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                      mechanics of
                      STYL]
       A Guide for Bureau of Solid Waste Management
            Authors, Secretaries, and Contractors
This handbook (SW-7) was prepared by Marion G. Curry, Anne Hamilton,
                     and Carol S. Lawson
         U.S.  DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH.,  EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
                    Public Health Service
       Consumer Protection and Environmental Health Service
              Environmental Control Administration
               Bureau of Solid Waste Management
                           1969

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                          mechanics of
                          STYL1
          A Guide for Bureau of Solid Waste Management

              Authors, Secretaries, and Contractors


    Manuscripts of the Bureau of Solid Waste  Management  interpret  and

report a variety of technical subjects designed  for seven—or varying

combinations of the seven--different audiences on  two continents.  Our

effectiveness  in accelerating solid waste research and propelling  all

aspects of solid waste management into a truly scientific field  is very

much a function of effective communication with  these audiences.   The

latter may be  characterized as Americans and  Europeans who work  in

the engineering, physical, social, or management sciences, those working

in solid waste management, members of local,  State, and the Federal gov-

ernment, and the general  public.  These people are being reached through

Bureau publications appearing in professional, scientific, and techni-

cal journals, or through  the pamphlets, reports, and books that we pub-

lish.   Because our field  will be a synthesis  of many disciplines and

because it is a new endeavor, our subject matter by its very nature must

occasionally be rudimentary or tentative.  Our style,  however, must be

invariably impeccable if  we are to attract the interest and win the

support of the scientific world.

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     For this purpose the following style guide has  been prepared for




the use and convenience of authors, secretaries, and contractors preparing




reports to be published by the Bureau of Solid Waste Management.  Although




varying subject matter sometimes requires variation  in format and each




author needs to develop his own writing style, the mechanics of style




must be consistent within a single manuscript.  When a manuscript is to




be submitted to another publisher or to a journal, the manuscript should




be tailored to agree in all respects with the style  of that publishing




agency.




     When you sit down at your desk with a yellow, legal-size pad, or




at your typewriter with a crisp, new sheet of bond papei—remember that




every singular that should have been a plural, every flaw in punctuation,




every misspelled, awkward, or imprecise word nicks away at your own




particular opportunity to reach our audiences.  A presentation from




notes may go over beautifully when spoken; but in a published Proceedings




it may look sloppy alongside papers polished up in the scientific tradi-




tion.  Your attention to the details presented herein will enhance your




work and further our mission.




     Bureau style, as it is developing, has already settled into a few




conventions peculiar to the solid waste field.  Further developments and




revisions will occur with the growth of the field into a science.




     For general style, refer to United States Government Printing Office




Style Manual.  Washington, 1967.  512 p.  (GPO Style Manual); or to A Manual




of Style.   12th ed.  Chicago, University of Chicago Press,  1969-  5^6 p.

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See also Webster's Third New Internationa]  Dictionary of the English Lan-




guage Unabridged.   Springfield,  Mass.,  G.  & C.  Merriam Co.,  1966.   2,662 p.




(Webster's Dictionary).




     For general  principles of writing,  refer to:   Style Manual  for Biolog-




ical  Journals.   2d ed.   Committee on Form and Style of the Conference of




Biological Editors.  Washington, American Institute of Biological  Sciences,




1964.  117 p.;   The Elements of Style.   W.  Strunk,  Jr., and  E. B.  White.




New York, Macmillan Company, 1959-  71  p.;  and A Dictionary  of Modern English




Usage.  2d ed.   H. W. Fowler.   New York, Oxford University Press,  1965.  725 p.




     For general  format, follow the specifications  of your Division, if




ava ilable, or the Style Manual for Biological Journals (p. 1-2) ,  wh i ch




briefly explains  the main parts of a paper, or the  journal to which the




manuscript is being submitted.  Generally,  a manuscript can  contain: ab-




stract, introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion,  conclusions




and summary,  acknowledgments,  and references; this  is the conventional




order of appearance.  Please date drafts and number the pages.






ABBREVIATIONS




     Abbreviations, used to save space  and  to avoid distracting spelling of




repetitious words, should be standard and consistent within  a manuscript.




Refer to GPO Style Manual, Webster's Dictionary, or Style Manual  for Bio-




logical Journals  for acceptable forms.




     A publication expected to have wide distribution to a foreign audience




should generally  not contain abbreviations.

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     Specialized abbreviations (those not generally known) are to be written




in full the first time they appear, immediately followed by the abbreviation




in parentheses.




     Abbreviations of units of measure (see Numerals, units of measure)




should be used only when they appear with Arabic numerals.  Omit periods




with units of measure except  inch  (in.).   Spell out mile, liter, day, week,




month, year, and three-letter units of measure.




     United States as a noun  is written out; when preceding a noun as a




modifier, it is abbreviated, with periods and no spacing  (U.S. foreign




policy) .




     Foreign countries and foreign political subdivisions are not abbre-




viated, except U.S.S.R.




     Abbreviate names of months, except May, June, and July, only when used




with the day and year.




     Do not abbreviate State  names because of Bureau policy to emphasize




the role of States.






AMPERSAND




     Spell out "and"  in Health, Education, and Welfare.   Spell out "and"




in Division of Research and Development.   Use an ampersand when abbre-




viating the latter (R&D); note close spacing.






BOOK TITLE  IN TEXT




     Capitalize all words except articles, prepositions,  and most con-




junctions and underline.  The style for citing a book title in the text




differs from styling  a  reference;  for the latter, see Preparation of




References, pages  17  through  24.




                                     k

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CAPITALIZATION




     Capitalize proper names.




     Capitalize a common noun or adjective that forms an essential part of




a proper name (Massachusetts Avenue).




     Capitalize State as a noun or adjective (this is a DHEW rule).




     Do not capitalize a common noun used alone as a substitute for the




name of a place or thing (The Great Lakes are frozen in the winter, but




the ice on the lakes melts in the spring).




     Geographic Terms.  A descriptive term used to denote a definite  region,




locality, geographic feature is a proper name and, therefore,  is capitalized




(the Gold Coast;  the Central States; the West Coast States).  A descriptive




term used to denote a mere direction or position  is not a proper name and,




therefore, is not capitalized (north;  north-central region; west Florida;




the eastern seaboard).




     Trade Names.  Trade names and variety names are capitalized (Fiberglas);




the common nouns  following such names are not capitalized (Red Radiance rose;




Whatman filter).   Derivatives of proper names used with an acquired inde-




pendent meaning are lower case.  This depends on general and long-continued




usage (watt;  plaster of paris;  petri dish; angstrom unit; pitot tube; venturi




tube;  roentgen).






COMMA AND SEMICOLON




     In addition  to the normal, grammatical uses of the comma, it  is  also




used to separate  elements of a simple series or enumeration; this  INCLUDES




a comma before "and," "or," or "nor" (U.S. Department of Health, Education,

-------
and Welfare)   (They were asked to straighten the chairs  in the hall,  scrub
the kitchen floor,  and prepare the dinner for the family).
    For longer,  involved enumerations,  a colon is used,  an Arabic numeral
is placed within parentheses,  and the series items are separated by semi-
colons.  Capitalize the first  letter only if the enumeration is a complete
sentence.  (There were three contributing factors:  (l)  the unusual length
of time taken between the halves; (2) the unanticipated  snowstorm, which
delayed  their arrival;  (3) the absence of qualified referees, an event
that had never occurred before.  Or  (1) There was an unusual  length of
time between halves.

COMPOUNDING WORDS
    Refer  to GPO Style  Manual  (Chapter  7),  or to  Webster's  Dictionary.
CONTRACT REPORTS
    Contractors preparing reports for the Bureau should submit camera copy
for figures and for any lengthy and difficult-to-reproduce materials as part
of the original  report.
    If  lists of tables and figures are  included,  they are to be published.
    The contractor's name is not to appear on each page of  the report, or
on graphs, etc.
    The Project Officer's name should not appear  in the byline; during
the production of a contract report, it is the function of the Project
Officer to guide, encourage, review, revise, and edit when necessary, on
behalf of the Bureau.  The appropriate acknowledgment should appear in the
preface  rather than the byline.
DASH
    Do not use spaces with a dash  (This is a DHEW rule--no spaces with dash)

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FIGURES,  FLOW CHARTS, SCHEMATIC  DRAWINGS,  etc.

     Keep the text independent of the figures and tables, so that the  figures,

tables, and other graphics supply detailed data  in support of statements  in

the text.

                               [EXAMPLE]

          New York City's solid wastes may be categorized by
     disposition (Table 2).


     In this way the reader is not forced  to look at the  illustrations at a

particular time during his reading.  Not all readers like to examine the

illustrative material as they read the text; some prefer  to look at the

figures and tables before or after reading the text.

     Figures (line drawings and graphs)  should be so scaled that the type

and thickness of the lines will be uniform throughout the report.  Avoid

hand lettering.

     Ordinate copy should read up in relation to bottom of figure.  Abscissa

and ordinate copy should be centered and should be close  to their respective

numerals.  When the numerals are decimals  less than 1, place a zero before

the decimal point.   Ordinate and abscissa copy is all  caps except terms of

measurement, which are all lower case and  in parentheses.  Abbreviate  terms

of measurement that are part of ordinate or abscissa copy (and of legends

and callouts) except liter.

     When two or more kinds of lines or points are used,  identify them in

a legend or with callouts and  arrows.  All  callouts and legends in figures,

flow charts, and schematic drawings are all caps, except terms of measure-

ment,  which are  all  lower case.  Use abbreviations for inch,  foot, and

pound  (in., ft,  Ib)  rather than the symbols.  Legends  should be inside the

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 I
 o
O)
•u
O
o
    figure.  When certain conditions are specified, state them  in the  legend,

    all caps, except terms of measurement.

         Crop, both vertically and horizontally, all unused areas from a figure.

    Show only areas that are pertinent.

         Do not use footnotes with a figure.  Make  this material part of the

    legend or caption.

         Start the figure title with a regular paragraph  indentation,  under  the

    figure, and set fairly close to the figure itself.  The word figure  is caps

    and lower case followed by the Arabic numeral and a period.  The  illustration

    should be described  in detail  in a figure caption rather than in  the text.

    End with a period.   Do not use an ampersand.  A source credit may  follow

    the figure caption.
    50  --
    40  --
    30
20 --
     10   -
                                              aatlout

                                             EFFLUENT
          INFLUENT

      ) ovdinate '
               f
                                                             legend
                                                      «	o   EFFLUENT
                                                      o_ _ _ _0   INFLUENT
                                                       3 cu cm/min   FLOW
                                        abscissa
             1    2    3    4    5    6    7    8    9   10   11   12   13   14

                                 WASTE VOLUME (liters)    abscissa copy

         Figure k.   Daily activity at Plant B.   This caption should continue
    with Overrun lines set at left margin,  single-spaced.   (From . .  ..)
                                         8

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FOOTNOTES

     Indent footnotes, as for a paragraph.  Double space footnotes in man-

uscripts; single space in camera copy.

     Use *, t, t, §, If, #, in this identical order, doubling or tripling

these marks if additional ones are needed.  Draw these symbols or consis-

tently substitute different symbols if these are not available.


FOREWORD

     The foreword presents the relationship of the document to the mission

of the program, and the style is usually more formal in tone.  It is almost

invariably written for the Director's signature.  The closing, placed at

the right margin at the end of the foreword, should be



                                              [EXAMPLE]


                                    --RICHARD D. VAUGHAN, Director
                                      Bureau of Solid Waste Management


HEADINGS, ORDER  OF  FOR TYPEWRITTEN PAPERS

     #1                                ALL  CAPS              (centered)

     #2                             Caps and Lower Case      (centered and
                                                             underlined)

     #3                     Caps and  Lower  Case.   (Run  into the
                       paragraph with period; underlined to  include
                       the period.

     #k                     Caps and  Lower  Case.   (Run  into the
                       paragraph, with period; do  not underline.)

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HYPHENATION




     Contractors and others preparing long reports that will probably be




typeset by the GPO should not hyphenate words on the right margin.






HYPHENATION OF UNIT MODIFIERS  (descriptors, multiple adjectives, compound




adject i ves)




     Do not hyphenate unit modifiers when words appear in regular order and




the omission causes no ambiguity in sense or sound; exercise restraint in




forming unnecessary combinations of words used in normal sequence.




     Use a hyphen between words, or abbreviations and words, that are




combined to form a unit modifier immediately preceding the word modified,




particularly in combinations in which one element  is a present or past




participle (collective-bargaining talks; fire-tested materials; Federal-




State-local cooperation; U.S.-owned property; 2-in.-diameter pipe).




     Be consistent, but note that some combinations are hyphenated as




modifiers and not hyphenated as nouns (rail haul of solid wastes; but the




rail-haul project).




     Refer to the GPO Style Manual  for further details.






NUMERALS




     The Arabic numeral is used to express numbers of 10 or more, except




for the first word of a sentence.




     Numbers under 10 are to be spelled, except when used with units of




measure (see below).




     Units of measure are expressed in Arabic numerals.




          Age (6 years old)




          Time (4:30 pm;  10 years,  3 months, 29 days)





                                   10

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          Dates (October 1935 (note:  no commas); Mar. 6 to June  15,  1969)




          Decimals (0.12 in. (supply cipher); 13-7 liters; 7-08 ft)




          Degrees (angle or arc) (an angle of 57°; latitude 49°l6'l4" N)




          Measurement (7 mm; about  10 yd (note:  singular); 8 by  12  in.;




                       8- by 12-in  page)




          Money ($3-65;  3 yen;  $3 for 200 Ib; $3 million)




          Percentage (12 percent; 0.5 percent)




          Proportion (1  to 4; 1:62, 500:1)




          Unit modifiers (5-day week; 1-percent  increase; 8-year-old wine;




                          2- and 4-day cultures; 5~ft-wide door)




          Fractions.  The Arabic numeral is used in unit modifiers  (i~in.




                      pipe; i-mile  run).  Fractions are usually spelled




                      out when standing alone or followed by "of a" or




                      "of an" (one-fourth in.; three-fourths of a day;




                      one-half of a farm; but 2£ cans).




     Between two Arabic numerals, use "to" (2 to 67 days).  When Arabic




numerals are within parentheses or  in tabular matter, use hyphen  (1-10; 4-17)




     When Arabic numerals contain four or more digits, use a comma,  (1,468




men; 4,680 days; 1,479,987 microbes) except for common and decimal  fractions,




astronomical and military time, and kilocycles and meters of not more than




four figures pertaining to radio.




     Numbers are spelled out at the beginning of a sentence; rephrase to




avoid spelling out large numbers.




     Numbers expressing units of measure separated from the unit description




by more than two words are spelled out (two and more separate years) .
                                   11

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     Numbers less than 100 preceding a unit modifier containing an Arabic




numeral  are spelled out (twenty-four 6-in.  guns;  but 120 8-lb kegs).




     Indefinite expressions of numerals are spelled out (midthirties;  in




the eighties; twelvefold).  "Nearly," "about," "around," "approximate,"




etc., DO NOT constitute indefinite expressions (mid-1856;  AO-plus people;




3i~fold; approximately kO people).






PHOTOGRAPHS AND GRAPHICS




     Submit glossy prints of photographs or photomicrographs together with




appropriate captions and credits on a separate sheet.  Do not write on the




back of photographs.  Indicate area that can be cropped rather than request-




ing reduction.




     For faithful reproduction of color photographs, submit transparencies.




Color prints of the transparencies are desirable to aid in accurate cropping,




enlarging, and positioning of illustrations.  Consider carefully, however,




the actual value of a color photograph to an understanding of the text;




because of the cost factor, as well as the difficulty of obtaining CPEHS




printing production clearance, the use of color photographs should be




limited and be functionally justifiable.




     If available, submit  letter granting permission to reproduce with




copyrighted graphics, together with the required credit line.






QUOTATIONS




     Quotations should reproduce the original with absolute precision  in




spelling, capitalization,  italics, and punctuation.  If irregularities are
                                    12

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quoted, such words may be followed by [sic].  Indicate breaks in material




quoted by an ellipsis (. .  .).  Enclose in square brackets,  [], any words




you insert within a quotation.






REFERENCES




     Unless the manuscript is prepared for another publisher who employs




a different style, follow the sequence, typographical style, and complete-




ness of the data  indicated in Preparation of References, pages 17 through




2k, when preparing your own list of cited references.




     Number the cited literature consecutively as each new reference appears




throughout the manuscript.




     Place the reference numbers after the word or statement annotated; use




superior Arabic numerals placed after the punctuation, except for a dash,




colon, or semicolons.  (Nuclear RNS is synthesized in chromatin from DNA




templates,49 and so transferred to the nucleolus for final assembly into




ribosomes.50»51  Nucleolar RNS plays an important role52;  .  . .)






SIGNS AND SYMBOLS




     Define all unusual symbols the first time they appear.  Provide a




glossary when five or more unusual symbols are used.




     The percent symbol, %, is used only with a numeral within parentheses




or in tabular headings; otherwise it is spelled as one word  (10 percent, in




text; (10%), in text; Railroad cars (%), as tabular head).




     A degree symbol, °, is used only to denote arc or angle; do NOT use




to indicate temperature unless this is the style of a journal to which the
                                   13

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report is to be submitted.  To indicate temperatures,  use the Arabic numeral




plus C or F (72 F; 37 C; 28 to 37 C).




     When a symbol is set close to the numeral, repeat before or after each




numeral in a group or series (30y to 50p;  $5.24, $6.78, and $57.98;  ±k to ±9).






SOLID WASTE




     The term solid waste is singular when used as an  adjective (solid waste




management, solid waste disposal, etc.).  Solid waste  is an all-inclusive




term; there are contexts within which the words residential refuse,  trash,




garbage,  etc., may be more appropriate and less stilted than solid waste.




If the former terms are eliminated from our vocabulary, the opportunity  is




lost for using the term solid waste with impact within those contexts when




its generic or universal quality needs emphasis.  Conversely, there are




some texts in which repetition of solid waste  is essential.






SPELLING AND HYPHENATION




     For spelling and use of the hyphen for word division, follow Webster's




Di ct ionary.

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TABLES

     Follow the style of the sample below.  Avoid vertical rules whenever

poss i ble.


                                 TABLE 6
mt 1MB
Complete
col umn
headings
Lt IIILt IS MLL UAKb WIIM INU
Abbr. when nee.
Wt. Length %
rtKI UU" >T
Vol ume
(cu yd)
(doub le
rule)
(single
Cap fi rst
  letter of
  f i rst word
  only
Gross tonnage
                                                                      (doub 1e
                                                                      = rule)
     "Source credit should appear as a footnote to the table title, as
From ....
     tlndent the footnotes; capitalize first letter of first word only; end
footnote with period.   Use the standard order of symbols.  (See Footnotes.)


TYPING

(1)  Title page.   [See  page 25-]

        Title, all  caps, centered, dropped 2 in. from top of paper.

        Byline,  caps and lower case, centered,  "by" omitted, dropped k in.

           from top of paper.

        The imprint should be centered and appear as follows:
            U.S.  DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,  EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
                          Public Health Service
          Consumer Protection and Environmental Health Service
                  Environmental  Control Administration
                    Bureau of Solid Waste Management
                                  1969
                                   15

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     The last line of the imprint should be 1£ in.  from the bottom of the

paper.


(2)  Page one.  [See page 26.]

        Repeat title, all caps,  centered.  Drop 2 in.  from top of

           paper.

        Repeat byline, caps and  lower case, omit "by."  Drop 3 type-

           writer spaces from title.

        Indent first paragraph.   Drop 3 typewriter spaces from byline.

        Use 1 in.  margins.

        Indent all paragraphs.

        Double space all manuscripts  and speeches.

     When typing manuscripts that will be typeset by a printer or publisher,

do NOT  hyphenate,  for word division,  any word on the right margin.


(3)  Title pages for speeches or  presentations are different than those for

articles.  The last two  lines of the  imprint (BSWM and date) are omitted,

and  the title, place, and date of meeting are inserted in the center of the

page.



                                [EXAMPLE]
        Presented at the National Equipment Show and Congress,
             San Francisco, California, June 2 to k, 196?-
                                   16

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                      Preparation of References






     Complete and accurate references aid the reader  (and his librarian)  in




locating source documents; inaccurate references reflect on the scholarship




of the author as well as his institution and his staff.




     The essential units of any reference are (1)  the author(s);  (2)  the




title of the paper, book, or proceedings; (3) the journal or proceedings,




with the volume,  issue number,  and inclusive pages;  (k)  the publisher (not




necessary for journal references); and (5)  the date.   When the original




research is made, all this information should be accurately recorded  from




each source document.




     If the manuscript is being submitted to a journal,  these same  elements




are included, but the style should be that  of the journal.  If there  is  no




style guide for the journal, check through  the references for several  articles




in a recent issue of the particular journal.  Note the placement  of these




elements, the punctuation between these elements,  the order of the  author's




initials, the abbreviation of journal titles, the use of inclusive  (or total)




pages,  etc.




     For manuscripts that are to be published by the  Bureau of Solid  Waste




Management, the references should conform to the style described  below, and




the first line typed in block style with runover lines indented  5 spaces.




     For manuscripts in press,  see the style for journals, books, pro-




ceedings, etc.   Omit data not positively known.   Close with (In  press.)




or (Accepted for publication.)
                                   17

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JOURNAL ARTICLE

Author(s) .
Title.
Journal  title.
Journal
 reference,
Date.
   Use  initials only  for  given name.   Invert  initials of
   senior  author only.  Separate all authors with comma.
   End with  a  period.   If no author, begin entry with title.
   If corporate author, give complete  name.

   Give  exact  title of  article.  Capitalize first letter and
   proper  names only.   Give foreign  titles exactly as they
   were  published;  if you want to  supply a translated title,
   put  the supplied English title  in square brackets.

   Give  complete title  of the journal.  Do not  abbreviate.
   Capitalize  nouns.  End with comma.  Underline  (including
   comma).
   Use  Arabic  numeral  for  volume;  omit  v.   Give  issue  number
   within  parentheses;  close  up;  follow with  a colon.   Give
   inclusive pagination; omit p.   Close entry with  a comma.

   Abbreviate  month,  except May,  June,  and  July.  Omit comma.
   Give year.

                         [EXAMPLES]

   Paulus,  J.  J.,  E.  P.  Floyd,  and D. H.  Byers.   Determination
     of sulfur dioxide in  atmosphere  samples; comparison  of
     a  colorimetric and  a  polarographic method.   American Indus-
     trial  Hygiene Association  Quarterly,  15(4):277-282,
     Dec.  1954.

   Lieberg,  0. S.   Heat  recovery  from incinerators.  Part 1.
     General considerations,  refuse handling, furnaces, waste
     heat  recovery, fly  ash control,  the  heat balance. Part 2.
     Generation  of service hot  water  and  low, medium and  high
     temperature water for space  and  process  heating.   Air Condi-
                   tioning, Heating, and Ventilating, 62(6) .'53-57, June 1965;
                   62(7):73-7b, July 1965-
3.
                 Rogus , C. A.  Weigh refuse electronically.
                   72(10:128-130, 165, 167, 169, 171.  Apr.
 American City,
1957.
                 National Communicable Disease Center.  1967 National Com-
                   municable Disease Center report on public health pesticides
                   Pest Control. 35(3) :13-1*t, 16, 18  . .  .  40, Mar. 19&7-
                                    18

-------
              5.  Black,  R.  J., and L.  Weaver.   Action on the solid wastes
                   problem.   Journal  of the Sanitary Engineering Division,
                   Proc.  ASCE, 93(SA6):91-96,  Dec.  196?.

              6.  Geiseler,  G., and H.  Wergin.   Uber den oxydativen Abbau
                   von Polyolefinen durch ozonhaltigen Sauerstoff.  I.
                   Kinetische Untersuchungen.   [Oxidative degradation of
                   polyolefins by oxygen containing ozone.  I.   Kinetic
                   investigations.]  Journal fur praktische Chemie, 25(3"^)
                   135-HO,  Sept.
BOOKS

Author.



Title.

Edition and
 volume.


Volume.


Imp r i n t.
Collation.


Series note,


Supplement.
   See above.  If an editor or compiler,  follow name with
   comma and ed.  or comp.   Underline (including period).
   If corporate author is  also publisher, omit as publisher.

   See above.  Use title as given on title page.
   Use 2d ed.  or 3d ed.  or 4th ed.  or rev.  ed., etc.  Close
   with period.

   2 v.  (for two volumes);  v. 2. (for volume two).  Close
   wi th peri od.

   Place- give city;  give State only if confusion would
     result without it.   Close with comma.

   Publisher- do not abbreviate.  Close with comma.

   Year- use date of the edition being referenced as it appears
     on the title page or reverse of title  page.  Do not use
     the date of a second (etc.) printing.

   369 p. (for total  pages); p. 383-389 (for specific
   pages).   Close with a period.

   If a series note is given, enclose it within parentheses
   and close with period outside parenthesis.

   Abbreviate (Suppl.)  Close with  period.

                         [EXAMPLES]

7-  Swavely, D. D., and L. F. Hultgren, comps.  State/interstate
     solid  waste planning grants; progress  abstracts, January
     1969.   Public Health Service Publication No. 1913.  Wash-
     ington,  U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.  9^ p.
                                    19

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              8.  Strunk,  W.  J.   The  elements  of  style.   Rev.  by  E.  B. White.
                   New York,  Macmillan  Company,  1959.   71  p.

              9.  Parr Instrument Company.   Oxygen  bomb  calorimetry  and
                   combustion methods.   Technical  Manual  No.  130.   Moline,
                   I 11.,  I960.   56 p.

             10.  American Public Works  Association.  Municipal  refuse dis-
                   posal.  2d ed.  Chicago, Public Administration Service,
                   1966.   528 p.

             11.  Kirk-Othmer enclyclopedia  of chemical  technology.   2d  ed.
                   v. 6.   New York,  Interscience Publishers,  1963.   932 p.

             12.  Lipsett, C.  H.   Industrial wastes and  salvage  conservation
                   and utilization.   2d ed.  chap. 52.   New York, Atlas
                   Publishing Co.,  Inc.,  1963.   p. 296-302.

             13-  Black, R.  J.,  J.  B. Wheeler, and  W. G.  Henderson.   Refuse
                   collection and disposal; an annotated  bibliography,  1962-
                   1963.   Public Health Service  Publication No.  91.  Wash-
                   ington,  U.S.  Government  Printing  Office,  1966.   13^  p.
                   Suppl. F.
PROCEEDINGS,  SYMPOSIUM,  SEMINAR,  ETC.

Editor.           Use,  if one given;  see above for  style.

Popular  title of
 proceedings.    Name- give accurate title of proceedings.   Capitalize
                   all words except  articles  and prepositions.   End  with
                   comma.

                 Location- give location of meeting,  the  city  and  state,
                   if  necessary.   End  with comma.
Proceedings
 number.

Publi sher.

Publi cat ion
 date.

Collation.
Date- give date that meeting was  held.   End  with  period.


Use, if any.

Use only if different from the sponsor  of proceedings.


Use only if different from date of meeting.

See above.
                                    20

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                                     [EXAMPLES]

             14. Weaver, L., ed.   Proceedings; the Surgeon General's
                   Conference on  Solid Waste Management for Metropolitan
                   Washington, July 19-20, 1967.   Public Health Service
                   Publication No. 1729-  Washington, U.S. Government
                   Printing Office, 1967.  194 p.

             15. 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.  161 p.

             16. Proceedings; 1966 National Incinerator Conference,  New
                   York, May 1-4, 1966.  American Society of Mechanical
                   Engineers.  266 p.

             17. Proceedings; First Annual Meeting of the Institute  for
                   Solid Wastes,  Chicago, Sept.  13-15, 1966.  American
                   Public Works Association.  78 p.
PART OF BOOK OR PROCEEDING
Author(s)

Title.

In.
Book, proceed-
 ings, etc.
Collation.
As above.

Title of selection, as above.

Use In, under 1ined, to introduce the book or proceedings in
which the specific selection is found, followed by no punc-
tuat ion.


See above, and  follow with other information necessary to
the collat ion.

Use specific pages where specific selection is to be found.

                    [EXAMPLES]
             18. Vaughan, R.  D.,  and R.  J.  Black.   The Federal  solid waste
                   program.  J_n_ Proceedings;  1968  National  Incinerator
                   Conference, New York, May  5"8,  1968.   American Society
                   of Mechanical  Engineers,  p.  318-321.

             19- Black,  R.  J.  A  review  of  sanitary landfilling practices
                   in the United  States. _[_n_ Proceedings;  Third International
                   Congress,  International  Research Group  on Refuse Disposal,
                   Trento (Italy), May 24-29,  1965-  [Temi  Press.]   p. 40-47.
                                    21

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             20.  Black,  R.  J.   Solid wastes handling.   In Environmental
                   aspects  of  the hospital,  v.  2.   Supportive departments.
                   Public Health Service Publication No.  930-C-16.   Wash-
                   ington,  U.S.  Government Printing Office,  1968.   p.  20-27.

             21.  Winkler, T.  E.   Discussion of The  incineration of
                   bulky refuse.  II, by E. R. Kaiser.   In Discussions;
                   1968 National Incinerator Conference,  New York,  May 5~8,
                   1968.  American Society of Mechanical  Engineers,   p.  26.
PERSONAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                       [EXAMPLES]
             22.  Personal  communication.   J.
                   to W.  W.  White,  Bureau of
                   17, 1968.
J. Jones, XZZ Corporation,
Solid Waste Management, Jan.
             23.  Personal  communication.   W.  Caller,  University of North
                   Carolina, to N.  L.  Drobny, Battelle Memorial Institute,
                   July 25,  1967.   Data collected in  conjunction with
                   Demonstration Grant No. D01-SW-0050-1.
IN PRESS
                                       [EXAMPLE]

             2k. Pearl, D. R.  A review of the state of the art of modern
                   municipal incineration system equipment,  v. 4.  pt. k.
                   _[_n_ Combustion Engineering, Inc.  Techni cal-economi c
                   study of solid waste disposal  needs and practices.   Pub-
                   lic Health Service Publication No. 1886.  Washington,
                   U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.  p. 17-  (in press.)


UNPUBLISHED DATA

                                       [EXAMPLES]

             25. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.  Unpublished data (SW-lOts)

             26. Carotti, A.  Unpublished data,  1968.
                                      22

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             27-  Tucker,  M.  G.   Biological  characteristics  of  incinerator
                   waste  waters.   Unpublished graduate student research
                   project in CE  687 course.   University of Michigan,  Aug.
                   1967.   15 P.


MISCELLANEOUS  (Supplied  information is  bracketed.)

             28.  The Solid Waste  Disposal Act;  Title II  of  Public Law
                   89-272, 89th  Cong.   S.306, Oct.  20, 1965.   Washington,
                   U.S.  Government Printing Office,  1966.   5  p.

             29.  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.

             30.  U.S. Congress.  Senate.  A  bill  to amend the  Solid Waste
                   Disposal  Act  [Title II of  Public  Law 89-272].   S.2005,
                   91st Cong.,  1st sess., Apr.  29,  1969.  [Washington, U.S.
                   Government Printing Office.]   10  p.

             31.  Kudlich, R.   Ringelmann smoke chart.   Rev. by L. R. Burdick,
                   U.S.  Bureau of Mines  Information  Circular  7718 (Rev. of
                   1C 6888).   [Washington], U.S.  Department of the Interior,
                   Mar.  1955. 4  p.

             32.  Gillette, S. G.   Apparatus for extracting  magnetic objects
                   from rubbish.   U.S. Patent 2,  964,  184,  Dec.  13,  I960.

             33.  Tuszynski,  W.,  and M. Dobrzanski.   Method  to  manufacture
                   foam glass.   Polish Patent 48847  owned by  Institute
                   of the Glass  and Ceramics  Industry, Warsaw, Poland.
                   Published Dec. 19,  1964.

             34.  American Society of Mechanical  Engineers  Incinerator  Com-
                   mittee, Midwest Section.  Minutes of  meeting,  Chicago,
                   June 3, 1966.

             35-  LaHaye,  P.  G.,  General  Electric  Company.   Statement before
                   the National  Coal Association  Technical  Sales  Conference,
                   Pittsburgh, Sept. 14,  1966.

             36.  Maziara, E.  F.,  Jr.  The partial  combustion of  paper
                   wastes.  M.S.  Thesis, Renesselaer Polytechnic  Institute,
                   Troy,  New York, 1967.  87  p.
                                     23

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37.  Kaiser, E.  R.,  and S.  B.  Friedman.   Pyrolysis of municipal
      refuse.  Summarized  in  Engineering Foundation Research
      Conference,  Solid Waste Research  and Development,  Univer-
      sity School,  Milwaukee, Wisconsin, July 24-28, 1967.
      Conference Preprint  No. F-2.

38.  Toussoun, T. A, A. R.  Weinhold, R.  G.  Linderman, and I. A.
      Patrick.   Identification of phytotoxins obtained from
      plant residues decomposing in soil.   Phytopathology,
      57(8)-.834, Aug. 1967.   (Abstract.)

39.  Hooper, T.  J.   20th Century alchemy--new newsprint
      is created.   Newark (N.J.) Sunday News, p. 8-10,
      25, 26, Apr.  8, 1962.

40.  Porteous, A.  Toward a profitable means of waste disposal.
      ASME Paper No. 67WA/PID-2.  Presented at Winter Annual
      Meeting,  American Society of Mechanical Engineers,
      Pittsburgh,  Nov. 12-17, 1967-

41.  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.  Flyer.  6 p.

42.  Vaughan, R. D.   Packaging and solid waste management.
      [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education,
      and Welfare,   [1968].   11 p.

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                   [SAMPLE OF TITLE  PAGE]
PRIVATE CONTRACTOR OPPORTUNITIES IN THE SOLID WASTES PROGRAM
                       Ralph J.  Black
     U.S.  DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,  EDUCATION,  AND  WELFARE
          Public  Health   Service
    Consumer Protection and Environmental  Health  Service
            Environmental  Control Administration
              Bureau of Solid  Waste Management
                            1969
                            25

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                         [SAMPLE OF PAGE OF TEXT]









        PRIVATE CONTRACTOR OPPORTUNITIES IN THE SOLID WASTES PROGRAM






                               Ralph  J.  Black






     The privilege of participating in a technical  session of the National




Refuse Equipment Show and Congress is especially appreciated by me as a




representative of the Solid Wastes Program.  This is the first time anyone




associated with the Program has had a chance to discuss its significance for




your industry on an occasion of this  importance.




     This discussion is necessary because what this Program is doing to




solve problems of pollution from solid wastes has great potential for and,




indeed, is now creating and expanding opportunities, however, without




information.  My function here today  is to supply some of that information




by indicating where we in the Solid Wastes Program think your opportunities




may be found.




     We begin with the basic premise  that the private disposal industry is




a vital element in the national campaign against contamination from solid




wastes.  This Show and Congress is persuasive evidence of that fact.   If,




however, further evidence is needed of both the capacity and the desire of




this industry for meaningful participation in the Solid Wastes Program, I




call your attention to a meeting held in Washington recently.




     This meeting of Program representatiges and the board of directors




of the National Council of Refuse Disposal Trade Associations was arranged
                                    26

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