-Set,
   PB-224 579-Set, PB-226 420, PB-244 382
   batteries industry, PB-241 204
   diseases from, 48
   in California, 175
   inorganic, 418, 453, PB-224 587,
       PB-224 591-PB-224 592, PB-244 382
   landfill disposal, PB-249 747
      See also Sanitary landfill-hazardous waste disposal
   ocean disposal, 130, 162, 192
   organic, 418, 516, PB-224 587, PB-224 589-PB-224 590
   poly chlorinated biphenyls, guidelines for  disposal, 516
   recycling and recovery, PB-224 579-Set, PB-226 420,
      PB-233 641
   spilled  materials disposal, 506, PB-243 386
   See also Hazardous wastes; Industrial wastes
Cheyenne, Wyoming, solid waste management system,
   PB-234612
Chilton County, Alabama, sanitary landfill, 220, 238, 291,
   311
Chlorine wastes, PB-244 382
Chromate from pigment manufacturing, PB-233 641
Chromium wastes, PB-224 585, PB-241 204
Cities' role in  solid waste management, 331
Citizen action
   League of Women Voters publications, 259, 303
   Mission 5000, 280
   recycling,  159, 273, 296, 303, 446
   See also Public participation in solid waste management
Clark County, Arkansas, solid waste  management system,
   479, PB-243 029
Classification  systems for hazardous  substances, 464,489, 512
Clay industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-238 819
Clean Air Act classification of pollutants, 489
Clearinghouse for industrial wastes, 453
Collection, 30, 37-38, 65, 94, 146-147, 390, 409, 424
   accounting systems, 153, 182
   airport solid wastes, PB-219 372
   bagging, 60, 248, 270, 390, PB-212 590
   beverage container guidelines (proposed),  463
   bibliographies, 35-36
   case studies:
      Akron, Ohio, 423-
      Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234 612
      Arbuckle Regional Development Authority,
         Oklahoma, PB-234612
      Baldwin County, Alabama, PB-234 612
      Baltimore, PB-228 161
      California, 175
      Cheyenne, Wyoming, PB-234  612
      Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243 029
      Dallas, PB-234 140
      Des Moines, 6, 249
                                                        13

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Collection (continued)
   case studies:
      Fresno, California, PB-234 141
      Genesee County, Michigan, 52
      Humboldt County, California, 174, PB-240 365
      Jacksonville, Florida, PB-234 139
      Kansas City, PB-234 068
      Kentucky, 181
      Memphis, PB-234 612, PB-234 713
      Middletown, Ohio, PB-234 945
      Minneapolis, PB-234 612
      New Orleans, 94
      Oregon, 168
      Sacramento  County, California, PB-234 612
      San Jose, California, PB-240 395
      Seattle, PB-234 612
      Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239 196
      Washington, D.C., 191
      Wichita, PB-233 878
      Wichita Falls, Texas, 311
    commercial, 472
    comparison of different systems, 423, 434, 436
    computer planning. See under Collection -management
      and planning
    costs, 65,142, 167, 228, 298, 347, 353, 390, 400, 436,
      440-441, 466,  526, PB-239 917, PB-241 468
      litter control, 455
      user charges. See User charges for collection and
         disposal
    crews, 65, 298,441,466,472, PB-239 917
      film. See Portrait of the San-Man in Films section of
         catalog
      incentive systems, 436, PB-239 917
      training and  safety. See Operation Responsible in
         Training programs section of catalog
    decisionmaking  and games. See Decisionmaking and
      games
    DISCUS. See DISCUS
    effect of household compactors, PB-234 605
    equipment. See  Equipment, refuse handling-collection
    facilities, commercial, 472
    Federal giants for  studies, 121
    films. See The Big Pickup, Tlie Green Box, and Portrait of
      the San-Man  in Films section of catalog
    fflmscripts 270,  272
    guidelines, 454,  504
    hydraulic transport through seweis, PB-229 256
    in Germany, 59
    in high-rise buildings, 292, PB-197 623, PB-213 133,
      PB-213 135
    in hospitals, PB-213 133, PB-213 135, PB-236 543
    in low-income areas, 242
    in recreation areas, 167
    in residential complexes, 248
    in rural areas, 255, 271-272, 342, 390, 479, PB-212 398,
      PB-240 365, PB-243 029
    litter, 455
    management and planning, 331, 409, 423, 434, 436, 441,
      466, PB-213 308, PB-231  309,
      PB-239 195-PB-239 196, PB-240 365
      computer planning, 123, 147, 166, 283, 370-371, 389,
         PB-239 117, PB-239 494, PB-239 895-Set,
         PB-239 917
      mathematical models, 65, 123, 147, 166, 283,
         PB-208 154, PB-231 309, PB-239 117, PB-239 494
    mechanized, 220,  311, PB-239 195-PB-239 196,
      PB-241 468
    pipeline (pneumatic), 30, 84, 120, PB-223 162,
      PB-229 256, PB-236 543
    productivity, 436, 440^141, 466
      effects of bagging, 60
Collection (continued)

   public demand, PB-225 020
   role of private sector, 346
   routing, 356, 441, 472, PB-239 895-Set
      heuristic, 356, 409, 472, PB-239 117, PB-239 494
   safety and health of workers. Set Safety and health of
      solid waste personnel
   satellite vehicle systems, 262, PB-197 931
   separate. See Newspaper, separate collection; Source
      separation
   standards and guidelines,  454
   transfer stations, 182, 337, PB-213  511, PB-227 075
   wet systems, PB-234 496, PB-234 499, PB-236 085
Collection Management Information System (COLMIS), 347,
   389
   user's manual, 370-371
Colorado solid waste management system, PB-234 612
   Planning Region No. 10 (Montrose, Colorado), 423
Coloring book on solid waste disposal,  335
   Spanish language version, 430
Combustion power unit-400, PB-187 299
Commercial solid wastes
   generation, 240, 293, 443, 445
      See also Management and planmng-case studies
   See also Collection, Generation; Management and
      planning; Storage
Compaction of solid waste. 248, 252, 292, 339, 390,
   PB-214960
   Atlanta household compactor demonstration project,
      PB-234 605
   See also Baling and balefills; Crushing solid waste;
      Shredding; Size reduction
Composition and analysis of  solid wastes, 4, 22, 125, 1 33,
   143, 170, 235, 252, 388,  PB-220 479, PB-231 203
   agricultural wastes, PB-222 454
   air classification of solid wastes, 1 02, 256
   aluminum, PB-208 674
   and corrosion in municipal incinerators, PB-238 747
   beverage containers, 326
   carbon, 193
   commeicial wastes, 443, 445
   compost, 158, 212, 488
   European wastes, 59
   food wastes, 443, 445
   fungal protein, 312
   glass, 445, PB-208 674
   household wastes, 443. 445
   hydrogen, 193
   incinerator residue, 154 , PB-222 458
   industrial wastes, PB-239  119
   institutional solid wastes, 237
   landfill decomposition gases, PB-213 487, PB-218 672,
      PB-234930-PB-234931
   livestock wastes, PB-222 337
   metal, 443, 445, PB-208 674
   paper, 445, PB-208 674
   partial oxidation products, 154
   pesticides, PB-222 165
   plant residue in soil, PB-222 113
   plastics, 324, 445, PB-208 674
      combuslion products, PB-222 001
   rubber, 443, 445, PB-208 674
   sample size, 97
   selenium, 148
   sewage sludge, 229, PB-222 396
   textiles, 443,445
   wastewater sludge, PB-222 396
   wood, 443, 445
Composting, 3, 8, 9, 21-22, 30, 52, 55, 89, 142-143, 145,
   212, PB-222 422, PB-225 160

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Composting (continued)
   air classification of compost, 256
   and ecology, 322
   cellulose degradation in, 126, 205, 488, PB-215 722
   chemical oxygen demand measurement, 206
   compost plant dust studies, PB-222 160
   concepts in America, 169, 321
   costs, 22,55, 89, 144, 212, 488, PB-187 311,
      PB-222 710, PB-225 160
   dairy manure, PB-233 441
   decomposition, 204
   economics, 1, 212, 321,488, PB-187  311, PB-222 710,
      PB-225 160
   effects on  field and garden crops, 488, PB-236 402
   equipment, 61
   Federal projects, 121
      Gainesville, Florida, plant, 30,  PB-187 311,
         PB-222 710
      Johnson City, Tennessee, project,  8-9, 15, 30, 74,
         190,212,488
   in Europe, 21-22, 55, 59, 89, 142, 212
   in the Middle East, 212
   markets for compost, 30, 55, 89, 120, 212
   parasites in compost, 224
   pesticide residues in compost. 29
   pH characteristics of compost, 158
   poultry manure, 82
   processing by air classification, 102
   selenium in compost, 148
   sewage sludge, 115, 144-145, 229, 484, PB-236 402,
      PB-245 271
      Johnson City, Tennessee, project,  8-9, 15, 74, 212,
         254,488
   speech by  Russell Train, 476
   U.S.  EPA/Tennessee Valley Authority Project, 8, 9, 15,
      30, 190,212,254,488
Compression of  solid waste. See Size reduction of solid waste
Concrete industry wastes,  PB-221 464, PB-221 467,
   PB-238 819
Conference of Institute of Solid Wastes Management (1974),
   speech by  H. L. Hickman, Jr., 395
Conference on Waste Reduction (1975),  461
Conferences. Sec Proceedings
Construction wastes, generation, 443
   Sec also Management and planning—case studies
Consumer attitudes. See Public opinion on refuse  problems
Consumer Product Safety  Commission classification of
   hazardous substances, 489
Consumer research in packaging, 261
Consumer role. See Public participation in solid waste
   management
Containers. Sec Equipment, refuse handling-collection
   containers; Packaging and containers
Contracts
   for commercial refuse collection, 472
   for resource recovery plants, 470, 480, 495-496
   Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 42, 76, 85,
      98,121,469
   with electric  utilities to burn refuse, 467
Control laboratory for District of Columbia incinerator, 62
Cook County, Illinois, ski mountain, PB-213 697
Copper, recycling and recovery, 491, PB-212 729
Corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades in
   refuse-fueled power plants, PB-221 095
Corrosion in incinerators, PB-213 378, PB-221  851,
   PB-238 747
Corrugated (recycled)markets, 465
Costs of solid waste management, 107, 178,  390
   air classification of solid wastes, 102
   baling, 69, 252, 390, PB-247 185
   collection. See Collection  costs
Costs of solid waste management (continued)
   composting. See Composting-costs
   hauling and land spreading of sewage sludge, PB-227 005
   hazardous waste disposal, 345, 506, PB-241 204,
      PB-244 382
   in New York State, 233
   in recreation areas, 167
   incineration, 114
   ocean disposal, 157, 192
   paper manufacture with secondary fiber, PB-250 798,
      PB-250 802, PB-250 905
   producing methane from solid waste and sewage sludge,
      458
   refuse as fuel in electric utility plants, 467
   resource recovery plants, 180, 321, 352-353, 388, 417,
      431, 442, 448, 471, 480, 482, PB-243 634
   salvaging operations, 293, 296, 333
   sanitary landfills, 178, 321, 475, 479, PB-249 747
   separate collection of paper, 381, 400, 486
   size reduction equipment at District of Columbia plant,
      62
   speech by Russell Train, 525
   spills of oil and hazardous wastes, 506
   See also Accounting systems for  solid waste management;
      Financing solid waste systems; also under Management
      and planning-case studies; Sanitary landfill
Council on Environmental Quality, 129
Course schedule, solid waste management training
   (1971-1972), 208
County government's role in solid waste management, 373
CPIMOO, PB-187  299
Crankcase oil, waste, PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Crop residue decomposition in soil, PB-222 113
Crushing solid waste, PB-225 159
   See also Compaction of solid waste; Shredding;  Size
      reduction
Cyanide wastes, PB-224 584
                           D
Dade County, Florida, proposed beverage container
   legislation, 461
Dairy manure, PB-225 160, PB-233 441
   See also Livestock wastes
Dallas solid waste management system, PB-234 140
DARE, 101, 226
Data Acquisition and Analysis Program (DAAP) for
   collection data, 434, PB-239 917
Debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities, 404
Decision Alternative Ration Evaluation. See DARE
Decision-Makers Guide in Solid  Waste Management, 390, 394
Decision trees in solid wastes planning, 10
Decisionmaking and games, 101, 338, 390, 394, PB-213 482
   DARE, 101, 226
   Decision trees, 10
   DISCUS, 137
   facilities selection, mathematical models, 219
   PERT, 135
Decomposition of compost, 204
Definition of hazardous substances, 464, 489, 512
DeKalb County, Georgia, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Demonstration grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
   management
Denver solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Department of Transportation classification of hazardous
   substances, 489
Des Moines solid waste management system, 6, 249, 311,
   PB-233 873, PB-234 612
                                                       15

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Design of packaging and containers, proceedings of a
   conference, 261
Deterrents to recycling. See Disincentives to recycling
Detroit solid waste management system, PB-236 662
Developments, disposal, 3,110, 267, 274
   See also Incineration; Ocean disposal; Sanitary landfill
Dialysis for separation of hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
Directories
   recycled paper sources, 343
   recycling projects, 341
DISCUS, a solid waste management game, 137
Disease
   among waste collection workers, 426
   relationship to solid waste, 48
   See also Public health aspects of solid waste management;
      Safety and health of solid waste personnel
Disincentives to recycling, 330, 353, 424
Disposal. See Incineration; Management and planning; Ocean
   disposal; Sanitary landfill
District of Columbia. See Washington, D.C.
Drinking  waster standards, pesticide residues, 489
Drug industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466, PB-225 333,
   PB-238 819
Dumping, 156, 290, 424
   and water pollution, 411, 435
   Arkadelphia City Dump, Arkansas, PB-243 029
   film. See A Day at the Dump in Films section of catalog
   in California, 175
   Mission 5000, 265, 280
      flyer, 202
      poster, 201
   reconnaissance of sites by plane and auto, 277
East Peoria, Illinois, solid waste management system, 423
Eastern Appalachia Health Region solid waste system, 323
Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461
Economics of solid waste management, 103, 178,
   PB-187 712, PB-213 394, PB-239 631
   asphalt-glass aggregate as paving, 261
   collection, 400
   composting and compost plants. See
      Composting—economics
   effects of:
      beverage container laws, 456, 459
      pricing mechanisms, PB-239 116
      reduced energy consumption, 461
   El Cajon pyrolysis facility (proposed), 442
   hazardous waste disposal, 345
   hospital systems, PB-221 681
   impact of beverage container laws, 325, 353, 456,
      461-462,487
   incineration, 114
   inorganic chemicals industry, PB-244 382
   Lee County, Mississippi, project, PB-241 468
   methane production from solid waste, 458
   oil re-refining industry, PB-237 620
   paper manufacture with  secondary fiber, PB-250 798,
      PB-250 802, PB-250 905
   paving with waste glass, PB-242 536
   public utility concept, 160-161, PB-225  332
   recycling,  225, 331, PB-223 034, PB-239 631
   refuse as fuel, 264, 378,  467
   resource recovery, 62, 91, 180, 321, 491, PB-245 674,
      PB-245 924
   sanitary landfill, PB-245  924
   sewage sludge treatment plants and landspreading,
      PB-222 000, PB-245 271
   tire retreading, PB-243 028
Economics of solid waste management (continued)
   wastewater sludge disposal, PB'-244 311
   See also Costs of solid waste management; Financing solid
      waste systems; Markets for recycled and recovered
      materials
Efficiency in solid waste collection. See Productivity in solio
   waste management
El Cajon, California, pyiolysis facility (proposed), 442
Electricity from solid waste, 264, 321, 378, 388, 401, 431,
   PB-214 166
Electrodialysis for separation of hazardous wastes,
   PB-224 583
Energy conservation, 378, 503
   and Federal use of retreaded tires, PB-243 028
   and waste reduction, 461
   speech by Arsen Darnay, 364
   speech by Thomas F. Williams, 360
   with lesource recoveiy, 353, 448
   with leturnable beveiage containers, 326, 378, 405,
      Pl!-213  341
Energy recovery from waste, 321, 329, 357-358, 390, 424,
   441,PB-231 176
   Ames, Iowa, solid waste system, 467
   economics, 321
   effect on wastepaper markets, 465
   El Cajon facility (proposed), 442
   EPA press briefing (1974), 359
   Federal demonstration grants, 30, 311, 334, 388
      Baltimore gas pyrolysis facility, 353, 388, 417, 431
      San Diego pyrolysis process, 353, 388, 417, 442
      St. Louis plant, 180, 234, 264, 311, 353, 387-388,
         396,412,421,467
      Wilmington, Delaware, facility, 353
   forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
   fuels from waste, 264, 329, 401, 417, 442, 448, 458, 503.
      PB-222  694, PB-239 509
   markets and technology, 264, 401, 448, 458, 467
   methane from solid waste, sewage sludge, and sanitary
      landfills, 448, 458
   Monroe County, New York, resource recovery plant, 467
   refuse-fueled power  plants. See Steam and electricity
      from solid wastes
   speech by Sheldon Meyers, 526
   speech by Russell Train, 460
   steam and electricity from solid wastes, 7, 62, 180, 264,
      321, 378, 388, 401, 431, 467, 503. PB-214 166
   tires as fuel, PB-234 602
   wastepaper as fuel, 420
Enforcement of solid waste regulations, 253, 327, 330-331,
       345, 419, 455, 457, PB-201 205
Engineers, role in solid  waste management, 227
Environmental health. See Public health aspects of solid
   waste disposal
Environmental protection, 112, 306, 379
   effects of:
      Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-24.5 674
      garbage grinders, 13
      hazardous wastes, 450, 452
      packaging and containers, 261, 332, 405
      plastic refuse disposal, PB-238 654
      resource recovery and source reduction, 352-353, 448
      resource recovery facilities, 448
      San Diego pyrolysis plant, 442
      waste automotive crankcase oil, EPA studies,
          PB-237 618
   exhibits. See Protect
      the Good Earth in Exhibits section of catalog
   film. See The Third Pollution in Films section of catalog
   speeches by:
      Arsen J. Darnay, 364, 380, 413
                                                       16

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Environmental protection (continued)
   speeches by:
       Sheldon Meyers, 526
       Russell Train, 460
       Thomas F. Williams, 318, 360
   See also Air pollution; Water pollution
Environmental Protection Agency press briefing on solid
   waste management and energy (1974), 359
Environmentalists, views, 461, 515
Equalization basins for sewage sludge treatment plants,
   PB-222 000
Equipment, 1, 248, PB-228  161
   collection, 65, 298, 311, 436, 441,455, 472, PB-233 878,
       PB-234 068, PB-234 139-PB-234 141, PB-234 713,
       PB-234 945, PB-239 195, PB-239 917, PB-240 365,
       PB-241 468
       container trains, 311
       containers, 59,  167, 436, 441, 455, PB-240 365,
          PB-241 468, PB-243 029
       fleet selection, 251
   composting, 61
   sampler for microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions,
       151
   sanitary landfill, 47, 287, 291, 305, PB-212 589
   shredders, 402, 433, PB-245 672
   size reduction, 114, PB-226 551
Erie County-Torrax Solid Waste Demonstration Project, 311
Estimation of solid waste characteristics and volume. See
   Generation of solid waste
European  solid waste management, 3, 21-22, 55, 89, 142,
   212
Evaluation of:
   Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245  674
   St.  Louis resource recovery plant, PB-243 634
Explosives, 345, PB-221 464, PB-221 466, PB-224 586
Exports (wastepaper),  effects on domestic markets, 397
Facilities for disposal of hazardous wastes, 468
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act classification of
   hazardous substances, 489
Federal grants for solid waste management, 18-19, 31, 41,
   80-81
   demonstration grants, 16, 18-19, 25, 30-31, 4M2, 66,
      71, 76, 81, 98, 108-109, 121, 197, 220, 260
      abstracts, 78
      application for a chemical waste landfill facility,
         PB-249  747
      resource recovery. See Resource recovery-Federal
         demonstration grants
   regulations, 19, 221
   research and training grants, 16, 31, 41-42, 67, 72, 76, 81,
      98
   State planning grants, See State solid waste
      management-planning grants
Federal information activities in solid waste management,
   318
Federal-local cooperation in solid waste management, 423
Federal policies on:
   resource recovery, 171, 334, 353, 357, 380,490
   solid waste disposal, PB-222 467
   virgin and secondary materials use, 353, 357, PB-239 736
   waste lubricating oiJ disposal, PB-237 618, PB-237 620
Federal procurement practices and solid waste reduction,
   490, PB-222 467, PB-229 727, PB-241 729
   guidelines for products containing recycled materials, 490
   lubricating oils and re-refined oils, PB-237 618,
      PB-237 620
Federal programs
   affecting solid waste generation and recycling,
      PB-213 311
Federal programs (continued)
    hazardous waste management, 399, 512
    solid waste management, 250, 395
    waste oil research, PB-237 618
    See also Office of Solid Waste Management
       Programs-program
 Federal Register guidelines and regulations
    beverage containers, 463
    grants for disposal and resource recovery, 19, 221
    pesticides, 328, 376, 398
    polychlorinated biphenyl wastes, 516
    procurement of secondary materials products by the
       Federal Government,  490
    resource recovery and source separation, 473
    resource recovery facilities in Federal agencies, 490
    storage and collection, 454, 504
    thermal processing and land disposal, 385
 Federal research and  training grants, 16, 30-31, 41-42, 67,
    71,76,81,98,190,260
 Federal role in solid waste management, 56, 141, 197, 215,
    306,331, 380,424,441
    and the packaging industry, 246, 456, 461
    hazardous wastes, 345
    in paper recycling, 511
    in waste reduction, 461, 500
    speech by Ralph J. Black, 31
    speech by Sheldon Meyers, 526
   use of retreaded passenger tires, PB-243 028
Federal solid waste disposal practices
   guidelines for collection and storage, 454, 504
   in the Washington area, 30
Federal subsidies for resource recovery, PB-222 467,
   PB-234 602, PB-239 736
Federal Water Pollution Control Act criteria for hazardous
   substances, 489
Feed from waste. See Nutrients from waste
Ferrous metals, recycling, 352, PB-208 674, PB-212 729,
   PB-213 577, PB-223 034,  PB-229 816-PB-229 817
   Franklin, Ohio, project, 408, PB-213  646
   St. Louis project, 264
Fertilizer consumption and production in the United States,
   484
Fibrous wastes. See Cellulose  wastes; Wood wastes
Film scripts, 265-272, 288
Films on solid waste management, 207, 349
   flyers, 70, 209-211, 214, 485, 502
   See also Films section of catalog
Financing solid waste systems, 103, 132, 188, 306, 342, 390,
   PB-213 482, PB-228 161,  PB-233 878, PB-234 068,
   PB-234 139-PB-234 141, PB-234 612, PB-234 713,
   PB-234 945, PB-240 365,  PB-243 029
   chemical waste landfill, PB-249 747
   cities' roles, 331
   electric companies using solid waste as fuel, 467
   public utility concept, 160-161, PB-225 332
   resource recovery plants, 448, 471, 480, 482
   rural, 342, PB-240 365
   States' roles, 327
   See also Management and  planning—case studies; User
      charges for collection and disposal
Fires in municipal solid wastes, 444
Flash pyrolysis system for municipal solid waste, 417
Flies in poultry manure,  82
   See also Insects and rodents in solid waste
Flyers for solid waste management films, 70, 209-211, 214,
   485,502
Food industry wastes, 198, 461, PB-219  019, PB-221 464,
   PB-221 466
Food packaging, 261
   See also Beverage containers; Packaging and containers
                                                        17

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Food waste, generation, 175, 443, 445
Forecasts of resource recovery, PB-245 924
Forsyth County, North Carolina, solid waste management
   system, PB-225 296
Franklin, Ohio, waste processing complex, 220, 309, 353,
   388, 408, 421,528, PB-213 646, PB-234 715-PB-234 716
   evaluation, PB-245 674
Fresno, California, solid waste management system, 84,
   PB-234 141
Fuel conservation in solid waste management, 407
Fuel oil from solid waste, 388, 401, 417, 442, 528
   cellulose liquefaction, PB-239 509
   from waste rubber, PB-222 694
Fuel, refuse as, 264, 311, 321, 378, 387-388, 396, 401, 420,
   431, 503,528,  PB-187 299, PB-214 166, PB-220 316,
   PB-234 602, PB-239 392, PB-240 723
   EPA/Edison Electric Institute meeting (1975), 467
   specifications for recovered organics, PB-242 540
   See also Energy recovery from waste; St. Louis sob'd
      waste plant; Wilmington material and energy recovery
      facility. Baltimore gas pyrolysis. San Diego
      pyiolysis project
                           G

Gainesville, Florida, composting plant, PB-187 311,
   PB-222 710
   refuse shredders, 402
Garrett pyrolysis system, 321, 353, 417,442, 448
Gas migration barrier for sanitary landfills, PB-239 357
Gas (industrial) wastes, PB-244 382
Gas pyrolysis, 821
   Baltimore facility, 353, 388, 417, 431,528
Gases (decomposition) in sanitary landfill, 11,47, 223, 245,
   287, 305, 391, 448, 458, PB-196 148,
   PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-213 487, PB-218 672,
   PB-230 379, PB-234 930-PB-234 931, PB-239 778
   methane as fuel, 448, 458
   migration and migration barrier, PB-239 357
Generation of solid waste, 44, 56, 58, 170, 178, 183, 235,
   293, 388, 443,445, 448, 498,500, 526, PB-213 311,
   PB-222 467, PB-239 117, PB-239 494, PB-239 631,
   PB-243 366
   and land use, 247
   bulky refuse, PB-228 119
   commercial, 240,  293, 443, 445
      See also Management and planning-case studies
   construction, 443
      See also Management and planning-case studies
   effects of air and  water pollution controls, PB-238 819
   hazardous wastes, PB-222 467, PB-224 593
       chemical wastes, 453, PB-226 420, PB-249 747
   highway litter, 455
   household, 235, 443, 445
       See also Management and planning-case studies
   in institutions, 237
   in low-income areas, 242
   in recreation areas, 167
   industrial,  240, 293, 443, PB-238 819, PB-239 631
      effects of pollution controls, PB-238 819
   institutional wastes, 443, 445
   livestock wastes, 484
   mapped for the United States, 149
   per capita, 56, 58,120, 234, 241, 443,445
   plastics, 443, 445, PB-243 366
   sewage sludge, 484
   wastepaper, 443, 445, PB-250 798
   See also Management and planning-case studies; Source
      reduction
Genesee County, Michigan, solid waste system, 52
Georgia solid waste disposal, 49
German solid waste management, 59
Glass, 261
   containers. See Beverage containers; Packaging and
      containers
   generation of waste glass, 443, 445
   industrial wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
   Oregon's Minimum Deposit Act, 325, 396, 421, 461-462
   recycling and recovery, 225, 308,  352-353, 442, 448,
      491.PB-208674, PB-241 729
      ;is cement products, 261
      as urban paving, 431, PB-222 052, PB-242 536
      economics, 321
      effects of:
         Federal procurement  policies on use of recycled
            glass, PB-241 729
         taxes on use of recycled glass, PB-240 988
      Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
      forecasts for 1972 to  1990, PB-245 924
      impact of design changes, 261
      markets, 293, 448, PB-245 924
      specifications for recovered cullet, PB-242 540
   separate collection, 261
   transportation rates for virgin and secondary materials,
      PB-233 871
   water-disposable, 236
   See also Packaging and containers
Glossary, solid waste management, 279
Government role in solid waste management. See Federal role
   in solid waste management; State solid waste
   management-roles; also under Management and planning
Grants. .See Federal grants for solid waste management
Grass clippings, anaerobic digestion, 178
Great Falls, Montana, solid waste management plan,
   PB-234 612
Grinding
   garbage, effects on sewage system, 13
   Madison, Wisconsin, project, 220
   See also Shredding
Groundwater pollution. See Water pollution
Guidelines. See Federal Register guidelines and regulations;
   Regulations for solid waste management; Standards and
   guidelines
Guides for:
   decisionmakers in solid waste management, 390, 394
   hazardous waste transportation control, 512
   municipal officials for resource recovery plants,
      470-471, 480, 482, 493, 495-496
                           H
Handbooks for public officials for resource recovery,
   470^71,480,482,493
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Hazardous wastes, 450, 452, PB-221 646-Set,
   PB-224 579-Set, PB-225 164, PB-233 630-PB-233 631
   bibliographies, 475, PB-224 595
   biological treatment. PB-224 583
   chemicals. See Chemical wastes
   classification systems for hazardous substances, 464, 489, 512
   clearinghouse for industrial wastes, 453
   composition and analysis, PB-224 580
   costs of disposal, 345, 475, PB-226 420, PB-241 204
   disposal facilities in the United States, 429, 468, 506,
      PB-226 420
   Federal program, 399
   film. See Hazardous Wastes, the Gross National
      Byproduct in Films section of catalog
   film flyer, 502
                                                      18

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Hazardous wastes (continued)
   generation, 453. PB-221 464, PB-222 467, PB-224 593,
      PB-226 420
   health effects and toxicity data, PB-221 464-PB-221 465,
      PB-221 467, PB-224 581
   incineration, 418, 427, 475, PB-224 582
   landfill disposal, 415, 453, 475, 506, PB-221 464-Set,
      PB-224 579-Set, PB-226  420, PB-241 204, PB-249 747
      damage reports, 449, 494, PB-249 747
   legislation, 345
   ocean dumping, 157, 162, 192, 489, PB-224 582
   pesticides. See Pesticides
   public attitudes towards disposal facilities, PB-223 638
   pyrolysis, PB-224 582
   recommended exposure levels, PB-224 581
   recycling and recovery, PB-224 579-Set, PB-226 420
   reduction and neutralization, PB-224 579
   report to Congress by EPA,  345
   research and development plans, PB-224 594
   slide show. See Hazardous Wastes, the Gross National
      Byproduct in Films section of catalog
   speech by Sheldon Meyers, 526
   spilled wastes disposal, 506,  PB-243 386
   State management activities, 457
      transportation control, 512
   surveys by States, 464
   transportation control, 512
   treatment processes, 475, 506, PB-221 464,
      PB-224 579-Set, PB-249  747
   See also Chemical industry wastes; Hospital wastes;
      Industrial solid wastes; Radioactive wastes; individual
      substances; e.g., Arsenic; Cyanide wastes;
      Polychlorinated biphenyls
Health of solid waste personnel. See Safety and health of
   solid waste personnel; also Public health aspects of solid
   waste disposal
Heuristic routing in solid waste  collection, 356, 409, 472,
   PB-239 899
High-rise buildings, collection and disposal systems, 292,
   PB-197 623
History of solid waste management, 404
   Solid Waste Disposal Act, 260, 410
Hospital solid wastes, 73, 79, 300-301, 406, PB-213 133,
   PB-213 135, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-222 018,
   PB-227 708
   economics, PB-221 681
   pneumatic collection systems in hospitals, PB-236 543
   Washington, D.C., system, 191
Hot Springs, Arkansas, solid waste management system, 423,
   PB-234 612
Household refuse, 45, PB-236 904
   See also Collection; Generation of solid waste—household
      wastes; Management and planning—case studies
Houston, Texas, solid waste management system, PB-225 299
Humboldt County, California, collection container system,
   174, PB-240365
Humor,  131
Humphreys County, Tennessee, solid waste management
   system, 255
Hydraulic transport of refuse through sewers, PB-229 256
Hydrogen content of solid wastes, 193
Hydrogenation process for utilizing waste rubber,
   PB-222 694
Hydrogeology of sanitary landfill, 90, 223, 287,
   PB-236 462-PB-236 463
 Idaho solid waste management system, PB-234 612
 Illinois, hydrogeology of solid waste disposal sites, 90
Implementation of resource recovery plants, 448,470-471,
   480,482
Incentive systems for collection crews, 436, PB-239 917
Incentives for recycling and waste reduction,  330, 352, 500
   taxes on packaging and containers, 246, 261, 353, 424,
      437
Incentives for resource recovery, 331, 357, PB-239 736
   tire recycling and reuse, PB-234 602
Incineration, 3, 33, 114,  154, 385, 390
   accounting system, 111
   bacteria destruction, 88
   bulky refuse, PB-221  731
   centralized system for hospitals in the Minneapolis-St.
      Paul area, PB-221  681
   economics, 114
   Erie County-Torrax Solid Waste Demonstration Project,
      311
   Federal giants for studies, 121
   guidelines, 385
   hazardous wastes, 427, 475, PB-224 582
   hospital wastes, 73
   in Germany, 59
   in Oakland County, Michigan, 117
   management and planning, PB-222 467
   plastics, PB-222 001,  PB-223 651
   Quad-City regional project, 33
   sewage sludge, 6, 154
   shipborne, PB-221 684
   technologies, 30
   tires, PB-234 602
   versus sanitary landfill, 75
   See also Management and planning-case studies; Partial
      oxidation; Pyrolysis
Incinerators
   corrosion, PB-213 378, PB-221 851, PB-238 747
   design and operation, 75, 122, 368, PB-223 626
      District of Columbia studies, 62, PB-187 286
   emissions, 62, 148, 213, 292, 368, 412
      portable sampler, 151
   evaluation, 14, 200
   guidelines, 122
   high-temperature vortex incinerator, PB-240 723
   mineral recovery from residue, 491
   quench water pathogens, 184
   refuse-fueled, 412, PB-214 166, PB-240 723
   residue analysis, 148,  154, PB-222 458
   residue marketability, PB-222 588
Industrial gas wastes, PB-244 382
Industrial solid wastes, 104, 278, 526, PB-222 419
   animal processing, 20
   batteries industries, PB-241 204
   chemical, 175, 475, 506, PB-226 420, PB-238 819,
      PB-333 641
   classification systems, PB-239 119
   clay, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-238 819
   clearinghouse, 453
   concrete, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-238 819
   drug, PB-221 464, PB-221 466, PB-225  333
   fabricated metal products, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
   food, 175, 198, 461, PB-219 019, PB-221  464,
      PB-221 466
   generation. See Generation-industrial wastes;
      Management and planning-case studies; also under
      State solid waste management-plans
   glass, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
   leather, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
   lumber, 175
   mining. See Mining wastes
   National Conference on Management and Disposal of
      Residues from the Treatment of Industrial
      Wastewaters (1975), 453
                                                         19

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Industrial solid wastes (continued)
    nonferrous smelting and refining, PB-238 819
    ocean disposal, 130, 162, 192
    paper, PB-221 464, PB-221 466, PB-238 819
    petroleum, 175, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
    poly chlorinated biphenj Is, guidelines 516
    power utilities, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
    steel, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-238 819
    stone, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
    surveys, 121, 139
    textile, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
 Industry
    effects of beverage container deposit laws, 325, 461-462,
       487
    role in solid waste management, 179, 246, 340, 345, 330,
       422.424
    views on:
       conservation, 515
       waste reduction, 461
Information retrieval services, Office of Solid Waste
   Management Programs, 294
Infrared sensor for refuse sorting, PB-229 901
Inglewood, California, bagging study, PB-212 590
Injuries among solid waste personnel, 32, 48, 426, 477-478,
   481,PB-247566-PB-247567
Injury Reporting and Information System. See IRIS (Injury
   Reporting and Information System)
Insects and rodents in solid waste, 20, 32, 48, 82, 292, 444
   PB-225 160
Institutional solid wastes, PB-223 345
   See also  Collection; Generation; Hospital solid wastes;
      Management and planning; Storage
Intergovernmental approaches tc  solid waste management.
   See Regional solid waste management
International Congress (3d), International Research Group on
   Refuse Disposal (1965), 43
International Paper Company Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461
International Research Group on  Refuse Disposal, 21-22, 89,
   142-145
Interstate solid waste management. See Regional solid waste
   management
Investment decisions in solid waste management. See
   Financing solid waste systems,
Ion exchange process for:
   recovery  of chromate from pigment manufacturing,
      PB-233 641
   separation of hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
IRIS (Injury Reporting and Information System) for solid
   waste management, 477-478, 481,
   PB-247 566-PB-247 567
Iron, scrap-influence of transpoitation costs on use of,
   PB-229 816-PB-229 817
   markets.  See Markets for ferrous scrap
   See also Metals
Jacksonville, Florida, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 139
Japanese solid waste management, 3
Jefferson County, Kentucky, solid waste demonstration
   project, 125
Johnson City, Tennessee, composting project, 8, 9, 15, 74,
   212,254,488
Jon Thomas, cool cat, 299
Kansas City, Missouri, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 068, PB-234 612
Kansas, film on solid waste management in.
   See T/ic Phoenix in Films section of catalog
Keep America Beautiful, Inc., ^ntihtter campaign, 318
Kentucky solid waste management plan, 181, PB-201 205
Knoju'ille solid waste management system, PB-234 612
KUKA "Shark" collection vehicle, 311
Laboi views on waste reduction, 461
Laboiatory (control) for Distnct of Columbia incinerator, 62
Land .availability foi composting and disposal of solid waste,
   484
Land burial of hazaidous wastes, PB-224 582
Land disposal. See Dumping; Sanitary landfill
Land pollution,  71, 175, 339
   speech by Sheldon Meyers, < 26
   Sec also Dumping, Environmental protection; Packaging
      and containers -environmental impacts; Water
      pollution-by dumps; Water pollution-by landfills
Land protection. See Environmental protection
Land icclamation by accelerated stabilization, 54, PB-187 301
Land use, 30,  84, 247, 339, 484, PB-218 672
Landfill. See Sanitary landfill
"Landward" pyrolysis system, 417, 431
Latah County, Idaho, solid waste management system, 423
Leachntes. 11, 90,  223, 245, 287, 435/
   PB 209 001-PB-209 002, PB-218 672, PB-222 468,
   PB 224 996,  PB-230 379, PB-234 930-PB-234 931,
   PB-236 462-PB-236 463, PB-239 778, PB-249 747
   fro-n sewage  sludge in landfills, 391, PB-225 360-Set
   prediction  by water balance Tiethod, 483
   Sec also Water pcllution-by landfills
Lead wastes, PB-241 204
   recycling, PB-212 729
League of Women Voters
   publications, 259, 296, 302-303 , 456
   views on waste  redaction, 461
Leather
   generation of waste leather, 443, 445
   indjstry wastes. PB-221 464,  PB-221  467
Lee County, Mississippi, solid waste disposal project,
   PB-241 468
Legislation, 306, 327, 345, PB-225  332
   antilitter, 455
   authority for solid waste agencies
      Des Moines  Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency,
         249, 311, PB-233 873
      Washington Metropolitan Area, 30
   beverage container, 448, 461
      statement by John  Quarles, Jr., before the
         Subcommittee on the Environment (1974), 459
   Federal, 171, 175, 330-331, 345,526
      packaging and containers, 246, 459
      Resource Recovery Act (1970), 241, 246
      Solid Waste Disposal Act,  171, 410
      loxic chemicals, 415
   local, 183, 253
      suggested, 419
   ocean dumping, 130, 157, 192
   recycling, 296
   State, 64, 183,  327,331,345
      California, 175
      hazardous wastes, 453
      Kentucky, l8l,PB-210 205
      Minnesota, PB-249  747
      New York, 233
      solid waste management and resource recovery
         incentives act (proposed), 377
      toxic chemicals, 415
   Washington,  D.C., 191
                                                       20

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Levulinic acid from cellulose wastes, PB-229 246
Lime sludges, PB-222 354
Liners, sanitary landfill, 428, 475
Literature surveys. See Bibliographies on solid waste
   management
Litter, 40, 159, 318
   beverage container content, 326
   costs, 455
   Highway  Litter Study (1974), 455
   impact of beverage container laws, 325, 461, 487
   plastics, PB-238 654
Little Rock,  Arkansas, solid waste management system, 423
Livestock wastes, 297
   anaerobic digestion, 178
   dairy manure, PB-225 160, PB-233 441
   film on Kansas feed-lot wastes. See The Phoenix
      in Films section of catalog
   generation, 484
   pathogen content, PB-222 337
   poultry manure, 82, PB-221 171, PB-223 430
   public health hazards, 20
   swine wastes, PB-221 621
Local government role in solid waste management, 175, 306,
   327, 331, 336, 373, 419, 424, 441, 511
Locational models for disposal facilities, 173, 178
Los Angeles County solid waste management system, 30,  120
Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana regional solid waste disposal
   study, 125
Lowell, Massachusetts, resource recovery facility, 353, 491
Lubricating oil. See Oil, lubricating
Lumber industry wastes, generation in California, 175
Lynn, Massachusetts, energy recovery plant, PB-214 960
                          M
Madison, Wisconsin
   milled refuse project, 57, 220, 311,
      PB-234 930-PB-234 931
   separate newspaper collection program, 400
Maiden, Massachusetts, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Management and planning, 2, 5, 53, 110, 120, 304
   accounting systems, 86, 111, 153, 176, 182, 451
   Bureau of Solid Waste Management
      intramural research, 165
      planning grants. See State solid waste
         management—planning grants
   case studies:
      Akron, Ohio, 423
      Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234 612
      Arbuckle Regional Development Authority,
         Oklahoma, PB-234 612
      Atlanta, PB-234 612
      Baldwin County, Alabama, PB-234 612
      Baltimore, PB-228  161
      Braintree, Massachusetts, PB-234 612
      Brevard County, Florida, PB-234 612
      Brookhaven, New York, PB-234 612
      Broward County, Florida, PB-234 612
      California, 175
      Cascade County, Montana, 118
      Chilton County, Alabama, 238
      Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243 029
      Colorado, 423, PB-234 612
      Dallas, PB-234  140
      DeKalb County, Georgia, PB-234 612
      Denver, PB-234 612
      Des Moines, 6,  249, 311, PB-233  873, PB-234 612
      Detroit, PB-236 662
      East Peoria, Illinois, 423
Management and planning (continued)
   case studies:
      Forsyth County, North Carolina, PB-225 296
      Fresno, California, 84, PB-234 141
      Genesee County, Michigan, 52
      Great Falls, Montana, PB-234 612
      Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, PB-234 612
      Hot Springs, Arkansas, 423, PB-234 612
      Houston, PB-225 299
      Humphreys County, Tennessee, 255
      Idaho, PB-234 612
      Jacksonville, Florida, PB-234  139
      Jefferson County, Kentucky,  125
      Kansas City, Missouri, PB-234 068, PB-234 612
      Kentucky, 181
      Knoxville, PB-234 612
      Latah County, Idaho, 423
      Little Rock,  Arkansas, 423
      Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana  metropolitan region, 125
      Maiden, Massachusetts, PB-234 612
      Memphis, PB-234 713, PB-234 612
      Middletown, Ohio, PB-234 945
      Minneapolis, PB-234 612
      Nashville, PB-234 612
      New Orleans, 94, PB-234 612
      New York City, PB-234 612
      New York State, 233
      Oakland County, Michigan, 117
      Omaha-Council  Bluffs solid waste management plan,
         183
      Orange County, Florida, PB-234 612
      Oregon, 168
      Port of Tacoma, Washington,  PB-226 042
      Portland, Maine, 423
      Portland, Oregon, PB-234 612
      Sacramento County, California, PB-234 612
      San Diego County, PB-234 612
      San Jose, California, PB-240 395
      Saugus, Massachusetts, PB-234 612
      Seattle, PB-234  612
      Southeastern Oakland County (Michigan) Incinerator
         Authority, 423, PB-234 612
      St. Louis, PB-234 612
      Tampa, Florida, PB-225 291
      Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239 196
      Ventura County, California, PB-234 612
      Vermont, PB-234 612
      Washington,  D.C., 30, 191, 271
      Washington State, PB-234  612
      Weber County, Utah, PB-234  612
      Wichita, PB-233 878
      Wyoming, PB-234 612
   cities' role, 331
   collection. See Collection-management and planning
   COLMIS (Collection Management Information System),
      347, 370-371, 389
   county government's role, 373
   Decision-Makers Guide in Solid Waste Management, 390,
      394
   decisionmaking and games. See Decisionmaking and
      games
   developments, 116
   economics, PB-187  712, PB-213 394, PB-221 681,
      PB-239 116,  PB-239 631, PB-241 468
   Federal-local cooperation, 423
   Federal planning grants. See State solid waste
      management-planning grants
   Federal role, 56, 197, 306, 345, 424, 441
   films. See The Stuff We Throw Away and What's New in
      Solid Waste Management in Films section of catalog
                                                       21

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Management and planning (continued)
   financing. See  Financing solid waste systems
   in Europe, 3, 21-22, 55, 59, 89,  142, 212
   in high-rise buildings, 248, 300-301, PB-213 133,
       PB-213 135
   in Japan, 3
   m recreational areas, 40, 167, 284
   in residential complexes, 248
   in rural areas. See Rural solid waste management
   in the food processing industry, PB-219 019
   m the pulp and paper industry, PB-234 944
   institutional, 237
       hospital solid waste systems,  191, 300-301, 406,
         PB-213 133, PB-213 135, PB-221  681
   intergovernmental approaches. See Regional solid waste
       management
   land use planning and solid waste generation, 247,
       PB-218672
   local, 306, 331, 336, 373, 419, 424, 441
   mathematical analysis, 95, 99, 283, 338, PB-231 309
       models, 103, 173, 178, PB-231 309
         aerobic digestion of waste organic sludges,
             PB-222 029
         collection, 123, 147, 166, 283, PB-208 154
         decisionmaking, 219, 338
         financing solid waste systems,  103
         generation of wastes, 178
         locating disposal facilities, 173, 178, 219
         post aeration of sewage sludges, PB-222 031
         wastewater sludge treatment plant, PB-222 396
   National Academy of Engineering-National Academy ot
       Sciences report, 112
   PERT method, 135
   predicting-
       amounts of combustible solid wastes, PB-222 467
       solid waste characteristics, 235
       See also Composition and analysis of solid wastes;
         Generation of solid waste
   President's message on the environment (1970), 1 29
   private and public roles, 345-346, 380, 390
   productivity, 60, 306, 320, 466
   public utility concept. See Public utility concept in sohc
       waste management
   regional approaches. See Regional solid waste
       management
   speech by H. L. Hickman, Jr. 234
   State:
       activities, 457
       agencies, 393
       roles, 124,  194, 306, 327, 345, 383, 424, 455
   systems analysis, 3, 84, 99, 112,  120,  128, 135-136, 173,
       178, PB-222 995
Manual separation of solid waste. See Source separation
Map of the United States reflecting quantities of solid waste
   generated, 149
MARC landfill project, 339
Marine disposal of solid wastes. See  Ocean disposal
Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries  Act criteria for
   ocean dumping of hazardous substances, 489
Markets for:
   compost, 30,55, 89,  120,  212
   energy recovered from waste, 401, 466
   ferrous metals, 114, 293, 491, PB-245 924
   recycled and recovered materials, 119, 225, 293, 321,
       353,438,448,466,480,491
       aluminum, 293, 491, PB-245 924
       forecasts for 1972  to 1990, PB-245 924
       glass, 293,  491, PB-245 924
Markets for' (continued)
   recycled and recovered materials
       wastepaper, 293, 397, 408, 420, 438, 448, 465, 486,
         511, PB-245 924, PB-250 798, PB-250 802,
         PB-250 905
       yeast from organic wastes, 91
   See also Salvaging and salvage markets
Materials recovery. See Resource recovery
Mathematical models. See Management and
   planning—mathematical analysis—models
Meat processing plant wastes, 20
Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator, 14
Memphis solid waste management system, PB-234 612,
   PB-234  713
Mercury wastes, PB-224 585, PB-241 204
Metal mining wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Metal products industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Metals
   ferrous, 261,  311, 352, 431,491, PB-208 674,
       PB-213  577, PB-213 646, PB-223 034, PB-234 715,
       PB-239  736, PB-241 729, PB-242 540, PB-245 924
   generation of waste metals, 443, 445
   nonferrous, 102, 256, 352, 491.PB-212 729, PB-221 464,
       PB-221 467, PB-241 204, PB-242 540
   recycling and recovery,  114,  256, 261, 264, 311, 352,
       408, 431,  442, 491, PB-208 674, PB-212 729,
       PB-213  577, PB-213 646, PB-223 034,
       PB-234  715-PB-234 716, PB-241 729
       economics. 321
       effect of I-ederal procurement policies on use of
         recycled muals, PB-241 729
       Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
       forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
       markets Sec Markets for recycled and recovered
         materials
       separation by air classification,  102
       specifications tor recovered metals, PB-242 540
   salvage and recycled metal markets, 114, 293, 438, 491,
       PB-245  924
   Sec also Automobile disposal, Steel, scrap, specific metals
Methane
   as luel trom
       sanitary landfills, 378, 448
       solid waste and sewage sludge, 458
   See aho Gases (decomposition) in sanitary landfill;
       Sanitary landtill-end uses
Microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions, portable
   sampler, 1 51
Microorganisms in waste degradation See Composting
Middletown, Ohio, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 945
Milling of solid wastes. See Shredding and baling
Mine spoil,  soil and water pollution, PB-237 525
Mineral fillers from water-softening process  sludge,
   PB-224  820
Mineral recovery from incinerator residues, 491
Minneapolis solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Mining wastes
   soil and water pollution, PB-237 525
   uranium, PB-238 819
Mission 5000, 265, 280
   flyer, 202
   poster, 201
Monroe County,  New York, resource recovery plant, 467
Mt. Trashmore, PB-225  346
   film See Mt.  Trashmore  in Films section of catalog
Municipal wastes. See Collection; Generation; Management
   and planning; Resource recovery
                                                       22

-------
                           N
Nashville solid waste management system, PB-234 612
National Academy of Sciences classification of hazardous
   substances, 489
National Cancer Institute classification of hazardous
   substances, 489
National Commission on Productivity, 440-441
National Conference on Management and Disposal of
   Residues from the Treatment of Industrial Wastewaters
   (1975), 453
National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969), 172
National Industrial Pollution Control Council, 129
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health
   classification of hazardous substances, 489
National Solid Wastes Management Association, 141
National Survey of Community Solid Waste Practices (1968),
   26, 28, 98, 113, 216-218, 260,443
Natural resources. See Energy conservation; Land use;
   Resource conservation
New Orleans solid waste management system, 94, PB-234 612
New York City solid waste management system, PB-234 612
New York State solid waste management system, 233
Newspaper
   anaerobic digestion, 178
   rec> cling and recovery
      markets, 465
         See also Markets for wastepaper
      specifications for recovered newsprint, PB-242 540
   separate collection, 381, 400, 420-421, 486
Nickel and sunless steel, PB-212 729
Nitrite-accelerated photochemical degradation of cellulose
   for microbiological conversion to protein, PB-222 115
Nonferrous metals, 102, 256, PB-212 729, PB-241  204,
   PB-242 540
   industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221  467
   recycling, 352,491
   See also specific metals
Nutrients from waste, PB-221 171, PB-222 115, PB-222 454,
   PB-223 343, PB-223 625, PB-223 873
   agricultural wastes, PB-222 454
   fibrous wastes, PB-223  625
   protein from'
      cellulose, 295, PB-222 115, PB-223 625, PB-223 873
      poultry manure, PB-221 171
   yeast, 91, 254
                           O
Oakland, California, metropolitan region study, 178
Oakland County, Michigan, refuse disposal system, 117
Ocean disposal, 130, 140, 157, 162, 192, PB-221  684
   hazardous wastes, 489, PB-224 582
Oceanside, California, solid waste management system,
   PB-225 360-PB-225  362
Office of Pesticide Programs classification of hazardous
   substances, 489
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 41,  108-109,
   119
   contract research, 42, 85, 98, 108, 121, 469
   demonstration grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
      management—demonstration grants
   funding, 112, 276
   organization, 260, 263
   program, 250, 276, 395
   publications, 203
   regional representatives, 439
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs (continued)
    schedule of courses in solid waste management
       (1971-1972), 208
    technical assistance activities, 16, 30, 68, 260
 Oil (fuel) from solid waste, 321, 401, 417, PB-222 694
 Oil, lubricating, 390, PB-237 618-PB-237 620
    evaluation and testing, PB-237 620
 Oil re-refining  industry, economics of, PB-237 620
 Oil, waste, 390,418
    disposal by individual consumers, PB-237 619
    ocean disposal, 130, 162, 192
    processing facility design, PB-242 461
    recovery and recycling, PB-235 857,
       PB-237  618-PB-237 620, PB-243 222
    spills, 506
 Omaha-Council Bluffs solid waste management plan, 183
 Onondaga County Solid Waste Disposal Authority shredding
    facilities, PB-245 672
 Operations research, 99
    See also Management and planning-mathematical
       analysis; Management and planning—systems analysis
 Orange County, Florida, solid waste management system,
    PB-224 996, PB-234 612, PB-236 462-PB-236 463
 Oregon's bottle bill (Minimum Deposit Act), 325, 396, 421,
    461
 Oregon's solid  waste management plan, 168
 Organization chart for Office of Solid Waste Management
    Programs (1972), 263
 Organizations and associations in resource recovery, 470
 Oxidation
    accelerated, in sanitary landfill, 54
    ponds for disposal of hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
 Oxidation (partial) of organic solid wastes. See Pyrolysis
Packaging and containers, 3, 27. 44, 172, 243, 353, 358
   beverage containers. See Beverage containers
   Conference on Waste Reduction (1975), 461
   energy and resource consumption, 352-353, 405, 456,
      461, 515, PB-245 924
   environmental impacts, 332, PB-238  654
   forecasts of resource' recovery for 1972 to 1990,
      PB-245 924
   glass, 261, 325
      water-disposable, 236
   government regulatory and fiscal policies, 437
   legisljtion, 246
      Oregon's Minimum Deposit Act, 325, 396, 421,
          461-462
      Vermont beverage container law,  462, 487
   paper, plastic-coated, 261
   pesticides, PB-202 202
   plastic, recycling, 261
   plastics, biodegradability,  199, 324, PB-213 488
   Proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources Conference on
      Design of Consumer Containers for Re-use or Disposal
      (1971), 261
   recycling,  261, 353, 448
   source reduction, 246, 353, 421-422, 424, 437, 456
      Leo Pak milk carton, 447, 461
      Red Owl Stores program, 416
      role of indsutry,  107, 246, 422, 448, 456
   speeches by:
      Arsen J. Darnay, 364
      Sheldon Meyers,  526
      Thomas F. Williams, 515
   taxes on 246, 353,424,437
   tin cans, 261, 448, PB-208 674, PB-223 034
   See also Glass; Plastics
                                                       23

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Paper
   as fuel, 420, 465
      See also Fuel, refuse as
   costs of wastepaper, 465, PB-250 798, PB-250 802
   directory of recycled paper sources, 343
   exports of wastepaper, effects on domestic markets, 397,
      465
   generation of wastepaper, 443, 445, PB-250 798
   influence of raw material transportation costs on use of
      recycled paper, PB-229 816-PB-229 817
   markets for wastepaper, 293, 397, 408, 420, 448
   recycling and recovery, 170, 225, 256, 311, 352-353,
      381, 408, 413, 420, 448, 465, 505, PB-208 674,
      PB-212 729, PB-213 646. PB-234 715-PB-234 716
      citizen action, 446
      economics, 321
      EPA intramural program. 507
      Federal subsidies, 311, PIi-239 736
      forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
      Franklin, Ohio, project, 309, PB-213 646
      incentives, 357
      markets for wastepaper. See Markets for recycled and
         recovered materials—wastepaper
      packaging and containers, 261
      separation by air classification, 102
      taxes affecting recycled paper use, PB-240 988
   refuse sacks, 248, 270, 390,  PB-212 590
   selenium in wastepaper, 148
   source separation, 381, 390, 400, 421,486
      PB-239 775-PB-239 776
      Federal guidelines, 473
   specifications for recovered corrugated paper and
      newsprint, PB-242 540
   transportation rates for virgin and secondary materials,
      PB-233 871
Paper industry
   effects of pollution controls on solid waste generation,
      PB-238 819
   solid waste management practices, PB-234 944
   wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221  466
Papermffl sludge landfill, PB-239 618, PB-239 869
Parasites in compost, 224
Partial oxidation of organic solid wastes, 154
Patents (abstracts)
   international, 319
   refuse handling fachties for buildings, 1
   United States,  317
Pathogens in incinerator residue, 73, 88, 184
Paving with waste glass, PB-222 052, PB-242 536
PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) method
   for solid waste management, 1 35
Pesticides, 29, 345, 506, PB-202 202, PB-224 584
   containers, PB-202  202
   drinking water standards, 489
   from wood waste, PB-222 051
   regulations for disposal and storage, 376, 398,
      PB-244 557
   residues in solid waste, 29, PB-222 165
   water contamination from, 415
Petroleum industry wastes, 175, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222 354
Photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid wastes,
   PB-222 454
Phytotoxins in crop residues in soil, PB-222 113
Pigment (inorganic) wastes, PB-244  382
Pipeline collection of solid waste, 30, 84, 120, PB-223 162,
   PB-229 256, PB-236 543
Pittsburgh solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Planning .grants. See State solid waste management-planning
   grants
Plant residue decomposition in soil, PB-222 113
Plastic refuse sacks, 60, 248, 390, PB-212 590
Plastics, 199. 244, 324, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
   biodegradabihty, 199, 324, PB-213 488
   effects of refuse on the environment, PB-238 654
   generation of waste plastics. 443, 445, PB-243 366
   incineration, 100, PB-223 651
      products, PB-222 001
   industry, role in waste management, 179, 340
   recycling and recovery, 222. 316,  352-353, PB-208 674,
      PB-214 045, PB-243 366
      forecasts for 1972 to  1990. PB-245 924
      taxes affecting use of recycled plastic, PB-240 988
   salvage markets, 293
   See also Packaging and containers
Pneumatic pipeline collection of solid waste. Sec Pipeline
   collection of solid waste
Pocket cafculator for sanitary landfills, 351
Poisoning incidents from chemical wastes, 415, 449-450,
   474, 494
Pollution. See Air pollution; Water pollution
Polychlormated biphenyl wastes, disposal guidelines, 516
Port of Tacoma, Washington, solid waste management study,
   PB-226 042
Portland, Maine, solid waste management system, 423
Portland, Oregon, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 61 2
Post aoration of sewage sludges, PB-222 031
Posters
   Mission 5000, 201
   Waste Not,  Want Not, 313
      Spanish language version,  392
Poultry manure, 82, PB-221 171, PB-222 148, PB-223 430
Power plants, refuse-fueled, 387, PB-187 299, PB-220 316,
   PB-221 095
Power utilities wastes,  PB-221 464, PB-221  467
Precious metals, recycling, PB-212 729
Predicuon of quantity and characteristics of solid waste. Si?e
   Generation of solid waste
President's message on the environment (1970), 129
Pricing mechanisms in  solid waste management, PB-239  116
Private Sector Collection Survey (1971), 443
Private sector, role  in solid waste management,  107, 141,
   246, 340, 345, 380, 422, 424
Problem-solving in solid waste management, 423
Proceedings:
   Ad hoc conference on solid waste training (1964), 72
   Conference of Institute of Solid Wastes Management
      (1974). 395
   Conference on Waste  Reduction (1975), 461
   Environmental Protection Agency/Edison Electric
      Institute Meeting (1975),  467
   3d International Congress, International Research Group
      on Refuse Disposal (1965), 43
   International Research Group on  Refuse Disposal, 21-22,
      89, 142-145
   National Conference on Management and Disposal of
      Residues from the Treatment of Industrial
      Wastewaters (1975), 453
   National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969), 172
   sanitary landfill conference (1972), 339
   Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; a symposium (197 I),
       ill
   Solid Waste Resources Conference on Design of Consumer
      Containers for Re-use or Disposal (1971), 261
   Surf eon General's Conference on  Solid Waste
      Management for Metropolitan Washington (1967), 30
                                                       24

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Proceedings (continued)
   Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning
      Agencies (1969), 194
Procurement of'
   contractors for resource recovery plants, 480
   products containing recycled materials, by Federal
      agencies, 490
Product design and solid waste management, 261, 353
Productivity in solid waste management, 60,  306, 320, 436,
   440-441,466
Propellants, PB-224 586
Protein
   analysis of fungal protein produced from waste, 312
   from cellulose wastes, 119, 186, 295, 312, PB-222 115,
      PB-223 873
Psychology of solid waste management, 87, 138
Public affairs activities of State solid waste management
   agencies,  64, 457
   See also Public relations in solid waste management
Public health aspects of solid  waste disposal, 20, 23, 32, 48,
   80, 128,  155, 175,  226,444
Public information, 64, 138, 261, 457, 472, PB-249 747
Public opinion on refuse problems, 87, 315, 344, 372,
   PB-213 340, PB-223 638
   hazardous waste facilities, PB-223 638
   mechanization of collection, PB-239 196
   purchase  of recycled oil, PB-237 619
   recycling, 315, 344
   salvage, 293
   sanitary landfills, 466, PB-239 631
   waste reduction, 461
Public participation in  solid waste management, 138, 159,
   261, 266, 313-314, 318, 392, 424, 446, 461
   films. See The Phoenix and The  Village Green in Films
      section of catalog
   in rural areas, 273,  342
   information kit. See Concerned Citizens in Information
      Kits section of catalog
   recycling, 273, 344, 403, 446
   See also Citizen action
Public regulation concept in solid waste management,
   PB-225 332
Public relations in solid waste management, 64, 138, 261,
   457,472, PB-249 747
Public utility concept in solid waste management, 160-161,
   PB-225 332
   Omaha-Council Bluffs  solid waste management plan, 183
"Purox" pyrolysis system, 417
Pyrolysis, 154, 178, 321, 329, 352,417,431
   Baltimore gas pyrolysis facility, 353, 388, 417, 431, 523
   El Cajon  facility (proposed), 442
   hazardous wastes, 427, PB-224 582
   San Diego project,  321, 353, 417, 442, 448, 523
   PB-222 015 sewage sludge, 154
   tires, PB-234 602

                           Q

Quad-City regional project, 33
Quarterly Safety Management Report, 477-478

                           R

Radioactive wastes, 162, 233, 345, PB-221 464, PB-221  467,
   PB-224 588
Rail transport of solid wastes, 252, 339, PB-187 306,
   PB-222 709
Railroad freight car demolition, 95
Rat infestation of municipal solid waste, 155, 444
Reconnaissance for dumps by plane and auto, 277
Recreation areas, solid waste management, 40, 167, 284
Recycled materials. See Secondary materials
Recycling, 96, 286, 307, 311, 330, 396, PB-212 729
   and air classification of wastes, 256
   centers, PB-239 766
      directory, 341
      film. See The Village Green in Films section of catalog
   citizen action, 159, 273, 296, 303
      film. See The Village Green in Films section of catalog
   directory of recycling projects, 341
   economics, 225, 331, PB-223 034, PB-239 631
   effects of Federal programs, 296, PB-213  311
   energy savings with, 352-353, 448
   films. See The Realities of Recycling and Recycling in
      Films section of catalog
   filmscript, 268
   highway litter, 455
   information kits. See Resource Recovery in Information
      Kits section of catalog
   legislation, 296
   markets for recycled materials. See Markets for recycled
      and recovered materials
   packaging and containers, 261, 353, 448
      See also  Beverage containers
   public opinion, 315, 344
   public participation, 273, 344, 403, 446
   separate collection of recyclable wastes, 381, 390, 400,
      421, 486, PB-239 775-PB-239 776
   See also under specific materials; e.g., Aluminum; Bark
      waste; Glass; Paper; Textiles; also Packaging and
      containers; Resource recovery; Salvaging and salvage
      markets
Red Owl Stores source reduction program, 416, 461
Referendum on proposed Dade County, Florida, beverage
   container legislation, 461
Refuse as fuel. See Fuel, refuse as
Regional Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
   representatives, 439
Regional solid waste management, 164, 327,  331, 336, 339,
   390, 423, PB-226 099, PB-231 309, PB-233 873,
   PB-239 631
   Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234 612
   Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, Oklahoma,
      PB-234 612
   Baldwin County, Alabama, PB-234 612
   Brevai-d County, Florida, PB-234 612
   Broward County, Florida, PB-234 612
   Colorado, PB-234 612
   DeKalb County, Georgia, PB-234 612
   Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency, 249,
      311, PB-233 873
   Eastern Appalachia Health Region, 323
   Fresno, California, area, 84
   Genesee County, Michigan, 52
   Idaho, PB-234 612
   Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana study, 125
   New York State, 233
   Omaha-Council Bluffs plan, 183
   Orange County, Florida, PB-234 612
   Oregon, 168
   Quad-City project,  33
   representatives, EPA, 439
   resource recovery, 431, 466, PB-239 631
   Sacramento County, California, PB-234 612
   San Diego County, California, PB-234  612
   Southeastern Oakland County  Incinerator Authority,
      Michigan, 423, PB-234 612
   Ventura County, California, PB-234 612
                                                       25

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Regional solid waste management (continued)
   Vermont, PB-234 612
   Washington, D.C., area, 30
   Washington State, PB-234 612
   Weber County, Utah, PB-234 612
   Wyoming, PB-234 612
 Regulations for solid waste management, 306
   Federal grants for solid waste disposal projects, 19, 221
   hazardous waste transportation, 512
   Kentucky,  181
   ocean dumping, 130, 157, 192
   Oregon, 168
   solid waste public utilities by States, 161
   See also Federal Register guidelines; Legislation;
      Standards and guidelines
 Reports to Congress by the Office of Solid Waste
   Management Programs
   hazardous wastes, 345
   resource recovery, 352-353, 448
 Research and development in solid waste management, 98
 Research and development projects (intramural) of the
   Federal Government in solid waste, 41-42, 165
 Research and training grants. See Federal research and
   training grants
 Residential solid wastes. See Collection; Generation of solid
   wastes-household wastes; Management and
   planning-case studies
Residuals.   See  Solid  waste  management
Resource conservation, 44, 77, 407
   and refillable beverage containers, 405
   effect of secondary materials use, 353, 448
   Senate Commerce Committee plans, 461
   speech by Arsen Darnay, Jr., 364
   speech by T. F. Williams, 515
   speech by S. Meyers,526
   speech  by R.  E.  Train,523
   timber supply, PB-250 798, PB-250 802
   See also Energy conservation, Land use; Recycling;
      Resource recovery
Resource recovery, 96, 112, 119, 177, 241, 289, 306-307,
   321, 350, 380, 390, 396, 421, 424, 466, PB-233 178
   Act (1970), 196
   activated carbon from refuse, 431, PB-221 172,
      PB-229  246
   activities, State and local, 432, 457
   alcohol from cellulose, PB-221 239
   aluminum.  See Aluminum-recycling and recovery
   Ames, Iowa, system, 466-467
   by wet processing, 408
   carbon black from tires, PB-234 602
   chromate from pigment manufacturing, PB-233 641
   cities' roles, 331
   costs of plants, 321, 388, 448, 466
   demonstration grants. See Resource recovery-Federal
      demonstration grants
   economics, 62, 91, 180, 321, 491, PB-245 674,
      PB-245  924
   energy savings with, 352-353, 448
   exhibit. See Solid Waste-A Valuable Resource in  Exhibits
      section  of catalog
   Federal
      demonstration grants, 30, 121, 196-197, 311,  334,
          353, 388,528-
          Baltimore gas pyrolysis process, 353,  388, 417,
            431, S^B
          El Cajon facility (proposed), 442
          Franklin, Ohio, plant, 309, 311, 353, 388,  408,
            421,1528  PB-213 646, PB-234 715-PB-234 716,
            PB-245 674
Resource recovery (continued)
   Federal
     demonstration grants
        Lowell, Massachusetts, facility, 353, 388, 491
        legulations, 221
        San Diego project, 353, 388, 417, 442,573
  Somerville and  Marblehead , Massachusetts,510
     St. Louis plant, ISO, 234, 264, 311, 353, 387-388,
         396.412.421.467, 528. PB-243 634
     Wilmington, Delaware, facility, 353, 388t 528
  facilities guidelines, 490
  policies, 171,334,353,357,380
  procurement, 490, PB-222 467, PB-229 727,
     PB-237 618, PB-237 620, PB-241 729
  solid waste management program, 395
  subsidies, PB-222 467, PB-234 602, PB-239 736
  film. See The Phoenix m Films section of catalog
  forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
  from hazardous wastes, PB-224 579
  from institutional solid wastes, 237
  from waste. See Fuel oil from solid waste; Fuel, refuse as
  fuels from waste. See Fuel oil from solid waste; Fuel,
     refuse as,
  glass. See Glass—recycling and recovery
  guidelines, 473
  handbooks for public officials, 470-471, 480, 482, 493,
     495 496
  information kits. See Resource Recovery and Concerned
     Citizens in Information Kits section of catalog
  levulinic acid from cellulose, PB-229 246
  management and planning, 466
     See also Resource recovery plants, implementation
  markets for recycled and recovered  materials. See Markets
     for recycled and recovered materials
  metals. See Metals-recycling and recovery
  mineral fillers from water-softening process sludge,
     PB-224 820
  minerals from incinerator residues, 491
  Monroe, New York, plant, 467
  oil, waste, 390, PB-235 857, PB-237 618-PB-237 620
  organic feed  concentrate from sludge, PB-223 343
  nutrients from waste. See Nutrients from waste
  organizations and associations, 470
  paper. See Paper-recycling and recovery
  phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222 354
  plants, implementation. 448, 470471, 480, 482, 493
     accounting system, 493
     procuring contractors, 480, 495-496
  projects, State and local, 432, 457
  protein from:
     cellulose, 186, 295, PB-222 115, PB-223 873
     poultry manure, PB-221 171
  regional approaches, 431, 466, PB-239 631
  reports to Congress by EPA, 352-353, 448
  Resource Recovery Act (1970). 246
  secondary materials specifications., PB-242 540
  speeches by:
     Samuel Hale, Jr., 320
     H. L. Hickman,Jr.,234
     Sheldon Meyers, 526
     John Tally,  196
     Russell Train, 460,525
     T.F.Williams, 515
  State activities, 432, 457
  State roles, 327
  statement by Arsen Darnay, Jr., before the Subcommittee
     on Minerals, Materials and Fuels, U.S. Senate (1973),
     358
                                                       26

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Resource recovery (continued)

   statements by Samuel Hale, Jr., before the Subcommittee
      on the Environment, U.S. Senate (1973), 357
   sugar from cellulose, PB-221 239, PB-221 877,
      PB-229 246
   systems in the United States, 470, PB-245 924
   vs. waste reduction, 261, 461, 500, 505
   wet processing system. See Franklin, Ohio, waste
      processing complex
   yeast from solid wastes, 91, 254
   See also Composting; Energy recovery; Recycling
Reverse osmosis for separation of hazardous wastes,
   PB-224 583
Risks in resource recovery contracts, 496
Rock Cut Road Plant No. 1, Onondaga County, New York,
   PB-245  672
Rodents in solid waste. See Insects and rodents in solid waste
Routing collection vehicles, 147, 356, 409, 472,
   PB-239  895-Set
Rubber, scrap
   generation, 443, 445
   recycling, 1^7, 382
       by a hydrogenation process, PB-222 694
       forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
       taxes affecting use  of recycled rubber, PB-240 988
   salvage markets, 293
   tires. See Tires
   transportation rates for virgin and secondary materials,
       PB-233871
Rural solid waste management, 174, 255, 342, 390, 479,
   PB-212  398, PB-212 589, PB-240 365, PB-241 468,
   PB-243  029
   aerial reconnaissance foi auto dumping sites, 277
   Chilton County, 220
   filmscripts, 271-272
Sacks, paper, 248, 270, PB-212 590
Sacramento, California, solid waste system, 273, PB-234 612
Safety and health of solid waste personnel, 32, 426, 472,
   477478, 481, 488, PB-247 S66-PB-247 567
   training program. See Operation Responsible in Training
      programs section of catalog
Salvaging and salvage markets, 3, 30, 293, 296, 333,
   PB-212 729-PB-212 731, PB-229 220
   See also under Markets for recycled and recovered
      materials
Sample size in analysis of solid waste, 97
Sampler for microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions,
   151
San Diego
   baling study, PB-214 960
   pyrolysis project, 353, 388, 417, 442,523, PB-222 015
   solid waste management system, PB-234 612
San Francisco Bay Region forecast of solid waste generation,
   178
San Francisco International Airport solid waste and
   collection system, PB-219 372
San Jose, California, solid waste system, PB-240 395
Sanitary landfill, 12, 23, 43, 47, 114, 189, 305, 424,
   PB-196  148
   accounting system, 86
   air pollution from, 494
   bale fills, 339, PB-214  960, PB-247 185
   bibliographies, 46-47, 384
   bird hazards to aircraft, 355
   calculator, 351
   Chilton County, Alabama, 238, 291, 311
   Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243 029
Sanitary landfill (continued)
   conference (1972), 339
   costs, 47, 178, 321, 475, 479, PB-249 747
   decomposition gases. See Gases (decomposition) in
      sanitary landfills
   Des Moines, 6
   design and operation, 11, 23, 90, 186, 223, 285, 287,
      390, 475, PB-224 996
      model operation agreement, 230
   economics, PB-245 924
      See also Sanitary landfill-costs
   end uses, 11, 30, 58,  120, 285, 287, PB-218 672
      Cook County, Illinois, ski mountain, PB-213 697
      Kemlworth (Washington, D.C.) recreation area, 105
      Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting ramp,
         PB-225 346
         film. See Mt  Trashmore in Films section of catalog
   equipment, 47.  287, 291,  305, PB-212 589
   Fede'al grants for studies, 121
   films  See Mt. Trashmore and Sanitary Landfill, One Part
      Earth to four Parts Refuse in Films section of catalog
   film script, 288
   Genesee County, Michigan, 52
   Germany, 59
   guidelines and standards, 11, 83, 230, 385, PB-218 672
   hazardous waste disposal, 449, 453, 475, 493-494, 506,
      PB-221 464-Set, PB-224 582. PB-226 420. PB-241 204
   hydrogeology, 90, 223, 287, PB-236 462-PB-236 463
   in high water table areas, 94, PB-224 996, PB-225 346,
      PB-236 462-PB-236 463
   in recreation areas, 167
   in rural areas, 255, PB-212 589. PB-243  029
   leachates. See Leachates
   Lee County, Mississippi, PB-241 468
   liners, 428, 475
   Los Angeles County Sanitation District  landfills, 30
   Madison, Wisconsin, landfill,  311,
      PB-234 930-PB-234 931
   MARC project, 339
   New York State, 233
   on abandoned strip mines, 311, 484
   papermill sludge. PB-239 618, PB-239 869
   public attitudes, 466, PB-239 631
   sewage sludge disposal, 393, 484, PB-225 360-PB-225 362
   site selection, 6, 11,47,90, 138, 223, 233  305 339
      PB-236 462-PB-236 463, PB-249 747
      hazardous wastes, 475
      landbankmg, 466
   social effects, PB-239 631
   speech by Russell Tram, 525
   stabilization, 54
      Sonoma County, California, stabilization study,
         PB-230 379, PB-239 778
   State activities,  457
   water pollution. See Water pollution—by landfills
   See also Management and planning-case studies
Sanitation.  See Public health aspects of solid waste disposal
Sanitation workers
   safety and health. See Safety and health  of solid waste
      personnel
   training. See Training sanitation workers
Santa Clara, California, sanitary landfill, 54
Satellite vehicle systems in solid waste collection,  262,
   PB-197 931
Saugus, Massachusetts, solid waste management system,
   PB-234 612
Schedule of courses in solid waste management training
   (1971-1972), 208
Scottsdale,  Arizona, mechanized collection system, 220,
   PB-239  195
Scrap metals. See Iron, scrap; Metals; Steel,  scrap
                                                        27

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Seattle solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Secondary materials use
   and resource conservation, 353, 448
   by the Federal Government, 490,
      PB-237 618-PB-237 620, PB-241 729
   environmental effects, 332, 352-353. 405, 448
   in paper manufacture, PB-250 798, PB-250 802,
      PB-250 905
   markets for secondary materials. See Markets for recyebd
      and recovered materials
   speech by Samuel Hale, Jr., 320
   taxes affecting, 246, 353. 424, 437. PB-240 988
Selenium in solid waste, 148
Separate collection. See Newspaper, separate collection;
   Source separation
Separation of solid wastes, 114, 225
   by air classification, 102, 256
   by Bowerman classifier, PB-208 674
   by infrared  sensor, PB-229 901
   by reverse osmosis, PB-224 583
   manual. See Source separation
Septic tank sludge, 391, PB-225 360-PB-225 362,
   PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Sewage sludge, 144-145, 390, PB-225 360-PB-225 362
   aerobic digestion, PB-222 029, PB-222 396
   anaerobic digestion to methane, 458
   as compost, 21-22, 115, 144-145,  229, 484, 488,
      PB-236402, PB-245 271
   cost of hauling and land spreading, 6, PB-227 005
   disposal into sanitary landfill. 391,
      PB-225 360-PB-225 362
   generation,  484
   incineration, 6
      pyrolysis, 154
   landfill, disposal, 6, 484
   lime sludges, PB-222 354
   methane from, 458
   ocean disposal, 157, 192
   post aeration, PB-222 031
   treatment plants with upstream equalization basins,
      PB-222  000
   See also Sludges, refuse
Shipborne disposal, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-221 684
Shredding, 248, 252, 390, 433, PB-214 960. PB-247 185
   Gainesville, Florida, composting plant, 402
   Madison, Wisconsin, Project, 57, PB-234 930-PB-234 935
   Onondaga County, New York, shredding facilities (Rock
      Cut Road Plant No. 1), PB-245 672
   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-Tennessee Valley
      Authority composting project, 488
Site reconnaissance for automobile dumps by plane and auto,
   277
Site selection for disposal facilities, 173, 178
Site selection for sanitary landfills, 6, 11, 47, 90, 138, 223,
   233, 339
Size reduction of sobd wastes, 30, 110, 114, 252, 369, 390,
   PB-214 960
   Buffalo, New York, crusher facility, PB-225 159
    equipment, 114, PB-226 551
       costs at District of Columbia plant, 62
    in high-rise buildings, 292, PB-197 623
    Tezuka, Japan, compression system, 69
    See also Baling and balefills; Compaction of solid wastes;
       Shredding
 Ski mountain  from sanitary landfill,  PB-213 697
 Sludges
    activated process for disposal of hazardous wastes,
       PB-224 583
    aerobic digestion, PB-222 029, PB-233 441
    battery industry,  PB-241  204
Sludges (continued)
   economics of disposal, PB-234 498
   in New York State, 233
   organic feed concentrate from, PB-223 343
   papermill sludge landfill, PB-239 618, PB-239 869
   See also Dairy manure; Septic tank sludge; Sewage  sludge;
      Wastewater sludge
Social costs of solid waste systems, PB-221 681, PB-239 631
Soil
   effect of compost, 488, PB-236 402
   pollution by mine spoil, PB-237 525
Solid Waste Accident Trends, 477
Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings of a
   Symposium (1971), 311
Solid Waste Disposal Act, 31,171
   amendment of 1968,  report of the Committee on Public
      Works, 51
   history, 410
Solid Waste Information  Retrieval System (SWIRS)
   Accession Bulletin, 195
   users' guide to thesaurus, 374
Solid waste management. See Management and  planning
Solid A'aste processing. See Composting; Incineration;
   Pyrolysis; Size reduction
Solid Waste Resources Conference on Design of Consumer
   Containers for Re-use or Disposal (1971), 261
Solidmcation of hazaidous solid wastes, PB-224 583
Solvent residues, disposal, 418
Sonoma County, California, sanitary landfill stabilization
   study, PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Sorting of solid wastes. See Separation of solid wastes
Source reduction. 357, 456
   and Federal procurement practices, PB-229  727,
      PB-243 028
   by taxation. Sec Taxes on packaging and containers
   Conference on Waste  Reduction (1975), 461
   legislation, 456
   packaging and containers, 246, 261, 353, 421-422, 437,
      456,461
      Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461
      Red Owl Stores program, 416
   reports to Congress by EPA, 352-353, 448
   speeches by:
      Samuel Hale, Ir , 320
      Sheldon Meyers, 526
      lohnH. Skinner, 500
      Russell Train, 460, 525
      T. F. Williams. 515
   State activities,  45 7
   vs. lesource recoveiy, 261, 461, 500, 505
   See also Generation of solid waste
Source separation,  225, 310, 390, 400, 510,
   PB-239 775-PB-239 776
   glass, 261
   guidelines.
      beverage container, 463
      resource recoveiy, 473
   paper, 381, 400, 420-421, 486
   speech by Sheldon Meyers, 526
   speech by Russell Train, 525
Southeastern Oakland County (Michigan) Incinerator
   Authority, 423, PB-234 612
Specifications for recovered mattnals, PB-242 540
Spills of oil and hazardous wastes, 506, PB-243  386
Springfield, Massachusetts, wet system for collection,
   PB-234 499
St. Louis:
   wasle wood and bulky refuse disposal, PB-228 119
   solid waste plant, 234,264,311, 353,387-388,412,
      421,467, 528, PB-234 612, PB-243 634
                                                       28

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Stabihzation of sanitary landfills, 54.PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Stainless steel, recycling, PB-212 729
   See also Metals—recycling and recovery, Steel, scrap
Standards and guidelines
   beverage container, 463
   disposal and resource recovery grants, 221
   local government, 239
   pesticides, 376, 398, PB-244 557
   polychlonnated biphenyl wastes, 516
   procurement of products containing recycled materials by
      the Federal Government, 490
   resource recovery and source separation, 473
   resource recovery facilities in Federal agencies, 490
   sanitary landfill, 11, 83,  230, 385, PB-218 672
   source separation, 473
   storage and collection, 454, 504
   toxic chemicals in water. 415
   See also Federal Register guidelines and regulations;
      Regulations for solid  waste management; Standards
      and guidelines
State solid waste management.
   activities, 432, 457, 526
   agencies, 163, 233
      list, 393
   California, 175
   Colorado, PB-234 612
   Georgia, 49
   Idaho, PB-234 612
   hazardous  waste
      surveys, 464
      transportation regulation, 512
   planning grants, 16, 42, 64, 71, 163, 215, 260
      regulations, 221
   plans, 124
      California, 175
      Kentucky, 181
      New York, 233
      Oregon, 168
   program implementation guide, 464
   regulations for:
      hazardous waste transportation, 512
      land disposal of hazardous wastes, 453
      public utilities, 169
   roles, 80, 194, 233, 306, 327, 339, 345, 380, 383,424,
      526
      antihtter, 455
      in paper recycling, 511
   surveys, 16, 64, 464
      Georgia, 49
      Oregon, 168
   Vermont, PB-234 612
   Washington, PB-234 612
   Wyoming, PB-234 612
State solid waste management and resource recovery
   incentives act (proposed), 377
Steam and electricity from solid wastes, 7, 264, 321, 401,
   431, 448, 503, PB-214 166, PB-234 602
Steel industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-238  819
Steel, scrap
   influence of transportation costs on use of
      PB-229 816-PB-229 817, PB-233 871
   markets. See Markets for ferrous metals
   metallurgical upgrading, PB-223 740
   recycling, 261, 311, PB-212729
      Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
      taxes affecting use of recycled steel, PB-240 988
   See also Automobile disposal
Stone industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Storage of solid waste, 155,  167, 444
    household, 45
Storage of solid waste (continued)
   standards and guidelines, 454, 504
   See also Collection
Street cleaning, PB-239 327
Strip mines
   as sanitary landfill, 220, 311
   reclamation with compost, 488
Style guide for Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
   publications, 386
Subsidies for resource recovery, PB-222 467, PB-234 602,
   PB-239 736
Sugar from cellulose wastes, PB-221 239, PB-229 246
Sulfur dioxide for production of feed concentrate from
   sludge, PB-223 343
Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste Management
   for Metropolitan Washington (1967), 30
Surveys, solid waste See Industrial solid wastes-surveys;
   State solid waste management~surveys;a/so National
   Survey of Community Solid Waste Practices
Swine wastes, PB-221 621
SWIRS. See Solid Waste Information Retrieval System
Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning
   Agencies (1969), 194
Synopsizer, sanitary landfill, 351
Systems analysis of solid waste management, 3, 84, 99, 112,
   120, 128, 135-136, 173, 178, 311, PB-222 995
Tacoma, Port of, PB-226 042
Tacoma, Washington, solid waste management system, 160
Tampa, Florida, solid waste management system, PB-225 291
Tannery wastes. See Leather
Taxes
   affecting secondary materials use, 246, 353, 357, 424,
      437, PB-240 988
   on packaging and containers, 246, 261, 353, 424, 437
Technical assistance available under the Solid Waste Disposal
   Act, 16,30,68,260
   See also Federal grants for solid waste management
Technology and the American Economy, 2
Tennessee Valley Authority composting project, 8-9, 15,
   74,212, 254,488
Textile industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Textiles
   generation of waste, 443,  445
   recycling, 225, 352, PB-212 729
   salvage markets,  293
Tezuka, Japan, refuse compression system, 69
Thermal processing of solid waste, 345, 390
   guidelines, 385
   See also Incineration; Pyrolysis
Third pollution. See Land pollution
Timber supply, PB-250 798, PB-250 802
Tin cans, recycling and recovery, 261, 353, 448, PB-208 674,
   PB-223 034, PB-245 924
   District of Columbia plant, 62
Tires, 390, 461
   100,000-mile passenger car tire, 461
   recycling, 353, 382,i>B-208 674, PB-234 602
       by a hydrogenation process, PB-222 694, PB-234 602
       by retreading, PB-234  602, PB-243 028
       forecasts for  1972 to 1990, PB-245 924
       in artificial reefs, 348, PB-234 602
       in road dressings, PB-232 559, PB-234 602
Tolleson, Arizona, mechanized collection system, 311,
   PB-239 196
Toxicity data on hazardous wastes, PB-224 581
Toxicology of:
   arsenic wastes, PB-224 585
                                                         29

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Toxicology of: (continued)
   cadmium wastes, PB-224 585
   chromium wastes, PB-224 585
   cyanide wastes, PB-224 584
   mercury wastes, PB-224 585
   pesticide wastes, PB-224 584
   propellants, explosives and chemical warfare materiel,
      PB-224 586
Training grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
   management-research and training grants
Training sanitation workers, 472
   management training courses, 208
   See also Operation Responsible, Safe Refuse Collection
      and Sanitary Landfill- You 're the Operator  in Films
      section of catalog; and Training Programs section  of
      catalog
 Transfer stations, 182, 337, 390, PB-213  511, PB-227 075
 Transport of solid waste, 30
    in hospitals, PB-236 543
    in New York State, 233
    in sewage lines, 84, PB-229 256
    See also Collection; Transfer stations
 Transportation of hazardous wastes, State
    control, 512
 Transportation rates for virgin and secondary commodities,
    327, 353, 424, PB-229 816-PB-229 817, PB-233 871
 Trash. See Debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities;
    also Litter
 Tree waste disposal in Des Moines, 6
 Trickling  filter process for disposal of hazardous wastes,
    PB-224 583
 TRW Systems Group classification of hazardous substances
    489
                           U
 Union Electric Company's Merarnec and Labadie plants, 46 7
 Uranium mining, effects of pollution controls on solid wasts
    generation, PB-238 819
 U.S. Coast Guard classification of hazardous substances, 489
 U.S. Department of the Army classification of hazardous
    substances, 489
 U.S. Department of Defense waste management, PB-221 464,
    PB-221 467
 U.S. Department of the Navy classification of hazardous
    substances, 489
 U. S. Department of Transportation
    classification of hazardous substances, 512
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    classification of hazardous substances, 489
    contract research, 85, 469
    press briefing on solid waste management and energy
       (1974), 359
    Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. See Office
       of Solid Waste Management Programs
    paper recycling program, 507
    regional  solid waste management representatives, 439
    resource recovery demonstration grants. See Resource
       recovery-Federal demonstration grants
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency/Edison Electric
    Institute Meeting (1975), 467
 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-Tennessee Valley
    Authority composting project, 8, 9, 15, 74, 212, 254, 488
 U.S. Public  Health Service-Tennessee Valley Authority
    composting project. See U.S. Environmental Protection
    Agency-Tennessee Valley Authority composting project
 U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit to Germany (1967), 59
 University of Illinois solid  waste system, 237
 Use It Again, Sam paper recycling program, 507
User charges for collection and disposal, 6, 160-161, 188,
   320, 327, 342, 390, PB-225  291, PB-233 878,
   PB-239 116, PB-240 365, PB-240 395
   See also Management and planning—case studies
Utility coal ash, PB-244 310, PB-244 312
Vectors. See Insects and rodents in solid waste
Ventura County, California, solid waste management system,
   PB-234612
Vermont
   beverage container law, 462, 487
   solid waste manage-ment system, PB-234 612
Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting ramp, PB-225 346
                           W
Washington, D.C.
   areawide conference, 30
   incinerator studies, 62, PB-1S7 286
   Kenilworth sanitary landfill, 105
   proposed mandatory deposit law for beverage containers,
      461
   solid waste management plan, 191
Washington State solid waste management system,
   PB-234612
Waste Management and Control, recommendations, 112
Waste oil. See Oil, waste
Waste reduction. See Source reduction
Wastepaper See Papei
Wastewater
   computer program for steadv-state of treatment facilities,
      PB-234 497
   Franklin, Ohio, treatment facility, 309
Wastewater sludge, PB-222  396, PB-244 310-PB-244 311
   mineral fillers from, PB-224 820
   Sec also Sewage sludge
Water absorption by solid wastes in landfill, 391, PB-196 ]48
Water balance method for predicting leachate generation, 483
Water-disposable glass container, 236
Water pollution
   by dairy manure. PB-225 160, PB-233 441
   by dumps, 411
      film. See The Third Pollution in Films section of
         catalog
   by hazardous wastes, 345, 350, 352, 494
   by landfills, 11,47, 83,90, 175, 245, 305,415,435,460,
      483, 494, 526, PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-218 672,
      PB-222 468, PB-224 996, PB-236 462-PB-236 463,
      PB-239 778
   by mine spoil,  PB-237 525
   by pesticides, 415
   by resource recovery facilities, 448
      effects of Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245  674
   by sewage sludge compost, PB-236 402
   regulations, 415
      effects on solid waste generation, PB-238 819
   See also Leachates
Weber County, Utah, solid  waste management system,
   PB-234612
Wells Dairy Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461
Wet-processing of solid wastes for resource recovery, 178,
   408, PB-245 674
Wet systems for refuse collection, PB-234 496,  PB-234 499,
   PB-236 085
Wichita Falls, Texas, container-iram collection, 311
Wichita solid waste management system, PB-233 878
                                                        30

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Wilmington, Delaware, material and energy recovery facility,      Workers, sanitation. See Sanitation workers
   353, 388f 528                                            Wyoming solid waste management system, PB-234 612
Wmston-Salem, North Carolina, landfill gas barrier,
   PB-239 357
Wood resources, PB-250 798, PB-250 802
Wood waste, 293, PB-221  876
   generation, 443, 445
   reuse in controlled-release pesticides, PB-222 051
   St. Louis disposal facilities, PB-228 119                      Yeast from solid waste, 91, 254
   tree waste disposal in Des Momes, 6                         Zinc, PB-241 204
   See also Cellulose wastes                                      recycling and recovery. 491, PB-212 729
                                                        31

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                                  oswmp publications
oswmp
order nos.*

  1.  Abstracts; selected patents on refuse handling facilities for buildings. J. A. Connolly, ed. Public Health
         Service Publication No. 1793. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. [320 p.]

  2.  Applying technology to unmet needs; report on the solid waste problem.  Appendix v. 5. Technology
         and the American economy; report of the  Commission. National  Commission  on Technology,
         Automation, and Economic Progress. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1966. 12 p.

  3.$ Can engineering cope with the debris of affluence? Product Engineering, 38(21).36-44, Oct. 9, 1967

  44 Characteristics of municipal solid wastes. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Scrap Age, 26(2):305-307, Feb. 1969.

  54 Cities' rubbish woes grow as volume rises, dumping sites fill up. M. Gordon. The Wall Street Journal,
         Oct. 18, 1961. p. 1, 10.

  6.f Collection and disposal of solid waste for the  Des Momes metropolitan  area; a systems engineering
         approach to the overall problem of solid waste management; an interim report. Henningson, Durham
         & Richardson.  Inc. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [324 p.]

  7,-j- Combustion power unit-400,  CPU-400;  a  technical abstract. Combustion Power Company,  Inc.
         Rockville, Md., U.S.  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 15 p. (See PB-187 299.)

  8.  Composting developments in the United  States. J. S. Wiley and O.W. Kochtitzky. Compost Science,
         6(2)'5-9, Summer 1965. [Reprinted, Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968.] 5 p.

  9.  Concept and design of the joint U.S. Public Health Service—Tennessee Valley Authority Composting
         Project,  Johnson City, Tennessee. J. S. Wiley, F. E. Gartrell, and H. G. Smith. [Cincinnati],  U.S.
         Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 14 p.

 lO.f Decision trees in solid wastes planning. A. J. Klee and G. A. Garland. Public Works, 99(7):74-77,  July
         1968.

 ll.f Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills; an interim report. County of Los
         Angeles, Department of County Engineer and Engineering-Science, Inc. Cincinnati, U.S. Department
         of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [267 p.]

 12.t Do you need a sanitary landfill? [R.  J. Black.]  Public Health Service Publication No. 1012. Washington,
         U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963. |8 p.]

 134 Effects of  garbage grinding on sewage systems and environmental sanitation. P. L. Davis  and R.  J.
         Black. APWA Reporter, 29(12): 16-18, Dec. 1962.

 14.  Evaluation  of  the Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator; operation  test report, August 1968. E. R.
         Kaiser. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [116 p.]

 15.  Experimental composting research and development; joint U.S. Public Health Service—Tennessee Valley
         Authority Composting Project, Johnson City, Tenn. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
         1968. 6 p. [Flyer.]
    *See order form for OSWMP publications in back of catalog.
    tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    $ Available in public and university libraries.

                                                32

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order nos.

  16.f The  Federal solid waste demonstration program. D.  M. Keagy.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of
          Health, Education, and Welfare, [1968]. 13 p.

  17.f Gainesville  compost  plant; an interim report. Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion Authority, Inc.
          Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [345 p.] (See PB-187 311.)

  18.f Grant programs under the Solid Waste Disposal  Act. Environmental Protection Publication SW-8.
          Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 16 p.

  19.$ Grants for  solid waste disposal projects. Federal Register, 31(61):5180-5183, Mar. 30, 1966. Reprinted
          as amended June 8, 1967. 4 p.

  20.f Health aspects  and vector control  associated with animal wastes.  W. M. Decker and J. H. Steele. In
          Management  of  Farm  Animal  Wastes;  Proceedings;  National  Symposium  on Animal  Waste
          Management, East Lansing,  Mich.,  May 5-7,  1966. St.  Joseph, Mich., American  Society of
          Agricultural  Engineers, p. 18-20.

  21.  International Research  Group  on Refuse  Disposal (IRGRD);  information  bulletin numbers  1-12,
          November 1956 to September 1961. J. S. Wiley, ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1969. 308 p.

  22.  International Research Group on  Refuse  Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 13-20,
          December 1961 to May 1964. J. S. Wiley, ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.
          274 p.

  234 Keeping a  sanitary landfill sanitary.  B.  F. Bjornson and M. D. Bogue. Public Works, 92(9): 112-114,
          Sept.  1961.

  24.f Land reclamation project; an interim report. Harza Engineering Company. Cincinnati, U.S. Department
          of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1968. [338 p.] (See PB-187 301.)

  25.t A  national  solid wastes program. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968.
          9 p.

  26.f The  national solid wastes survey; an interim  report.  R. J. Black, A. J. Munich, A. J. Klee, H. L.
          Hickman, Jr., and  R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
          [1968]. 53 p.

  27.t Packaging and  solid  waste  management. R.  D. Vaughan.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare, [1968]. 11 p. (\ScrapAge, (12):143, 150, 155, Dec. 1968.)

  28.  Preliminary data analysis; 1968 national survey of community solid waste practices. A. J. Munich, A. J.
          Klee, and P.  W. Britton. Public Health Service Publication No. 1867. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing  Office, 1968. 483 p.

  29.t Preliminary estimate  of the significance of pesticide residues in solid wastes and problems of reduction
          or elimination of these residues. E. P. Floyd and A. W. Breidenbach. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department
          of Health, Education, and Welfare,  [1968]. 6 p.

  30.  Proceedings;  the Surgeon  General's  Conference  on   Solid Waste  Management  for  Metropolitan
          Washington,  July   19-20,  1967. L.  Weaver, ed. Public Health  Service  Publication  No.  1729.
          Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office. 194 p.
     f Out of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     t Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 33

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order  nos.

  31.+  Progress under the Federal solid wastes program. R. J. Black.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare, [1968]. 10 p.

  32.$  The public health aspects of solid waste disposal. R. J. Anderson. Public Health Reports, 79(2):93-96,
          Feb. 1964.

  33.f  Quad-City solid wastes project; an interim report, June 1, 1966 to May 31, 1967. Cincinnati, U.S.
          Department of Heahh, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [181 p.]

  34.f  Rail transport  of solid wastes, a feasibility study; interim report: phase one.  American Public Works
          Association  Research Foundation.  Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
          1969.  168 p. (See PB-187 306.)

  35.   Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated b bliography. 1954-1955. L. Weave-'. Public Health Service
          Publication No. 91, Suppl. B. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1956. 32 p.

  36.   Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1956-1957. E. R.  Williams. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 91. Suppl. C. Washington, U.S. Government Printing  Office, 1958. 48 p.

  37.   Refuse collection  and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1958-1959. E. R. Williams and  R. J. Black.
          Public Health Seivice Publication No. 91, Suppl. D. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1961.  73 p.

  38.   Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1960-1961. rev. ed R. J. Black  and P. L.
          Davis.  Public Health  Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. E. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1966. 69 p.

  39.   Refuse collection  and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1962-1963. R. J. Black, J. B. Wheeler, and
          W.  G.  Henderson. Public Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. F. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1966. 134 p.

  40.   Refuse and litter control in recreation areas. L. Weaver. Public Works, 98(4):126-128,160, Apr. 1967.
          Reprinted, Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967. 4 p.

  41.f  Research  activities of  the solid  wastes  program  of the Public  Health Service. A.  W. Breidenbach.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1968]. 16 p.

  42.t  Review of the national solid wastes program. T. W. Bendixen.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare, [1967]. 15 p.

  43.f  A review  of sanitary  landfilling  practices  in  the  United States. R.  J. Black. In Proceedings; 3d
          International  Congress,  International  Research Group on  Refuse  Disposal, Trento (Italy), May
          24-29, 1965. [Roma, Temi Press.] p. 40-47.  [Published in English, German, French,  and Italian
          editions.]

  44.   The role  of packaging in solid waste management, 1966  to 1976. A Darnay and W. E. Franklin. Public
          Health Service Publication No. 1855. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.  205 p.

  45.f  Safe  and sanitary home refuse storage.  [R. J. Black.] Public Health Service Publication  No. 183.
          Washington, U. S. Government Printing Office. Revised 1962, 1968. 6 p. [Flyer].

  46.t  Sanitary  landfill;  a bibliography.  R.  L. Steiner and R. Kantz. Public  Health  Service Publication No.
          1819.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 37 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 34

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order nos.

 47.  Sanitary landfill facts. 2d ed. T. J. Sorg and H. L. Hickman, Jr. Public Health Service Publication No.
          1792. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 30 p.

 48.f Solid waste/disease relationships; a literature survey. T. G. Hanks. Public Health Service Publication No.
          999-UIH-6. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967. 179 p.

 49.|  Solid waste disposal: a new area of pollution. D. Bogue and R. J. Boston. Georgia Municipal Journal,
          18(2):14-15, Feb. 1968.

 50.t The Solid  Waste  Disposal Act; Title II of Public Law 89-272, 89th Cong., S. 306, October 20, 1965.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1966. (See  171.)

 Sl.f Solid Waste  Disposal Act Amendment of 1968; report of  the Committee on Public Works, United
          States Senate, to accompany S. 3201, 90th Cong,,  2d sess., Report No.  1447. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1968. 33 p.

 52.f Solid waste disposal study; technical  report; Genesee County, Michigan, June 1968. Cincinnati, U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [251 p.]

 53.  Solid waste handling in metropolitan areas. [W. E. Gilbertson, R. J.  Black, L.  E. Crane, and P. L.
          Davis.]  Public Health Service Publication  No. 1554. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1966.41 p.

 54.f Solid wastes landfill  stabi^ation; an interim report. Ralph Stone  and Company,  Inc. Cincinnati, U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [145 p.]

 55.  Solid waste management/composting; European activity and American potential. S. A. Hart. Public
          Health Service Publication No. 1826. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 40 p.

 56.t Solid waste management: the Federal role. R.  D. Vaughan.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare,  1969. 22 p.

 57.f Solid waste reduction/salvage plant,  an  interim report; City of Madison pilot  plant demonstration
          project,  June  14  to  December 31, 1967. Cincinnati, U.S.  Department of Health, Education,  and
          Welfare, 1968. 25  p.

 58.$  Solid wastes: every  day, another 800 million pounds.  S. A. Mix. Today's Health, 44(3):46-48, Mar.
          1966.

 59.f Solid wastes  management in  Germany; report of the U.S.  Solid  Wastes  Study Team visit, June  25-
          July 8,  1967.  S. A. Hart. Public Health Service Publication No.  1812. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1968. 18 p.

 60.| Some  effects of disposable plastic liners on  refuse  handling efficiency. W. C. McElwee and M. J.
          Wilcomb. Journal  of Environmental Health, 30(5):501-509, Mar.-Apr. 1968.

 61.$ Some  specialized equipment  used in European  compost  systems.  J. S. Wiley. Compost  Science,
         4(1):7-10, Spring  1963.

 62.f Special  studies  for  incinerators;  for  the government of the  District of Columbia, Department of
          Sanitary Engineering. Day  & Zimmerman. Public Health Service Publication No. 1748. Washington,
          U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 80 p. (See PB-187 286.)
    tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    JAvailable in public and university libraries.


                                                35

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order nos.

  63.f  State/interstate  solid  waste  planning  grants  and agencies-January  1969. Public Health  Service
          Publication No. 1912. Rockville, Md., U.S  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969.
          17 p.

  64.f  State/interstate solid waste planning grants; pi ogress abstracts, January  1969. I), D. Swavely and L. F.
          Hultgren,  comps.  Public  Health Service  Publication No. 1913. Washington, U.S.  Government
          Printing Office, 1969. 94 p.

  65.   A study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man crews; final report. Ralph
          Stone and  Company. Inc. Public Health Service Publication No. 1892. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office. 1969. 175 p.

  66.t  Summaries; solid wastes demonstration grant projects-1969. C.  E. Sponagle and P. L. Stump. Public
          Health Service Publication No. 1821. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 175 p.

  67.f  Summaries of solid wastes research and training grants—1968. L. W. Lefke, comp. Public Health Service
          Publication No.  1596. Washington,  U.S. Government  Printing Office,  1968. 48 p. Supplement
          (insert). Jan. 1, 1968- July 1, 1970.  8 p.

  68.f  Technical  assistance  activities of the  solid  wistes program. H.  L. Hickman,  Jr. Cincinnati, U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 12 p.

  69.t  The  Tezuka  refuse compression system; a  preliminary report.  American Public Works Association
          Research Foundation.  Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education,  and  Welfare, 1969. 47 p.

  70.f  The 3rd pollution. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finle^, Inc., [1967]. 4 p.  [Flyer.]

  71.$  Action on the solid wastes problem. R. J. Black and L. Weaver. Journal of the Sanitary Engineering
          Division, Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers, 93(SA6):91-96, Dec. 1967.

  72.f  Ad hoc conference on solid waste training, Rob;rt  A. Taft Sanitary Engineering Center,  Cincinnati,
          Nov. 4-6, 1964. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. 72 p.

  73.t  Management  of solid  wastes from hospitals:  problems and technology. R. D. Vaughan.  [Cincinnati],
          U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1969]. 12 p.

  744  Municipal composting lesearch at Johnson City, Tennessee. O. W. Kochtitzky, W. K, Seaman, and J. S.
          Wiley. Compost Science, 9(4):5-16, Winter 1969.

  75.f  Municipal incineration. M. D. Bogue. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
          1968.27 p.

  76.f  Private  contractor opportunities in  the solid  wastes  program. R.  J. Black.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [ 1968]. 14 p.

  77.  Solid waste-a natural resource? R. P. Lonergan and  E. M. Herson. In  Man and the quality of his
          environment;  western resources  papers, 1967. J. E. Flack  and  M. C.  Shipley, eds.  [Boulder],
          University  of Colorado Press, 1968. p. 107-120.

  78.f  Solid wastes  demonstration grant abstracts; grants awarded January 1-June 30, 1969. C. E. Sponagle.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 47 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Goveinment Printing Office depository libraries.
     JAvailable in public and university libraries.


                                                 36

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order  nos.

  79.t Solid wastes handling.  R. J. Black. In  Environmental aspects  of the hospital, v. 2.  Supportive
          departments.  Public  Health  Service Publication  No. 930-C-16.  Washington,  U.S.  Government
          Printing Office, 1967. p. 20-27. Reprinted as "Solid wastes handling [in hospitals]." Cincinnati, U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 9 p.

  80.t Solid wastes problems  and  programs,  a  challenge  to  the  professional sanitarian.  Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-37. D. A. Townley. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,  Education,
          and Welfare, [1968]. 11 p.

  81.t The  solid wastes program of the U.S. Public Health Service. R. D.  Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. [1968]. 13 p.

  82-t Utilization  and  disposal  of poultry manure.  J. S. Wiley. Cincinnati,  U.S.  Department  of  Health,
          Education, and Welfare, 1969. 14 p.

  83.f Effects of land disposal of solid wastes on water quality. R. L. Cummins. Environmental  Protection
          Publication SW-2ts. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 29 p.

  84.f A  systems  study of  solid waste  management in the  Fresno area; final report  on a solid waste
          management demonstration. Aerojet-General Corporation.  Public  Health  Service  Publication No.
          1959. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. [411 p.]

  85.  Summaries of solid waste management contracts, July  1, 1965-June 30, 1970. H. H. Connolly, comp.
          Public Health Service  Publication  No. 1897. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.
          46 p.

  86.  An accounting system for sanitary landfill  operations. E.  R. Zausner. Public Health Service Publication
          No. 2007. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 18 p.

  874 The  psychology of solid  waste  management.  A. J. Klee. APWA Reporter, 36(5):14-15,18,20, May
          1969.

  88.$ Microbiological evaluation of incinerator operations. M. L. Peterson and F. J. Stutzenberger. Applied
          Microbiology, 18(1):8-13, July 1969.

  89.  International Research Group on  Refuse  Disposal (IRGRD);  information bulletin numbers 21-31,
          August 1964 to December  1967. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health,  Education, and
          Welfare, 1969. 387 p. [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]

  90.f See 223.

  91.  Conversion of organic solid  wastes into yeast; an economic evaluation.  F. H.  Meller. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 1909. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 173 p.

  92.f Technical-economic  study of solid waste disposal needs  and practices. Combustion Engineering, Inc.
          Public Health Service Publication  No. 1886. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.
          [705 p.] (£»PB-187712.)

  93.  Observations of continental European solid waste management  practices. M. E.  Jensen. Public Health
          Service Publication No.  1880. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 46 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    $ Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 37

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order  nos.

  94.  Master plan for solid waste collection and disposal— tri-parish metropolitan area of New Orleans; final
          report  on a  solid waste  management demonstration. Albert Switzer &  Associates,  Inc.,  and
          Greenleaf/Telesca. Public  Health  Service Publication  No.  1932.  Washington,  U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1969. [359 p.]

  95.  Dismantling  railroad  freight  cars; a study of improved methods with application to other demolition
          problems. D. M. Butler and W. M. Graham. Public Health Service Publication No.  1850. Washington,
          U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 32 p.

  96.$ Recycling and reuse of waste materials; an esssntial  feature of solid waste control systems for the
          future. R. D. Vaughan. Waste Age, 1(1): 6-7, S;pt. 1969.

  97.f Analysis of solid waste  composition; statistical technique to determine sample  size. D. E. Carruth and
          A. J. Klee. Environmental Protection Publicat on SW-19ts. [Cincinnati) , U.S. Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare, 1969. 25 p.

  98.J Research and development for better solid waste management. A.  W. Breidenbach and R. W. Eldredge.
          BioScience,  19(1 1):984-988, Nov. 1969.

  994 Tactics,  strategy:  the  solid  waste   battle.  A.   J.  Klee.  Environmental Science  &  Technology,
          3(10):898-902, Oct.  1969.

 lOO.t Solid wastes and air  pollution. R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department o" Health, Education,
          and Welfare, 1969. 16 p.
 101.   Let DARE make your solid-waste decisions. A. J. Y^tz . American City, 85(2): 100-103, Feb. 1970.

 102. t  Air classification  for reclamation  processing  of  solid wastes.  R.  A. Boettcher.  ASME  Paper No.
          69-WA/PID-9. Presented at Winter Annual Meeting, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Los
          Angeles, Nov. 16-20, 1969. 12 p.

 103.$  Economics of solid  waste investment  decisions.  R.  M. Clark.  Journal of  the  Urban Planning and
          Development Division,  Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers,  96(UPl):65-79, Mar.
          1970.

 104.   Industrial and agricultural solid wastes and problems involved in their disposal. T. J. Sorg. Public Health
          News (New Jersey), 51(3):67-69, Mar. 1970.

 105.   Kenilworth model sanitary landfill; interim report on a solid waste  demonstration  project, December
          1967-January 1969. District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary Engineering. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1969. [127 p.]

 106.   Automobile scrapping processes and needs for Maryland; a final report on a solid waste demonstration.
          Management Technology,  Inc. Public  Health  Service  Publication No.  2027. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1970. 64 p.

 107. t  Solid waste management and the packaging Indus ry. R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati] , U.S. Department of
          Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 20 p.

 108.$ The Federal solid  wastes program. R. D. Vaughan. Civil Engineering, 39(2) 69-71, Feb. 1969.

 1094 Bureau  attacks  nation's  solid  waste. R.  D.  Vaughan.  Environmental  Science  &  Technology,
          3(8):705-707, Aug. 1969.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 38

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order nos.

 110.  Current concepts in the  disposal of solid wastes  J.  C. Kennedy. Journal of Environmental Health,
          31(2):H9-153,Sept.-Oct. 1968.

 111.  An accounting system for incinerator operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service Publication No.
          2032. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office. 1970  17 p.

 112.t Policies for solid waste management. National Academy of Engineering—National Academy of Sciences.
          Public  Health Service  Publication No. 2018. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1970.
          64 p.

 113.  Planning and the national solid  waste survey.  H.  L.  Hickman, Jr. Journal of Environmental Health,
          32(4):402-405,Jan.-Feb. 1970.

 114.f Solid waste processing; a  state-of-the-art report on unit operations and processes. R. B. Engdahl. Public
          Health  Service Publication No. 1856. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 72 p.

 115.  Composting dewatered sewage sludge. G. L. Shell and J. L. Boyd. Public Health Service Publication No.
          1936. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 28 p.

 116.  Progress in solid waste management and needed developments. L. W. Lefke. In Proceedings; 8th Annual
          Environmental and Water Resources  Engineering Conference, Nashville, June 5-6, 1969. Vanderbilt
          University, Technical  Report No. 20. p.  107-118.  Reprinted,  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of
          Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 16 p.

 117.  Proposals  for a  refuse disposal  system  in Oakland County, Michigan; final report on a solid waste
          demonstration grant project.  Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd. Public Health Service Publication No.
          1960. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 146 p.

 118.  Comprehensive study of solid waste disposal in Cascade County, Montana: final report on a solid waste
          demonstration. Thomas,  Dean & Hoskins, Inc.  Public Health Service  Publication  No. 2002.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 188 p.

 119.$ Reuse of solid  wastes,  a major solution to a ma|0i national  problem.  R. D.  Vaughan. Waste Age,
          1(1)'10,14-15. Apr. 1970.

 120.± Where will we put  all that garbage'' T. Alexander.  Fortune,  76(5):149-151,189-190.192,194, Oct.
          1967, Reprinted,  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1970].  13 p.

 121.J Grants  encourage new  waste disposal  methods.  A. J.  Muhich. Journal of Environmental  Health,
          32(5)-572-578. Mar.-Apr. 1970.

 122.  Municipal-scale  incinerator design and  operation.  Formerly titled "Incinerator guidelines—1969." J.
          DeMarco,  D. J. Keller, J. Leckman, and J. L. Newton. Public Health Service  Publication No. 2012.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 98 p.

 123.  Mathematical modeling of solid  waste collection policies, v. 1-2. M. M. Truitt, J. C. Liebman, and C. W.
          Kruse.  Public Health Service Publication No. 2030. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1970. [311 p.]

 124.  Developing a  State solid waste management plan. R. 0. Toftner. Public Health Service Publication No.
          2031. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 50 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    $ Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 39

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order nos.

 125.  Louisville, Ky.-Ind. metropolitan region solid waste disposal study; interim leport  on a solid waste
          demonstration project,  v. 1.  Jefferson County, Kentucky. University of Louisville. [Cincinnati],
          U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 205 p.

 126.$ Cellulolytic activity in municipal solid waste camposting. F. J. Stutzenberger, A. J. Kaufman, and R. D.
          Lossin. Canadian Journal of Microbiology, 16(7): 553-560, July 1970.

 127.  Solid  waste  management;  abstracts and excerpts from the literature, v. 1-2.  C. G. Golueke. Public
          Health Service Publication No. 2038. Washhgton, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 147 p.

 128.  Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; first and second annual reports. C. G. Golueke and
          P. H. McGauhey. Public  Health Service Publication No. 2039. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1970. 245 p.

 129.f Excerpts relating to solid  waste from The President's Message on Environment, 91st Cong.,  2d sess.,
          Feb.  10, 1970. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. [4 p.]

 130.  An appraisal of marine disposal of solid waste:; off the west coast: a preliminary review and results of a
          survey. C. G.  Gunnerson. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970.
          32  p.

 131.t America the beautiful; a collection  of the nation's trashiest humor.  A. Hamilton, comp. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 2048. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.  31  p.

 132.$ Financing municipal solid  waste management systems. R. M. Clark and R. 0. Toftner. Journal of the
          Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers, 96(SA4):885-892,
          Aug.  1970.

 133.$ Sample  weights in  solid waste composition studies. A. J.  Klee and D. Carruth. Journal of the  Sanitary
          Engineering Division, Proceedings  of the American  Society of Civil Engineers, 96(SA4):945-954,
          Aug.  1970.

 134.  Needs for chemical  research in solid waste management.  A. W.  Breidenbach and  E. P. Floyd.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 28 p.

 135.f PERT; concepts and application to solid waste management. S. J. Meresman. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-35ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 35 p.

 136.  Systems analysis of regional solid waste handling. N. Morse and E. W. Roth. Public  Health Service
          Publication No. 2065. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. [294 p.]

 137.$ DISCUS—a solid-waste management game. A. J. Klee. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience Electronics,
          GE-8(3): 125-129, July 1970.

 138.f Citizen support for solid waste management. National Association  of Counties Research Foundation.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1970]. 20 p. (Also published as
          ch. 8  of Public Health Service Publication No. 2084.)

 139.f Planning a comprehensive  in-plant solid  waste  survey.  R.  L. Cummins,  W. T.  Dehn, H. Hudson,  and
          M. L. Senske. Environmental Protection Publication SW-58ts. [Cincinnati], U.S.Department of Health,
          Education, and Welfare, 1970. 9 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.
                                                 40

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order  nos.

 140.$ Ocean dumping poses growing threat. Environmental  Science  & Technology, 4(10):805-806, Oct.
          1970.

 141.t The  public-private partnership in solid  waste  management.  H. L. Hickman, Jr.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970.  16 p.

 142.  International Research Group on  Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 32, April
          1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 41  p. [Translated
          by the Israel  Program for Scientific Translations.]

 143.  International Research Group on Refuse  Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin  number 33, August
          1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 27  p. [Translated
          by the Israel  Program for Scientific Translations.]

 144.  International Research  Group  on  Refuse  Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number  34,
          December 1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 29 p.
          [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]

 145.  International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number  35, May
          1969. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 46  p. [Translated
          by the Israel  Program for Scientific Translations.]

 146.$ Decentralized solid waste  collection  facilities.  R. M.  Clark and B. P. Helms. Journal of the Sanitary
          Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American  Society of Civil Engineers, 96(SA5): 1035-1043,
          Oct.  1970.

 147.  Mathematical analysis of solid waste collection. D. H. Marks and J. C. Liebman, Public  Health Service
          Publication No. 2104. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 196 p.

 148.$ Determination  of selenium  in  solid waste.  H. Johnson. Environmental Science & Technology,
          4(10):850-853, Oct. 1970.

 149.$ Mapping the United States... a solid waste view. A. J.  Klee. Waste Age, 1(5):30-31, Sept.-Oct. 1970.

 150.$ Clean  and  green  solid waste  system  in  Alabama  is  widely copied. M.  D.  Bogue.  Waste  Age,
          1(5):4-6,IO-11,36, Sept.-Oct. 1970.

 151.$ Portable sampler  for  microorganisms  in incinerator stack emissions.  D. H. Armstrong.  Applied
          Microbiology, 19(1):204-205, Jan.  1970.

 152.t The  Resource  Recovery  Act,  Public  Law 91-512,  91st Cong., H.R. 11833,  October  26,  1970.
          [Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.]  9 p. (See 171.)

 153.  An accounting system for  solid waste collection.  E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service Publication No.
          2033. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1970. 24 p.

 154.  Partial oxidation  of solid  organic wastes. W. W. Shuster. Public Health Service Publication No. 2133.
          Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 99 p.

 ISS.f Control of domestic rats and mice. rev. ed. B. F. Bjornson, H. D. Pratt, and K. S. Littig. Public Health
          Service Publication No.  563.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1968.  Reprinted,
          [Bureau of Solid Waste Management], 1970. 41 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    $Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 41

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order nos.

 156.  Closing open dumps. D. R. Brunner, S. J. Hubbard, D. J. Keller, and J. L. Newton. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-61ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971, 19 p.

 1574 Marine disposal  of solid  wastes. C. G. Gunnerson, R. P. Brown, and D. D. Smith. Journal of the
          Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers,  96(SA6):1387-
          1397, Dec. 1970.

 1584 An investigation of the pH characteristics of compost. R. A. Carnes and R. D. Lossin. Compost Science,
          11(5):18-21,  Sept.-Oct.  1970. Reprinted,  [Cincinnati,  U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,
          1971.]  4 p.

 159,  The mess we're in. S. Edmund. Ranger Rick '& Nature Magazine, 4(6):4-10, July 1970.

 1604 Manage solid wastes as a utility. R. M. Clark, R. 0.  Toftner, and T. W. Bendixen. American  Citv,
          86(2):45-47, Feb. 1971.

 161.| Management  of  solid waste—the utility concept. R. M. Clark,  R.  0.  Toftner, and T. W. Bendixen.
          Journal of the  Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings, American  Society of Civil Engineers,
          97(SA1):33-40, Feb. 1971.

 162.$ Deep-sea disposal of liquid and solid wastes. E. D.  Smith and R. P. Brown. Industrial Water Engineering,
          7(9):20-24, Sept. 1970.

 163.f State  solid waste planning grants, agencies,  and  progress-1970; report of activities through June 30,
          1970.  R. 0. Toftner, D. D. Swavely, W. T. Dehn, and B. L. Sweeney, comps. Public Health Service
          Publication No. 2109. Washington, U.S.  Gcvernment Printing Office,  1971. 26 p.

 164.  Intergovernmental  approaches  to  solid  waste  management.  R.  0. Toftner and R. M.  Clark.
          Environmental Protection Publication SW-47ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
          19 p.

 165.  Summaries of solid waste intramural research  and development projects. A. W. Breidenbach, comp.
          Environmental Protection Publication SW-14r. Washington, U.S. Government Printing  Office, 1971.
          24 p.

 166.  An information system  for solid waste  operation. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
          1971. 3 p.

 167.f Solid  waste management in recreational forest areas. C. S. Spooner. Public Health Service Publication
          No. 1991. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 96 p.

 168.f Oregon solid waste management plan; status  report, 1969. Oregon State Board or Health. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 2115. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 125 p.

 169.  American  composting  concepts. P.  H.   McGauhey.  Public Health Service  Publication No. 2023.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Offic;,  1971. 23 p.

 170.  The role  of nonpackaging paper in  solid  wasie  management, 1966 to 1976. W. E. Franklin and  A.
          Darnay. Public  Health Service Publication No. 2040. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1971. 76 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                42

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order nos.

 171.  The Solid Waste Disposal Act, Title II of Public Law 89-272-89th Congress, S. 306-October 20, 1965:
          as  amended by the Resource Recovery Act of 1970, Public Law 91-512-91st Congress, H. R.
          11833-October 26, 1970; by Public Law 93-14-93rd Congress,  H. R. 5446-April 9,  1973 (To
          extend the amended Solid  Waste Disposal Act-for one year); and by Public Law 93-611-93rd
          Congress,  H. R. 16045-January  2,  1975 (To amend the  Solid Waste  Disposal  Act to authorize
          appropriations  for fiscal year 1975). Environmental Protection Publication SW-1.3.  [Washington],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 1975. 14 p.

 172.  Proceedings;  1st  National  Conference  on Packaging Wastes,  Sept. 22-24,  1969. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-9rg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 242 p.

 173.$ Locational  models for  solid waste management. B. P. Helms and R. M. Clark. Journal of the Urban
          Planning and Development Division, Proceedings, American Society of Civil Engineers, 97(UP1):1-
          13, Apr. 1971.

 174.J Solid Waste transfer and disposal for rural areas. D. R. Andres and F. W. Cope. California Vector Views,
          17(7):67-76, July 1970.

 175.f California solid waste  management  study  (1968) and plan (1970).  California State Department of
          Public Health.  Public Health Service Publication No. 2118. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1971. [303 p.]

 176.  An accounting system for solid waste management in small communities. E. R. Zausner. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 2035. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 18 p.

 177.  Recovery and utilization of municipal solid waste; a summary  of  available cost  and performance
          characteristics of unit  processes and systems. N. L. Drobny, H. E. Hull, and R. F. Testin, Public
          Health Service Publication No. 1908. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1971. 118 p.

 178.f Comprehensive studies  of solid waste management; third annual report. C. G.  Golueke. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-lOrg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 201 p.

 179.f Plastic wastes in the  coming decade. H. H. Connolly. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-68.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 26 p.

 180.$ St. Louis power plant  to bum  city  refuse. F.  E. Wisely, G. W. Sutterfield,  and D. L. Klumb. Civil
          Engineering, 41(l):56-59, Jan. 1971.

 181.t Kentucky solid waste  management plan; status report, 1970.  Kentucky State Department of Health.
          Environmental  Protection Publication SW-6tsg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
          160 p.

 182.  An accounting system for transfer station operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service Publication
          No. 2034. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1971. 20 p.

 183.f Omaha-Council  Bluffs  solid waste management plan; status  report,  1969. Henningson, Durham &
          Richardson. Public  Health Service Publication No. 2117. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1971. [225 p.]

 184.f Pathogens associated  with solid waste processing; a  progress  report.  M. L. Peterson. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-49r. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 26 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 43

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order nos.

 185.f Sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation. M. J. Wilcomb and H. L. Hickman, Jr., comps.
          Environmental Protection Publication SW-88ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
          lip.

 186.f Construction of a chemical-microbial  pilot plant for production of single-cell protein from cellulosic
          wastes. C. D. Callihan and C. E. Dunlap. Environmental Protection Publication SW-24c. Washington,
          U.S. Government Printing Office,  1971.  1 26 p. (See PB-223 873.)

 187.  Rubber reuse and solid waste management, pt. 1-2. R. J. Pettigrew, F. H. Roninger, W. J. Markiewicz,
          and  M. J. Gransky. [Public  Health Service  Publication No. 2124.] Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1971.  120 p.

 188.  Financing solid  waste management  in small communities.  E. R.  Zausner. Eavironmental  Protection
          Publication SW-57ts. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 14 p.

 189.  Sanitary landfill ... an answer to a community problem; a route to a community asset, rev. ed. [R. J.
          Black.] Public Health  Service Publication No. 1012. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1970. [8 p.]

 190.  Summaries of  solid waste  research and training grants-1970. L. W.  Lefke,  A. G. Keene, R.  A.
          Chapman, and H. Johnson, comps. Publi: Health Service  Publication No. 1596. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1971. 134 p. Addendum through July 31, 1971. 8 p. [Insert.]

 191.f District  of  Columbia  solid waste  management plan;  status report,  1970. District of  Columbia.
          Environmental Protection Publication SW-ltsg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
          138 p.

 192.  Ocean disposal of barge-delivered liquid and solid wastes from U.S. coastal cities.  D. D. Smith and R. P.
          Brown.  [Public  Health Service  Publication No. 2113.]  Washington,  U.S.  Government Printing
          Office, 1971. 119 p.

 193.$ Method for macrodetermination of carbon arid hydrogen in solid  wa&tes. D. L Wilson. Environmental
          Science & Technology, 5(7):609-614, July 1971.

 194.  Symposium of State and Interstate  Solid  Waste Planning Agencies, Sept.  9-11. 1969, St. Louis, Mo.
          L. A. Gluckman, ed.  Public  Health Service Publication  No. 2093. Washington, U.S.  Government
          Printing Office, 1971. 92 p.

 195.f Solid  Waste  Information  Retrieval  Systen<  Accession  Bulletin, 1(1-12): 1-266, Jan.-Dec.  1970;
          2(1-2): 1-42, Jan.-Feb.  1971. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1971-1972.

 196.t Resource recovery—a new solid waste management philosophy and technology. J. T. Talty. Presented at
          the  10th  Annual  Environmental  and  Water  Resources  Engineering  Conference,  Vanderbilt
          University,  Nashville,  June  1971.  [Cincinnati], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency. 9 p.
          Reprinted 1971. 11 p.

 197.t Activities in managing solid  wastes.  J. DeMarco. In Proceedings: Second National Symposium on Food
          Processing  Wastes, Denver,  Mar. 23-26, 1971. Pacific Northwes:  Water Laboratory, EPA; and
          National  Canners Association, p. 41-50. Reprinted,  [Cincinnati],  U.S. Environmental  Protection
          Agency, 1971. 10 p.
     tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                44

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order nos.

 198.f Solid waste management in the food  processing industry. H. T.  Hudson. In Proceedings: Second
          National Symposium on Food Processing Wastes, Denver, Mar. 23-26, 1971. Pacific Northwest Water
          Laboratory,  EPA; and  National  Canners  Association, p. 637-654.  Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 18 p.

 199.  Feasibility study of the disposal of polyethylene plastic waste.  K. Gutfreund. Public Health Service
          Publication No. 2010. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 45 p.

 200.  Seven incinerators; evaluation,  discussions, and authors' closure. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-51ts.lj. [Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 40 p.] (Includes discussions and
          authors' closure for "An evaluation of seven incinerators" by W. C. Achinger and L. E. Daniels.)

 201.f Mission 5000; let's find a better way! Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 1 p. [Poster,
          16x20 in.].

 202.f Mission 5000. [Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.] 6 p. [Flyer and button.]

 203.  Available information materials; solid waste management. Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.
          Environmental Protection  Publication SW-58.26.  Washington,  U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency, July 1976. 103 p.

 204.$ Compost studies, pt. I. R. D. Lossin. Compost Science, 11(6): 16-17, Nov.-Dec. 1970.

 205.$ Compost studies, pt. II. R. D. Lossin. Compost Science, 12(1):12-13, Jan.-Feb. 1971.

 2064 Compost  studies, pt. III.  R. D. Lossin. Measurement of the chemical oxygen demand of compost.
          Compost Science,  12(2):31-32, Mar.-Apr. 1971.

 207.f Films tell the story. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 6 p. [Flyer.]

 208.f Solid waste management  training bulletin of courses, July  1971-December 1972. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1971. 16 p.

 209.f 5000 Dumps. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971]. 6 p. [Flyer.]

 210.f Recycling. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971]. 6 p. [Flyer.]

 211.f The stuff we throw away. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971]. 6 p. [Flyer.]

 212.  Composting of municipal solid wastes  in the United States. A. W. Breidenbach et al. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-47r. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 103 p.

 213-t Study  report on a pilot-plant conical incinerator. W. C. Achinger. Environmental Protection Publication
          14ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department  of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 56 p.

 214.t Our environment. Falls Church, Va.,  Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971]. [4 p.]  [Flyer.]

 215.f State and interstate solid waste planning; a case study of Federal-State partnership. H. L. Hickman, Jr.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14 p. [Restricted distribution.]
    tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    t Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 45

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order nos.

 216.  1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region 1. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
          New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont. A. J. Munich, A. J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel. Public Health
          Service Publication No. 1866. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 47 p.

 217.  1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region 2. v. 1. Delaware, New Jersey, New
          York. A. J. Muhich, A.  J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel. Public Health Service Publication No. 1866.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 161 p.

 218.  1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region  2. v. 2. Pennsylvania. A.  J. Muhich,
          A. J. Klee, and C.  R. Hampel. Public Health  Service  Publication  No. 1866. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1969. 409 p.

 2194 Selecting  solid  waste  disposal  facilities. B.  P.  Helms and  R.  M.  Clark. Journal of the Sanitary
          Engineering Division, Proceedings,  Americar Society of Civil Engineers, 97(SA4):443-451, Aug.
          1971.

 220.$ Solid  waste  demonstration  programs . . . can they  help  you'' E.  F.  Spiuei.  American  City,
          86(7):58-60,62, July 1971.

 221.$ Solid waste disposal and resource recovery grants. Federal Register, 36(181)'18622-18628, Sept.  17,
          1971.

 222.  New chemical concepts for  utilization  of waste Mastics. M. E. Banks,  W  D. Lusk, and R. S. Ottinger.
          [Public Health Service Publication No. 2125.|  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
          129 p.

 223.  Hydrogeology of solid  waste disposal sites in northeastern Illinois;  a  final report on a solid waste
          demonstration grant project. G.  M. Hughes, R.  A. Landon, and R.  N.  Farvolden. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-12d. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1971. 154  p.

 224-t Parasitological examination of  compost; a  Solii Waste Research open-file report.  M. L. Peterson.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  15 p.

 225.t Economic  realities of  reclaiming  natural  resources  in  solid  waste.  T.D.Clark. In Institute of
          Environmental Sciences  1971  Annual Techn cal Meeting Proceedings,  Los  Angeles, Apr. 26-30,
          1971. Mt.  Prospect, 111., Institute of Environmental Sciences,  p. 39-43. Reprinted, [Washington],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.   2 p.

 226.$ The role of decision models  in the evaluation of competing  environmental health alternatives. A. J.
          Klee. Management Science,  18(2):B52-B67, Oct. 1971.

 227.$ The engineer in solid waste management. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Professional Engineer, 41 (10):  16-17, Oct.
          1971. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

 228.  Cost of residential solid waste collection. R. M. C ark, B. L. Grupenhoff, G. A. Garland, and A. J. Klee,
          Journal  of the  Sanitary Engineering Division,  Proceedings  of the  American  Society of Civil
          Engineers,  97(SA5):563-568, Oct. 1971.

 229.  Agricultural benefits and environmental changes  resulting from the use of digested sewage sludge on
          field crops; an interim report on a  solid waste demonstration project. T. D.  Hinesly, O. C. Braids,
          and J.  E.  Molina. Environmental  Protection  Publication SW-30d. Washington,  U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1971. 62 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 46

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order nos.

 230.  Recommended  standards for sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation and model sanitary
          landfill operation agreement. National Solid Wastes Management Association and Federal solid waste
          management program.  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-86ts. Washington, U.S. Govern-
          ment Printing Office, 1971. 23 p.

 231.  Solid waste management; abstracts  from the literature—1964. J. A.  Connolly  and S.  E. Stamback.
          Public Health Service Publication  No. 91—1964,  Suppl. G. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1971. 280 p.

 232.  Solid waste management demonstration grant  projects-  1971; for grants awarded  during the period
          June 1,  1966-June  30,  1971. C. E. Sponagle and P. L.  Stump. Public Health Service Publication No.
          1821. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 247 p.

 233.t New York  solid waste management plan; status report, 1970. Roy F. Weston [Environmental  Scientists
          and Engineers].  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-5tsg.  Washington,  U.S.  Government
          Printing Office, 1971. [307 p.]

 234.$ Solid waste management. H.  L.  Hickman, Jr. District  Heating,  57(1):18-19,22-24, Summer 1971.
          Reprinted. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency].  1971. 13 p.

 235.  Methods of predicting  solid waste characteristics. G. B. Boyd and  M. B. Hawkins.  Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-23c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1971. 28 p.

 236.  Design of a water-disposable glass packaging container, pt. 1-3. S.  F. Hulbert,  C. C. Fain,  and M. J.
          Eitel.  Environmental Protection Publication Sw-llrg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1971. 60 p.

 237.f An analysis of institutional  solid wastes.  S. A. Messman  [University of Illinois].  Environmental
          Protection Publication  SW-2tg. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 61 p.

 238.  Clean  and  green  solid  waste  system  in  Alabama is  widely  copied. M. D. Bogue. Waste  Age,
          l(5);4-6,10-11,36,  Sept.-Oct.  1970.  Reprinted,  [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1971.8 p.

 239.  Guidelines  for  local  governments on solid waste  management. National Association  of  Counties
          Research Foundation. Public  Health  Service Publication No. 2084. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1971. 184 p.

 240.t Empirical analysis of commercial solid waste generation. T. V. DeGeare, Jr., and J. E. Ongerth. Journal
          of the Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings  of the American Society of Civil Engineers,
          97(SA6);843-850, Dec. 1971.

 241.f Resource recovery in  solid waste management.  L.  W. Lefke. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-67r. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14 p.

 242.  A study  of residential solid waste generated in low-income areas. G. R. Davidson,  Jr.  Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-83ts. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 14 p.

 243.  The  role of packaging in solid  waste management—1966  to 1976. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-5c.2. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [28 p.] [Condensation.]
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     $ Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 47

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order nos.

 244.  Disposal  of polymer  solid wastes by  primary polymer  producers  and plastics  fabricators. C. W.
          Marynowski. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972. 92 p.

 245.  Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 1. A. A. Fungaroli. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-12rg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [200 p.]

 246.  Packaging industry and government. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Waste Age, 2(6): 12-14, Nov.-Dec. 1971.

 247.| Land  use planning  and solid  waste  management.  R. M.  Clark and R. 0.  Toftner.  Public  Works,
          103(3):79-80,98, Mar. 1972.

 248.  Solid  waste  management  in  residential complexes.  Greenleaf/Telesca. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-35c. Washington, U.S. Goveriment Printing Office, 1971. [419 p.]

 249.  Collection and  disposal  of solid waste  for the Des Moines  metropolitan area; the planning phase.
          Henningson,  Durham  &  Richardson, Inc., and Veenstra & Kimm. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-14d. Washington, U.S. Goveriment Printing Office, 1971. [321 p.]

 2504 Interview with  Sandy Hale; Waste  Age discusi.es  new direction for Federal solid  waste management
          program with its new director.  Waste Age, 2(6):8-9,23-27, Nov.-Dec. 1971. Reprinted, [Washing-
          ton] , U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [8 p.]

 251.J Fleet selection for solid waste collection system. R. M. Clark and B. P. Helms. Journal of the Sanitary
          Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 97(SAl):71-78, Feb.
          1972.

 252.t High-pressure compaction  and  baling of solid waste; final report on a solid waste management
          demonstration  grant. K.  W. Wolf and C. H. Sosnovsky.  Environmental  Protection  Publication
          SW-32d. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 163 p.

 253.  Digest of selected local solid waste  management ordinances. M. D. Powell, B. P. Fiedelman,  and M. J.
          Roe. Environmental Protection Publication SW-38c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing  Office,
          1972.376 p.

 254.f Microbial degradation of urban and agricultural wastes. W.  Q. Kehr. In Environmental quality:  now or
          never.  C.  L.  San Clemente, ed.  SIM Special Publication No. 5. East Lansing, Michigan State
          University, 1972. p. 184-191.

 255.  Creating  a  countywide  solid waste  management system; the case study of Humphreys County,
          Tennessee. M.  A. Kruth, D. H. Booth,  and D. L. Yates. Environmental Piotection  Publication
          SW-110. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 15 p.

 256.  Air classification of solid wastes; performance of experimental units and potential applications for solid
          waste reclamation. R. A. Boettcher. Environmental Protection Publication SW-30c. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1972. 73 p.

 257.  Solid waste management;  abstracts from the literature-1965. J. A. Connolly and S. E. Stainback.
          Public Health Service Publication No. 91-1965, Suppl. H. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972.216 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                48

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order nos.

 258.   Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1966. Franklin Institute Research Laboratories.
          Public Health Service Publication  No. 91-1966, Suppl.  I. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972. 197 p.

 259.f  Study of solid waste management; committee guide. League of Women Voters Publication No. 699.
          Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, Nov. 1971. 8 p.

 260.t  Initiating a national effort to improve solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-14. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 107 p.

 261.   Design  of  consumer  containers  for  re-use or  disposal;  proceedings  of Solid  Waste  Resources
          Conference,  [ColumbusJ,  May 12-13, 1971.  G. F. Sachsel,  comp.  Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-3p. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 330 p.

 262.   Satellite  vehicle waste  collection systems. J.  E. Delaney.  Environmental  Protection Publication
          SW-82ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 14 p. [Condensation.]

 263.t  EPA's  Office  of Solid Waste  Management  Programs.  [R.  J.  Griffin, Jr.]   [Washington],  U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  [1972]. 15 p.

 264.   Energy recovery from waste;  solid waste as supplementary fuel in power plant boilers. R. A. Lowe.
          Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d.ii. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1973. 24 p.

 265.   5000 Dumps. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-39c.4.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 7 p. [Film narrative.]

 266.   The third pollution. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.l. [Cincinnati],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 9 p. [Film narrative.]

 267.   The  stuff  we  throw away.  Stuart  Finley, Inc.  Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-39c.7.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]

 268.   Recycling.  Stuart Finley,  Inc.  Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-39c.3. [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]

 269.   What's  new  in  solid waste management? Stuart Finley,  Inc. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-39c.8. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972.  14 p. [Film narrative.]

 270.   In the  bag.  Stuart Finley,  Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.5. [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 6 p. [Film narrative.]

 271.   Burn, bury, or what? Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.2. [Cincinnati],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]

 272.   The green box.  Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.6.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 7 p. [Film narrative.]

 273.   Recycling our resources. E. McGou$i.  American  Youth, 13(1): 18-21, Mar.-Apr. 1972.

 274.   New technologies in solid waste management. C. J. Dial. Environmental Protection Publication SW-82.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 18 p.
    f Out of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.


                                                 49

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order nos.

 275.  The  automobile cycle;  an environmental  arid resource  reclamation  problem. U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, Federal solid waste management program. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-80ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government 1'iintmg Office, 1972. 115 p.

 276.$ Federal redirections in solid  waste. Environmental Science & Technology, 6(4):318-320, Apr. 1972.
          Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 4 p.

 277.  Aerial  and automotive reconnaissance  of solid waste disposal sites in a  rural county. T. J. Sorg.
          Environmental  Protection Publication SW-32ts.  [Washington!,  U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency, 1972. 12 p.

 278.  Industrial solid waste problems. T. J. Sorg. AlChE Symposium Series, 68(122): 1-5, 1972.

 279.  Solid  waste  management  glossary.  U.S. Environmental  Protection1  Agency, Federal solid waste
          management program. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-108ts. Washington,  U.S. Govern-
          ment Printing Office, 1972. 20 p.

 280.  Mission 5000;  a citizens'  solid waste management  project. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-115ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.  [16 p.]

 281.  Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1967. Franklin Institute Research  Laboratories.
          Public  Health Service  Publication No- 91-1967, Suppl. J. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972. 404 p.

 282.f Solid waste management; abstracts from the Iit3rature-1968. Franklin  Institute Research  Laboratories.
          Public  Health Service  Publication No. 91-1968, Suppl. K. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972. 286 p.

 283.  Computer planning for efficient solid waste collection. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-5rg.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office. 1972.  [24 p.] [Condensation.]

 284.  Design criteria for  solid waste management in recreational areas. H. R. Little. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-91ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 68 p.

 2854 Sanitary landfill: alternative to the  open  dump. Environmental Science & Technology, 6(5):408-410,
          May 1972.

 286.  Recycling; assessment and prospects for  success. A. Darnay. Environmental  Protection Publication
          SW-81. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 14 p.

 287.  Sanitary landfill design  and  operation.  D. R. Brunner  and D.  J. Keller. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-65ts. Washington, U.S. Goveriment Printing Office, 1972. 59 p.

 288.  Sanitary landfill; one part earth to four parts refuse. L. A. Haug and R. J.  Black. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-6. Washington,  L.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [22 p.] [Film
          narrative.]

 289.$ Resource recovery losing  ground. S. Hale, Jr. Phoenix Quarterly, 4(2):3-4, 1972.

 290.  Let's dump the dump; the ABC's of solid waste management. Greenfield, Mass., Channing L. Bete Co.,
          Inc., 1971. 16 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or GDvernment Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 50

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order nos.

 291.  Clean and green. [Clanton, Ala., Chilton County, 1972.]  [4 p.]

 292.  Solid waste management in high-rise dwellings; a condensation. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-27c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 19 p.

 293.  Salvage markets for materials in solid wastes. A. Darnay and W. E. Franklin. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-29c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 187 p.

 294.  Information retrieval services of EPA's Office  of Solid Waste Management Programs. J. A. Connolly.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-91.2.  [Cincinnati],  U.S.  Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1972. 12 p.

 295.$ Production  of fungal protein from  cellulose and waste cellulosics.  C.  J. Rogers,  P. V.  Scarpino, E.
          Coleman, D. F. Spino, and T. C.  Purcell. Environmental Science & Technology, 6(8):715-719, Aug.
          1972.

 296.  Recycle; in search of new policies for resource recovery. League of Women Voters Publication No. 132.
          Washington, League of Women Voters of the  United States, 1972. 39 p.

 297.  Aerobic  treatment  of livestock wastes. D. D. Jones,  D.  L. Day,  and  A.  C. Dale.  Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-16rg. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 55 p.

 298.  A study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man  crews; a condensation.
          I. Kiefer. Environmental  Protection  Publication SW-9c.l.  Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
          Office, 1972. 32 p.

 299.  The  processing and recovery  of Jon  Thomas—cool cat! T.  Marceleno. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-4ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1972. [34 p.]

 300.  Solid waste handling and  disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 1. Summary, conclusions,
          and recommendations.  Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d.l. Washing-
          ton, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.  [263 p.]

 301.  Solid waste handling  and disposal  in multistory buildings and  hospitals, v. 3. Research on systems
          development. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d.3. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1972. [229 p.]

 302.  Solid waste—it won't go away; current  focus, rev. ed. League of Women Voters Publication No. 675.
          Washington, League of Women Voters of the  United States, Nov. 1971. [12 p.]

 303.  Solid  waste  management, the  national issues; community guide, rev. ed. League of Women Voters
          Publication No. 134. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, Nov. 1972.  [4 p.]

 304.  Solid waste management; an overview. W. D. Ruckelshaus. Public Management,  54(10):2-4, Oct. 1972.

 305.  Role  of sanitary landfilling in solid  waste management. R. J. Black. Waste Age, 3(5):28-30,32,54-57,
          Sept.-Oct. 1972.

 306.f The  Federal role  in solid  waste  management-present and future. S. Hale, Jr., J. A.  Hill, and H. L.
          Hickman, Jr. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 30 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 51

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order  nos.

 307.  Resource  recovery, recycling,  and reuse. In Annual report to  the  President  and to the  Council on
          Environmental  Quality  for  the  year  ending  May  1972. Citizens' Advisory  Committee on
          Environmental Quality. Washington, U.S  Government Printing Office, [1972].  p. 33-41. Reprinted.
          [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protect  on Agency, 1972. [10 p.]

 308.  Glass and aluminum recovery  in recycling operations. W. Herbert and W. A. Flower. Public  Works,
          102(8):70,110,112,  Aug. 1971. Reprinted,  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
          1972. 2 p.

 309.  Waste  processing  complex  emphasizes  recycling.  W.  Herbert  and W.  A.  Flower.  Public  Works,
          102(6):78-81, June  1971.  Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972.
          4 p.

 310.  Improving manual solid waste  separation studies. P. W. Britton. Journal of the Sanitary Engineering
          Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 98(SA5)''717-730,-Oct. 1972.

 311.  Solid Waste  Demonstration Projects;  Proceedings of a Symposium,  Cincinnati, May 4-6,  1971. P. L.
          Stump, comp. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-4p. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1972. 256 p.

 312.  Automatic amino acid analyses for determining the amount and quality of protein in fungal  protein and
          in other protein sources. W. E. Coleman. In  Symposium; seed proteins. G  E. Inglett,e
-------
order  nos.

 323.  Regional management of solid wastes; a planning study. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-80.1. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 7 p. [Condensation.]

 324.  Making polyethylene more disposable.  1. Kiefer.  Environmental  Protection Publication  SW-14c.l.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 24 p. [Condensation.]

 325.  Oregon's bottle bill; the first six months. E. Claussen. Environmental Protection Publication SW-109.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 14 p.

 326.f The beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations. T. H. Bingham and P. F. Mulligan
           [Research Triangle  Institute]. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office,  1972.  190 p. (See
          PB-213341.)

 327.  The States' roles in solid waste management; a task force report. T. Anderson et al. Lexington, Council
          of State Governments,  1973. 58 p.  Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
          July 1973.

 328.$ Pesticides and  containers; acceptance, disposal, and storage;  proposed rulemaking and issuance of
          procedures. Federal Register, 38(99): 13622-13626, May 23, 1973.

 329.t Pyrolysis:  a possible   new  approach  to  solid  waste  disposal   and recycling.   [Cincinnati,  U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency], May 1973. 4 p.

 330.  Solid  waste; disposal,  reuse  present  major  problems.  Congressional  Quarterly;  Weekly  Report,
          31(17): 1019-1023, Apr. 28, 1973.

 331.  Cities and the  nation's  disposal crisis. Washington, National League of Cities and U.S. Conference of
          Mayors, Mar.  1973.  46 p. Reprinted, [Cincinnati],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June
          1973.

 332.  Environmental  impacts  of packaging. E. L.  Claussen. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1973. 10 p.

 333.  The salvage industry;  what  it is-how  it  works.  I. Kiefer.  Environmental  Protection Publication
          SW-29c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 32 p. [Condensation.]

 334.  The Federal  resource recovery demonstration program. S. Hale. Professional Engineer, 48(6):28-31,
          June 1973.

 335.  There  lived  a wicked dragon. M. Finan. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 30 p.
          [Coloring book.]

 336.  Developing a local and regional solid waste management plan. R. 0. Toftner. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-101ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 29 p.

 337.  Solid waste transfer stations; a state-of-the-art report on systems incorporating highway transportation.
          T. A. Hegdahl. Environmental Protection Publication-SW-99. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environ-
          mental Protection Agency, 1973.  160 p. (SeePB-213 511.)

 338.J The utilization of expert  opinion in decision-making. A. J. Klee.  AIChE Journal,  18(6):1107-1115,
          Nov. 1972.
    tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    |Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 53

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order nos.

 339.  Sanitary  landfilling; report on a joint conference sponsored by the National Solid Waste Management
          Association and  the  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  Kansas City, Missouri, Nov. 14-15,
          1972. J. E. Delaney, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-5p.  [Washington],  U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 190 p.

 340.f Who's on the clean-up crew? R. J.  Black. In Polymers and ecological problems. J. Guillet, ed.  New
          York, Plenum Publishing Corporation, 1973. p. 181-184.

 341.  Solid waste recycling  projects;  a  national  directory.  P. Hansen, comp.  Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-45. Washington, U.S. Go/ernment Printing Office, 1973. 284 p.

 342.  Improving  rural  solid  waste management  practices.  T.  L.  Goldberg. Environmental  Protection
          Publication SW-107. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 83 p.

 343.  The  national buyer's guide  to recycled paper. S. Dane, comp. Washington, Environmental Educators,
          Inc., 1973. 208 p.

 344.  Recycling and the consumer; solid waste rranagement. Environmental Protection Publication SW-117.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Prote:tion Agency, 1974. 12 p.

 345.  Disposal  of hazardous wastes; report to CDngress. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of
          Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-115. Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1974. 110 p.

 346.  The  private sector in solid waste  management; a profile of its resources and contribution to collection
          and disposal,  v.  1-2. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-51d.l. Washington, U.S. Environmen:al Protection Agency, 1973. 239 p.

 3474 Shaving solid waste collection  costs. G. A. Garland and B. R. Weddle. Nation's Cities, 12(2): 13-14,
          16-17, Feb. 1974.

 348.  Scrap tires  as artificial  reefs. R. B. Stone,  C.  C.  Buchanan,  and F.  W. Sleimle, Jr.  Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-119. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 33 p.

 349.  Films tell the solid  waste management  story, rev. ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
          1974. 6 p. [Film list.]

 350.  Resource recovery; the Federal perspective. L H. Skinner. Waste Age, 5(1): 12.14,54, Jan.-Feb. 1974.

 351.  Sanitary  landfill  synopsizer. J.  E.  Delaney and   J. M.  Sweeten  Cincinnati,  U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, 1972. [2 p.]  [Pocket calculator.]

 352.  Resource recovery and source reduction; first report to Congress. 3d ed. U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency,  Office  of Solid Waste  Management  Programs. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-118. Washington, U.S. Government P-inting Office, 1974. 61 p.

 353.  Resource  recovery and source  reduction; second report to Congress.  U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency,  Office  of Solid  Waste  Management  Programs. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-122. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 112 p.

 354.  Solving  the abandoned car problem in small communities, W. T. Dehn. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-70ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 23 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
     ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                 54

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order nos.

 355.  Bird/aircraft hazards at  airports near solid waste disposal  sites. G. R. Davidson, T. V. DeGeare. T. J.
          Sorg, and R. M. Clark. Environmental Protection Publication SW-116. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1974. 30 p.

 356.  Heuristic routing for solid waste collection vehicles. K. A.  Sinister and D. A. Schur. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-113. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 45 p.

 357.  Statement; Samuel  Hale, Jr., Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste Management Programs,
          before  the  Subcommittee on  the  Environment,  Committee  on Commerce, United States Senate,
          June 11, 1973  [and] June 22,  1973. S. Hale, Jr.  [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1974.] 43 p.

 358.  Statement of Arsen J. Darnay, Jr., Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste Management
          Programs,  Environmental  Protection Agency, before the Subcommittee on Minerals,  Materials and
          Fuels,  Committee on  Interior and   Insular  Affairs,  United  States  Senate,  Washington, D.C.,
          October 30, 1973. A. Darnay. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 10 p.

 359.  EPA press briefing on solid waste management and energy, February 8, 1974.  [Washington,  U.S.
          Environmental Protection  Agency,  1974.] 6 p., attachments.

 360.  Energy and the  environment. T. F. Williams. Presented before the Plenary Session Panel "Counter-
          point"  at  20th  Annual  Meeting of Keep America Beautiful,  Inc., New  York, Dec. 5-6, 1973.
          [Washington, U.S. Environmental Piotection Agency, 1974.J 6 p.

 364.  Environmental  protection,   residuals  management, and  resources—the  future  is  now. A.  Darnay.
          Presented at Annual Meeting of National Packaging Association, Boca Raton, Fla., Mar. 12-16, 1974.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1974. 23 p.

 368.  Gaseous  emissions  from municipal  incinerators. A.  A.  Carotti  and  R. A. Smith. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-18c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office. 1974. 61 p.

 369.  Size  reduction of solid waste; an  overview. J. F Mank. Environmental Protection Publication SW-1 17.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1974. 8 p.

 370.  User's manual for COLMIS;  a collection management information system for solid waste management.
          v. 1.  Environmental  Protection Publication SW-57c. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1974. 99 p.

 371.  User's manual  for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste management.
          v. 2.  Environmental  Protection Publication SW-58c. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1974. 49 p.

 372.  Illinois report  probes citizens'  attitudes  on refuse problems. Solid Wastes Management,  17(2): 19,51-
          53,66,70,72,  Feb.  1974;  17(3):26,74,84-85, Mar.  1974.  Reprinted, [Washington],  U.S. Environ-
          mental  Protection Agency, 1974. 6  p

 373.  Basic issues on solid waste management affecting county government. National Association of Counties.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, May 1973. 40 p.

 374.  Users' guide to the solid waste  information retrieval system thesaurus. J. A. Connolly, V. P. Fuschini,
          and S.  S.  Radinsky,  comps. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-104.01. Washington,  U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1974.  56 p.

 375.  Library holdings—nonperiodical;  Federal solid  waste management  program, November  1972.  R. Gill
          and M. Bolly. Environmental Protection Publication SW-123. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
          Office,  1974. 150 p.


                                                 55

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order nos.

 376.  Pesticides  and pesticide  containers;  regula:ions  for  acceptance  and recommended  procedures  for
          disposal and storage. Federal Register, 39(85): 15235-15241, May 1, 1974.

 377.  State solid waste management and resource lecovery incentives act. In 1973 Suggested state legislation.
          v. 32.  Lexington, Ky., The Council of State  Governments, 1973. Reprinted,  [Washington], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.5). 63-76.

 378.  Energy conservation through improved solid waste  management.  R. A.  Lowe, M. Loube, and F. A.
          Smith. Environmental Protection Publication SW-125.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, 1974. 39 p.

 379.  Environmental protection-the people's choice.  T.  F. Williams. Presented at 2d  Northeast Regional
          Conference of the  National Audubon Society, New Paltz, N.Y.,  June 8, 1974. [Washington, U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 17 p.

 380.  Waste management—private and  public perspectives.  A.  Darnay.  Presented at National  Solid Waste
          Management  Association's  International Waste Equipment and Technology  Exposition, Houston,
          June 25, 1974. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 15 p.

 381.  Separating paper at the  waste source for  recycling. S. Lingle. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-128. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 16 p.

 382.  Incentives for tire recycling and reuse.  I. Kjefer. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-32c.l.
          Washington, U.S. Government Printing Of Ice,  1974. 28 p.

 383.  Our effluent  society;  the States and solid waste management. The Council of State Governments.
          [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Proteciion Agency, 1974. 41  p.

 384.  Sanitary landfill; a bibliography. R. L. Steiier and R. Kantz. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-4rg.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 34 p.

 385.  Thermal processing and land disposal of solid  waste; guidelines. Federal Register,  39(158):29327-
          29338, Aug. 14, 1974.

 386.  Mechanics of style; a guide  for Solid Waste Management authors, secietaries, grantees, and  contractors.
          Office  of  Solid Waste  Management   Programs.  Environmental  Protection Publication  SW-7.2.
          [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Proteciion Agency, 1974. 20 p.

 387.  Refuse as a  supplementary fuel for powei  plants—November  1973  through  March  1974; interim
          progress report.  G.  W. Sutterfield. Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d.iii. [Washington],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1974. 25 p.

 388.  The demonstration of systems for  recovering  materials and energy  from solid waste.  J.  H. Skinner.
          Presented at  National Materials Conservation Symposium, National Bureau of Standards, Gaithers-
          burg, Md.,  Apr. 29,  1974. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 20 p.

 389.  COLMIS;  a   new  solid  waste management  information  system. Washington,  U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency,  1974. 6 p. [Flyer.]

 390.  Decision-makers  guide in  solid  waste  management.  2d ed.  Environmental Protection  Publication
          SW-500. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976. 158 p.

 391.  Disposal  of  sewage  sludge into  a  sanitary  landfill. R. Stone, comp.  Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-71d. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1975. 418 p.

 392.  Malgastar  causa  necesidad. Washington,  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. [9xl3-in.
          poster; Spanish version of "Waste not, wart not."]

                                                56

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order nos.

 393.  State solid waste management agencies. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [List,
          updated periodically.]

 394.  EPA publishes decision-makers guide for sanitation officials. R. A. Colonna. Solid Wastes Management,
          17(7):30,34,37,July 1974.

 395.t The  Federal solid waste management programme; a review and prognosis. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Presented
          at 76th Annual Conference of Institute of Solid Wastes Management, Scarborough, England, June
          18-21, 1974. London, Institute of Solid Wastes Management, 1974. 14 p.

 3964 U.S. finds a rich resource; the nation's trash pile. U.S. News & World Report, 76(19):63-64,66, May 13,
          1974.

 397.  Trends in wastepaper exports and  their effects on domestic markets. F. L. Smith, Jr. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-132.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 17 p.

 398.$ Pesticides and  pesticide containers; proposed  regulations for prohibition of certain acts regarding
          disposal and storage. Federal Register, 39(200):36867-36870, Oct.  15, 1974.

 3994 Federal program for hazardous waste management.  J. P. Lehman. Waste Age,  5(6):6-7,66-68, Sept.
          1974.

 4004 The   economics  of separate  refuse  collection.  R. P.  Stearns  and  R.  H. Davis.   Waste  Age,
          5(3):6-8,10-11,14-15,130-131, May/June 1974.

 401.  Markets and technology for recovering energy from solid waste. S. J. Levy. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-130. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 31 p.

 402.  Refuse shredders at EPA's Gainesville, Florida,  experimental composting plant. J. A. Ruf. Waste Age,
          5(3):58,60-63,66, May/June 1974.

 403.  Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication SW-117.1.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  [16%x22-in.  two-sided sheet with
          information about recycling as well as illustrations of five recyclable materials, which  can be made
          into a mobile.]

 404.  Debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities. C. G. Gunnerson. Journal of the  Environmental
          Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers,  99(EE3):229-243,
          June 1973.

 405.  Resource and environmental profile analysis of nine beverage container alternatives; final report, v. 1-2.
          R. G. Hunt, W. E. Franklin, R. O. Welch, J. A.  Cross, and A. E. Woodall. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-91c. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 178 p.

 406.  Hospital  wastes. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-129. Washington, U.S. Govern-
          ment Printing Office, 1974. 36 p.

 407.  Fuel conservation in solid waste management. K. A. Shuster. Virginia Town & City, 9(12):7-9, Dec.
          1974.

 408.  Recovering resources from solid waste  using  wet-processing; EPA's Franklin,  Ohio, demonstration
          project. D. G. Arella. Environmental Protection Publication SW-47d. Washington, U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1974. 26 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 57

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order nos.

 409.  A  five-stage improvement process for solid waste collection systems. K. A. Shuster. Environmental
          Protection Publication  SW-131. Washington, U.S. Government Prinling Office, 1974. 38 p.

 410.  A  legislative history of the Solid Waste Disposal  Act, as amended, together with a section-by-section
          index. U.S. Congress,  Senate, Committee on Public Works. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office, 1974. 503 p.

 411.  Dumps; a potential threat to our groundwater supplies. B. R.  Weddle and G. A. Garland. Nation's
          Cities, 12(10):21-22,24-25,42, Oct. 1974.

 412.f St. Louis/Union  Electric  refuse firing  demonstration  air pollution test report. L. J. Shannon, M. P.
          Schrag, F. I. Honea, and D. Bendersky. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
          107 p.

 413.f Resource recovery and land protection; an environmental  imperative. A. Darriay. Presented  at Spring
          Meeting,  Paperboard  Group, American  Paper  Institute, Greenbrier, W. Va., May 21, 1974. New
          York, American Paper  Institute, 1974. 7 p.

 414.  Recycle; use it again, Sam.  [Washington,  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1974.]  [Bumper
          sticker.]

 415.  Where  have  all the toxic  chemicals gone? W. H. Walker. Ground Water, 11(2) 11-20, Mar.-Apr. 1973.
          Reprinted, [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 10 p.

 416.  Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl Stores program. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency,  [1974]. 3 p.

 4174 Pyrolysis of municipal solid waste. S. J. Levy. Waste Age, 5(7): 14-15,17-20, Oct. 1974.

 418.  One private plant  treats  oil, chemical  residues in Denmark. P.  Henriksen. Solid Wastes Management,
          17(5):77-78, 139, May 1974.

 419.t Suggested solid waste management ordinance for local government. National Association of Counties
          Research Foundation.  Environmental Prelection Publication  SW-73d. [Washington],  U.S. Environ-
          mental Protection Agency, 1974. 23 p.

 420.$ Paper recycling in the United States. S. A. Lirgle. Waste Age, 5(8):6-8,10, Nov. 1974.

 4214 There's gold in your garbage. B.  Peterson.  Scouting,  62(7):47-48,84-86, Oct.  1974. Reprinted,
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 4 p.

 422.  Packaging source  reduction; can industry and government cooperate? E. L. Claussen. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-136. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 17 p.

 423.  Problem-solving in solid waste management through Federal-local cooperation; eight case studies. B. R.
          Weddle  and  M.  Madison.  Environmenlal Protection  Publication SW-134.  Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1974. 40 p.

 424.  Ma's alia de  la  lata  de  basura. G. Allison,  S.  Mooser,  and P. Taylor.  Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-7tg. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1974. 23 p.  [Spanish
          version of "Beyond the trash can."]
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                58

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order nos.

 425.  See 431.

 4264  Health  and safety  in  the solid  waste  industry. J.  A. Cimino. American Journal of Public Health,
          65(l):38-46, Jan. 1975.

 427.  Incineration in hazardous waste management. A. C. Scurlock, A. W. Lindsey, T. Fields, Jr., and D. R.
          Huber. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-141. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protec-
          tion Agency, 1975. 104 p.

 428.   Liners for land  disposal sites; an assessment. A. J. Geswein.  Environmental  Protection Publication
          SW-137. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 66 p.

 429.f Hazardous waste  management facilities in the United  States. A. J. Hayes. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-146. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1974. 39 p.

 430.   Habi'a una vez  un dragon  malvado. M. Finan. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-105s.
           [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 31 p.  [Spanish version of "Once there
          lived a wicked dragon."]

 431.   Baltimore demonstrates gas pyrolysis; resource recovery from  solid waste. D. B. Sussman. Environ-
          mental Protection Publication SW-75d.i. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 24 p.

 432.   A nationwide survey of resource recovery activities. L. McEwen.  Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-142.1.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.  (In
          press.)
 433.  -Solid waste shredding and shredder selection. H. W. Rogers and S. J. Hitte. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-140. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nov. 1974. 87 p.

 434.f  Residential collection systems, v. 1.  Report  summary. ACT Systems, Inc. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-97c.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 106 p.

 435,$  Leachate effects of improper land disposal. G. A. Garland and D. C. Mosher. Waste Age, 6(3):42,44-48,
          Mar. 1975.

 436.  Eleven residential pickup  systems compared for cost  and productivity. K. A. Shuster.  Solid  Wastes
          Management,  18(3):6,42-44, Mar. 1975.

 437.  An evaluation of the effectiveness and costs of regulatory and fiscal policy instruments on product
          packaging. T. H.  Bingham et al. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-74c.  [Washington], U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 301 p.

 438.t Recycled materials  markets;  February  1975-a summary.  S.  A. Lingle. Environmental  Protection
          Publication SW-149. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1975. 8 p.

 439.   [Regional  solid waste management  representatives.  Washington, U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency.] 1 p. [List, updated periodically.]

 440.  Improving productivity in solid  waste  collection; a  brief for elected  officials. Washington, National
          Commission on Productivity, 1974. 10 p.

 441.  Report of the Solid Waste  Management Advisory Group on opportunities for improving productivity in
          solid waste collection-1973. Washington, National Commission on Productivity, 1974. 46 p.
    fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.
    ^Available in public and university libraries.

                                                 59

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order nos.

 442.  San Diego County demonstrates pyrolysis of solid waste to recover liquid fuel, metals, and glass. S. J.
          Levy. Environmental Protection Publication SW-80d.2.  Washington, U.S  Government Printing
          Office, 1975. 27 p.

 443.  Comparative  estimates  of post-consumer  :;olid  waste.  F.  A.  Smith. Environmental  Protection
          Publication SW-148. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 18 p.

 444.  The relationship of solid waste storage practices in the inner city to the incidence of rat infestation and
          fires. R. M. Wolcott and B. W. Vincent. Environmental Protection Publication SW-150. [Washing-
          ton] , U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 14 p.

 445.  A solid waste estimation procedure; material flows approach. F. L. Smith, Jr. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-147. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 56 p.

 446.  What you can do to recycle more paper. Enviionmental Protection Publication SW-143. {Washington],
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. [12 p.]

 447.  Source reduction fact sheet; reducing waste at its source, program of International Paper  Company and
          Wells Dairy. Washington, U.S. Environment!! Protection Agency, May 1975. 2 p.

 448.  Resource  recovery and waste reduction; third report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency,  Office of Solid  Waste  Management  Programs.  Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-161. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 96 p.

 449.  Hazardous  waste disposal damage reports. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-151. [Washing-
          ton] , U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 8 p.

 450.  Hazardous  wastes. Environmental Protectioi  Publication SW-138. Washington,  U.S. Government
          Printing Office, 1975. 24 p.

 451.  An accounting system for  solid waste shredders.  S. J. Hitte.  Environmental  Protection Publication
          SW-154. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 18 p.

 452.  Hazardous wastes  and  their management; environmental information. Washington, U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency,  May 1975. 3 p.

 453.  Industrial waste management; seven conference  papers. Environmental Protection Publication SW-156.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb. 1975. 111 p.

 454.  Solid wastes; proposed guidelines for storage and  collection. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
          Federal Register, 40(134):29404-29408, July 11, 1975.

 455.  1974 Highway litter study; report to Congress. U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway
          Administration. House  Document No. 93-326 (93d  Congress, 2d  Session).  Washington, U.S.
          Government Printing Office, 1974. 77 p.

 456.  Reduce; targets, means and impacts  of source  reduction.  D. Wahl and G. Allison.  League of Women
          Voters Publication No. 576. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United  States, 1975. 47 p.

 457.t State activities in solid waste management,  974.  R.  J. Black. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-158. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 2.16 p.

 458.  Anaerobic digestion of solid waste and sewage sludge to methane. S. J. Hitte. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-159. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1975. 13 p.
     fOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Printing Office depository libraries.

                                                60

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order nos.

 459.  Statement  of Honoiable  John  R.  Quarles, Jr.,  Deputy  Administrator, Environmental Protection
          Agency, before the Subcommittee  on the Environment, Committee  on Commerce, United States
          Senate, May 7. 1974. J. R. Quarles, Jr. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1975.
          14 p.

 460.  Win  the  war  on  waste.  R.  E.  Train.  Presented at  3d National  Congress  on Waste Management
          Technology  and Resource Recovery, San Francisco,  Nov.  14, 1974. [Washington, U.S. Environ-
          mental Protection Agency, 1975.] 15 p.

 461.  Proceedings;  1975 Conference  on  Waste  Reduction,  April 2-3, 1975,  Washington,  D.C.  U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency,  Office of Solid Waste  Management Programs. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-7p.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 152 p.

 462.  Questions and  answers; returnable beverage containers for beer and soft drinks. [Washington, U.S.
          Environmental  Protection  Agency,  Office  of  Solid  Waste Management Programs], July  1975.
          [13 p.]

 463.  Solid waste management;  guidelines for beverage  containers. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
          Federal Register, 40(220);52968-52969, Nov. 13, 1975.

 464.  State program implementation guide: hazardous waste surveys. C. H. Porter. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-160. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1975. 38 p.

 465.  Paper  recycling  1973:  a  dramatic  year in perspective. S. A. Lingle. In Fiber  Conservation and
          Utilization  Proceedings; Pulp and  Paper Seminar, Chicago, May 1974. Reprinted, San  Francisco,
          Miller Freeman Publications, Inc., 1975.  11 p.

 466.  Solid waste management  today  . . . bringing about municipal change.  D. Wahl and  R. L. Bancroft.
          Nation's Cities, 13(8): 17-32, Aug. 1975.

 467.  Use  of solid waste  as a fuel by  investor-owned electric  utility companies: proceedings; EPA/Edison
          Electric  Institute Meeting. R. A. Lowe. Environmental Protection Publication SW-6p. Washington,
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July  1975. 27 p.

 468.  Information about  hazardous waste management  facilities.  D.  Farb and S. D. Ward. Environmental
          Protection Publication  SW-145. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.  1975.
          130 p.

 469.f Summaries of  solid  waste management contracts;  July  1,  1970—March 31, 1975.  R.  J.  Black.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-5.4.  [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency, Aug. 1975. 37 p.

 470.  Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—further assistance. D. Hawkins.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-157.8.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, [1975]. 29 p.

 471.  Resource  recovery plant  implementation:  guides for municipal  officials—financing. R. E. Randol.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-157.4.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, [1975]. 20 p.

 472.  A handbook for initiating or improving commercial refuse collection.  City of Scottsdale, Arizona.
          Environmental  Protection Publication  SW-85d.  [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental  Protection
          Agency, Aug. 1975. 68 p.
     tOut of print; available only from EPA libraries or Government Pruning Office depository libraries.

                                                 61

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order nos.

 473.  Materials recovery; solid  waste  management guidelines  for  source separation. U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency. Federal Register, 40| 181):42986-42990, Sept. 17, 1975.

 474.  Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin: an accidental poisoning episode in  horse arenas. C. D. Carter et al. Science,
          188(4189):738-740, May 16, 1975.

 475.  Landfill disposal of hazardous wastes' a re/iew of literature and known approaches. T. Fields, Jr., and
          A. W. Lindsey.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-165. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency, June 1975. 36 p.

 476.  The uses and abuses of waste. R. E. Train. Compost Science,  16(3): 11-13, May-June  1975.

 477.  IRIS; injury  reporting and  information  system for solid  waste management. Washington,  U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency, [1975] . 5 p. [Flyer.]

 478.  IRIS; a new service  for  the  solid waste  management industry. Washington, U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency, [1975]. 4 p.

 479.  Sanitary landfill  Clark County, Arkansas. [Arkadelphia, Ark., Clark County, 1975.] 9 p.

 480.  Resource recovery  plant implementation:  guides for municipal officials—interim report. A. Shilepsky.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-152.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection
          Agency, Oct. 1975. 38 p.

 481.  Making  refuse collection safer. S. D. Wener. Nation's Cities, 13(9):28-31, Sept. 1975.

 482.  Resource recovery  plant cost estimates: a comparative evaluation of four recent dry-shredding designs.
          F.  A. Smith. Environmental Protection  Publication  SW-163.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency, Oct. 1975.  20 p.

 483.  Use of  the water balance  method for predicting leachate generation from solid waste disposal sites.
          D. G. Fenn,  K. J.  Hanley, and T. V. DeGeare. Environmental Protection Publication SW-168.
          [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Oct.  1975. 40 p.

 484.  Land  availability,  crop production, and fertilizer requirements  in the United States.  L. A. Prior.
          Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-166.  [Washington].  U.S.  Environmental Protection
          Agency,  Oct. 1975. 99 p.

 485.  The big  pickup-a new publication from the Office of Solid  Waste Management Programs.  Washington,
          U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,  [1975]. 1 p. [Flyer.]

 486.  Residential  paper recovery; a  municipal implementation  guide. P. Hansen. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-155.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  1975. 26 p.

 487.  Beverage containers: the  Vermont experience. M. Loube.  Environmental  Protection  Publication
          SW-139.  [Washington], U.S. Environmemal Protection Agency, 1975. 16 p

 488.  Composting at Johnson City; final report en joint USEPA-TVA composting  project with operational
          data,  1967 to 1971. v. 1-2. G. E.  Stone and C.  C. Wiles. Environmental Protection Publication
          SW-31r.2. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 336 p.

 489.  A summary of hazardous substance classification systems. A. M.  [Cohan. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-171.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 55 p.

 490.  Guidelines for procurement of products tha: contain recycled  material. U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency.  Federal Register, 41(10):2356-2263, Jan. 15, 1976.

                                                 62

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order nos.

 491.  Mineral recovery from the noncombustible  fraction  of municipal solid waste; a  proposed project to
          demonstrate incinerator residue recovery. D. G. Arella and Y. M. Garbe. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-82d.l.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1975. 14 p.

 492.  Hazardous waste disposal damage reports. Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental
          Protection Publication SW-151.2. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec.  1975.
          lip.

 493.  Resource recovery plant  implementation, guides for municipal officials-accounting format. Environ-
          mental Protection  Publication  SW-157.6. [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,
          [1976]. 17 p.

 494.  Damage incidents from improper  land  disposal. Journal  of Hazardous Materials, 1(2): 157-164, Jan.
          1976.

 495.  Resource  recovery  plant  implementation:  guides  for  municipal  officials—procurement.   Mitre
          Corporation. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-157.5. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental
          Protection Agency, [1976]. 66 p.

 496.  Resource recovery plant  implementation: guides for municipal officials-risks and contracts. R. E.
          Randol.   Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-157.7.   [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, 1976. 52 p.

 498.  Quantity and composition of post-consumer solid waste: material flow estimates for 1973 and
         baseline future projections. F. A. Smith.  S/aete Age,  7(4)2,6-8,10, Apr.  1976.

 500.  Reduce the  incentive to waste. J. H.  Skinner. Paper No. 7d.  Presented at 80th National  Meeting,
          American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Boston, Sept. 8, 1975. 9 p.

 502.  Hazardous wastes,  the  gross national byproduct; a new publication from the Office  of Solid Waste
          Management.  Environmental Protection   Publication  SW-502.  Washington,  U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, [1976]. 1 p.  [Flyer.]

 503.  Saving  the  energy in solid  waste; environmental  information. Washington, U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, [1976]. 4 p.

 504.   Guidelines for the storage and collection of residential,  commercial, and institutional solid waste. U.S.
          Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 41(31):6766-6772, Feb. 13, 1976.

 505.   Waste reduction and  resource  recovery-there's room for both. N. Humber. Waste Age,  6(11):38,40-
          41,44, Nov. 1975.

 506.   Ultimate disposal of spilled hazardous materials. A. W. Lindsey. Chemical Engineering, 82(23): 107-114,
          Oct. 27, 1975.

 507.   EPA employees provide paper for recycling; environmental news.  Washington, U.S.  Environmental
          Protection Agency, [1976]. 2 p. [Press release.]

 510.  Demonstrating multimaterial source separation in Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts.
         P. Hansen and J. Ramsey.   Waste Age,  7(2): 26-27,48, Feb. 1976.

 511.   Wastepaper recycling,  review of recent  market demand and supply. F. L.  Smith, Jr.  Pulp  & Paper,
          49(10): 148-151, Sept. 1975.

 512.   State  program  implementation guide:  hazardous waste  transportation  control.   C.  H. Porter.
          Environmental  Protection Publication  SW-512.  [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency, Mar. 1976. 35 p.


                                                 63

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order nos.

515.  Conservation and common sense. T. F. Williarrs. Presented at National Conference "Land Application
         of Waste  Materials."  Soil  Conservation  Society  of  America, Des  Mohes, Mar.  17,  1976.
         [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 21 p.

516.  PCB-contaming wastes (industrial facilities); recommended  procedures for disposal. U.S. Environmental
         Protection Agency. Federal Register, 41(64) 14134-14136, Apr. 1, 1976.

525.  Solid waste management: horizons unlimited   R.E. Train. Presented at International Waste
        Equipment and Technology Exposition, Chicago, June 2, 1976. Washington, U.S. Environ-
        mental Protection Agency.  16 p.

526.  Status  of solid waste management in the United States. S. Meyers,  Presented at 2d International
         Congress of the International Solid Wastes  Association, Padua, June 24, 1976. Washington,  U.S.
         Environmental Protection Agency. (In press.)

528.  Resource  recovery  technology  update from  the U.S.  EPA:   status report on resource
        recovery technology:  demonstrating resource recovery.   S. Lingle,  ed.   Waste Age,
        7(6): 19: 22,26,42,44-46, June 1976.
                                               64

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ntis reports

-------
                                        ntis  reports
   The following solid waste management publications are available from the National Technical Information
Service, U.S. Department of Commerce, Springfield, Virginia 22161. The price for a microfiche film copy of
each is $2.25; see back of catalog for paper copy prices.

ntis
order nos.*
PB-187 286  Special studies for incinerators for the government of the District of Columbia, Department of
            Sanitary Engineering. Day & Zimmerman. U.S.  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
            1968. 80 p.

PB-187 299  Combustion power unit-400 (CPU-400); a technical abstract. Combustion Power Company, Inc.
            U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 15 p.

PB-187 301  Land reclamation project; an interim report. Harza Engineering Company.  U.S. Department of
            Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [338 p.]

PB-187 306  Rail transport  of solid wastes—a feasibility study; interim report, phase one.  American Public
            Works Association Research Foundation. U.S. Department  of Health, Education, and Welfare,
            1969. 168 p.

PB-187 311  Gainesville compost plant; an interim report. Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion Authority,
            Inc. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 345 p.

PB-187 712  Technical-economic study of solid  waste disposal needs and practices. Combustion  Engineering,
            Inc. Public Health Service Publication No. 1886. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
            1969. [705 p.]

PB-196 148  Special studies of a sanitary landfill.  R. C. Merz and R. Stone. U.S.  Department of Health,
            Education, and Welfare, 1970. [222 p.]

PB-197 623  Collection,  reduction,  and disposal of solid waste in high-rise multifamily dwellings. National
            Academy of Sciences—National Research Council. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1971.
            169 p.

PB-197 931  Satellite vehicle systems for solid  waste collection; evaluation and  application. R. A.  Perkins.
            Environmental Protection Publication  SW-82ts. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1971.
            243 p.

PB-201 205  Codification of solid waste  management authority in Kentucky; appendix A. Kentucky State
            Department of Health. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 175 p.

PB-202 202  Organic pesticides and pesticide containers; a study of their decontamination  and  combustion.
            R. C. Putnam, F. Ellison, R. Protzmann, eoid J.  Hilovsky.  Environmental Protection Publication
            SW-21c. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,  1971. 175 p.

PB-208 154  Mathematical modeling and computer  simulation for designing municipal refuse collection and
            haul services. S. Wersan, J. Quon, and A. Charnes. Environmental Protection Publication SW-6rg.
            U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 446 p.

PB-208 674  Evaluation, extraction, and recycling of certain solid waste components. Great Lakes Research
            Institute.  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-35d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
            1972.110 p.
    *See order form for NTIS reports in back of catalog

                                                66

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order nos.

 PB-209 001  Pollution of  subsurface  water by  sanitary landfills, v. 2.  A. A.  Fungaroli. Environmental
             Protection Publication SW-12rg.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 216 p.

 PB-209 002  Pollution of  subsurface  water by  sanitary landfills, v. 3.  A. A.  Fungaroli. Environmental
             Protection Publication SW-12rg.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 169 p.

 PB-212 398  Rural  storage and  collection  container systems. Humboldt County  and Garretson-Elmendorf-
             Zinov-Reibin. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-41d.i. U.S.  Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1972. 146 p.

 PB-212 589  Evaluation  of a multi-functional  machine for use in sanitary landfill  operations in sprasely
             populated areas. V. L. Hammond. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39d. U.S. Environ-
             mental Protection Agency, 1972. 209 p.

 PB-212 590  The use  of bags  for solid waste storage  and collection. Ralph Stone and  Company, Inc.
             Environmental Protection Publication  SW42d.  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  1972.
             264 p.

 PB-212 792  A study  to identify  opportunities for  increased solid waste  utilization, v. 1. General report.
             Battelle Memorial Institute. Environmental Protection Publication SW-40d.l. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency,  1972.  178  p.

 PB-212 730  A study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 2-7. Aluminum, copper,
             lead, zinc, nickel and stainless steel, and precious metal reports. Battelle  Memorial Institute.
             Environmental Protection Publication  SW-40d.  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  1972.
             608 p.

 PB-212 731  A study to  identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 8-9. Paper and textile
             reports.  Battelle Memorial  Institute.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-40d.3. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 342 p.

 PB-213 133  Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 2. Observations of local
             practices. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d.2.  U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency,  1972. [301 p.]

 PB-213 135  Solid waste  handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 4. Selection and design
             of solid waste systems. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d.4. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. [189 p.]

 PB-213 308  Management information for solid waste collection. R. M. Clark. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1972. 18 p.

 PB-213 311  Analysis of  Federal programs affecting solid  waste generation and recycling.  SCS Engineers. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 153 p.

 PB-213 340  Metropolitan  housewives'  attitudes toward solid waste  disposal.  National  Analysts, Inc. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. [114 p.]

 PB-213 341  The beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations. T.  H. Bingham and  P. F.
             Mulligan. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 201 p.

 PB-213 378  Corrosion studies in municipal incinerators. Battelle Columbus Laboratories. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1972. 120 p.

 PB-213 394  Urban solid waste management; economic case study. R. M. Clark. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1972. 21 p.


                                                 67

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order nos.

 PB-213482  An  investment  decision  model  for control technology  R.  M. Clark.  U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency. 1972. 20 p.

 PB-213487  Landfill decomposition gases, an annotated  bibliography.  J.  A. Geyer. U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1972. 28 p.

 PB-213 488  An investigation of the biodegradabilily of packaging plastics. J.  E. Potts, R. A. Clendinning, and
             W. B. Ackart. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 80 p.

 PB-213 511  Solid  waste transfer  stations;  a state-of-the-art  report  on  systems  incorporating  highway
             transportation. T. A. Hegdahl.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 160 p.

 PB-213 577  Identification of opportunities for incieased recycling of ferroas solid waste.  W.  J. Regan, R. W.
             James, and T. J.  McLeer  [Institute  of Scrap Iron  and Steel, Inc.]. Environmental Protection
             Publication SW-45d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 391 p.

 PB-213 646  Solid  waste and fiber recovery demonstration plant for the  City  of Franklin, Ohio; an interim
             report. N. T. Neff [A. M. Kinney, Inc.]. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-47d.i.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 83 p.

 PB-213 697  Ski mountain; a  conceptual feasibility study in solid waste management. Metropolitan Sanitary
             District of Greater Chicago. Environmental Protection Publication SW-46d. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1972. [324 p.]

 PB-214 045  Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics. J. Milgrom [Arthur D.  Litr.le, Inc.]. Environmental
             Protection Publication SW-41c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 316 p.

 PB-214 166  Generation of steam from  solid wastes. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., and City of Lynn, Massachusetts.
             Environmental Protection  Publication SW-49d.  U.S.  Environmental Piotection  Agency, 1972.
             139 p.

 PB-214 960  Baling solid waste to conserve  sanitary landfill space; a feasibility  study. City  of San Diego.
             Environmental Protection  Publication SW-44d.  U.S.  Environmental Piotection  Agency, 1973.
             89 p.

 PB-215 722  Cellulose degradation in composting. R.  Regan et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
             1973. 153 p.

 PB-218 672  Development of construction  and use criteria for sanitary landfills; final report on a solid waste
             management demonstration grant. County of Los Angeles, Department of County Engineer, and
             Engineering-Science,  Inc.  Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-19d. U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. [511 p.]

 PB-219 019  Solid  waste management in the food processing industry A. M. Katsuyama,  N. A. Olson, R. L.
             Quirk, and W. A. Mercer [National Canners Association]. Environments! Protection Publication
             SW-42c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 304 p.

 PB-219 372  Analysis  of airport solid wastes and collection systems; San Francisco International Airport.
             Metcalf & Eddy,  Inc.  Environmental  Protection  Publication SW-4£d. U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. 137  p.

 PB-220 316  Solid  waste as fuel for power plants. Homer & Shifrin, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication
             SW-36d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 146 p.

 PB-220 479  Physical, chemical, and  microbiologic;J  methods  of solid waste  testing.  D. F. Bender, M.  L.
             Peterson, and H. Stierli. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 203 p.


                                                68

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order nos.
 PB-221 095  Investigation  of corrosion-deposition phenomena  on gas  turbine blades. L. R. Fleischer. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  [44 p.]

 PB-221 171  Biological conversion of animal wastes to nutrients. B. F. Miller. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1973. [82 p.]

 PB-221 172  Preparation and evaluation of activated carbon produced from municipal refuse. M. K. Stevenson,
             J. O. Leckie, and R. Eliassen. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [150 p.]

 PB-221 239  Acid hydrolysis of cellulose in refuse to sugar and its fermentation to alcohol. A. O. Converse,
             H. E. Grethlein, S. Karandikar, and S. Kuhrtz.  U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1973.
             [113 p.]

 PB-221 464-Set   A study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods. Booz Allen
             Applied Research, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 3 v.

             PB-221 465  v. 1. Purpose, scope, approach and principal findings of study. [408 p.]

             PB-221 466  v.2. [544 p.]

             PB-221 467  v. 3. [460 p.]

 PB-221 621  A recirculatmg waste  system for swine units. J. R. Miner. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
             1973. [247 p.]

 PB-221 681  Study of the economics of hospital solid waste  systems. R. G.  Bond et al. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. [329 p.J

 PB-221 684  Municipal waste disposal by shipborne incineration and sea disposal of residues. M. W. First et al.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [603 p.]

 PB-221 731  Incineration  of bulky refuse without prior shredding. E. R. Kaiser, D. Kasner, and C. Zimmer.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 91  p.

 PB-221 851  First annual  progress  report on a study of corrosion in municipal  incinerators. D. A. Vaughan and
             P. D. Miller. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 34 p.

 PB-221 876  Utilization of bark waste. R. A.  Currier and M. L. Laver. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
             1973.185 p.

 PB-221 877  Radiolytic hydrolysis of cellulose. J. A. Kelly.  U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1973.
             [26 p.]

 PB-221 879  An  analysis  of the  abandoned  automobile  problem. Booz Allen  Applied Research, Inc.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  [196 p.]

 PB-222 000  Design and  simulation  of equalization basins.  R. Smith,  R. G. Eilers, and E. D.  Hall. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  [58 p.]

 PB-222 001  Combustion  products from the incineration  of plastics. E. A. Boettner, G. L. Ball, and B. Weiss.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [155  p.]

 PB-222 015  Pyrolysis of solid municipal wastes. D. A. Hoffman. U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,
             1973. [78 p.]

 PB-222 018  Hospital  solid  waste disposal in  community  facilities. A. F. Iglar  and  R. G.  Bond.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  [350 p.]


                                                 69

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order nos.

 PB-222029  A mathematical  model for aerobic  digestion. R.  Smith,  R.  G. Eilers,  and E. D.  Hall.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 50 p.

 PB-222 031  Mathematical  model for post aeration. R Smith, R. G. Eilers, and E. D. Hall. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. 44 p.

 PB-222 051  Wood waste  reuse in controlled  release  pesticides. G.  G. Allan et al. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. [97 p.]

 PB-222 052  Use  of domestic  waste glass for urban paving. W.  R. Malisch, D. E.  Day, B. G.  Wixson.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [107 p.]

 PB-222 113  Biological consequences of plant residue decomposition  in soil. W. C. Snyder, Z. A. Patrick, and
             A. R. Weinhold. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 136 p.

 PB-222 115  The nitrite-accelerated photochemical degradation of cellulose as a pretreatment for microbiolog-
             ical  conversion to  protein. A.  Fookson  and G. Frohnsdorff. U.S. Environmental  Protection
             Agency, 1973. [102 p.]

 PB-222 148  The effect of processing poultry manure on disease agents. J.  R. Howes, C. F. Hall, and W. F.
             Krueger. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [36 p.]

 PB-222 160  Microbiological studies  of compost  plant dust. D. H. Armstrong and  M.  L. Peterson.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [20 p.]

 PB-222 165  Tentative procedure analyzing pesticide r3sidues in solid  waste. R. A. Carnes. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1972. [23 p.]

 PB-222 337  Survival of pathogens in animal manure disposal. S. L. Diesch, B  S. Pomeroy, and E. R. Allred.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [134 p.]

 PB-222 354  Study of utilization and disposal of  lime sludges containing phosphates.  R. E. Opferkuch et al.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 119 p.

 PB-222 396  Thermophilic  aerobic digestion of organic solid wastes. J. F. Andrews  and  K. Kambhu.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [83 p.]

 PB-222 419  Studies  on  modifications  of solid  industrial  wastes.  C.  S.  Grove and C. M.  Antoni.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [179 p.]

 PB-222 422  Composted  municipal refuse as a soil amendment. C. C. Hortenstine  and D. F. Rothwell. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [67 p.]

 PB-222 454  Photosynthetic reclamation of  agricultu-al solid and liquid wastes. C. G. Golueke et al.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [94 p.]

 PB-222 458  A study of incinerator residue  analysis of water soluble components.  R. J.  Schoenberger and
             P. W. Purdom. U.S. Environmental Proteciion Agency, 1973. [316 p.]

 PB-222 467  Problems and opportunities in management of combustible solid wastes.  International Research
             and Technology Corporation. U.S. Enviroimental Protection Agency, 1973, [517 p.]

 PB-222 468  Preventing landfill leachate  contamination of water. E.  J. Wren. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1973. [120 p.]
                                                70

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order nos.

 PB-222 588  Marketability of recovered and clarified incinerator residue in the New York metropolitan area.
             Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-53d. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973.  188 p.

 PB-222 694  Study of the technical and economic  feasibility of a hydrogenation process for utilization of
             waste rubber.  R.  H. Wolk and C. A. Battista.  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1973.
             [155 p.]

 PB-222 709  Rail  transport of solid wastes. American Public Works Association.  Environmental Protection
             Publication SW-22d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 148 p.

 PB-222 710  Gainesville compost plant; final  report  on a solid waste  management demonstration,  v. 1-2.
             Gainesville Municipal  Waste Conversion Authority, Inc., and Environmental Engineering,  Inc.
             Environmental Protection  Publication  SW-21d.  U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1973.
             237 p.

 PB-222 995  Systems  simulation and   solid  waste; a  case  study.  R. M. Clark and  J.  I. Gillean.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [40 p.]

 PB-223 034  Economic and  technological  impediments  to  recycling obsolete  ferrous  solid waste.  0. W.
             Albrecht and R. G. McDermott. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [62 p.]

 PB-223 162  Pneumo-slurry  pipeline  collection  and  removal  of  municipal   solid waste. I. Zandi.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  [128 p.]

 PB-223 343  Sludge  conditioning using  sulfur dioxide and  low pressure for  production  of  organic  feed
             concentrate. M. S. Weinberg et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 90 p.

 PB-223 345  A study  of  institutional  solid wastes. J. C. Burchinal and L.  P.  Wallace. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. 245 p.

 PB-223 430  Poultry manure disposal  by plow-furrow-cover. H. E.  Besley. U.S.  Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1973. 202 p.

 PB-223 625  Utilization of fibrous  wastes as sources of nutrients. J. M. Leatherwood. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973.  16 p.

 PB-223 626  Design  and control of incinerators, v.  1-2. A. F. Sarofim  et  al. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1973.299 p.

 PB-223 638  Public  attitudes  towards hazardous  waste  disposal  facilities.   L.  L.  Lackey  et  al.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  181 p.

 PB-223 651  Incineration  of plastics found in  municipal wastes. R. W. Heimberg et al. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. 246 p.


 PB-223 740  The metallurgical  upgrading of automotive  scrap steel. O.  N. Carlson and F. A. Schmidt.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 90 p.


 PB-223 873  Single-cell proteins from cellulosic wastes. C. D. Callihan and  C. E. Dunlap. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1973. 89 p.
                                                 71

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order  nos.

 PB-224 579-Set  Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous
             waste. R. S. Ottinger et al. [TRW Systems Group]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
             16 v.

             PB-224 580 v. 1. Summary report. 210 p.

             PB-224 581 v. 2. Toxicologic summary.  244 p.

             PB-224 582 v. 3. Ultimate incineration.  251 p.

             PB-224 583 v. 4. Miscellaneous waste treatment processes. 149 p.

             PB-224 584 v. 5. Pesticides and cyanide  compounds. 146 p.

             PB-224 585 v. 6. Mercury, arsenic, chromum, and cadmium compounds. 207 p.

             PB-224 586 v. 7. Propellants, explosives, and chemical warfare materiel. 2C6 p.

             PB-224 587 v. 8. Miscellaneous inorganic and organic compounds. 79 p.

             PB-224 588 v. 9. Radioactive materials.  1 68 p.

             PB-224 589 v. 10. Organic compounds. 216 p.

             PB-224 590 v. 11. Organic compounds (continued). 247 p.

             PB-224 591 v. 12. Inorganic compounds. 330 p.

             PB-224 592 v. 13. Inorganic compounds (continued). 290 p.

             PB-224 593 v. 14. Summary  of waste origins. 160 p.

             PB-224 594 v. 15. Research and development plans.  109 p.

             PB-224 595 v. 16. References. 424 p.

 PB-224 820  Reuse of solid waste  from water-softening processes.  R. D. Nelson and E. Vey [1IT Research
             Institute].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  108 p.

 PB-224 996  Effective use of high water  table areas for sanitary landfill:  second  annual report.  VTN, Inc.
             Environmental Protection Publication  SW-57d. U.S.  Environmental Protection  Agency, 1973.
             172 p.

 PB-225 020  Socio-economic factors affecting demand for municipal collection of household refuse. University
             of Chicago. U.S.  Environmental Protectioi Agency, 1973. 58 p.


 PB-225 159  Buffalo's crusher facility  for bulky solid waste. Leonard  S.  Wegman Co.. Inc.  Environmental
             Protection  Publication SW-60d. U.S. Envi •onmental Protection  Agency, 1973. 79 p.


 PB-225 160  Dairy waste management. C.  L. Senn.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-58d. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 152 p.


 PB-225 164  Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites. Arthur D. Little,
             Inc. Environmental Protection Publicatior SW-46c. U.S. Environmental Pro:ection Agency, 1973.
             85 p.

                                                 11

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order  nos.

 PB-225 291 Tampa's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
            Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-52c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            93 p.

 PB-225 296 Forsyth County's solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
            Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-50c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            88 p.

 PB-225 299 Houston's  municipal  solid waste  management  system; a case  study. Applied  Management
            Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-51c. U.S. Environmental Protection
            Agency, 1973.79 p.

 PB-225 332 Public regulation  concept in solid waste management; a feasibility study. Applied Management
            Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-54d. U.S. Environmental Protection
            Agency, 1973. 114 p.

 PB-225 333 Solid  waste management in  the drug industry. D. M. Shilesky, K. W. Krause, and R. J. Sullivan.
            Environmental Protection  Publication  SW44c. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            102 p.

 PB-225 346 Building an amphitheater and coasting ramp of municipal solid waste, v. 1-2. W. M. Beck, Jr.
            Environmental Protection Publication SW-52d.of. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            265 p.

 PB-225 360-Set   Sewage sludge disposal in a sanitary landfill. Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. Environmental
            Protection Publication SW-61d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 2 v.

            PB-225 361 v. 1. Summary and conclusions. 22 p.

            PB-225 362 v. 2. Description of study and technical data. 376 p.

 PB-226 042 Solid  waste management study  for the  Port  of Tacoma.  Kaiser  Engineers. Environmental
            Protection Publication SW-55d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 107 p.

 PB-226 099 Developing a local and regional  solid  waste management  plan. R. 0. Toftner. Environmental
            Protection Publication SW-101ts.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 35 p.

 PB-226 420 Solid  waste management in the industrial chemical industry. K. Holcombe and P. W. Kalika.
            Environmental Protection Publication  SW-33c. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            225 p.

 PB-226 551 Size-reduction equipment   for  municipal solid  waste,  v.  1.  Procedures  for  evaluating  and
            comparing equipment, v. 2.  Inventory of equipment. Midwest Research Institute. Environmental
            Protection Publication SW-53c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 126 p.

 PB-227 005 Costs  of hauling and land spreading of domestic sewage treatment plant sludge. W. F. McMichael.
            U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974. 19 p.

 PB-227 075 A model for optimal  design and operation of solid waste transfer  stations. H. J. Yaffe. National
            Science Foundation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 118 p.

 PB-227 708 Hospital  solid waste;  an  annotated bibliography. R.  D.  Singer  et  al. U.S. Environmental
            Protection Agency, 1973. 205 p.

 PB-228119 Waste  wood  and  bulky refuse  disposal;  St.  Louis facilities.  City  of St. Louis, Missouri.
            Environmental Protection Publication  SW-63d. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
            50 p.

                                                73

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order  nos.

 PB-228 161  Baltimore's  municipal  solid waste  management  system; a case study.  Applied Management
             Sciences,  Inc.  Environmental  Protection Publication SW-49c.  U.S. Environmental  Protection
             Agency, 1974. 110 p.

 PB-229 220  A case study and business  analysis  of  the scrap industry. Resource Planning Institute. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  129 p.

 PB-229 246  Chemical  conversion of wood and  cellulosic  wastes. F. Shafizadeh et al. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1974. 60 p.

 PB-229 256  Feasibility of hydraulic transport and treatment of ground household refuse through sewers.
             A. R. Guzdar and S. S. Rhee. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 222 p.

 PB-229 727  Can  Federal  procurement  practices be  used  to  reduce  solid wastes?  J.  Milgrom.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  232 p.

 PB-229 816  Raw  materials  transportation costs ard their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron
             and steel,  v. 1. J. F. Foran et al. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 207 p.

 PB-229 817  Raw  materials  transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron
             and steel,  v. 2. J. F. Foran et al. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 100 p.

 PB-229 901  An infrared spectral sensor for  refuse sorting. P.  F. Winkler. U.S. Environmental  Protection
             Agency, 1974. 81 p.

 PB-230 379  Sonoma County solid waste stabiliza ion study. EMCON Associates. Environmental  Protection
             Publication SW-65d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 224 p.

 PB-231 176  Reclamation of energy from organic waste. J. T. Pfeffer. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
             1974.143 p.

 PB-231 203  Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing; four additional methods.
             N. Ulmer. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 51 p.

 PB-231 309  Optimization models for regional public  systems. K. S. Vasan. National Science Foundation and
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agenc>, 1974.137 p.

 PB-232 559  Scrap rubber tire utilization in  road dressings. B. G. Brand.  U.S. Environmental  Protection
             Agency, 1974. 51 p.

 PB-233 178  The chemical conversion of solid wa:;tes to useful products.  J. F. Barbour, R. R. Groner, and
             V. H. Freed. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 168 p.

 PB-233 360  Optimal configuration  of a regional solid waste management system. A. A. Pathak.  National
             Science Foundation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 209 p.

 PB-233 441  Dairy manure  management  methods. Washington State  University. Environmental  Protection
             Publication SW-67d. U.S. Environment al Protection Agency, 1974. 128 p.

 PB-233 630  Program  for the management  of hazardous  wastes, v. 1. Battelle  Memorial  Institute.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  385 p.

 PB-233 631  Program  for the management  of hazardous  wastes, v. 2. Battelle Memorial  Institute. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 19''4. 778 p.

 PB-233 641  An ion-exchange process for recovery of chromate from pigment manufacturing. D. J. Robinson
             et al. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1974. 92 p.

                                                74

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order nos.

 PB-233 871  Transportation rates  and  costs  for  selected virgin and secondary commodities.  Moshman
             Associates, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 234 p.

 PB-233 873  The Des Moines story; a report on the implementation of the solid waste management plan for
             the Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency.  R. C. Porter and Henningson, Durham,
             and Richardson. Environmental Protection Publication SW-70d. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1974. 272 p.

 PB-233 878  Wichita's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
             Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-73c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             89  p.

 PB-234 068  Kansas City's  municipal solid waste management system. Applied Management  Sciences, Inc.
             Environmental Protection  Publication SW-72c. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             249 p.

 PB-234 139  Jacksonville's municipal solid  waste  management  system; a  case study. Applied Management
             Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 156 p.

 PB-234 140  Dallas' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
             Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-70c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             103 p.

 PB-234 141  Fresno's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
             Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-71c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             174 p.

 PB-234 496  A preliminary assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection. P. M. Meier et al. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  179 p.

 PB-234 497  Modifications to the  executive computer program for  steady-state simulation  of wastewater
             treatment facilities. P. M. Meier and G. R. Fisette. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             70  p.

 PB-234 498  Economic  analysis  of the  processing  and  disposal of refuse  sludges.  P.  Kos  et  al. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 85 p.

 PB-234 499  Wet systems for residential refuse collection; a case study for Springfield, Massachusetts. P. M.
             Meier. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 220  p.

 PB-234 602  Tire  recycling  and reuse   incentives. International  Research  and Technology Corporation.
             Environmental Protection  Publication SW-32c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974.
             88 p.

 PB-234 605  The Atlanta household refuse compactor demonstration  project. Bradbury Associates, Inc. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 155 p.

 PB-234 612  Financial  methods  for solid  waste  facilities. Resource  Planning Associates. Environmental
            Protection Publication SW-76c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 376 p.

 PB-234 713 Memphis' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
            Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 137 p.

 PB-234 715  Franklin,  Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v. 1.
             A.  M. Kinney, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW47d.l. U.S. Environmental Protec-
             tion Agency, 1974. [63 p.]

                                                75

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order  nos.

PB-234 716 Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v. 2.
            A. M. Kinney, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-47d.2. U.S. Environmental Protec-
            tion Agency, 1974. 368 p.

PB-234 930 Solid waste milling and disposal on lard without cover, v. 1. Summary and major findings J. J.
            Reinhardt and R. K. Ham. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 181 p.

PB-234 931  Solid waste milling and disposal on lanl without cover, v. 2  Data condensations. J. J. Reinhardt
            and R. K. Ham. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 462 p.

PB-234 944 Study of solid waste management practices in the pulp and paper industry. Gorham International,
            Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 185 p.

PB-234 945 Middletown's municipal  solid waste management  system;  a  case study.  Applied Management
            Sciences. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 109 p.

PB-235 770 Aluminum  as a component of solid waste and a recoverable 'esource. R. J. Talley and R. H.
            Ongerth. U.S. Environmental Protectior Agency, 1974. 31 p.

PB-235 857 Waste oil recycling and disposal. N. J.  Weinstein. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1974.
            328 p.

PB-236 085 An assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection; summary report. P. M. Meier, J.
            Kuhner, and R. E. Bolton. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 93 p.

PB-236 402 Agricultural benefits and environmental changes resulting from the use of digested sludge on field
            crops.  T. D.  Hinesly. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-30d.l.  U.S.  Environmental
            Protection Agency, 1974. 375 p.

PB-236 462 Effective use  of high water  table  arias  for  sanitary  landfill; final  leport. v. 1. VTN,  Inc.
            Environmental Protection Publication  SW-57d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1973.
            129 p.

PB-236 463 Effective use  of high water  table  anas  for  sanitary  landfill; final  report, v. 2. VTN,  Inc.
            Environmental Protection Publication  SW-57d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1973.
            128 p.

PB-236 543 A study  of pneumatic solid waste collection systems as employed in hospitals. Ross Hofmann,
            Associates. Environmental  Protection Publication  SW-75c. U.S. Environmental  Protection
            Agency, 1974. 260 p., app.

PB-236 659 Columbus'  municipal solid waste  management system; a  case study.  Applied  Management
            Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-82c. U.S. Environmental  Protection
            Agency, 1974. 156 p.

PB-236 662 Detroit's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
            Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-81c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
            94 p.

PB-236 904 Demonstration of waste flow  reductian  from households.  S  Cohen and H.  Wallman.  U.S.
            Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 103 p.

PB-237 264 Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national  disposal sites, v. 2. Appendices.
            Arthur  D.  Little,  Inc.  Environmental Protection  Publication  SW-46c.l. U.S.  Environmental
            Protection Agency, 1973. 235 p.
                                                76

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order nos.

 PB-237 525 Mine spoil potentials for soil and water quality. R. M. Smith et al. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1974. 303 p.

 PB-237 618 A technical and economic study  of waste oil recovery, pt 1. Federal research on waste oil from
             automobiles. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox [Teknekron, Inc., and the Institute of Public
             Administration]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-90c.l. U.S. Environmental Protection
             Agency, 1974. 107 p.

 PB-237 619 A technical and economic study, of waste oil recovery, pt. 2. An investigation of dispersed sources
             of used crankcase oils. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G.  Wilcox  [Teknekron, Inc., and the Institute
             of Public Administration]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-90c.2. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1974. 63 p.

 PB-237 620 A technical  and  economic  study  of  waste  oil  recovery, pt. 3.  Economic, technical, and
             institutional barriers to waste oil recovery. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox [Teknekron,
             Inc.,  and  the Institute  of Public  Administration].  Environmental  Protection Publication
             SW-90c.3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 143 p.

 PB-238 145 Promising technologies for treatment  of hazardous wastes.  R. Landreth and C. Rogers.  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 44 p.

 PB-238 654 An analysis of  the  current  impact of plastic refuse disposal upon the environment. D. A.
             Vaughan, M. Y. Anastas, and H.  H. Krause. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 49 p.

 PB-238 674 Feasibility study of use of molten salt technology  for pyrolysis of solid waste. V.  L. Hammond
             and L. K. Mudge. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 86 p.

 PB-238 747 A study of corrosion in municipal incinerators  versus  refuse composition. D. A. Vaughan, H. H.
             Krause, and W. K. Boyd. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 51 p.

 PB-238 819 Forecasts of the effects of air and water pollution controls on solid waste generation. R. Stone
             and D. E. Brown [Ralph  Stone  and Company, Inc.]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
             1974. 830 p.

 PB-239 116 Evaluation  of the  feasibility  and economic implications of pricing mechanisms in solid waste
             management. E. Ulrich. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 88 p.

 PB-239 117 Analysis models for solid waste  collection, v. 1. J.  F. Hudson, D. S. Grossman, and D. H. Marks.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 229 p.

 PB-239 119 Industrial solid waste classification systems. J. B. Berkowitz et al. [Arthur D.  Little, Inc.]. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 413 p.

 PB-239 195 Merchanized  residential  solid waste  collection.  M.  G. Stragier. Environmental  Protection
             Publication SW-74d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  176 p.

 PB-239 196 Mechanized, non-stop residential solid waste collection. W. Da Vee and M. G. Stragier [City of
             Tolleson, Arizona]. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-76d. U.S. Environmental Protec-
             tion Agency, 1974. 66 p.

 PB-239 327 Urban street cleaning. A. H. Levis. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 57 p.

 PB-239 357 An  evaluation  of landfill gas   migration and a  prototype gas migration barrier. City of
             Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Enviro Engineers,  Inc. Environmental Protection Publication
             SW-79d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 154 p.
                                                 77

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order nos.

 PB-239 392  Where the boilers are; a survey of electric utility boilers with potential capacity for burning solid
             waste  as fuel.  B.  G.  Tunnah,  A. Hakki, and  R. J. Leonard [Gordian  Associates,  Inc.].
             Environmental Protection Publication  SW-88c. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,  1974.
             329 p.

 PB-239 494  Analysis models for solid waste collection, v.  2. Appendices and documentation. J. F.Hudson,
             D. S. Grossman, and D. H. Marks. UJS. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 225 p.

 PB-239 502  Fabrication  of  single cell protein  from cellulosic wastes.  W. H. Daly  and L. P.  Ruiz. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 71 p.

 PB-239 509  Solid  waste  conversion: cellulose  liquefaction.  J.  A.  Kaufman  and  A. H. Weiss. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 216 p.

 PB-239 618  An experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; second annual report. O. B. Andersland. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 230 p.

 PB-239 631  Criteria  for  regional  solid  waste  rranagement planning.  B. H. Stevens.  U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency,  1974. 338 p.

 PB-239 736  A study of Federal subsidies to stimulate resource recovery. Resource  Planning Associates, Inc.
             Environmental Protection Publication  SW-96c. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,  1974.
             144 p.

 PB-239 775  Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; separate  collection studies,  [v. 1.]
             SCS  Engineers,  Inc. Environmenta   Protection  Publication  SW-95c.l.  U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency,  1974. 157 p.

 PB-239 776  Analysis of source  separate  collection of recyclable solid waste; collection center studies,  [v. 2.]
             SCS  Engineers,  Inc. Environmental  Protection   Publication  SW-95c.2.  U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency,  1974. 72 p.

 PB-239 778  Sonoma County solid waste stabilization  study. EMCON Associates. Environmental Protection
             Publication  SW-65d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 283 p.

 PB-239 869  An experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; first annual report. O. B. Andersland et al.
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 200  p.

 PB-239 895-Set   Routing of solid waste collection vehicles. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
             4v.

             PB-239 896  First annual report and appendix A; a linear programming approach for the traveling
                         salesman problem. J. C. Liebman and  S. Hong. 70 p.

             PB-239 897  First  annual report and  appendix B; optimal routing of  solid waste  collection
                         vehicles. J.  C. Liebman and M. Wathne. 110 p.

             PB-239 898  Final report and appendix A; manual for use of the computer codes. J. C. Liebman.
                         55  p.

             PB-239 899  Final report and appendix B; a heuristic solution to the m-postman problem. J.  C.
                         Liebman and J. W. Male. 127 p.

 PB-239 914  Preliminary design  of a  household refuse grinder.  A. T. Fisk and A. Guzdar. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1974. 130 p.
                                                 78

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order nos.

 PB-239 915  Feasibility of hydraulic transport of ground household refuse through sewer appurtenances. D. A.
             Monaghan and A. Guzdar. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 130 p.

 PB-239 917  Residential collection systems, v. 2. Detailed study and analysis. ACT Systems, Inc.  Environ-
             mental Protection Publication SW-97c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 254 p.

 PB-240 365  Rural storage and  collection container systems. Humboldt County, California. Environmental
             Protection Publication SW-81d. U.S. Environmental  Protection  Agency, 1975. 126 p.

 PB-240 395  San Jose's municipal  solid waste  system, a case  study. Applied Management Sciences,  Inc.
             Environmental  Protection  Publication  SW-78c. U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1975.
             153 p.

 PB-240 723  High-temperature vortex incinerator. R. C. Thurnau and D. A. Oberacker. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, 1975. 32 p.

 PB-240 988  An evaluation of the impact of discriminatory taxation on the use of primary and secondary raw
             materials.  Boo/-Allen and  Hamilton, Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOlc  U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 148 p.

 PB-241 204  Assessment of industrial  hazardous waste practices, storage  and primary batteries industiies.
             Versar,  Incorporated.  [Environmental Protection  Publication]  SW-102c  U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, Jan. 1975. [209  p.]

 PB-241 468  Lee County. Mississippi,  solid  waste  disposal project. Lee County Board of  Supervisors.
             Environmental  Protection  Publication  Sw-83d. U.S  Environmental  Protection Agency, 1974.
             [140 p.]

 PB-241 729  Requiring secondary materials in  Federal construction; a  feasibility  study.  J.  M.  Ramsey
             [Resource Planning Associates.]  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-130c. U.S.  Environ-
             mental Protection Agency, Jan.  1975. [206 p.]

 PB-242 461  Preliminary design of a comprehensive waste oil processing facility. G. D. Gumtz and E. J. Martin
             [Maryland Environmental Services]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 142 p.

 PB-242 536  Use of domestic waste glass for  urban paving; summary report. W. R. Malisch, D. E. Day, and
             B. G. Wixson [University of Missouri].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 60 p.

 PB-242 540 Specifications for materials recovered from municipal refuse. H. Alter and W. R. Reeves [National
             Center  for Resource Recovery, Inc.]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 120 p.

 PB-243 222 Recycling of waste oils. S. Mai/us  [National Oil  Recovery Corporation]. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, June 1975. 283  p.

 PB-243 366 Environmental assessment of future disposal methods  for plastics in municipal solid waste. D. A.
             Vaughan  et  al.  [Battelle Columbus  Laboratories].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June
             1975. 86 p.

 PB-243 386 Methods  to  treat,  control and monitor spilled hazardous materials. R. J. Pilie et  al.  [Calspan
             Corporation]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 149 p.

 PB-243 634 St.  Louis refuse  processing plant: equipment, facility, and  environmental  evaluations.  L.  J.
             Shannon,  D. E. Fiscus,  and P. G.  Gorman  [Midwest Research Institute]. U.S. Environmental
             Protection Agency, May 1975. 122 p.
                                                 79

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order nos.

 PB-244 309-Set  Characterization and utilization of municipal  and utility sludges  and ashes. U.S. Environ-
             mental Protection Agency, May 1975. 3 v.

             PB-244 310 v. 1.  Summary.  N.  L. Hecht and  D. S. Duvall [University of Dayton Research
                              Institute]. 40 p.

             PB-244 311 v. 2.  Municipal sludges. N. L. Hecht, D. S. Duvall, and A. S. Rachidi [University
                              of Dayton Research Institute]. 241 p.

             PB-244 312 v. 3.  Utility coal ash. N. L. Hecht and D. S. Duvall  [University of Dayton Research
                              Institute]. 74 p.

 PB-244 557  Guidelines for the  disposal  of small  quantities of unused pesticides  E. W. Lawless, T. L.
             Ferguson,  and A.  F.  Meiners [Midwest  Research  Institute]. U.S. Environmental  Protection
             Agency, June  1975. 342 p.

 PB-244 832  Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices; inorganic chemicals industry. R. G. Shaver et
             al. [Versar, Incorporated]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-104c. U.S.  Environmental
             Protection Agency, Mar. 1975. [505 p.]

 PB-245 271  Review of landspreadmg of liquid municipal sewage sludge. T. E. Carroll  et al. [Battelle Columbus
             Laboratories]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June  1975. 110 p.

 PB-245 672  Evaluation of shredding facilities, Rock Cut Road Plant No. 1; Onondaga County Solid Waste
             Disposal  Authority, Onondaga County, New York.  Onondaga  County Solid Waste Disposal
             Authority.  Environmental Protection  Publication  SW-86d. U.S.  Environmental  Protection
             Agency, 1975. [147 p.]

 PB-245 674  A technical, environmental  and  economic evaluation of the "wet processing system  for the
             recovery  and  disposal of municipal solid  waste." Systems  Technology Corporation. Environ-
             mental Protection Publication SW-109c  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 223 p.

 PB-245 924  Base line  forecasts of resource recovery, 1972 to  1990: final report. Midwest Research Institute.
             Environmental Protection Publication SW-107c.  U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, 1975.
             [386 p.]

 PB-247 185  Evaluation  of solid  waste   baling  aid  balefills.  v. 1-2.  Ralph  Stone and Company,  Inc.
             Environmental Protection Publication SW-lllc.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.
             [375 p.]

 PB-247 566  Injury reporting and information  system field test.  v. 1. D. M. J. Compton and K. King  [Safety
             Sciences,  WSA, Incorporated]. Enviroimental Protection Publication SW-110c.l. U.S. Environ-
             mental Protection Agency, 1975. [138 p.]

 PB-247 567  Injury reporting and information system field test. v. 2. Tabulation of data. D. M. J. Compton
             and K. King  [Safety Sciences,  WSA, Incorporated].  Environmental Protection  Publication
             SW-llOc.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. [66 p.]

 PB-249 747  Chemical  waste land disposal facility demonstration grant application. Barr Engineering Company
             for the Minnesota  Pollution Control Agency. Environmental  Protection  Publication SW-87d. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 183 p.

 PB-250717  A  study  of  selected  landfills desigred  as  pesticide  disposal  sites. TRW  Systems  Group.
             Environmental Protection Publication SW-114c.  U.S. Environmental Piotection  Agency, 1976.
             143 p.
                                                80

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order nos.

 PB-250 798  Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and  paperboard industry.
             v. 1, sect. 1-8,10. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-115c.l. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 383 p.

 PB-250 802  Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and  paperboard industry.
             v. 3. Appendices. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-115c.3. U.S.
             Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 422 p.

 PB-250 905  Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and  paperboard industry.
             v. 2, sect. 9. Process economics. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication
             SW-115c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 257 p.
                                                81

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                                           title index


Numbers following entries are order numbers, by which the publications arc listed in this catalog.
Abstracts: selected patents on reluse handling facilities for buildings, 1
Accounting system for incinerator operations,  111
Accounting system for sanitary landfill operations. 36
Accounting system for solid waste collection, 153
Accounting system for solid waste management in small communities. 1 76
Accounting system for solid waste shredders, 451
Accounting system for transfer station operations,  182
Acid hydrolysis of cellulose in refuse to sugar and its fermentation to alcohol, PB-221  239
Action on the solid wastes problem, 71
Activities in managing solid wastes. 197
Ad hoc conference on solid waste training, 72
Aerial and automotive reconnaissance of solid waste disposal sites in a rural county, 277
Aerobic treatment of livestock wastes, 297
Agricultural benefits and environmental  changes  resulting from the use of digeste-d sewage sludge  on field
   crops; an interim report on a solid waste demonstration proiect,  229
Agricultural benefits  and environmental changes resulting fiom  the  use of digested sludge on field  crops,
   PB-236 402
Air classification tor reclamation processing of solid wastes, 102
Air classification of solid wastes, performance of experimental units and potential applications for solid waste
   reclamation, 256
Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, PB-22'5 164
Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, v. 2, PB-237 264
Aluminum as a component of solid waste  and a recoverable resource. PB-235  770
America the beautiful; a collection of the  nation's trashiest humor,  131
American composting concepts. 169
Anaerobic digestion of solid waste and sewage sludj;e to methane, 458
Analysis  of  demand  and supply  for secondary  fiber   in the U.S.  paper and paperboard industry, v. 1,
   sect. 1-8,10, PB-250 798
Analysis  of demand and supply for  secondary fiber in the U.S. paper  and paperboard industry, v. 2, sect. 9,
   Process economics. PB-250 905
Analysis  of  demand  and supply  for secondary  fiber   in the U.S   paper and paperboard industry, v. 3,
   Appendices, PB-250 802
Analysis models for solid waste collection, v. 1, PB-239 117
Analysis models for solid waste collection, v. 2, Appendices and documentation, PB-239 494
Analysis of airport solid wastes and collection syste TIS; San Francisco International Airport, PB-219  372
Analysis of Federal programs affecting solid waste generation and recycling, PB-213 311
Analysis of solid waste composition; statistical teclnique to determine sample size, 97
Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable johd waste: collection center studies, v. 2, PB-239 776
Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste: separate collection studies, v. 1, PB-239 775
Analysis of the abandoned automobile problem, PB-221 879
Analysis of the current impact of plastic refuse disposal upon the environme'it,  PB-238 654
Applying technology to unmet needs; report on the solid waste problem. 2
Appraisal of marine disposal of solid wastes off the west coast'  a  preliminary review and results of a survey,
   130
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices; norganic chemicals  industry, PB-244 832
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices; storage and primary batteries industries, PB-241  204
Assessment of wet systems for residential  refuse collection, summary repoit, PB-236 085
Atlanta household refuse compactor demonstration project, PB-234 605
Automatic amino acid analyses for determining the amount  and  quality of protein in fungal protein and in
   other protein sources 312

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Automobile cycle; an environmental and resource reclamation problem, 275
Automobile scrapping processes and needs for Maryland; a final report on a solid waste demonstration, 106
Available information materials; solid waste management, 203

                                                 B

Baling solid waste to conserve sanitary landfill space; a feasibility study, PB-214 960
Baltimore demonstrates gas pyrolysis; resource recovery from solid waste, 431
Baltimore's municipal solid waste management system;a case study, PB-228 161
Base line forecasts of resource recovery, 1972 to 1990: final report, PB-245 924
Basic issues on solid waste management affecting county government, 373
Beverage container problem;analysis and recommendations, 326
Beverage container problem;analysis and recommendations, PB-213 341
Beverage containers; proposed solid waste management guidelines. See Solid waste management; guidelines for
   beverage containers
Beverage containers: the Vermont experience, 487
Big pickup—a new publication from the Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 485
Biological consequences of plant residue decomposition in soil, PB-222 113
Biological conversion of animal wastes to nutrients, PB-221 171
Bird/aircraft hazards at airports near solid waste disposal sites, 355
Buffalo's crusher facility for bulky solid waste, PB-225 159
Building an amphitheater and coasting ramp of municipal solid waste, PB-225 346
Bureau attacks nation's solid waste, 109
Burn, bury, or what*7 271
California solid waste management study (1968) and plan (1970), 175
Can engineering cope with the debris of affluence? 3
Can Federal procurement practices be used to reduce solid wastes? PB-229 727
Case study and business analysis of the scrap industry, PB-229 220
Cellulolytic activity in municipal solid waste composting, 126
Cellulose degradation in composting, PB-215 722
Characteristics of municipal solid wastes, 4
Characterization and utilization of municipal and utility sludges and ashes, v. 1-3, PB-244 309-Set
Chemical conversion of solid wastes to useful products, PB-233 178
Chemical conversion of wood and cellulosic wastes, PB-229 246
Cities and the nation's disposal crisis, 331
Cities' rubbish woes grow as volume rises, dumping sites fill up, 5
Citizen support for solid waste management, 138
Clean and green,  291
Clean and green solid waste system in Alabama is widely copied, 150, 238
Closing open dumps, 156
Codification of solid waste management authority in Kentucky; appendix A, PB-201 205
Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; a systems engineering approach to
   the overall problem of solid waste management; an interim report, 6
Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; the planning phase, 249
Collection, reduction, and disposal of solid waste in high-rise multifamily dwellings, PB-197 623
COLMIS; a new solid waste management information system, 389
Columbus' municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-236 659
Combustion power um't-400 (CPU-400); a technical abstract, 7, PB-187 299
Combustion products from the incineration of plastics, PB-222 001
Comparative estimates of post-consumer solid waste, 443
Compost studies, pt. 1-3, 204-206
Composted municipal refuse as a soil amendment, PB-222 422
Composting at Johnson  City; final report on joint USEPA-TVA  composting  project with operational data,
   1967 to  1971,488
Composting developments in the United States, 8

                                                83

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Composting dewatered sewage sludge, 115
Composting of municipal solid wastes in the United States. 212
Comprehensive studies of solid waste management, first and second annual reports, 128
Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; third annual report, 178
Comprehensive  study of solid waste disposal  in  Cascade  County, Montana; final report  on a solid waste
   demonstration, 118
Computer planning for efficient solid waste collection, 283
Concept and design of the joint U.S. Public Health Service-Tennessee Valley Authority Composting Project,
   Johnson City, Tennessee, 9
Conservation and common sense. 515
Construction of  a chemical-microbial pilot plant for  production of single-cell orotein fiom  cellulosic  wastes,
   186
Control of domestic rats and mice, 155
Conversion of organic solid wastes into yeast; an economic evaluation, 91
Corrosion studies in municipal incinerators, PB-213  37£
Cost of residential solid waste collection, 228
Costs of hauling and land spreading of domestic sewage treatment plant sludge, PB-227 005
Creating a countywide solid waste management systerr ; the  case study of Humphreys County, Tennessee. 255
Criteria for regional solid waste management planning, PB-239 631
Current concepts in the disposal of solid wastes,  110
                                               D
Dairy manure management methods. PB-233 441
Dairy waste management, PB-225  160
Dallas'  municipal solid waste management system; a cas; study, PB-234 140
Damage incidents from improper land disposal, 494
Debris  accumulation in ancient and modern cities, 404
Decentralized solid waste collection facilities, 146
Decision-makers guide in solid waste management, 390
Decision trees in solid wastes planning, 10
Deep-sea disposal of liquid and solid wastes, 162
Demonstrating  multimaterial  source separation in Somerville and
  Marblehead,  Massachusetts,  510
Demonstration of waste flow reduction from househoks, PB-236 904
Des  Moines  story; a  report  on the implementation of the solid waste management plan for the Des  Moines
   Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency, PB-233 873
Design  and control of incinerators, PB-223 626
Design  and simulation of equalization basins, PB-222 000
Design  criteria for solid waste management in recreational areas, 284
Design  of a water-disposable glass packaging container, 236
Design  of consumer  containers for re-use or disposal: proceedings of the  Solid Waste Resources Conference
   (May 12-13, 1971), 261
Determination of selenium in solid waste, 148
Detroit's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-236 662
Developing a local and regional solid waste managemen plan, 336, PB-226 099
Developing a State solid waste management plan, 124
Development of construction and use criteria for sanita-y landfills; an interim report, 11
Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills; final report  on a solid waste management
   demonstration grant, PB-218 672
Digest  of selected local solid waste management ordinances, 253
DISCUS- a solid-waste management game, 137
Dismantling railroad  freight cars; a study of improved methods with application to other demolition problems,
   95
Disposal of hazardous wastes; report to Congress, 345
Disposal of polymer solid wastes by primary polymer producers and plastics fabricators, 244
Disposal of sewage sludge into a sanitary landfill, 391
District of Columbia solid waste management plan; status report (1970), 191
Do you need a sanitary landfill? 12


                                                 84

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Don't leave it all to the experts; the citizen's role in environmental decision making, 314
Dumps; a potential threat to our groundwater supplies, 411
Ecology of compost; a public involvement project, 322
Economic analysis of the processing and disposal of refuse sludges, PB-234 498
Economic and technological impediments to recycling obsolete ferrous solid waste, PB-223 034
Economic realities of reclaiming natural resources in solid waste, 225
Economics of separate refuse collection, 400
Economics of solid waste investment decisions, 103
Effect of processing poultry manure on disease agents, PB-222 148
Effective use  of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v. 1, PB-236 462
Effective use  of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v. 2, PB-236 463
Effective use  of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; second annual report, PB-224 996
Effects of garbage grinding on sewage systems and environmental sanitation, 13
Effects of land disposal of solid wastes on water quality, 83
Eleven residential pickup systems compared for cost and productivity, 436
Empirical analysis of commercial solid  waste generation, 240
Energy and the environment, 360
Energy conservation through improved solid waste management, 378
Energy recovery from waste; solid waste as  supplementary fuel in power plant boilers, 264
Engineer in solid waste management, 227
Environmental assessment of future disposal methods for plastics in municipal solid waste, PB-243 366
Environmental impacts of packaging, 332
Environmental  Protection Agency publishes guidelines on solid  waste  collection  and storage for Federal
   Agencies. See Guidelines  for the storage and collection of residential,  commercial, and institutional solid
   waste
Environmental protection, residuals management, and resources—the future is now, 364
Environmental protection—the people's choice, 379
Evaluation of shredding facilities, Rock  Cut  Road  Plant  No. 1; Onondaga  County  Solid Waste  Disposal
   Authority, Onondaga County, New  York, PB-245 672
Evaluation of solid waste baling and balefills, v. 1-2, PB-247 185
Evaluation of the effectiveness and costs of regulatory and fiscal policy instruments on product packaging, 437
Evaluation of the feasibility and economic implications of pricing mechanisms in solid waste management,
   PB-239 116
Evaluation of the impact of discriminatory taxation on the use of primary and secondary raw materials,
   PB-240 988
Evaluation of the Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator; operation  test report (August 1968), 14
Excerpts relating to solid waste from the President's  Message on Environment, 91st Cong., 2d sess. (Feb. 10,
   1970), 129
Experimental  composting research and development; joint U.S. Public Health Service—Tennessee Valley
   Authority  Composting Project, Johnson  City, Tenn., 15
Experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; first annual report, PB-239  869
Experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; second annual report, PB-239 618
Fabrication of single cell protein from cellulosic wastes, PB-239 502
Feasibility of hydraulic transport and treatment of ground household refuse through sewers, PB-229 256
Feasibility of hydraulic transport of ground household refuse through sewer appurtenances, PB-239 915
Feasibility study of the disposal of polyethylene plastic waste, 199
Feasibility study of use of molten salt technology for pyrolysis of solid waste, PB-238 674
Federal program for hazardous waste management, 399
Federal redirections in solid waste, 276
Federal resource recovery demonstration program, 334
Federal role in solid waste management-present and future, 306
                                                  85

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Federal solid waste demonstration program, 16
Federal solid waste management programme; a review and prognosis, 395
Federal solid wastes program, 108
Films tell the solid waste management story, 349
Films tell the story, 207
Financial methods for solid waste facilities, PB-234 612
Financing municipal solid waste management systems, 132
Financing solid waste management  in small communities, 188
First annual progress report on a study of corrosion in municipal incinerators, PB-221 85 I
Five-stage improvement process for solid waste collection systems, 409
Five-thousand (5000) dumps, 265
Five-thousand (5000) dumps [flyer], 209
Fleet selection for solid waste collection systems, 251
Forecasts of the effects of air and water pollution controls on solid waste generation, PB-238 819
Forsyth County's solid waste management system;a case study, PB-225 296
Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v 1, PB-234 715
Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v. 2, PB-234 716
Fresno's municipal solid waste management system;a case study, PB-234 141
Fuel conservation in solid waste management, 407

                                                 Ci

Gainesville compost plant; an interim report, 17, PB-18"' 311
Gainesville compost plant; final report on a solid waste nanagement demonstration, v. 1-2, PB-222 710
Gaseous emissions from municipal incinerators, 368
Generation of steam from solid wastes, PB-214 166
Glass and aluminum recovery in recycling operations, 308
Grant programs under the Solid Waste Disposal Act, 18
Grants encourage new waste disposal methods, 121
Grants for solid waste disposal projects, 19
Green box, 272
Guidelines for local governments on solid waste  management, 239
Guidelines for procurement of products that contain recycled material, 490
Guidelines for the storage and collection of residential, commercial, and institutional solid waste, 504
Guidelines for the disposal of small quantities of unused pesticides, PB-244 557

                                                 R

Habi'a una vez un dragon malvado,  430
Handbook for initiating or improving commercial refuse collection, 472
Hazardous waste disposal damage reports, 449, 492
Hazardous waste management facilities in the  United States, 429
Hazardous wastes, 450
Hazardous wastes and their management; environmental information, 452
Hazardous  wastes,  the   gross  national  byproduct;  a  new  publication from  the Office of Solid  Waste
   Management,  502
Health and safety in the solid waste industry, 426
Health aspects and vector control associated with animal wastes, 20
Heuristic routing for solid waste collection vehicles, 356
High-pressure compaction-and baling  of solid waste; final report on  a solid waste management demonstration
   grant, 252
High-temperature vortex incinerator, PB-240 723
Highway litter study (1974); report to Congress, 455
Hospital solid waste; an annotated bibliography, PB-227 708
Hospital solid waste disposal in community facilities, PB-222 018
Hospital wastes, 406
Houston's municipal solid waste management system;a :ase study, PB-225 299

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Hydrogeology  of solid  waste disposal  sites  in  noitheastern  Illinois,  a  final  icport  on a  solid waste
   demonstration grant project, 223
Hydrogeology  of  solid waste  disposal  sites in northeastern  Illinois,  an  interim  report on  a  solid waste
   demonstration giant project, 90

                                                  I

Identification (if opportunities for increased iccycling o; temms solid waste. PB-21 3 577
Illinois report probes citizens' attitudes on refuse pioblems, 372
Improving manual solid waste separation studies, 3 10
Improving productivity in solid waste collection, a brief for elected officials. 440
Improving rural solid waste management piactices ^42
In the bag, 270
Incentives for recycling and icuse of plastics, PB-214 045
Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics, a summary report, 316
Incentives for tire recycling and icuse, 382
Incineration in hazardous waste management. 427
Incineration of bulky icfuse without pnor shredding. PB-221 731
Incineration of plastics found in municipal wastes, PB-223  651
Industrial and agricultural solid wastes and pioblems involved in their disposal, 104
Industrial solid  waste classification systems.  PB-239  1 19
Industrial solid  waste problems. 278
Industrial waste management, seven conference papers. 453
Information about hazardous waste management facilities,  468
Information retncval services of hPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 294
Information system for solid waste operation.  166
Infrared spectral sensor lor refuse soiling, PB-229 901
Initiating a national effort to improve solid waste management, 260
In|urv reporting and infoimation system field test, v  1, PB-247 566
Injury reporting and infoimation system field test. \  2, Tabulation of data, PB-247 567
Intergovernmental approaches to solid waste management.  164
International Research (iioup on Refuse Disposal  (1RGRD); information bulletin numbers  1-12 (November
   1956 to September 196]), 21
International Research Group on  Refuse Disposal (IRGRD), information bulletin numbers 13-20 (December
   1961 to May 1964), 22
International Research Gioup  on Refuse Disposal  (IRGRD), information bulletin numbers 21-31 (August
   1964 to December 1967), 89
International Reseaich Group on Refuse Disposal  (IRGRD). infoimation bulletin number 32 (April 1968),
   142
International Research Group on  Refuse Disposal (IRGRD)- information bulletin number 33 (August 1968),
   143
International Research Group  on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD). information  bulletin number 34 (December
   1968), 144
Internationa] Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD). infoimation bulletin number 35 (May 1969). 145
Interview  with  Sandy Hale,  Waste Age discusses new direction for Federal solid waste management program
   with its new  director. 250
Investigation of corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades, PB-221 095
Investigation of the biodegradability of packaging plastics,  PB-21 3 488
Investigation of the pH characteristics of compost. 158
Investment decision model for control technology. PB-213  482
Ion-exchange process for recovery  of eliminate from pigment manufacturing, PB-233 641
IRIS: a new service for the solid waste management mdustrv. 478
IRIS, injury reporting and information system  foi solid waste management, 477

                                                 J

Jacksonville's municipal solid waste management  system; a  case study, PB-234  139
                                                  87

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                                                 K

Kansas City's municipal solid waste management system; PB-234 068
Keeping a sanitary landfill sanitary, 23
Kenilworth  model sanitary  landfill; interim report  on  a  solid  waste  demonstration project (December
   1967-January 1969), 105
Kentucky solid waste management plan; status report, 1970, 181
Land availability, crop production, and fertilizer requirements in the United States, 484
Land reclamation project; an interim report, 24, PB-187 301
Land use planning and solid waste management, 247
Landfill decomposition gases; an annotated bibliography, PB-213 487
Landfill disposal of hazardous wastes: a review of literature and known approaches, 475
Leachate effects of improper land disposal, 435
Lee County, Mississippi, solid waste disposal project, PB 241 468
Legislative history of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, together with a section-by-section index, 410
Let DARE make your solid-waste decisions, 101
Let's dump the  dump; the ABC's of solid waste managerient, 290
Library holdings-nonperiodical; Federal solid waste management program (November 1972), 375
Liners for land disposal sites; an assessment, 428
Litter bit is not enough, 318
Locational models for solid waste management, 173
Louisville,  Ky.-Ind.  metropolitan  region solid  waste  disposal study; interim report on  a solid  waste
   demonstration project, v. 1, 125

                                                 M

Making polyethylene more disposable, 324
Making refuse collection safer, 481
Malgastar causa necesidad, 392
Manage solid wastes as a utility, 160
Management information for solid waste collection, PB-213 308
Management of solid waste-the utility concept, 161
Management of solid wastes from hospitals: problems and technology, 73
Mapping the United States... a solid waste view, 149
Marine disposal of solid wastes, 157
Marketability of recovered and clarified incinerator residue in the New York metropolitan area, PB-222 588
Markets and technology for recovering energy from solid  waste, 401
Mas alia" de la lata de basura, 424
Master plan  for solid waste collection and disposal—tri-parish metropolitan area of New Orleans; final report
   on a solid waste management demonstration, 94
Materials recovery; solid waste management guidelines for source separation, 473
Mathematical analysis of solid waste collection, 147
Mathematical model for aerobic digestion, PB-222 029
Mathematical model for post aeration, PB-222  031
Mathematical modeling and computer simulation for designing municipal refuse collection and haul services,
   PB-208 154
Mathematical modeling of solid waste collection policies, v. 1-2, 123
Mechanics of style; a guide for Solid Waste Management authors, secretaries, grantees, and contractors, 386
Mechanized, non-stop residential solid waste collection, PB-239 196
Mechanized residential solid waste collection, PB-239 195
Memphis' municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-234 713
Mess we're in, 159
Metallurgical upgrading of automotive scrap steel, PB-223 740
Method for macrodetermination of carbon and hydrogen in solid wastes, 193

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Methods of predicting solid waste characteristics, 235
Methods to treat, control and monitor spilled hazardous materials, PB-243 386
Metropolitan housewives' attitudes toward solid waste disposal, PB-213 340
Microbial degradation of urban and agricultural wastes, 254
Microbiological evaluation  of incinerator operations, 88
Microbiological studies of compost plant dust, PB-222 160
Middletown's municipal  solid waste management system; a case study, PB-234 945
Mine spoil potentials for soil  and water quality, PB-237 525
Mineral  recovery  from the noncombustible fraction of  municipal  solid waste;  a  proposed  project to
   demonstrate incinerator residue recovery, 491
Mission 5000 [flyer], 202
Mission 5000; a citizens' solid waste management project, 280
Mission 5000; let's find a better way!  201
Model for optimal design and operation of solid waste transfer stations, PB-227 075
Modifications  to the executive computer  program for  steady-state  simulation  of wastewater treatment
   facilities, PB-234 497
Municipal composting research at Johnson City, Tennessee, 74
Municipal incineration, 75
Municipal-scale incinerator design and operation, 122
Municipal waste disposal by shipborne incineration and sea disposal of residues, PB-221 684

                                                  N

National buyer's guide to recycled paper, 343
National solid wastes program, 25
National solid wastes survey; an interim report, 26
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 1, 216
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 1, 217
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 2, 218
Nationwide survey of resource recovery activities, 432
Needs for chemical research in solid waste management, 134
New chemical concepts for utilization of waste plastics, 222
New technologies in solid waste management, 274
New York solid waste management plan; status report (1970), 233
Nitrite-accelerated  photochemical degradation of cellulose as a pretreatment for microbiological conversion to
   protein, PB-222 115

                                                  0

Observations of continental European solid waste management practices, 93
Ocean disposal of barge-delivered liquid and solid wastes from U.S. coastal cities, 192
Ocean dumping poses growing threat, 140
Omaha-Council Bluffs solid waste management plan; status report (1969), 183
One private plant treats oil, chemical residues in Denmark,  418
Opportunities  for  improving  productivity in solid  waste  management—1973; report of the Solid Waste
   Management Advisory Group on, 441
Optimal configuration of a regional solid waste management system, PB-233 360
Optimization models for regional public systems, PB-231 309
Oregon solid waste management plan; status report (1969), 168
Oregon's bottle bill; the  first  six months, 325
Organic pesticides and pesticide containers; a  study of their decontamination and combustion, PB-202 202
Our effluent society; the States and solid waste management, 383
Our environment [flyer] ,214
Packaging and solid waste management, 27
Packaging industry and'government, 246
                                                  89

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Packaging source reduction; can industry and government cooperate7 422
Paper recycling in the United States, 420
Paper recycling 1973: a dramatic year in perspective, 465
Parasitologjcal examination of compost; a Solid Waste Research open-file repoi t, 224
Partial oxidation of solid organic wastes, 154
Patent abstracts; international solid waste management (1945-1969), 319
Patent abstracts; United States solid waste management (1945-1969), 317
Pathogens associated with solid waste processing; a progress report, 184
PCB-containing wastes (industrial facilities); recommended procedures for disposal, 516
PERT; concepts and application to solid waste management, 135
Pesticides and pesticide containers; proposed regulators for prohibition of certain acts regarding disposal and
   storage, 398
Pesticides;  EPA proposal on disposal and storage. See Pesticides and pesticide containers; proposed regulations
   for prohibition of certain acts regarding disposal and storage
Photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid and liquid wastes, PB-222 454
Physical, chemical, and microbiological  methods of solid waste testing, PB-220 479
Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing; four  Additional  methods, PB-231 203
Planning a comprehensive in-plant solid waste survey,  I 39
Planning and the national solid waste  survey, 113
Plastic wastes in the coming decade, 179
Pneumo-slurry pipeline collection and removal of municipal solid waste, PB-223 162
Policies for solid waste management,  112
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 1, 245
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 2, PB-209 001
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 3, PB-209 002
Polychlorinated biphenyl-containing wastes;  disposal procedures. See  PCB-containtng  wastes  (industrial
   facilities); recommended procedures  for disposal
Portable sampler for microorganisms in  incinerator stack emissions, 151
Poultry manure disposal by plow-furrow-cover, PB-222 430
Preliminary assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection, PB-234 496
Preliminary data analysis; 1968 national survey of compiunity solid waste practices, 28
Preliminary design of a comprehensive waste oil processing facility, PB-242 461
Preliminary design of a household refuse grinder, PB-239 914
Preliminary estimate of the  significance  of pesticide  residues in solid wastes and  problems of reduction or
   elimination of these residues, 29
Preparation and evaluation of activated  carbon produced from municipal refuse, PB-221 172
Preventing landfill leachate contamination of water, PEi-222 468
Private contractor opportunities in the solid wastes program, 76
Private sector in solid waste management; a  profile of its resources and contribution to collection and disposal,
   v. 1-2, 346
Problem-solving in solid waste management through Federal-local cooperation; eight case studies, 423
Problems and opportunities in management  of combusiible solid wastes, PB-222 467
Proceedings; 1975 Conference on Waste Reduction (Apr. 2-3, 1975), 461
Proceedings; 1st National Conference on Packaging Wastes (Sept. 22-24, 1969), 172
Proceedings; the  Surgeon General's  Conference on  IJolid Waste Management for  Metropolitan Washington
   (July 19-20, 1967), 30
Processing and recovery of Jon Thomas—cool cat! 299
Procurement of products that contain recycled materhl and resource recovery facilities; guidelines for  Federal
   agencies, 490
Production of fungal protein from cellulose  and waste cellulosics, 295
Program for the management of hazardous wastes, v. 1-2, PB-233 630-PB-233  631
Progress in solid waste management and needed developments, 116
Progress under the Federal solid wastes  program, 31
Promising technologies for treatment  of hazardous wastes, PB-238 145
Proposals  for  a  refuse  disposal  system  in  Oakland.  County, Michigan;  final report  on a solid waste
   demonstration grant project,  117
Proposed solid waste management guidelines for beverage containers, 463
Psychology of solid waste management, 87

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Public attitudes towards hazardous waste disposal facilities, PB-223 638
Public health aspects of solid waste disposal, 32
Public-private partnership in solid waste management, 141
Public regulation concept in solid waste management; a feasibility study, PB-225 332
Pyrolysis of municipal solid waste, 417
Pyrolysis of solid municipal wastes, PB-222 015
Quad-City solid wastes project; an interim report (June 1, 1966 to May 31, 1967), 33
Quantity and composition of post-consumer solid  waste:  material flow
  estimates  for 1973 and baseline  future projections,  498
Questions and answers on returnable beverage containers for  beer and soft drinks, 462

                                                 R

Radiolytic hydrolysis of cellulose, PB-221 877
Rail transport of solid wastes, PB-222 709
Rail transport of solid wastes-a feasibility study; interim report, phase one, 34, PB-187 306
Rats, fires, and inner-city solid waste storage practices, 444
Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron and steel, v. 1,
   PB-229 816
Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron and steel, v. 2,
   PB-229 817
Recirculating waste system for swine units, PB-221 621
Reclamation of energy from organic waste, PB-231 176
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, PB-224 579-Set
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 1, Summary
   report, PB-224 580
Recommended  methods  of reduction, neutralization,  recovery  or  disposal of  hazardous  waste,  v. 2,
   Toxicologic summary, PB-224 581
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 3, Ultimate
   incineration, PB-224 582
Recommended  methods  of reduction, neutralization,  recovery  or  disposal of  hazardous  waste,  v. 4,
   Miscellaneous waste treatment processes, PB-224 583
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 5, Pesticides
   and cyanide compounds, PB-224 584
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 6, Mercury,
   arsenic, chromium, and cadmium compounds, PB-224 585
Recommended  methods  of reduction, neutralization,  recovery  or  disposal of  hazardous  waste,  v. 7,
   Propellants, explosives, and chemical warfare materiel, PB-224 586
Recommended  methods  of reduction, neutralization,  recovery  or  disposal of  hazardous  waste,  v. 8,
   Miscellaneous inorganic  and organic compounds; PB-224 587
Recommended  methods  of reduction, neutralization,  recovery  or  disposal of  hazardous  waste,  v. 9,
   Radioactive materials, PB-224 588
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 10, Organic
   compounds, PB-224 589
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery  or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 11, Organic
   compounds (continued), PB-224 590
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 12, Inorganic
   compounds, PB-224 591
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 13, Inorganic
   compounds (continued), PB-224 592
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 14, Summary
   of waste origins, PB-224 593
Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, v. 15, Research
   and development plans, PB-224 594
Recommended  methods  of  reduction,  neutralization,  recovery  or disposal of hazardous  waste,  v. 16,
   References, PB-224 595

                                                 91

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 Recommended standards for sanitary landfill design, construction, and evalualion and model sanitary landfill
   operation agreement, 230
 Recovering resources from solid waste using wet-processing; EPA's Franklin, Ohio, demonstration project, 408
 Recovery and utilization of municipal solid waste; a sunmary of available cost and performance characteristics
   of unit processes and systems, 177
 Recycle; in search of new policies for resource recovery, 296
 Recycle; use it again, Sam [bumper sticker], 414
 Recycled materials markets; February 1975—a summary, 438
 Recycling, 268
 Recycling [flyer], 210
 Recycling and reuse of waste materials; an essential feauire of solid waste control systems for the future, 96
 Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management, 344
 Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management [mobile], 403
 Recycling; assessment and prospects for success, 286
 Recycling of waste oils, PB-243 222
 Recycling our resources, 273
 Reduce; targets, means and impacts of source reduction, 456
 Reduce the incentive to waste, 500
 Refuse and litter control in recreation areas, 40
 Refuse  as a supplementary fuel for power plants-November 1973 through March  1974; interim progress
   report, 387
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography (1954-1959), 35-37
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography (1960-1973), 38-39
Refuse shredders at EPA's Gainesville, Florida, experimental composting plant, 402
Regional management of solid wastes; a planning study, 323
Regional solid  waste management representatives, 439
Relationship of solid waste  storage practices in  the inn;r city to the incidence of rat infestation and fires, 444
Report of the  Solid Waste Management Advisory Group on opportunities for improving productivity in solid
   waste collection-1973, 441
Requiring secondary materials in Federal construction; a feasibility study, PB-241 729
Research activities of the solid wastes program of the Public Health Service, 41
Research and development for better solid waste management, 98
Residential  collection systems, v. 1, 434
Residential  collection systems, v. 2, Detailed study and analysis, PB-239 917
Residential, commercial and institutional solid wastes; proposed guidelines  for storage and collection, 454
Residential  paper recovery; a municipal implementation guide, 486
 Resource and environmental profile analysis of nine beverage container alternatives; final report, v.  1-2, 405
Resource recovery—a new solid waste management philosophy and technology, 196
 Resource Recovery Act; Public Law 91-512, 91st Cong.. H.R. 11833 (October 26, 1970), 171
Resource recovery and land  protection; an environmental imperative, 413
Resource recovery and source reduction; first report to Congress, 352
Resource recovery and source reduction; second report 1o Congress, 353
Resource recovery and waste reduction; third report to Congress, 448
Resource recovery in solid waste management, 241
Resource recovery losing ground, 289
Resource recovery plant cost estimates: a comparative evaluation of four recent dry-shredding designs, 482
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—accounting format, 493
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials-financing, 471
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials-further assistance, 470
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—interim report, 480
Resource recovery plant implementation:  guides for municipal officials-procurement, 495
Resource recovery plant implementation:  guides for municipal officials—risks and  contracts, 496
Resource recovery, recycling and reuse, 307            :fi
Resource  recovery  technology  update from the  U.S.E.P.A.:  status  report on
   resource  recovery technology:  demonstrating resource  recovery, 528
 Resource recovery; the Federal perspective, 350
 Reuse of solid waste from water-softening processes, PB-224 820


                                                 97

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Reuse of solid wastes: a major solution to a major national problem, 119
Review of landspreading of liquid municipal sewage sludge, PB-245 271
Review of sanitary landfilling practices in the United States, 43
Review of the national solid wastes program, 42
Role of decision models in the evaluation of competing environmental health alternatives, 226
Role of nonpackagmg paper in solid waste management (1966 to 1976), 170
Role of packaging in solid waste management (1966 to 1976), 44
Role of packaging in solid waste management (1966 to 1976); condensation, 243
Role of sanitary landfilling in solid waste management, 305
Routing of solid waste collection vehicles, PB-239 895-Set
Routing of solid waste collection vehicles, final report and appendix A; manual for use of the computer codes,
   PB-239 898
Routing of solid waste collection vehicles, final report and appendix B; a heuristic solution to the m-postman
   problem, PB-239 899
Routing of solid waste collection vehicles, first annual report and appendix A; a linear programming approach
   for the traveling salesman problem, PB-239 896
Routing of solid waste collection vehicles, first annual report and appendix B; optimal routing of solid waste
   collection vehicles, PB-239 897
Rubber reuse and solid waste management, pt. 1-2, 187
Rural storage and collection container systems (1972), PB-212 398
Rural storage and collection container systems (1975), PB-240 365
Safe and sanitary home refuse storage, 45
Salvage industry; what it is-how it works, 333
Salvage markets for materials in solid wastes, 293
Sample weights in solid waste composition studies, 133
San Diego County demonstrates pyrolysis of solid waste to recover liquid fuel, metals, and glass, 442
San Jose's municipal solid waste system;a case study, PB-240 395
Sanitary landfill; a bibliography, 46, 384
Sanitary landfill: alternative to the open dump, 285
Sanitary landfill... an answer to a community problem; a route to a community asset, 189
Sanitary landfill: Clark County, Arkansas, 479
Sanitary landfill design and operation, 287
Sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation, 185
Sanitary landfill facts, 47
Sanitary landfill; one part earth to four parts refuse, 288
Sanitary landfill synopsizer, 351
Sanitary  landfilling;  report  on a joint conference sponsored  by  the  National Solid Waste Management
   Association and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (Nov. 14-15, 1972), 339
Satellite vehicle systems for solid waste collection; evaluation and application, PB-197 931
Satellite vehicle waste collection systems, 262
Saving the energy in solid waste; environmental information, 503
Scrap rubber tire utilization in road dressings, PB-232 559
Scrap tires as artificial reefs, 348
Selecting solid waste disposal facilities, 219
Separating paper at the waste source for recycling, 381
Seven incinerators; evaluation, discussions, and authors' closure, 200
Sewage sludge  disposal in a sanitary landfill, PB-225 360-Set
Sewage sludge  disposal in a sanitary landfill, v. 1, Summary and conclusions, PB-225 361
Sewage sludge  disposal in a sanitary landfill, v. 2, Description of study and technical data, PB-225 362
Single-cell proteins from cellulosic wastes, PB-223 873
Size-reduction equipment for municipal solid waste, PB-226 551
Size reduction of solid waste; an overview, 369
Ski mountain; a conceptual feasibility study in solid waste management, PB-213 697
Sludge conditioning  using sulfur dioxide  and low pressure for production of  organic feed concentrate,
   PB-223 343

                                                  93

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Socio-economic factors affecting demand for municipal collection of household refuse, PB-225 020
Solid waste—a natural resource? 77
Solid  waste  and  fiber recovery  demonstration plant for the City  of Franklin, Ohio;  an interim  report,
   PB-213 646
Solid waste as fuel for power plants, PB-220 316
Solid waste conversion: cellulose liquefaction, PB-239 509
Solid waste demonstration programs.  . . can they help you? 220
Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings of a Symposium (May 4-6, 1971), 311
Solid waste/disease relationships; a literature survey, 48
Solid waste disposal; a new area of pollution, 49
Solid Waste Disposal Act, 171
Solid  Waste  Disposal Act Amendment of 1968; report of the Committee on  Public Works, United  States
   Senate, to  accompany S. 3201, 90th Cong., 2d sess. (Report No.  1447), 51
Solid waste disposal and resource recovery grants, 221
Solid waste; disposal, reuse present major problems, 330
Solid waste disposal study; technical report; Genesee County, Michigan (June 1968), 52
Solid waste estimation procedure, material flows approach, 445
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 1, 300
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 2, PB-213 133
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 3. 301
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 4, PB-213 135
Solid waste handling in  metropolitan areas, 53
Solid Waste Information Retrieval System Accession Bulletin. 195
Solid waste, it won't go away, current focus, 302
Solid waste management, 234
Solid waste management; abstracts and excerpts from the literature, v. 1-2, 127
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature ' 1964), 231
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature ' 1965), 257
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature i'l 966), 258
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature (1967), 281
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature (1968), 282
Solid waste management; an overview, 304
Solid waste management and the packaging industry, 107
Solid waste management/composting;  European activity and American potential,  55
Solid waste management demonstration grant  projects—1971, for grants awarded during the period June 1,
   1966-June30, 1971,232
Solid waste management glossary, 279
Solid waste management; guidelines for beverage containers, 463
Solid waste management: horizons unlimited,  525
Solid waste management in high-rise dwellings; a condeisation, 292
Solid waste management in recreational forest areas, 167
Solid waste management in residential complexes, 248
Solid waste management in the drug industry, PB-225 333
Solid waste management in the food processing industry, 198, PB-219 019
Solid waste management in the industrial chemical indistry, PB-226 420
Solid waste management study for the Port of Tacoma, PB-226 042
Solid waste management: the Federal  role, 56
Solid waste management, the national issues; community guide, 303
Solid waste management today . . . bringing about municipal change, 466
Solid waste management training bulletin of courses (July 1971-December 1972), 208
Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v. 1, Summary and major  findings,, PB-234 930
Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v. 2, Data condensations,  PB-234 931
Solid waste processing;  a state-of-the-art report on unit operations and processes.  114
Solid waste recycling projects; a national directory, 341
Solid waste reduction/salvage plant; an interim report; City of Madison pilot plant demonstration project, June
   14 to December 31,  1967,57
Solid waste shredding and shredder selection, 433
Solid waste transfer and disposal for rural areas, 174

                                                 94

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Solid waste transfer stations; a state-of-the-art report on systems incorporating highway transportation, 337
Solid waste transfer  stations;  a  state-of-the-art report on  systems  incorporating highway  transportation,
   PB-213 511
Solid wastes and air pollution, 100
Solid wastes demonstration grant abstracts; grants awarded January 1-June 30, 1969, 78
Solid wastes: every day, another 800 million pounds, 58
Solid wastes handling, 79
Solid wastes landfill stabilization; an interim report, 54
Solid wastes management  in Germany; report of the U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit (June 25-July 8,
   1967), 59
Solid wastes problems and  programs: a challenge to the professional sanitarian, 80
Solid wastes program of the U.S. Public Health Service, 81
Solid wastes; proposed guidelines for storage and collection, 454
Solving the abandoned car  problem m small communities, 354
Some effects of disposable  plastic liners on refuse handling efficiency, 60
Some specialized equipment used in European compost systems, 61
Sonoma County solid waste stablization study (1974), PB-230 379
Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study (1975), PB-239 778
Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl Stores program, 416
Source reduction fact sheet; reducing waste at its source, program of International Paper Company and Wells
   Dairy, 447
Source separation for materials recovery; guidelines, 473
Special studies for incinerators for the government of the District of Columbia, PB-187 286
Special studies of a sanitary landfill, PB-196  148
Specifications for materials recovered from municipal refuse, PB-242 540
St. Louis power plant to burn city refuse, 180
St. Louis refuse processing  plant: equipment, facility, and environmental evaluations, PB-243 634
State activities in solid waste management (1974), 457
State and interstate solid waste planning; a case  study of Federal-state partnership, 215
State/interstate solid waste planning grants and  agencies (January 1969), 63
State/interstate solid waste planning grants; progress abstracts  (January 1969), 64
State program implementation guide:  hazardous waste surveys, 464
State program implementation guide:  hazardous waste transportation control, 512
State solid waste management agencies, 393
State solid waste management and resource recovery incentives act (proposed), 377
State solid waste planning grants, agencies, and progress—1970; report of activities through June 30, 1970, 163
Statement  of  Arsen  J. Darnay, Jr., Acting Deputy Assistant  Administrator for Solid Waste Management
   Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, before the Subcommittee on Minerals, Materials and Fuels,
   Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, United States Senate, Washington, D.C. (October 30, 1973), 358
Statement  of  Honorable  John  R. Quarles, Jr., Deputy  Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency,
   before the Subcommittee on the Environment, Committee on Commerce, U.S. Senate (May 7, 1974), 459
Statement; Samuel Hale, Jr., Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste  Management Programs, before
   the  Subcommittee on  the Environment, Committee on Commerce, United States  Senate (June 11, 1973
   [and] June 22,  1973), 357
States' roles in solid waste management; a task force report, 327
Status of solid  waste management in the United States, 526
Studies on modifications of solid industrial  wastes, PB-222 419
Study of corrosion in municipal incinerators versus refuse composition, PB-238 747
Study of Federal subsidies  to stimulate resource recovery, PB-239 736
Study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods, PB-221 464-Set
Study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects  and disposal methods, v. 1, Purpose, scope, approach
   and principal findings of study, PB-221 465
Study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods, v. 2, PB-221  466
Study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods, v. 3, PB-221  467
Study of incinerator residue analysis of water soluble components, PB-222 458
Study of institutional solid wastes, PB-223 345
Study of pneumatic solid waste collection systems as employed in hospitals, PB-236 543
Study of residential solid waste generated in low-income areas, 242

                                                  95

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Study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man crews; a condensation, 298
Study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man crews; final report, 65
Study of solid waste management; committee guide, 259
Study of solid waste management practices in the pulp and paper industry, PB-234 944
Study of the economics of hospital solid waste systems, PB-221 681
Study of the  technical and  economic feasibility of a  liydrogenation process for utilization of waste rubber,
   PB-222 694
Study of utilization and disposal of lime sludges containing phosphates, PB-222 354
Study report on a pilot-plant conical incinerator, 213
Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 1, PB-212  729
Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 2-7, PB-212  730
Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 8-9, PB-212  731
Stuff we throw away, 267
Stuff we throw away [flyer] ,211
Suggested solid waste management ordinance for local gDvernment, 419
Summaries of solid waste intramural research and development projects, 165
Summaries of solid waste management contracts (July 1, 1965-June 30,  1970), 85
Summaries of solid waste management contracts (July 1, 1970-March 31, 1975), 469
Summaries  of solid waste research and training grants (1968), 67
Summaries  of solid waste research and training grants (1970), 190
Summaries; solid wastes demonstration grant projects (1969), 66
Summary of hazardous substance classification systems, 489
Survival of pathogens in animal manure disposal, PB-222 337
Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning Agencies (Sept. 9-11, 1969), 194
Systems analysis of regional solid waste handling, 136
Systems simulation and solid waste; a case study, PB-222 995
Systems  study of solid waste management  in the Fresno area; final  report on  a solid waste management
   demonstration, 84
Tactics, strategy: the solid waste battle, 99
Tampa's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-225 291
Technical and economic  study of waste oil recovery, pt. 1, Federal research on waste oil from automobiles,
   PB-237 618
Technical and economic study of waste oil recovery,  pt. 2, An investigation of dispeised sources of used
   crankcase oils, PB-237  619
Technical and economic study of waste oil  recovery, p  . 3, Economic, technical, and institutional barriers to
   waste oil recovery, PB-237 620
Technical assistance activities of the solid wastes program, 68
Technical-economic study of solid waste disposal needs £nd  practices, 92, PB-187 712
Technical, environmental  and economic evaluation of the "wet processing system for the recovery and disposal
   of municipal solid waste," PB-245 674
Tentative procedure analyzing pesticide residues in solid waste, PB-222  165
Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin: an accidental poisoning episode in horse arenas, 474
Tezuka refuse compression system; a preliminary report, 69
There lived a  wicked dragon, 335
There's gold in your garbage, 421
Thermal processing and land disposal of solid waste; guidelines, 385
Thermophilic aerobic digestion of organic solid wastes, PB-222 396
Third pollution, 266
Third pollution [flyer], 70
Tire recycling and reuse incentives, PB-234 602
Toward a new environmental ethic, 237
Transportation rates and costs for selected virgin and secondary commodities, PB-233 871
Trends in wastepaper exports and their effects on  domesi ic markets, 397
                                                 96

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                                                 u

Ultimate disposal of spilled hazardous materials, 506
Urban solid waste management; economic case study, PB-213 394
Urban street cleaning, PB-239 327
U.S. finds a rich resource; the nation's trash pile, 396
Use of bags for solid waste storage and collection, PB-212 590
Use of domestic waste glass for urban paving, PB-222 052
Use of domestic waste glass for urban paving; summary report, PB-242 536
Use  of solid waste as a fuel by investor-owned electric utility companies: proceedings; EPA/Edison Electric
   Institute Meeting, 467
Use of the water balance method for predicting leachate generation from solid waste disposal sites, 483
User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste management, v. 1,
   370
User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste management, v. 2,
   371
Users' guide to the solid waste information retrieval system thesaurus, 374
Uses and abuses of waste, 476
Utilization and disposal of poultry manure, 82
Utilization of bark waste, PB-221 876
Utilization of fibrous wastes as sources of nutrients, PB-223 625

                                                 W

Waste management-private and public perspectives, 380
Waste not, want not, 313
Waste oil recycling and disposal, PB-235  857
Waste processing complex emphasizes recycling, 309
Waste reduction and resource recovery-there's room for both, 505
Waste wood and bulky refuse disposal; St. Louis facilities, PB-228 119
Wastepaper recycling: review of recent market demand and supply, 511
Wet systems for residential refuse collection; a case study for Springfield, Massachusetts, PB-234 499
What the people  want you to do with solid waste, 315
What you can do to recycle more paper, 446
What's new in solid waste management?  269
Where have all the toxic chemicals gone? 415
Where the boilers are; a survey of electric utility boilers with potential capacity for burning solid waste as fuel,
   PB-239 392
Where will we put all that garbage? 120
Wichita's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-233 878
Win the  war on waste, 460
Wood waste reuse in controlled release pesticides, PB-222 051

                                               XYZ

No entries.
                                                 97

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                                           author index
   Numbers following entries are order numbers, by which the publications are listed in this catalog. PB num-
bers refer to National Technical Information Servic; reports, which are listed in a separate section.
Achmger,W. C.,200, 213
Ackart, W. B., PB-213488
ACT Systems, Inc., 434, PB-239 917
Aerojet-General Corporation, 84
Albert Switzer & Associates, Inc., 94
Albrecht, O. W., PB-223 034
Alexander, T., 120
Allan, G. G., PB-222 051
Allison, G., 424, 456
Allied, E. R., PB-222 337
Alter, H., PB-242 540
American Public Works Association, PB-222 709
American  Public  Works Association Research Foundation,
   69, PB-187306
A. M. Kinney, Inc., PB-234 715-PB-234 716
Anastas, M. Y., PB-238 654
Andersland, O. B., PB-239 618, PB-239 869
Anderson, R. J., 32
Anderson, T., 327
Andres, D. R., 174
Andrews, L F., PB-222 396
Antoni, C. M., PB-222 419
Applied   Management  Sciences,   Inc.,  346,  PB-225 291,
   PB-225 296,   PB-225 299,  PB-225 332,   PB-228161,
   PB-233 878,   PB-234 068,   PB-234 139-PB-234 141,
   PB-234 713, PB-234 945, PB-236 662, PB-240 395
Arella, D. G.,408, 419
Armstrong, D. H., 151, PB-222 160
Arthur   D.  Little,   Inc.,  316,  PB-225 164,  PB-239 113,
   PB-250 798, PB-250 802, PB-250 905
Asce, A. M., 251
Ayres, E., PB-234 602

                          B

Ball, G. L., PB-222 001
Bancroft, R. L., 466
Banks, M. E., 222
Barbour, J. F., PB-233 178
Barr Engineering Company, PB-249 747
Battelle   Columbus   Laboratories,   114,   PB-213 37!i,
   PB-243 366, PB-245 271
Battelle  Memorial  Institute,   PB-212 729-PB-212 73 .,
   PB-233 630-PB-233 631
Battista, C. A., PB-222 694
Beck, W. M., Jr., PB-225 346
Bender, D. F., PB-220 479
Bendersky.D., 321,412
Bendixen, T. W., 42, 160-161
Berkowitz, J. B., PB-239 119
Besley, H. E., PB-223 430
 Bete, Channmg L. S<>e Channing L. Bete Co., Inc.
 Bingham, T. H., 326, 437, PB-21 3 431
 Bjornson, B. F., 23, 155
 Black,  R. J., 12-13. 26, 31, 37-39, 43, 45, 53, 71, 76, 79
    189,288,305,340,457,469
 Boetlcher, R. A., 102,256
 Boettner, E. A., PB-222 001
 Bogue, M. D., 23,49,75,238
 Bolly, M., 375
 Bolton, R. E., PB-236 085
 Bond, R. G., PB-221 681, PB-222 018
 Booth, D. H., 255
 Booz-Allen  and Hamilton, Inc., PB-240 988
 Booz  Allen  Applied  Research,  Inc.,  PB-221 464-Set,
    PB-221 879
 Boston. R. J., 49
 Boyd.G. B., 235
 Boyd, J. L., 115
 Boyd. W. K., PB-238 747
 Bradbury Associates, Inc., PB-234 605
 Braids, O. C., 229
 Brand, E.G., PB-232 559
 Bieidenbach, A. W., 29, 41, 98, 134,165, 212
 Britton, P. W., 28.310
 Brown, D.E., PB-238  819
 Brown, R. P., 157, 1<>2, 192
 Brunner, D. R., 156, 287
 Buchanan, C. C., 348
 Burchmal, J. C., PB-223 345
 Butler. D. M., 95
California State Department of Public Health, 175
Callihan, C. D., 186, PB-223 873
Calspan Corporation, PB-243 386
Carlson, O.N., PB-223 740
Carnes, R. A., 158, PB-222 165
Caiotti, A. A., 368
Carroll, T. E., PB-245 271
Carruth, D., 97, 133
Casana, J., PB-241 204
Channmg L. Bete Co.. Inc., 290
Chapman, R. A., 190
Charnes, A., PB-208 154
Chicago, University of, PB-225 020
Cimino, J. A., 426
Citizens' Advisory Committee on  Environmental  Quality,
   307
Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243 029
Clark, R. M., 103, 132, 146,  160-161, 164, 173, 219, 228,
   247, 251, 355, PB-213 308,  PB-213 394, PB-213 482,
   PB-222 995
                                                     98

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Clark,!. D., 225
Claussen, E. L., 325, 332, 422
Clendinning, R. A., PB-213 488
Cohen, S.,  PB-236 904
Coleman, E., 295
Coleman, W. E., 312
Colonna, R. A., 394
Combustion Engineering, Inc., PB-187 712
Combustion Power Company, Inc., PB-187 299
Compton,  D. M. J., PB-247 566-PB-247 576
Connolly,  H. H., 85,179
Connolly,  J. A., 1, 231, 257, 294, 317, 374
Converse, A. O., PB-221 239
Cope, F. W., 174
Council of State Governments, 377, 383
Crane, L. E., 53
Cross, J. A., 405
Cukor, P.,  PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Cummins,  R. L., 83,  139
Currier, R. A., PB-221 876

                          D

Dale, A. C., 297
Dane, S., 343
Daniels, L. E., 200
Darnay, A. J., 44, 170, 286, 293, 358, 364, 380, 413
Da Vee, W., PB-239 196
Davidson, G. R., Jr.,  242, 355
Davis, P. L., 13, 38, 53
Davis, R. H., 400
Day, D. E., PB-222 052, PB-242, 536
Day, D. L., 297
Day & Zimmerman, 62, PB-187 286
Dayton  University   Research   Institute,
   PB-244 310-PB-244312
Decker, W. M., 20
DeGeare, T. V., 240, 355
Dehn,W. T., 139, 163, 354
Delaney.J. E., 262, 339, 351
DeMarco, J., 122, 197
Dial, C. J.,  274
Diesch, S. L., PB-222 337
Dindal, D.  L., 322
District of  Columbia, 191
District of Columbia, Department  of Sanitary Engineering,
   105, PB-187 286
Drobny, N. L., 177
Dunlap, C. E., 186, PB-223 873
Duvall, D.  S., PB-244 310-PB-244 312
Edmund, S., 159
Eilers, R. G., PB-222 000, PB-222 029, PB-222 031
Eitel, M. J., 236
Eldredge, R. W., 98
Eliassen, R., PB-221 172
Ellison,  F., PB-202 202
EMCON Associates, PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Engdahl, R. B., 114
Engineering-Science, Inc., 11, PB-218 672
Enviro-Engineers, Inc., PB-239 357
Environmental Engineering, Inc., PB-222 710
Environmental Scientists and Engineers, 233
Ernest, U., PB-239 116
Esco/Greenleaf, 300-301, PB-213 133, PB-213 135
Fain, C. C., 236
Farb, D., 468
Farvolden, R. N., 223
Ferguson, T. L., PB-244 557
Fiedelman, B. P., 253
Fields, T., Jr., 427, 475
Finan.M., 335,430
Finley, Stuart. See Stuart Finley, Inc.
First, M. W., PB-221  684
Fiscus, D. E., PB-243 634
Fisette, G. R., PB-234 497
Flack, J. E., 77
Fleischer, L. R., PB-221 095
Flower, W. A., 308-309
Floyd, E. P., 29, 134
Fookson, A., PB-222 115
Foran, J. F., PB-229  816-PB-229 817
Franklin Institute Research Laboratories, 258, 281-282
Franklin, W. E., 44, 170, 293, 321, 405
Freed, V. H., PB-233 178
Frohnsdorff, G., PB-222 115
Fungaroli, A. A., 245, PB-209 001-PB-209 002
Fuschini, V. P.,  374
Gainesville  Municipal Waste  Conversion  Authority,  Inc..
   PB-187 311, PB-222 710
Garbe.Y. M.,491
Garland, G. A., 10, 228, 347, 411, 435
Garretson-Elmendorf-Zinov-Reibin, PB-212 398
Gartrell, F. E., 9
Geswein, A. J., 428
Geyer, J. A., PB-213 487
Gilbertson, W. E., 53
GUI, R., 375
Gillean, J. I., PB-222 995
Gluckman, L.  A., 194
Goldberg, T. L., 342
Golueke, C. G., 127-128,178, PB-222 454
Gordian Associates, Inc., PB-239 392
Gordon, M., 5
Gorham International, Inc., PB-234 944
Gorman, P. G., PB-243 634
Graham, W. M., 95
Gransky, M. J., 187
Great Lakes Research Institute, PB-208 674
Greenleaf/Telesca, 94, 248
Grethlein, H. E., PB-221 239
Groner, R. R., PB-233 178
Grossman, D.  S., PB-239 117, PB-239 494
Grove, C. S., PB-222 419
Grupenhoff, B. L., 228
Gumtz, G. D., PB-242 461
Gunnerson, C. G., 130, 157, 404
Gusdar, A. R., PB-229 256
Gutfreund, K., 199
                          H
Hakki, A., PB-239 392
Hale, S., 250, 276, 289, 306, 320, 334, 357
Hall, C. F., PB-222 148
Hall, E. D., PB-222 000, PB-222 029, PB-222 031
Ham, R. K., PB-234 930-PB-234 931
Hamilton, A., 131
Hammond, V. L., PB-212 589
Hampel, C. R., 216-218
Hanks, T. G., 48
Hansen, P., 341,486,510
Hart, S. A., 55,59
Harza  Engineering Co., PB-187 301
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Haug, L. A., 288
Hawkins, D.,470
Hawkins, M. B., 235
Hayes, A. J., 429
Hecht, N. L., PB-244 310-PB-244 312
Hegdahl,T. A., 377, PB-213511
Heimberg, R. W., PB-223 651
Helms, B. P., 146, 173,219, 251
Henderson, W. G., 39
Henningson, Durham  &  Richardson,  Inc.,  6,  183, 249,
   PB-233 873
Henriksen, P., 418
Herbert, W., 308-309
Herson, E. M., 77
Hickman, H. L., Jr., 4, 26, 47, 68, 113, 141, 185, 215, 227,
   234, 246, 306,395
Hill, J. A., 306
Hilovsky, J., PB-202 202
Hinesly, T. D., 229, PB-236 402
Hitte, S. J., 433,451, 458
Hoffman, D. A., PB-222 015
Hofmann, Ross, Associates, PB-236 543
Holcombe, K., PB-226 420
Honea, F. I., 412
Hong, S., PB-239 896
Home, R., PB-239 119
Homer & Shifrin, Inc., 264, PB-220 316
Hortenstine, C. C, PB-222  422
Howes, J. R., PB-222 148
Hubbaid, S. J.,  156
Huber, D. R., 427
Hudson, H., 139
Hudson, H. T.,  198
Hudson, J. F., PB-239 117, PB-239 494
Hughes, G. M., 223
Hulbert, S. F., 236
Hull, H. E., 177
Hultgren, L. F., 64
Humber, N., 505
Humboldt County, California, PB-212 398, PB-240 365
Humpstone, C.  C., PB-234  602
Hunt, R. G., 405
                          I
Iglar, A. F., PB-222 018
Inglett, G. E., 312
Institute  of Public Administration, PB-237 618-PB-237 620
International Research and Technology Corp., PB-222 467,
   PB-234 602
International  Research Group  on  Refuse  Disposal,  89,
   142-145
Israel Program for Scientific Translations, 89, 142-145
James, R. W.,PB-213 577
Jensen, M. E., 93
Johnson, H., 148, 190
Jones, D. D., 297
Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd., 117
Kaiser Engineers, PB-226 042
Kaiser, E. R., 14, PB-221 731
Kalika, P. W., PB-226 420
Kambhu, K., PB-222 396
Kantz, R., 46, 384
Kaiandikar, S., PB-221 239
Kasner, D., PB-221 731
Katsuyama, A. M., PB-219 019
Kaufman, A. J., 126
Kaufman, J. A., PB-239 509
Keagy, D. M., 16
Keahey, S. G., PB-234 602
Keaton, M. J., PB-237 618-PB-23'' 620
Keene, A. G., 190
Kehr,W. Q., 254
Keller, D.J., 122, 156,287
Kelly, J. A., PB-221 877
Kennedy, J. C.. 110
Kentucky State Depart nent of Health, 181, PB-201 205
Kiefer, I., 243, 283, 292, 298. 323-324, 333, 382, 406
King, K., PB-247 566-PB-247 567
Kinney, A. M. See A. M. Kinney, Inc.
Klee,  A.  I.,  10, 26,  28,  87,  97, 99, 101, 133, 137, 149,
   216-218, 226,228. 338
Klumb, D. L., 180
Kochtitzky, O. W., 8, 74
Kohan, A. M., 489
Kos, P., PB-234 498
Kiause, H. H.. PB-238 654, PB-233 747
Krause, K. W., PB-225 333
Krueger, W. F., PB-222 148
Kiuse, C.W., 123
Kruth, M. A., 255
Kuhner, J., PB-236 085
Kuhrtz, S., PB-221 239
Lackey, L. L., PB-223 638
Landon, R. A., 223
Laver, M. L., PB-221  876
Lawless, E. W., PB-244 557
Lazar, E. C., 494
League of Women Voters of the U.S., 259, 296, 302-303,456
Leatherwood, J. M., PB-223 625
Leckie, J.O., PB-221  172
Leckman, J., 122
Lee County, Mississippi Board of Supervisors, PB-241 468
Lefke, L. W., 67, 116, 190, 241
Lehman, J. P., 399
Leonard, R. J., PB-239 392
Leonard S. Wegman Co.. Inc., PB-222 588, PB-225  159
Levis, A. H., PB-239 327
Levy, S.J., 401, 417, 442
Liebman, J. C., 123, 147, PB-239 396-PB-239 899
Lindsey, A. W., 427, 475, 506
Lingle, S.,  381, 420, 438, 465,528
Littig, K. S., 155
Little. Arthur D. See  Arthur D. Li-.tie, Inc.
Little, H. R., 284
Lonergan,  R. P., 77
Los Angeles  County, Department of County Engineer, 11,
   PB-218672
Lossin, R.  D., 126, 158, 204-206
Loube, M., 378, 487
Louisville,  University of, 125
Lowe, R. A., 264, 378, 467
Lusk,W. D., 222
Lynn, Massachusetts, City of, PB-214 166

                          M

McCandless, L. C., PB-241 204
McDermott, R. G., PB-223 034
McElwee, W. C., 60
McEwen, L., 432
                                                      100

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McGauhey.P. H., 128, 169
McGough, E., 273
McLeer, T. J., PB-213 577
McMichael, W. I., PB-227 005
Madison, City of, Engineering Staff, 57
Madison, M., 423
Maizus, S., PB-243 222
Male, J. W., PB-239 899
Malisch, W. R., PB-222 052, PB-242 536
Management Technology, Inc.,  106
Mank,J. F., 369
Marceleno.T., 299
March, F., PB-239 119
Markievvicz, W. J., 187
Marks, D. H., 147, PB-239 117, PB-239 494
Martin, E.  J., PB-242 461
Maryland Environmental Services,  PB-242 461
Marynowski, C. W., 244
Meier,   P.   M.,   PB-234 496-PB-234 497,   PB-234 499,
   PB-236 085
Memers, A. G., PB-244 557
Meller, F. H.,91
Mercer, W. A., PB-219 019
Meresman, S. J., 135
Merz, R. C.,PB-196 148
Messman, S. A., 237
Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., PB-214 166, PB-219 372
Metropolitan   Sanitary  District  of  Greater  Chicago,
   PB-213 697
Meyers, S., 526
Midwest   Research   Institute,  PB-226 551,  PB-243 634,
   PB-244 557, PB-245  924
Milgrom, J., PB-214 045, PB-229 727
Miller, B. F., PB-221 171
Miller, P. D., PB-221 851
Miner, J. R., PB-221 621
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, PB-249 747
Missouri, University of, PB-242 536
Mitre Corporation, 495
Mix, S. A., 58
Molina, J.  E., 229
Mooser, S.,424
Morse, N., 136
Mosher.D. C., 435
Moshman Associates, Inc., PB-233  871
Muhich, A. J., 26, 28, 121, 216-218
Mulligan, P. F., 326, PB-213  341
                          N
National  Academy  of Engineering—National Academy  of
   Sciences, 112
National Academy of Sciences, PB-197  623
National Analysts, Inc., PB-213 340
National Association of Counties, 373
National Association of Counties Research Foundation, 138,
   239,419
National Center for Resource Recovery, Inc., PB-242 540
National Commission on Productivity, 440-441
National  Commission  on Technology,  Automation, and
   Economic Progress, 2
National League of Cities, 331
National Oil Recovery Corporation, PB-243 222
National Research Council, PB-197 623
National Solid Wastes Management Association, 230
Neff, N.T., PB-213 646
Nelson, R. D., PB-224 820
Newton,!. L., 122, 156
Nixon, R.,Pres.  U.S., 129
                                   Disposal  Authority,
                                                                                    O
Oberacker, D. A., PB-240 723
Olson, N. A., PB-219 019
Ongerth, A. M., 240
Ongerth, R. H., PB-235 770
Onondaga  County  Solid  Waste
   PB-245 672
Opferkuch, R. E., PB-222 354
Oregon State Board of Health, 168
Ottinger, R. S., 222, PB-224 579-Set
Park, W. R., 321
Pathak, A. A., PB-233 360
Patrick, Z. A., PB-222 113
Perkins, R. A., PB-197 931
Peterson, B., 421
Peterson, M. L., 88, 184, 224, PB-220 479, PB-222 160
Pettigrew, R. J., 187
Pfeffer, J. T., PB-231 176
Pilie, R. J., PB-243 386
Pomeroy, B. S., PB-222 337
Porter, C. H., 464, 512
Porter, R. C., PB-233 873
Potts, J.E., PB-213 488
Powell, M. D., 253
Pratt, H. D., 155
Prior, L. A., 484
Proctor, D. E.,  PB-233 441
Protzmann, R., PB-202 202
Pur cell, T. C., 295
Purdom, P. W., PB-222 458
Putnam, R. C., PB-202 202
Quarles, J. R., Jr., 459
Quirk, R. L., PB-219 019
Quon, J., PB-208 154
                          R
Rachidi, A. S., PB-244 311
Radinsky, S., 317, 374
Rains, W. A., PB-243 028
Ralph   Stone  and   Co.,   Inc.,  54,  65,  PB-212590,
   PB-225 360-Set, PB-238 819, PB-247 185
Ramsey, J. M., 510, PB-241 729
Randol, R. E., 471,496
Reeves, W. R., PB-242 540
Regan, R..PB-215 722
Regan, W. J., PB-213 577
Reinhardt, J. J., 57, PB-234 930-PB-234 931
Resource  Planning   Associates,   PB-234 612,  PB-239 736,
   PB-241 729
Resource Planning Institute, PB-229 220
Rhee, S. S., PB-229 256
Robinson, D. J., PB-233 641
Roe, M. L, 253
Rogers, C. J., 295
Rogers, H. W.,433
Rohlich,G., 57
Roninger, F. H., 187
Ross Hofmann, Associates, PB-236 543
Roth, E. W., 136
Rothwell, D. F., PB-222 422
Ruckelshaus, W. D., 304
Ruf, J. A., 402
                                                      101

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Sachsel.G. F., 261
Safety Sciences, PB-247 566-PB-247 567
San Diego, City of, PB-214 960
Sarofim, A. F., PB-223 626
Scarpino, P. V., 295
Schell, T., PB-234 602
Schmidt, F. A., PB-223 740
Schoenberger, R. J., PB-222 458
Schrag, M. P., 412
Schur, D. A., 356
Scottsdale, Arizona, City of, 472
SCS Engineers, PB-213 311, PB-239 775-PB-239 776
Scurlock, A. C.,427
Seaman, W. K., 74
Semi, C.L., PB-225 160
Senske, M. L., 139
Shafizadeh, F., PB-229 246
Shannon, L. J., 321, 412, PB-243 634
Sharpe, L., 315
Shell, G. L., 115
Shilepsky, A., 480
Shilesky, D. M., PB-225 333
Shipley, M. C., 77
Shuster, K. A., 356, 407, 409, 436
Sinister, W. W., 154
Singer, R. D., PB-227 708
Skinner, J.H., 350, 388,500
Slimak, K., PB-241 204
Smith, D. D., 157,162, 192
Smith, F. A., 378, 443, 482,498
Smith, F. L., Jr., 397,445,511
Smith, H. G., 9
Smith, R., PB-222 000, PB-222 029, PB-222 031
Smith, R. A., 368
Smith, R. M., PB-237 525
Smithers Scientific Service, Inc., PB-243 028
Snyder, W. C., PB-222 113
Sorg, T.  J.,47,  104, 277-278,355
Sosnovsky, C. H., 252
Spino, D. F., 295
Spitzer, P. E., 220
Sponagle, C. E., 66, 78, 232
Spooner, C. S., 167
Stamback, S. E., 231,257
Stearns,  R. P., 400
Steele, J. H., 20
Steimle, F. W., Jr.,  348
Sterner, R. L., 384
Stevens, B. H., PB-239 631
Stevenson, M. K., PB-221  172
Stierli, H., PB-220 479
St. J«ouis, Missouri, City of, PB-228 119
Steiner, R. L., 46
Stone, G. E., 488
Stone, R., 391, PB-196 148, PB-238 819
Stone, Ralph. See Ralph Stone and Co., Inc.
Stone, R. B., 348
Stiagier, M. G., PB-239 195-PB-239 196
Stuart Finley, Inc., 265-272
Stump, P. L., 66,232,311
Stutzenberger, F. J., 88, 126
Sullivan, R. J., PB-225 333
Sussman, D. B., 431, 493
Sutterfield, G. W., 180, 387
Swavely, D. D., 64, 163
Sweeney, B. L., 163
Sweeten, J. M., 351
Switzer, Albert. See Albert Switzer & Associates, Inc.
Systems Technology Corporation, PB-245 674
 Talley, R. J., PB-235 770
 Tally, J. T., 196
 Taylor,  P., 424
 Teknekron, Inc., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
 Testm, R. F., 177
 Thomas, Dean & Hoskms, Inc., 118
 Thurnau, R. C., PB-240 723
 Toftner, R. O., 124, 132, 160-161, 163, 164, 247, 336.
   PB-226 099
 Tolleson, Arizona, City of, PB-239 196
 Townley, D. A., 80
 Tram, R. E ,460,476,525
 Truitt, M. M., 123
 TRW Systems Group, PB-224 579-Set, PB-250 717
 Tunnah, B. G., PB-239 392
                          U
Ulmer, N., PB-231 203
Ulrich, E., PB-239 116
University of Illinois, 237
U.S. Conference of Mayors, 331
U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Public Works, 410
U.S.  Department   of  Transportation,  Federal  Highway
   Administration, 455
U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 454, 463,  473, 490,
   504,516
U.S. Environmental Protection Agtncy, Office of Solid Waste
   Management Programs, 203, 390, 439, 448, 461462, 493
Vasan, K. S., PB-231 309
Vaughan,  D.  A.,  PB-221 851,  PB-238 654,  PB-238 747,
   PB-243 366
Vaughan, R. D., 26-27, 56, 73, 81, 96, 100, 107-109, 119
Veenstra & Kimm. 249
Versar, Incorporated, PB-241 204, PB-244 382
Vey, E., PB-224 820
Vincent, B. W., 444
VTN, Inc., PB-224 996
                          W
Wahl, D., 456, 466
Walker, W. H., 415
Wallace, L. P., PB-223 345
Wallman, H., PB-236 904
Ward, S.D., 468
Washington State University, PB-233 441
Wathne, M., PB-239 897
Weaver, L., 30,35.40,71
Weddle, B. R., 347, 411,423
Wegman, Leonard S. See Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc.
Weinberg, M. S., PB-223 343
Weinhold, A. R., PB-222 113
Weinstein, N. J., PB-235 857
Weiss, A. H., PB-239 509
Weiss, B., PB-222 001
Welch, R. O., 405
Wener, S. D.,481
Wersan, S., PB-208 154
Weston, R. F., 233
Wetzel, R., PB-241 204
Wheeler, J. B., 39
Wilcomb, M. J.,60, 185
Wilcox, G., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Wiles, C. C., 488
Wiley, J. S., 8-9, 21-22, 61,74, 82
                                                     102

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Williams, D. E., PB-243 028
Waiiams, E. R., 36-37
Williams, T. !•., 318, 360, 379, 515
Wilson, D. L., 193
Wmkler, P. K, PB-229 901
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, City of, PB-239 357
Wisely, F. E., 180
Wixson, B. G., PB-222 052, PB-242  536
Wolcott, R. M., 444
Wolf, K. W., 252
Wolk, R. H., PB-222 694
Woodall, A. E., 405
Wren, E. J.. PB-222 468
WSA. Incorporated, PB-247 566-PB-247 567

                         XYZ

Yaffe, H. J., PB-227 075
Yates, D. L., 255
Zandi, I., PB-223 162
Zausner, E. R., 86, 111, 153, 176. 182, 188
Zimmer, C..PB-221 731
                                                      103

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                                  swirs search  request
      For  LITERATURE  SEARCHES  on all aspects of solid waste  management with world-
wide  coverage, request  a comprehensive search  to meet your research needs, from SWIRS,
Post  Office Box 2365,  Rockville, Maryland  20852.  You will receive abstracts of publica-
tions  that you  may request  on  inter library loan.

      The materials available from this  service are  primarily from  non-OSWMP-generated
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    SWIRS SEARCH
      REQUEST
SOLID WASTE  INFORMATION RETRIEVAL SYSTEM  (SWIRS)
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FROM (Mailing address including ZIP code)
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          solid waste information  retrieval system (swirs)


      In addition to the reports on EPA's solid waste work listed in this publication, solid waste
management information users may wish to research the worldwide literature.  For this purpose,
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words. For  literature searches on all aspects of solid waste management with worldwide cover-
age, request a comprehensive  search to meet ycur research  needs, from SWIRS , Post Office  Box
2365, Rockville, Maryland  20852.


      The literature abstracted is primarily from non-OSWMP-generated sources, and is retrievable
under the following  category searchable elements:


AGRICULTURAL WASTES          HEALTH/SAFETY                 Municipal refuse
  Crop residues                  INCINERATION                   Scrap metal
  Manure                        INDUSTRIAL WASTES           RESEARCH
  Timber/other vegetation         INSTITUTIONAL WASTES        SANITARY LANDFILL
ANALYSIS OF SOLID WASTE       LAWS/REGULATIONS           SEPARATION
  Data                          LITTER                       SLUDGE
AUTOMOBILES                   MANAGEMENT                 STORAGE
BULKY WASTES                   Municipal                    STREET  CLEANING
COLLECTION                      Regional                     TRAINING , EDUCATION ,
COMPOST                         Rural                          PUBLIC; RELATIONS
DISPOSAL                        State                        TRANSPORT
ECONOMICS                      OCEAN DISPOSAL              SOURCE  REDUCTION
  Disposal costs                 PACKAGING                    ENERGY
  Financing facilities             PROCESSING/REDUCTION          Demand for solid waste
  Pollution control costs          RECYCLING                        management
  Marketing information            Incinerator  residue             Fuel from wastes
  Taxes and incentives            Industrial wastes               Heat utilization from
HAZARDOUS  WASTES              Mining wastes                    incineration


      The source documents  from which  the SWIRS  summaries  are  generated are  AVAILABLE
THROUGH INTERLIBRARY  LOANS through all organizational, academic, or local library systems.


      To expedite response, please direct all SWIRS literature-search requests to:

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See SWIRS Search Request on the back of this page.


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                                                                     no  1307

       US.  Environment,.! r.cf :...o:i Agency
       Region V,  Lbr^y
       230  S'J'ith Dec-:..  -rs S:rc5t
                                                       US GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1976 6/7-OOC/5fiO

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