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             February 1974
U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
         WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460
For sale by the Superintendent of Documents.
       U.S. Government Printing  Office
   Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price 30 cents

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      Although opinion varies about the "crisis of
       the environment," its seriousness, its causes
       and its probable solutions, there is general
agreement  on the present  urgency to bring into
balance the exploitative demands on the Earth
and the necessity of maintaining (or  restoring) a
stable and healthy ecosphere. This environmental
concern has become  an integral and persuasive
factor in national and international affairs. Within
the past five  years,  two Federal agencies—the
Council on Environmental Quality and the En-
vironmental Protection Agency—have  been cre-
ated to assess and administer environmental pro-
grams. Congress has  legislated  a decisive and
wide-ranging body of environmental law; and most
States have  set up departments  to deal with  prob-
lems of the environment.  The increasing  inter-
national  awareness  of man's  fragile  ecological
niche was  signalled  by the U.N. Conference on
the Human Environment held in Stockholm  in
June 1972.
  The latter  was of  historic  importance for it
marked the beginning of a transition in the atti-
tudes toward the future uses of the environment.
Despite ideological,  political,  economic and re-
ligious differences, the delegates of 114 nations
agreed on  an Action Plan and a Declaration  of
Principles based on the common realization that
the Earth is a closed  ecological system  and that
man continues to modify it only at his peril.
  This perception is especially acute in a period
of high technology when man's ability to intrude
upon and divert  the natural order presents a mag-
nitude of  change that  is unprecedented.  It  is
conjectured that the  changes in man's interaction
with his environment in the last 60  years  are
greater than all the changes that have  occurred
from the time of man's first arrival on the Earth
to World War I.  Further, some of the most serious
ecological  problems—air pollution  from radio-
active  particles,  the uncontrolled fouling of the
oceans and waterways—can only be  solved  on a
worldwide basis. Without histrionics, the question
faces us—the  future  of the Earth is in our hands;
how shall we decide?
  The issues raised by environmental concern are
manifold,  diverse  and of great complexity.  It is
to these  that  this bibliography is addressed. Its
primary focus is  on  books  that present policy
issues and interdisciplinary concepts, rather than
those that deal narrowly with particular problems

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and their technological  solutions.  The  listing is
designed to provide the nonspecialist with a wide
spectrum of views and opinions; some reflective of
the physical sciences and technology, others  of
the economic,  sociological and political realities
that dictate whether new technologies will or will
not  be used,  whether   innovative or  restrictive
policies will be imposed.
   Although the tides cited are written by authors
competent in their fields, contrasting and at times
conflicting points of view  are presented.  Some
books are optimistic about our present and future
capability  to  solve, or  at least ameliorate,  the
abuses represented by physical pollution, the de-
pletion of natural resources, the excesses of popu-
lation growth  and  the  exacerbating  imbalances
between the rich, industrialized nations  and the
poorer, developing ones. Other books listed here
are frankly  alarmist about the present, and pessi-
mistic about the future.
   No volume provides a synthesis or reconcilia-
tion of these disparate assessments. The environ-
mental field lacks an Aristotle to impose a philo-
sophical order  on  the  vast  body of  scientific
information and speculative thought  that exists.
And to date, no book of incisive insight, of bench-
mark importance, comparable  to Darwin on evo-
lution, Einstein  on relativity, or Freud on  the
interpretation of dreams, -has surfaced.
   The limitations of this listing are ameliorated
somewhat  because most of  the books  included
have  extensive  bibliographies  of their own. Inter-
ested readers will find numerous other easily  ap-
proachable information sources.
   The U.S. Government (both executive agencies
and Congressional committees) has been prolific
in publication of documents on natural resources,
wildlife,  conservation and environmental policy;
these are indexed in the 17.5. Government Publica-
tions: A Monthly  Catalogue available from  the
Government Printing Office,  Washington, D.C.
20402. The Natural Resources Library  of  the
U.S. Department of the Interior publishes a semi-
monthly listing  of  publications,  including books
and periodicals.  Subscription to  this Environ-
mental  Awareness  Reading  List  is  available
through the National Technical Information Serv-
ice,  U.S. Department of Commerce,  Springfield,
Va. 22151.
   Among  others that  have  prepared extensive
reading lists are the Conservation Library Center

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 (1357  Broadway,  Denver, Colo.  80202), the
 Sierra Club (1050  Mills Tower, San  Francisco,
 Calif. 94104) and  the  American  Library Asso-
 ciation (500  Huron Street, Chicago, 111. 60611).
   The National Wildlife Federation (1412 16th
 Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036) publishes
 an annual  Conservation Directory that  lists  all
 major international, national, interstate, state and
 citizen organizations active  in  this  field. Many of
 these groups have published bibliographies tailored
 to their special interests. Further, many  profes-
 sional, trade and industry associations offer publi-
 cations hi their specific fields of resource manage-
 ment and  industrial  processes. Some of  these
 associations publish newsletters as well.
   Reflecting  the mounting  interest and  concern
 about  the  environment, magazines,  newsletters
 and  occasional papers have so proliferated that
 they  are impossible to list in a modest bibliogra-
"phy.  Some  are wholly devoted to ecological inter-
 ests,  others are magazines of general interest that
 have regular  departments on the environment. A
 public, school or college library can provide access
 to services that review and document current peri-
 odical, newspaper and other literature of interest.
   And, of course, all that is significant about the
 environment has not been  said or written in the
 last few years. In 1864, George Perkins Marsh
 published his now classic Man  and Nature: Or,
 Physical Geography as  Modified by Human Ac-
 tions, in which he developed the thesis  that it was
 the duty of each generation to use the environment
 in a  way that did not impair  the natural  endow-
 ment of future generations.  Or, as Thomas Jeffer-
 son  expressed it in  a letter to James Madison,
 "The earth belongs always to the living generation.
 They may manage it then, and what proceeds from
 it, as they please during their usufruct."
   The tenure of successive occupants of Earth is
 brief. But, with care,  the tenure of mankind may
 be long.  And to end with  a  cautionary word—
 from Joseph Wood Krutch, preeminently a natur-
 alist  and a man of letters,  in  his warning to the
 spring  peepers, "Don't  forget we  are  all in this
 together"—a message at  once  simple and very
 complicated.

                    Ruth A. Hussey
                    Editor

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Bibliography of
      Selected
      Reading

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Anderson, Walt, editor. Politics and Environment:
A Reader in  Ecological Crisis. 1970.  Goodyear
Publishing Co., Pacific Palisades, Calif.  (362 pp.,
$8.45).
   This is an intellectual grab bag  with something
for everyone  concerned about the environment
and the measure of man and his society.  Some
30 essays, written by scientists and publicists rep-
resenting a diversity of  disciplines, are marshalled
under six major categories.
   Though the viewpoints presented are various,
central to all  is recognition  of the interrelated
problems created by this century's unprecedented
technological  expansion, coupled  with  the  expo-
nential growth of the  American  population and
economy.  The  ecological  consequences  of this
enormous growth  on  man,  and  this immense
utilization of  natural  resources are  analysed  in
their endless manifestations—physical, biological,
sociological, economic, and—in the end—political.
The argument here is  that  the time is long-past
for piecemeal  solutions to individual  ecological
disasters and the time has come for a national, and
ultimately an international commitment to a policy
of environmental control.
   Most of  these essays have  been published  in
popular and scholarly  periodicals or as chapters
in books; no one of them provides a final solution,
but pertinent questions are raised.

Bausiun, Howard T., editor. Science for Society:
A  bibliography  (3rd  Edition). 1973.  American
Association  for  the  Advancement  of Science,
Washington, D.C. (92 pp., $1).
   This  bibliography prepared by  the AAAS's
Commission on  Science Education  is  designed
for  both  teachers  and  students of  secondary
schools and colleges, and for lay groups concerned
with the social problems of  scientific  and tech-
nological advances. .Listings are grouped under:
Reference;  Science,  Technology, Society; Re-
sources and the Environment Education; Health;
Conflict and Population. The citations are  about
evenly divided between books and periodical lit-
erature, and the range of  selection is extremely
wide.

Brooks, Paul, The House of Life. 1972. Houghton
Mifflin Co., Boston (350 pp., $8.95).
   Rachel Carson  would have been pleased  by
this testament to her  work.  Miss  Carson, who

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died in  1964, was an intensely private person, so
this is an intellectual and literary biography rather
than a  personal  one.  The  focus  is on the five
books published between 1941 and 1965,  Under
the Sea-Wind, The Sea Around  Us, The Edge of
the Sea, Silent Spring,  and The Sense of Wonder,
and  on  major  periodical  articles,  unpublished
manuscripts, interviews, and correspondence. Since
there are generous excerpts from all these sources,
this is both an excellent introduction to her work,
and  a  poignant recollection for those who have
long admired her life  and writing. Special atten-
tion is given to the genesis, the writing and the
violent reaction to Silent Spring,  her most famous
and controversial book. Mr. Brooks  believes that
Miss Carson's  work provided the same kind of
excitement for environmentalists  that  Einstein's
did for physicists and Darwin's for biologists.

Chisolm, Anne. Philosophers  of the Earth: Con-
versations with Ecologists. 1972. E.  P. Dutton &
Co., Inc., New York (201 pp., $8.95).
   This  is a layman's guide to ecological thinking
as practiced by  leading  scientists, activists and
publicists in the United States, Great Britain, and
Europe.  It  is based  on lengthy interviews with
16 men,  among  them Lewis  Mumford,  Rene
Dubos,   Kenneth  Boulding,  Sir  Frank Fraser
Darling, Charles Elton, Barry Commoner, Donald
Kuenen, Paul Ehrlich, Norman  Moore, and Jean
Dorst.  Although their  individual disciplines  differ
and their styles range  from  a  strict concentration
on field studies to the wide-ranging populariza-
tions of the ecological crisis, they share a common
concern  that man's actions are impinging  more
and more on the biosphere, and that the time is
now for a critical assessment of the consequences.
Of singular  interest is  the author's tracing of the
development of each man's career and his ideology.

Cole, H. S. D.; Freeman, C.; Jahada, M.; Pavitt, K.,
editors. Models of Doom: A Critique of Limits to
Growth. 1973.  Universe Books,  New York (244
pp., $2.95).
   This  book by 13 Sussex University  scientists
attacks the arguments of Dennis Meadows and his
collaborators at MIT  in Limits  To Growth (see
page 13). The  Sussex scientists  argue that the
MIT group's  methods, assumptions,  data,  and
predictions are  faulty,  that their  world model has
a  built-in Malthusian  bias  and  does  not  reflect

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reality. They charge that a major limitation to the
MIT approach is that it excludes  politics, social
structure, and  human needs and desires. They
believe that changing social and  political values
will significantly affect exponential growth, that the
collapse  of the  world?s  ecosphere  which  the
Meadows' group postulates, is needlessly alarmist,
and  that his policy recommendations would  be
impossible  to implement.

Daly, Herman, editor. Toward  a  Steady-State
Economy. 1973. W. H. Freeman &  Co., San Fran-
cisco, Calif. (332 pp., $8.95 cloth, $3.95 paper).
  Increasingly  the  debate of  growth  vs. non-
growth occupies  center stage  in  economic and
political  colloquies.  These essays argue that un-
controlled growth is irrational,  destructive of our
environmental patrimony,  and  will be ultimately
fatal. The traditional view that  growth is the pri-
mary measure of progress, is dismissed as an obso-
lete myth. Evolution towards an economic system
with rational consumption  of goods and resources
is advocated.  Contemporary  concern  about  the
energy "crisis"  gives pertinency  to  Mr. Daly's
contention  that today the energy industry is  ab-
sorbing an  ever-increasing capital investment, but
that its relative productivity is diminishing and its
percentage  of jobs  in the economy  is dropping.
Thus, more growth means relatively  fewer jobs.
Going beyond economics, Mr. Daly proposes that
we develop methods of income distribution inde-
pendent of the "income-through-jobs" link.

Dasmann, R. F.; Milton, John P.; Freeman, P.  H.
Ecological Principles for Economic Development.
1973. John Wiley  & Sons,  Ltd.,  London, New
York  (252 pp., $5).
  This  title was commissioned  jointly  by  the
International Union for Conservation of Nature &
Natural Resources (IUCN), Merges, Switzerland,
and  the  Conservation Foundation,  Washington,
D.C. It is  written from the  ecologist's point  of
view for those concerned with development, either
at a national level or in connection with  the aid
programs of the international agencies and private
foundations.
  Properly implemented, the authors believe the
objectives of conservation and development should
coincide if  the long-term well-being of the human
race is given equal  consideration with man's im-
mediate  needs.  Particular  emphasis  is on eco-

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systems currently  subject to heavy development
pressures: for example, those known to be espe-
cially fragile, such  as high  mountains, coastal
areas,  and islands. Diverse  problems related  to
dams, irrigation, and other major river-basin de-
velopment, power-plant siting, forestry,  livestock
and  agricultural projects, and the promotion  of
tourism, are examined. The authors contend (and
cite  past  instances to show)  that, if  ecological
factors  are excluded  from  the  initial  planning
stages for man-modifications of ecosystems,  con-
sequences  that ensue  frequently are the reverse
of what was intended.

DiBlasio,  Kathleen M., editor. Conservation Di-
rectory, 1973. The National Wildlife Federation,
Washington, D.C.  (184pp.,  $2).
   This  directory is published  as a  Conservation
Education Service of the  Federation. It provides
a  detailed and extensive  listing of  organizations
and  agencies  and of public interest and  citizen
groups concerned  with environmental protection,
natural  resource use,  and the preservation and
management  of wildlife.

Disch, Robert, editor. The Ecological Conscience:
Values  For Survival.  1970. Prentice-Hall,  Inc.,
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. (206 pp., $2.45).
   This  collection  is based on  the  joint premises
that man-made changes in the biosphere threaten
the integrity  of  the life-support  system essential
for human survival, and that the complexities  of
the environmental crisis constitute  the most seri-
ous problem facing man today. These problems are
delineated, and sometimes explained, by a galaxy
of experts and publicists of the scientific and the
social/economic  disciplines.  They  range  from
well-known ecologists like Barry Commoner, Paul
Ehrlich, Ian McHarg, and Aldo Leopold, to social
critics at large  such as Lewis Mumford, Buck-
minster Fuller,  Paul  Goodman,  and  Lawrence
Slobodkin; the more  esoteric  ranges of the en-
vironmental conscience are explored by Thomas
Merton and Alan  Watts.
   Final  conclusions  are  few  hi  this thoughtful
selection  of  readings.  But,  despite diversity  of
viewpoints, there is general agreement that, though
science can reveal the depths of our present eco-
logical crises  and point the  way to  some of the
technological  correctives,  only  social/political
action can resolve it.  It is one of the lessons of

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history, that every major advance in the techno-
logical competence of man has generated revolu-
tionary changes in all the  primary  structures  of
society, and the values and attitudes held by each
of us.

Dorfman, Robert & Nancy S. Economics of the
Environment;  Selected Readings. 1972.  W. W.
Norton & Company,  Inc., New York. (426 pp.,
$4.75).
  Pollution is a by-product of regular economic
activities,  and this volume  offers a  sophisticated
and scholarly examination of how the flow of-real
income can be maintained without  abusing the
environment.  It consists of 26 papers, written by
distinguished  economists (among them  Mishan,
Kneese, Coase, Leontief, Galbraith, Dales, Lands-
berg, and Friedman) divided into five groups. The
first group blocks out the problem  by  pointing
out the main economic issues. The second devel-
ops the concepts and methods of economic analy-
sis as they apply to environmental problems. The
third section presents the pros and cons of various
policies for environmental protection. The fourth
explores the reasons for the accelerating  abuse  of
the envkonment in the last 30 years, and the con-
cluding section explains the methods  and difficul-
ties involved  in making quantitative  assessments
of environmental damage and costs of abating it.
  Together these papers survey the  key aspects
from  an economic point of view. However,  no
attempt is made to delineate an overall philosophy
of balancing economic costs against environmen-
tal  degradation  nor  is a coherent  program  of
action recommended.

Freeman, A. M.; Haveman, R. H.; Kneese, A. V.
The Economics of Environmental Policy. 1973.
John  Wiley & Sons,  Inc., New York,  London
(184pp., $4.45).
  Here the achievement of environmental quality,
or its lack, is presented as an exercise in efficient
economic management of material resources. The
authors believe the competitive market system has
served reasonably well in parcelling out resources
to individual  (and corporate) owners but fails  to
work  for "common property" resources, i.e., the
aLr, river systems, the oceans, federal lands and
their undeveloped resources, and other large eco-
logical systems. To correct this, they feel, environ-
mental  resources  must  be  given the  same cost-

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accounting as  anything  else that goes  into the
Gross National Product.
  The economic rationale  of  existing and pro-
posed environmental legislation is examined and
found wanting.  The authors state that  to  bring
environmental resources  back into the economic
system so that they can be subject to the  same
kinds of constraints that  now influence the use of
other resources—land, labor,  and  capital—will
require major rethinking not only of our economic
imperatives, but of our political and legal estab-
lishments as well.
  No firm conclusions are  reached,  but the au-
thors pose  the  hard and unresolved questions of
how much cleaning up of industrial pollutants  is
actually going  to be done,  and who is  going to
pay for it; essentially political decisions.

Gillette, Elizabeth R.,  editor. Action for Wilder-
ness (Sierra Club Battlebook series).  1972. Sierra
Club, San Francisco, Calif. (222 pp., $2.25).
  This is a critical assessment of the intent and
the administration of the Wilderness Act passed
by Congress in 1964  to establish the  "National
Wilderness  Preservation  System."  (The  Sierra
Club believes that the Act itself is flawed serious-
ly because  it requires  lengthy  Congressional ap-
proval of  every wilderness area added to the
System.) Individual chapters cite both successful
and  failed  campaigns for designating "wilderness
areas." Others  explain the techniques for making
a wilderness study  to  develop  a wilderness area
proposal and for organizing public support. Still
others are regional case studies. In the concluding
chapter, Russell E. Train (former Chairman of the
Council on Environmental Quality and now Ad-
ministrator of EPA) discusses President Nixon's
1971 proposal for the World Heritage Trust. Much
of the text is  based  on the proceedings of the
Sierra Club's Twelfth  Biennial Wilderness  Con-
ference  (1971), and  the  views  expressed are
strongly conservationist.  It  is  an  action manual
for the already  converted.

Goldman, Marshall I. The Spoils of Progress: En-
vironmental Pollution in the Soviet Union.  1972.
The MIT Press, Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, Cambridge, Mass. (372 pp., $7.95).
  This  examination of  environmental  law and
practice in the  USSR reveals that it has environ-
ment-related problems  as extensive and severe as

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our own. While state ownership of production re-
sources eliminates some forms of environmental
disruption, it also exacerbates others, such as pol-
lution  caused by the  rapidity  of  industralization,
concentration of heavy industry over a small area,
or, since industry is state-owned, the identity of
interest between plant manager and local govern-
ment official because  for both the criterion is in-
creased production. The USSR has a set of model
pollution-control  laws, but the author says com-
pliance is indifferent and enforcement ranges from
weak to non-existent. As in America, rapid indus-
trialization and unrestrained growth are eroding
the Soviet environment. Ironically, as the author,
an  economist and associate of the  Russian Re-
search Center at Harvard, points out the Russians
now find  themselves  in the unenviable position
where they must increase their  rate  of growth
in order to generate enough resources  to provide
for pollution control.

Graham, Frank, Jr. Man's Dominion: The Story
of Conservation in America. 1971. J. B. Lippin-
cott Co. Philadelphia (339 pp., $8.95).
   Earth Day, 1970, was not without precedents;
the conservation movement has long been implicit
in American life. This book recounts the history
of that tradition from  the 1880's to the passage of
the Wilderness  Act of 1964.
   Although today's environmentalists are primari-
ly concerned with man and his survival under the
duress of global  pollution,  the earlier  conserva-
tionists usually  had specialized concerns—preser-
vation of a particular place, a species, or a threat-
ened  natural resource.  Using whenever possible
their own words, Mr. Graham presents the thought
and activities of such early battlers as Guy Brad-
ley for the preservation of the Everglades, Gifford
Pinchot  who  persuaded   President   Theodore
Roosevelt that  natural resources were not always
expendable, John Muir, the celebrant of the Si-
erra, Steve Mather who promoted national parks,
and many others.  The intramural controversies
within the movement  are detailed as well.

Hardin, Garrett.  Exploring  New  Ethics for Sur-
vival: The Voyage of the Spaceship Beagle. 1972.
The Viking Press,  New York (273 pp.,  $7.95;
$1.45 paper).
   The author, professor of Human Ecology at the
University of California, is a prolific writer on the

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environment, and his essay, The Tragedy  oj the
Commons, written in 1968, has become a classic.
This is a further  elaboration of the thesis  that
there are  too many people making too many de-
mands on the common resources. It is  cast as a
fable,  the  voyage   of  the  Spaceship  Beagle
searching  for habitable planets in other solar sys-
tems some 200 years in the future.
   The reason for this journey  is that  man  had
exhausted the finite capacity of  the earth to sup-
port his exorbitant numbers  and demands. Unfor-
tunately,  the  ethical  misconceptions  and false
economies that made this planet uninhabitable con-
tinue within the  space  capsule,  and  soon the
plight  of  the voyagers is  comparable to the one
they left behind. Within this science-fiction frame-
work,  Mr. Hardin  offers  a  wide-ranging exposi-
tion of the population-environmental-quality-of-
life complex. Believing there are no easy answers,
radical alternatives to our present  life are advo-
cated.

Helfrich,  Harold W. Agenda for  Survival:  The
Environmental Crisis—2. 1971. Yale University
Press., New Haven, Conn. (234 pp., $10).
   This title—and  a similar  book that preceded it
(The  Environmental  Crisis:  Men's  Struggle  to
Live With  Himself)—is  derived  from  the two-
year Yale School of Forestry  symposium on "Is-
sues in the Environmental Crisis." The 14  papers
reflect the theoretical and practical work of well-
known authorities from such diverse fields as the
applied sciences, sociology and economics, indus-
try, conservation,  architecture and urban design,
law, and  politics.  This holistic  approach is used
because the total-environment theory of  the "new
conservation" movement demands an overview of
man and  his many activities that are determining
tomorrow's habitat.
   Crucial issues explored  include the  need for
worldwide pollution control, the uses and  abuses
of pesticides and other chemicals, the strategies for
the recovery of urban areas, the responsibility  of
Congress  and other  government institutions, the
role of citizens groups, and cost accounting for the
achievement of  a clean environment.

Inglis, D. R. Nuclear Energy—Its Physics and Its
Social Challenge. 1973. Addison-Wesley. Reading,
Mass. (395 pp., $4.95).
   This is a heroic attempt by one scientist  to
                       8

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cover all applications of nuclear energy, from in-
ternational weaponry to domestic power reactors.
It can be construed as a kind of  environmental
impact statement on the increasing reliance on nu-
clear reactors in this present-day energy crisis. The
problems  of power reactors are  identified and
emphasis  is placed  on the potential  for  serious
accident and genetic damage. Dr.  Inglis believes
that the danger from the fast breeder reactor is
underestimated  by Washington  experts. He rec-
ommends a moratorium on  nuclear-power-plant-
reactor  development and siting.
   Consideration is given to nuclear  weapons, their
mechanics,  their  accident  potential, and their
stockpiling by the major world powers. The argu-
ment here is that U. S. policy should  be to work
for an  amplification of the "Limited Test Ban
Treaty  of  1963"  so that  all nuclear explosions
would be banned by treaty. Although this book
has been written for the general public interested
in the environmental consequences  of the increas-
ing reliance on nuclear  energy,  supplementary
chapters on scientific principles and background
material drawn chiefly  from the  disciplines  of
chemistry and nuclear physics are included.

James,  Bernard. The  Death  of  Progress.  1973.
Alfred A. Knopf, New York (166 pp., $5.95).
   A professor of anthropology, the author exam-
ines critically the cult of progress; its development
as a secular substitute for earlier religious-ethical
beliefs,  its  long reign in western society, and its
present  dubiety. Belief in the supremacy of prog-
ress as the measure of a society's worth, he argues,
has resulted in the moral and ecological predica-
ment of our present world culture. Our progress
culture  (the first to depend upon high technology)
is seen  as destroying irreversibly the very planet
that sustains it. The  author warns  that unless
rational limitations  are placed on present over-
reaching demands on resources and living space,
"natural correctives"  (that  we  will  term  eco-
catastrophes) will impose then: own drastic ones.
Present courage to break with  the idea  that
endless  materialistic advancement is not only good
but possible, and that what technology has  abused
it wUl correct,  is the first  order of  business in
Dr. James' scenario. Supportive evidence is drawn
primarily from  the social philosophers rather than
the scientific disciplines.

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Kahn,  Hennan  &  Bruce-Briggs, B.  Things To
Come: Thinking About the 70's & 80's. 1972. The
Hudson Institute. The MacMillan Co., New York
(262 pp., $6.95).
  By inclination every environmentalist is a "fu-
turist" in one way or another. Mr. Kahn is one of
the best known of bold speculators  about the
future shape of  our society.  This book overlaps
and continues the themes of his famous book, The
Year 2000  (1967). While the earlier book was
concerned with long-range prospects, this looks at
the short and middle-range prospects of mankind.
Although the societal (and value) scenarios and
technological forecastings are multiple and diverse,
central to all is the belief that it is necessary and
possible  to study the future even though the fu-
ture  does not yet exist.
  One chapter, "The 1985 Technological Crisis—
The  Social Effects  of Technology." covers many
issues but  makes three major points: (1)  It is
possible  that many  different technologies will
break down simultaneously; (2) many crises are
of a greater magnitude than  those coped with in
the past; and (3) because both pollution and tech-
nology tend  to  grow expotentially, we often do
not know about problems until they  are  critical
and  there is little  time to prevent damage.  Both
the  authors  are eminent in  the socio-economic
and  historical disciplines but  in a sense this is an
"organizational"  book:   The  product of  The
Hudson  Institute's  on-going study (begun in the
mid-sixties) of  the future of the U.  S. and the
world.

Leavitt, Helen. Superhighway—Superhoax. 1970.
Doubleday & Co., New York  (324 pp., $6.95).
   This  is a thoroughly  documented  book  by a
long-tune critic of the Federal Interstate Highway
System.  The author  disputes the claims of the
"highway lobby"  that America's continued sur-
vival and well-being depend  on the extent of its
freeways. While acceeding to the need for a na-
tional  network  of  good, high-speed  roads, she
views the present system as a perversion of scale
and- priorities. She examines interests with  a stake
hi the preservation of the current system (the
automobile  manufacturers,  oil, rubber,  cement
companies,  and the construction industry! among
them), and the  institutional means by which they
preserve it.  Also discussed with detailed case his-
                      10

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tories are the penalties  paid by the majority—
urban congestion, suburban blight,  polluted  air,
and fragmented communities.
   Mrs.  Leavitt argues  that, until  freeways  are
treated  by planners as a single aspect of a bal-
anced  transportation  system,  and  the  Highway
Trust Fund is opened to permit the development
of urban transportation needs,  we  will remain
trapped by the consequences  of a  concept that
has proven counterproductive of its professed end.

Lewis, Richard S. The Nuclear-Power Rebellion.
1972. The Viking Press, Inc., New York (313 pp.,
$8.95).
   Essentially this is an  account  of  growing citi-
zens' concern about, and organization against the
atomic industrial establishment. With the prolifer-
ation  of  nuclear power  installations,  there  is
mounting  local anxiety about the long-term radi-
ation  effects and the accident  hazards  posed by
nuclear  power  plants scheduled for nearby con-
struction.  The author, a long-time science journal-
ist and  presently  editor  of "Science and Public
Affairs: the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists," criti-
cizes the Atomic Energy Commission for its con-
flict-of-interest  role as both promoter and  regu-
lator of atomic energy and its alliance with industry
and  privately-owned  utilities.  Documented  are
AEC's shifting relationships with environmental-
ists and others concerned  about  our growing re-
liance on  a "hazardous" technology and the sci-
entific establishment's internal controversies about
AEC's safety  and health standards, its issuance
of plant licenses,  its technical and industrial pro-
cedures,  and the  little-publicized accidents and
near-accidents in  atomic plants.

Lewis,  Richard  S.  editor.  The  Environmental
Revolution (A Science and Public Affairs Book).
1973. Educational Foundation for  Nuclear Sci-
ence, Chicago (164 pp.,  $3.50).
   This  volume presents many of the ideas and
viewpoints that have  appeared in "Science and
Public Affairs," the Bulletin of the Atomic Scien-
tists, in  the last four years.  Although reflective of
the multi-disciplines of the physical, the biologi-
cal, and the applied sciences, the unifying concern
is long-term human survival. This bounty of in-
tellectual fare  is organized under five major cate-
gories—Statements of Concern, Our Endangered
World,  Manipulating  the  Environment, Energy
                        11

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and the Environment, Suggestions and Remedies.
All the contributors are distinguished.

McHale, John.  The  Ecological Context.  1970.
George  Braziller, Inc.,  New  York  (188  pp.,
$7.95).
   The author, director of the Center for Tntegra-
tive Studies in the State University of New York
at Binghamton, offers a sophisticated and techni-
cal treatment of  the  consequences  and  implica-
tions  of man's  interaction with the  environment.
Focusing primarily on the "life-support" systems
of the physical environment—energy  and mate-
rials—the discussion revolves around the inquiry:
What are the physical operational parameters for
the planet—the ecological or housekeeping rules
that govern human occupancy? Included are phys-
ical limits and contraints in the overall ecosystem,
relevant human (biological)  limits, and irrepara-
ble resource limits. Through graphic documents,
charts, depiction of ecological systems and cycles,
and verbal description and  analysis, the author
establishes the "state of  the art"  in ecological
terms, and furnishes  a good foundation for en-
vironmental  planning. A  "selected  reading" list
includes many  titles on specific technical aspects
of the environment.

Maddox, John. The Doomsday Syndrome. 1972.
McGraw-Hill Co., New York (291 pp., $2.95).
   This is another entry in the controversy about
growth, its possible limits, and the future.  Mr.
Maddox is the editor of  Nature, the  prestigious
British journal of science,  and this book was writ-
ten primarily to contravene the widely publicized
"Blueprint  for  Survival"  (Ecologist,  January
1972). That article argued that the world cannot
sustain  continuous expansion much longer  and
proposed a carefully controlled program of growth.
To Mr. Maddox, many contemporary scientists,
politicians, and other  critics active in the  environ-
mental movement  are  false prophets of doom.
Optimistic  about  the  present and  the future, he
marshals evidence to show  that the  environment
has .been  treated more badly  in  the past than
would now be  permissible, that the  extinction of
some wildlife species, though regrettable, poses
no warning for human survival, and that the scale
of man's disruption of the ecosphere is puny com-
pared to the dimensions  of natural phenomena.
The Malthusian projection of catastrophe by over
                      12

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population will be averted, he believes, because the
improved standard of living that accompanies in-
dustrialization, will in itself, lower  the fertility
rate of developing nations.

Meadows, Donella H.  and Dennis L.;  Randers,
Jorgen; and Behrens, William V. The Limits to
Growth. 1972. Universe Books, New York (207
pp., $1.25 paper).
   The assumption that growth is inevitable, neces-
sary, and  desirable,  long persuasive in Western
thinking, has recently, come under critical attack.
This book, like the earlier British study, A Blue-
print for Survival, examines the interrelationships
of basic factors that determine growth—popula-
tion, agricultural production, natural resources, in-
dustrial production,  and pollution.  It  concludes
that if population, pollution, and resource  con-
sumption continue  to increase rapidly, conditions
could  become  so disastrous that a sharp drop in
population  and  living  standards would result
around mid-next century. The study, done by  a
research team at Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology, was commissioned by The Club  of Rome
(a prestigious international group set-up in 1968
by  the Italian  economist and industrialist Dr.
Aurelio Peccei). Computer simulations on a glo-
bal scale were used to predict the  effects of future
interaction  of  the "survival  factors."  Although
some of the assumptions, and, consequently, some
of the conclusions have been criticized as unreal-
istic and "alarmist,"  it is virtually the only study
that deals with growth problems  far out  on the
space-time graph.

Metzger, H. Peter. The  Atomic  Establishment.
1972. Simon and Schuster, New York (318  pp.,
$8.95).
  This  is a muckraking critique  of  the Atomic
Energy Commission  (AEC)  and its legislative
overseer, the Joint  Committee  on Atomic Ener-
gy. The author believes that instead of  the intended
adversary relationship, the latter has  become the
apologist for the AEC which operates essentially
without review or restraint. Mr. Metzger,  a  bio-
chemist, charges that the AEC has  pursued in-
appropriate technological adventures,  has become
a secretive  agency, and  has been less concerned
with public safety than with the vigorous promo-
tion of nuclear power. The author seeks to  pro-
mote public questioning of present nuclear reactor
                        13

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construction, and of AEC's  behavior in other
areas. Among them are nuclear weapons acquisi-
tion and testing programs, effects of radioactive
fallout, uranium mine radon, waste storage irregu-
larities, and a range of derelict "atomic gadgets."

Montague, Katherine and Peter. Mercury (Sierra
Club Battlebook  Series).  1971.  Sierra Club, San
Francisco, Calif.  (158 pp., $2.25).
   This book discusses the pervasiveness of mer-
cury in the environment and its known and sus-
pected biological effects on man. The  enormous
amount of mercury, casually dumped into the en-
vironment,  has  produced many public  health
questions but no reassuring answers.  Case his-
tories involving toxic damage to the living and the
unborn are cited. Federal agencies (among them
the  USDA,  Interior, HEW) are criticized for
their past failure to set strict standards and  con-
trols on the discharge of mercury from industrial
and agricultural  sources,  and for failing to de-
velop sensitive monitoring procedures  to  detect
mercury in air  and water. The authors  believe
that the dangers of mercury pollution are so great
that an accountability system for mercury (and
other persistent toxic substances)  is needed. The
appendices include major industrial  uses of mer-
cury, a  State-by-State  pollution  survey, and  a
selected bibliography.

Neilands,  J. B.;  Orians,  Gordon  H.; Pfeiffer,
£.  W.; Yennema, Alje; Westing, Arthur H. Har-
vest of Death.  1972. The Free Press, Division of
the MacMillan Co., New York (304 pp., $10).
   The 1968 convention of the American Associa-
tion for  the  Advancement of Science established
a  "Scientists Committee  on  Chemical  and  Bio-
logical Warfare," to  assess U. S. policy and prac-
tice in Southeast Asia. This book is  the examina-
tion by five scientists (botanist, biochemist, zoolo-
gists)  of the military  uses  of chemical  agents
against the flora, fauna,  and the population of
that region.  The scientists' concern is  legitimate
here, since agents used, i.e., herbicides, for one,
are derived from basic  discoveries of science.
Whether  the complex  ecosystem  of  Vietnam,
Cambodia,  and Laos will recover, and  when, the
authors believe is a matter of scientific specula-
lation. An assessment of the effects of defoliation
on plant and animal life  require long-term, in-
tensive studies.
                      14

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Passell, Peter and Ross,  Leonard. The Retreat
from  Riches: Affluence and  Its Enemies.  1971.
The Viking Press, New York (185 pp., $6.95).
  Economics has moved onto center stage as the
controversy grows not only over whether a high
consumption society  is compatible with  a healthy
ecology, but, and perhaps more importantly, who
pays  for  industrial  growth  and its  consequent
pollution.
  The authors, two  Columbia University profes-
sors,  examine the axioms of growth and  anti-
growth, and come out, resoundingly, for growth.
Economic growth, they claim, is the best and per-
haps  the  only  way  to  cure  America's environ-
mental, sociological, and  economic ills. It  need
not degrade the environment, since pollution re-
sults from a perverse system of  incentives to in-
dustry. If industrial firms  were forced to pay for
their  abuses, poisoning the  air  and  fouling the
water, management would acquire technologies .to
clean up polluting sources.
  Mr. Passell and Mr. Ross  question projections
used in Limits to Growth (see  page  13). Their
answer  to the  "natural-limit" to  growth theory
(i.e.,  all resources are  finite) is that most new
technologies  and scientific  breakthroughs will
provide substitutes for scarce materials, produce
others by recycling,  and  unlock new sources  of
energy infinitely.

Reilly, William D., editor. The  Use of Land: A
Citizens' Policy Guide to  Urban Growth.  1973.
Thomas  Y. Crowell Co.,  New  York (318 pp.,
$3.95).
   "The Task Force on Land and Urban Growth"
was created by the Citizens' Advisory Committee
on Environmental Quality in the  summer of 1972.
Chaired by Laurance S. Rockefeller, its members
were  chosen from government, business, and aca-
demia. Their report  offers a  realistic appraisal of
what can be done  in the foreseeable  future to
influence  the development and redevelopment of
cities, suburbs,  and  remote  areas, to  achieve a
balance between the forces  of conservation and
the urgencies of  growth. An even-handed assess-
ment is given. The study is based on careful analy-
sis of major and recent land use reports, exami-
nation of State'and national legislation, enacted
and pending, and comprehensive field  studies of
Florida,  New  York, Colorado,  and  California.
Although the report reflects  a variety of  present
                        15

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discontents, the authors believe  that changes  in
planning and  control can  be achieved,  and will
result in a qualitatively different America. Recom-
mendations are made for  enactment and  imple-
mentation of national land-use policy, and legisla-
tion providing Federal recognition, guidance and
financial assistance to States that undertake the
reform of their land-use laws and institutions.

Ridgeway, James. The Last Play: The Struggle
to  Monopolize the  World's  Energy Resources.
1973. E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., New York (446
PP., $10).
   The thesis  here is that  the energy industry is
dominated by  an international cartel of giant com-
panies, most of them located in the United  States,
whose intent is to monopolize (and  exhaust) the
world's  energy resources for corporate profits.  A
"citizens" guide to the major energy institutions
provides organizational profiles and histories  of
over 40 corporations, the resources  they control,
how they  operate, to whom they sell, and the
cohesive  interlocking  relationships  that control
them. Mr. Ridgeway, a former contributing editor
of The  New Republic, and author of two  earlier
books on ecology and corporations, argues that
the politics of  the energy trusts are destructive not
only in  their  wasteful exploitation of natural re-
sources, but in their contribution to the current
"energy crisis" psychology. The  author  proposes
a scheme  to alleviate the energy crisis that would
require  the expropriation of this Nation's  energy
resources  by "democratic processes" and the dis-
mantling of the current apparatus through which
the energy cartels operate.  The arguments offered
are  controversial;  the  documentation  cited  is
impressive.

Rocks,  Lawence and  Runyon,  Richard P.  The
Energy Crisis. 1972. Crown Publishers, Inc., New
York (189pp., $2.95).
   Written in 1972, a year  before threats of ener-
gy shortages became dramatic, this  book  argues
with great urgency, that the  most profound issue
we face is  an impending power shortage. The
authors  believe energy capabilities and their con-
sequences will supercede all other environmental,
ecdnomic, and political issues before this decade
has passed.
   Contemporary energy sources  (oil, gas, coal,
and the atom), estimates of their probable dates
                      16

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of exhaustion,  and the consequent affect on our
standard of living are analyzed. Alternative power
systems are surveyed.
   In comparing  the energy situation hi various
nations, the authors find the USSR the only sur-
viving superstate;  China an energy pygmy; Can-
ada  relatively strong; Japan the most vulnerable
of nations;  and   Western  Europe  with  energy
needs  more  pressing  than  those  of the  United
States. And  until a  self-sufficient synthetic fuel
capacity or fusion power is developed, the authors
believe the  Middle  East  will  hold oil-needing
America,  Western Europe,  and Japan in thrall.


Rosenbaum,  Walter  A. The Politics of Environ-
mental Concern.  1973. Praeger Publishers, New
York (298 pp., $3.95),
   This is a political scientist's assessment of en-
vironmental concern as an increasingly persuasive
factor in deciding questions  of public policy. Few
policy  matters  before governmental bodies now
seem immune from  environmentalists, who have
identified  "battle  fronts," where political action
is imperative. Concurrently,  industry has begun to
invest substantial  capital and to show the stirrings
of environmental  sensibilities.
   Mr. Rosenbaum believes  that the Environmen-
tal Era in American politics is here.  He argues
for the development of a  comprehensive, long-
range planning process that will reflect  environ-
mental necessities at all major decision-making
levels, both private  and public, rather than the
current incremental  approach. He details the in-
terplay between various and competing  interests
and  the  role of  the Council on  Environmental
Quality and EPA.
   Major credit is given to organized environmen-
tal groups for  mobilizing public discontent with
environmental  degradation,   for proselytizing to
increase the political strength of these public in-
terests,  and  for bringing sustained  pressure on
government and the Congress to remedy or pre-
vent ecological ills. However, there is substantial
agreement among  environmentalists that  the Fed-
eral  Government  must become the Nation's com-
prehensive planner;  must establish priorities for
environmental protection, must calculate and cre-
ate the "trade-offs"  to be made, and must plan
resource  use  and  conservation several generations
ahead.
                        17

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Sarnoff, Paul. The New York Times Encyclopedic
Dictionary of the Environment. 1971. Quadrangle
Books, New  York,  Chicago (351 pp., $10).
   To think  about  and understand  the  environ-
ment involves an amalgam of information from
a diversity of fields—agronomy, biology, botany,
chemistry,  engineering, geology, geography, medi-
cine, metrology, oceanography, physics and atomic
physics,  zoology, business administration, eco-
nomics, political science, public health, and others
as well.  Each of these has a jargon of  its own.
This reference work is: first, a dictionary that pro-
vides understandable  definitions of environmental
terms; and secondly, an  encyclopedia  that ex-
plains and illustrates scientific  concepts,  tech-
nological problems and solutions, causes and  ef-
fects of environmental degradation, and the state-
of-the-art of  pollution control. Mr. Sarnoff's work
is illustrated with photographs, drawings, dia-
grams, and understandable data-tables. The alpha-
betical arrangement of terms makes specific refer-
ence  easy, but  for  the reader with time, perusal
straight through from A to Z is an education.

Simon, Anne W. No Island Is An Island: The
Ordeal of  An  Island. 1973.  Doubleday  & Co.,
Inc., Garden  City, N.  Y. (250 pp., $8.95).
   In  part, this  is  an unabashed celebration  of
"one of the Nation's  more blessed outposts" and
its beaches,  cliffs,  dunes, moors, marshes, and
ponds. It is  also  a clinical examination of the
land-use  controversy, focused here  on  a  100-
square-mile island off the  coast of Massachusetts.
On Martha's  Vineyard, in microcosm, the Ameri-
can dilemma is laid out plainly, how should land
be used?
   Mrs.  Simon  (a long-time Vineyard property-
owner) presents it all: the many  faceted struggle
of developers vs. environmentalists, summer resi-
dents vs. day-trippers vs.  islanders, township au-
thority vs. State  and  Federal government,  land-
owners vs. regulators. Much of the book is or-
ganized around three  questions: what is  the cost
of growth in  terms of the natural amenities; how
should growth  be  directed; and should  further
growth be  permitted within the fragile ecosystem
of an island.
   The author concludes  that if  Martha's  Vine-
yard is to be  saved from haphazard development,
it  (and the neighboring Nantucket and the Eliza-
beth Islands) must become a part of a  regional
                     18

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development in which the Federal presence is an
active  partner. Mrs. Simon believes that time is
running out  for her  beloved Vineyard, and  for
most  islands  off both  the  Atlantic and Pacific
coasts, unless ecologically sound regional  land-
use policies are imposed.

Small, George L. The Blue Whale.  1971. Colum-
bia University Press, New  York, London  (248
pp., $9.95).
  The blue whale is  the largest now-living crea-
ture and perhaps the  biggest that has ever graced
the earth (some cetologists believe that whales
have  existed for 50  million years). They have
been hunted with such rapacity and improvidence
that there is very real concern that the blue whale
(and other cetaceans) may soon become extinct.
It is to this biological disaster, and the evolution
of the  modern whaling industry that has made it
likely,  that  Dr.  Small  (professor  of Geography,
City University of New York)  addresses himself.
The whaling policies of various countries are de-
tailed and contrasted; ranging from Norway's ex-
ercise  of restrictive control  over  its whalers, to
Japan's consistent flouting of even the  most rudi-
mentary   conservation  practices.  Fortunately,
Amercan activities have been negligible for many
years  and ceased entirely in 1971. The failure of
the International Whaling Commission to restrain
the excessive slaughter of whales is treated in de-
tail. The author argues that if  all cetacean life is
not to be  destroyed,  the traditional concept of
"freedom of the seas" must be  put aside and sole
authority to harvest whales must be given to an
international body, perhaps under the U.N. This
book  is more than a natural history of the whale
and a  historical account of the whaling industry
and its economics. It poses hard questions; what
is the nature of a species—man—that knowingly
and without good reason  exterminates  another?
When  will modern man learn that he  is but one
form  of  life  among a multitude  of other forms,
each of which is  in some way  related  to and  de-
pendent on the others?

Stacks, John F. Stripping (Sierra Club  Battlebook
Series).  1972. San Francisco, Calif.  ( 140 pp.,
$2.25).
  The basic question raised is  whether strip min-
ing of coal is an economically and environmental-
ly sensible way to meet the Nation's energy needs.
                        19

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The answer given is an unequivocal "no," and the
why is explored in  chapters that describe the
doomsday  landscapes  and acid-polluted streams
left in the wake  of giant machines; the careless
dispossession of people; and  the  coincidence of
the development  of new  and vast earth-moving
technologies  with the  accelerating demand for
cheap coal that makes strip mining so  very profit-
able. It pays handsomely, the author points out,
because the  final costs of  production (the en-
vironmental  and social damages involved) are
not borne  by the coal strippers and  the  major
energy consumers, but randomly by the public.
   The ineffectuality of State laws in regulating
stripping and enforcing reclamation, the lack of
a strong Federal  regulatory program, the equivo-
cal role of the Department of Interior  in its leas-
ing of Federal land  and water  rights,  and the
sometimes  cynical ploy of industry in  advertising
idyllic  scenes of  reclamation are examined from
the conservationist's perspective.

Strong, Maurice F.  Who Speaks for  the Earth?
1973. W. W. Norton & Co., Inc., New York (171
pp., $6.95).
   During the U.N. Conference on the Human En-
vironment  (Stockholm, June  1972),   The  Inter-
national Institute for Environmental Affairs spon-
sored the  Distinguished Lecture Series. Men and
women of international reputations were invited
to speak their minds, free of national  interest or
political constraint. Each  lecture was  devoted to
a  major  environmental  issue,   including   some
which were treated only tangentially by the Con-
ference. This is a collection of those lectures.
   In  the initial lecture, Barbara  Ward presents
the conceptual and intellectual framework for the
Conference, putting the complexities  of the hu-
man environment in a broad social, political and
moral context and in  historical perspective.  Rene
Dubos believes that as we enter the global phase
of social evolution each of us will recognize two
countries, one's own and  the planet Earth. Thor
Heyerdahl  pleads the vulnerability of  the oceans
and man's  terrible abuse of them with toxic pol-
lutants. Gunnar  Mydral, warns that there are
limits to a growth whose component elements all
form an exponential curve, and of the hard choices
involved in reconciling the disparate needs  of the
developed  and  the developing countries. Carmen
Miro  interprets the interrelations between  popu-
                     20

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lation  variables and  other  social and  economic
factors. Lord Zuckerman argues that science and
technology are not  despoilers of the environment
but  that  all future environmental improvement
depends upon  the  wise application of- scientific
and  technological progress. In contrast, Aurelio
Peccei, more  pessimistically is haunted  by the
vision  of six or seven billion people crowding the
globe by  the year 2000 or thereabouts, and the
problem of settling them and  providing for their
needs.  All seven lectures, diverse as  they are, are
informed  by a humane concern for the predica-
ment of man.

Thibeau, C. E.; Taliaferror, P. W.; editors. Direc-
tory of Environmental Information Sources. 1972.
The National Foundation for Environmental Con-
trol, Inc.,  Boston (457 pp., $25).
  This reference work identifies and  describes
major  organizations, both governmental and pri-
vate, that are sources of reliable information on
the environment. Executive departments and  in-
dependent agencies  of the  Federal  Government
and  legislative committees  of  the Congress are
listed with descriptive material  on their functions
and  responsibilities,  and  major  personnel are
identified.  In  the   private sector,  information
sources are grouped as citizens organizations, pro-
fessional,  occupational and trade  associations,
with details of membership, primary interests and
purposes,  and  officers. Comparable information
is given on educational institutions  with signifi-
cant study programs  on the environment.  Addi-
tional information sources include bibliographies,
other directories,  conference and symposium pro-
ceedings,  documents,  and   reports.  Indices  and
topical cross references are provided.
  It is a  guide for all those concerned with the
application  of political, social, and technical  ef-
forts for the betterment of the  environment.

Toffler, Alvin, editor. The  Futurists. 1972.  Ran-
dom House, New York (322 pp., $3.95).
  Twenty-two essays, written by men and women
from nine different  countries, represent the multi-
ple viewpoints  current in the futurist movement.
Mr.  Toffler defines "futurists" as a growing school
of social critics and planners, philosophers, scien-
tists, and environmentalists concerned with the
alternatives facing man as  "the human race col-
lides with an  onrushing future." Some  of the
                       21

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essays focus on possible futures, others on proba-
ble ones,  and still  others on preferable futures.
Implicit to all is the belief that we can foresee some
of the alternatives and reach judgment as to where
they will lead us if adopted.
   The editor attempts no synthesis of views pre-
sented  or hard  conclusion   about  the  future.
Among the contributors are Margaret Mead, Ken-
neth Boulding, Buckminster Fuller, Erich Jantsch,
Arthur Clarke, Herman  Kahn, Paul Ehrich, Ar-
thur  Waskow,  Daniel Bell,  John McHale, and
Marshall McLuhan.
Vayda, Andrew P.,  editor. Environment and Cul-
tural Behavior: Ecological Studies in Cultural An-
thropology.  1969.  American  Museum  Source-
books in  Anthropology, Natural History  Press,
Garden  City, N. Y. (485 pp., $4.50).
   The purpose of the  23 anthropological  studies
collected here is to make cultural behavior in-
telligible by relating it to the  material  world in
which it  develops  or  occurs.  The  selection  of
articles is characterized by diversity in the demo-
graphic  and geographic areas,  types or levels of
economy, and the  variety of adaptive  behavior
described.
   This  book  ranges  in  discussion from  second
millenium agricultural  practices through the pot-
latch  system  of certain North American Indians
to the intrusion of smog as part of the ecosystem
hi Los Angeles. Dr. Vayda  is professor of An-
thropology at Columbia University. Most of the
articles have been published in scholarly journals,
and bibliographies follow each chapter.
Ward, Barbara  and   Dubos, Rene.  Only One
World:  The  Care and Maintenance  of a  Small
Planet.  1972. W. W.  Norton & Co., Inc., New
York (225 pp., $6).
   Although not an  official document, this  report
was commissioned  by the Secretary-General of
the U.N. Conference on the Human Environment
to provide factual background and a conceptual
framework for the  Conference. The  result of  a
unique experiment in international  collaboration,
it  represents  the opinions of  a committee of sci-
entific and intellectual  leaders from 58 countries.
They provide an accomplished profile of the world
and of the sciences, technologies, and social insti-
tutions that are having  an unprecedented effect on
the environment. The authors,  one a renowned
political economist  and the other a  microbiolo-
                     22

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gist, impose balance and stylistic coherence on the
frequently contrasting views of the relationships
between man and  his habitat. Analysis is made
of the two worlds that man inhabits, the biosphere
into which  he is born, the  technosphere  of his
creation, and the critical imbalance between them.

Whitten, Rep. Jamie L. That We May Live. 1966.
D.  Van Nostrand  Co.,  Inc.,  Princeton, N. J.,
Toronto, London (251 pp., $6.95).
  The author, a long-time Congressman and  now
chairman of the House of  Representatives'  Ap-
propriations  Subcommittee  for  Agriculture,  En-
vironmental and  Consumer Protection, discusses
his  concern  over what he feels are  unjustified
public fears  of  chemical  pesticides.  The  public
alarm over pesticides  and their use, he points  out,
started  with the unwarranted cranberry scare of
the 1950's and  was  greatly  heightened in 1962
by  the publication  of Rachel  Carson's  Silent
Spring.  Mr. Whitten became  involved when these
events prompted requests to his subcommittee for
millions of dollars  for further research on pesti-
cides  and pest control. A  result of this involve-
ment was Mr. Whitten's conviction that a defense
was needed of the pesticides' role in our environ-
ment. He became a defender.
  The book amply demonstrates that  pesticides
are to be credited  with remarkable advances in
agriculture, with all the attendant benefits to con-
temporary man.  Also  emphasized are  the tremen-
dous  benefits  pesticides have brought  in public
health (control  of  disease-carrying agents),  for-
estry, and household  management.
  The author addresses a number of controversial
issues regarding the effects of pesticides  on hu-
mans, fish and wildlife, and other "non-targeted"
forms of life.

Who's Who in Ecology. 1973.  Special Reports,
Inc., New York  (291  pp., $50).
  The result of two  years  of  planning and re-
search,  this directory  gives biographical informa-
tion on scientists and members of  the  academic
world whose main focus is on ecology and its re-
lated  disciplines. Included also  are  other indi-
viduals  from politics,  government, and public af-
fairs who have close  personal involvement with,
or have made outstanding contributions  to, the
improvement of the environment. This is the pre-
mier volume of a continuing series.
                       23

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Wood, Nancy. Clearcutting. 1971.  Sierra Club,
San Francisco, New York (151 pp., $2.75).
  This is another in the Sierra Club's Battlebook
Series, and its advocacy is  explicit in the  sub-
title, "The Deforestation of  America." Its  argu-
ment  is that the U.S.  Forest Service is involved
too often and too closely with the timber industry.
The industry  believes  clearcutting—total cutting
of all "harvestable trees" in any area—will en-
courage rapid growth of second, third  and fourth
crops  of trees.
  Mrs. Wood argues that clearcutting is  an  eco-
logical disaster. In its wake,  she contends, comes
land  erosion,  siltation and  sedimentation  of
streams,  the end of wildlife, and the  perversion
of  verdant mountains  to barren moon-scapes.
There is  also scientific opinion that disruption  of
age-old soil conditions in the forests could leave
the land barren in less than 200 years, and there-
fore unable to support merchantable saw-timber
for 5,000 or more years. A formidable prospect,
not only for the ecologist but  for the economist
as well.
  A major recommendation is that  the Forest
Service be placed under new leadership, new prin-
ciples, and a new department—a Department  of
Natural  Resources.  Other recommendations in-
clude imposition of immediate moratoriums on
clearcutting and timber exports, and the re-direc-
tion of forestry practices to conserve and perpetu-
ate the interdependent resources of trees, wild-
life, soil, water,  and air.

World Health Organization. Health Hazards  of
the Human Environment. 1972. World Health Or-
ganization, Geneva, Switzerland (387 pp., $11.25).
  The World Health Organization,  a U.N. affili-
ate representing  the  public  health  and  medical
professions of over  130 countries, has compiled
this wide-ranging survey of environmental  haz-
ards to human  health. The  human environment
is considered here  as  those  external physical,
chemical,  biological, and social  influences  that
have  a significant effect on the health and well-
being of both the individual and the communities
of people. Discussion ranges from the poor sani-
tary conditions  and communicable  diseases that
plague developing countries,  to the more  indirect
physical  and chemical  factors  and  psycho-social
influences  that effect  economically advanced and
industrialized nations.
                      24

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BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SELECTED  READING

  The following  are brief  reviews  of  titles in
EPA's first edition (1971) of An Environmental
Bibliography. This pamphlet is now out  of print.

American Association  for the  Advancement of
Science. Science jor Society. 1971. Commission
on  Science  Education,  (AAAS),  Washington,
D. C. ($1; 10 for $7.50)—A bibliography on the
application of  science and technology to human
problems  with emphasis  on  environment  and
population.
American Association  of University  Women. A
Resource  Guide  on Pollution  Control.  1970.
Washington, D.C. ($1.25). Delineates major en-
vironmental problems,  indicates the resources
available for correction and suggests citizen action
programs.
American Chemical  Society. Cleaning  Our  En-
vironment. The Chemical Basis for Action. 1969
and Supplement. 1971. Washington, D.C. (Orig-
inal Report, $2.75,  Supplement, $1). Report on
the current status of the science and technology
of environmental  improvement  which includes a
list of priority  recommendations for action.
Brodine,  Virginia.  Environmental   Workbooks.
1970-71. Scientists' Institute for Public Informa-
tion,  New York  (Single copy  $1;  set  of eight
titles, $5). A  series of  workbooks  on various
environmental  problems  designed  for  the  con-
cerned citizen but written by- SIPI scientists.
Caldwell,  Lynton Keith.  Environment: A  Chal-
lenge to Modern  Society. Natural History Press.
1970.  Doubleday  & Co.,   Garden  City,  N.Y.
($7.95). An assessment  of  the  new patterns of
individual and social action  needed if man is to
contend with increasing environmental problems.
Carson, Rachel L. Silent Spring. 1962. Houghton
Mifflin Co., Boston  ($5.95). Also, Fawcett Pub-
lication,  Inc.  ($.95).  Focuses  on the  damage
done by massive use of chemicals to control pests.
Commoner, Barry. Science  and Survival. 1966.
Viking  Press,  New York  ($4.50; paperback
$1.35). Presents a case against the unbridled ap-
plication of science  and technology  to  the ma-
nipulation of the environment and biological man.
Commoner,  Barry.  The Closing  Circle;  Man,
Nature  & Technology. 1971. Alfred A. Knopf,
Inc., New York ($6.95). Discusses the  environ-
mental crisis  as the  result of  man's  social mis-
management of  the  world's resources,  and  the
post-World War II development of  a  new  and
destructive technology.

                      25

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Congressional  Quarterly. Man's Control of the
Environment.  1970.  Washington, D.C. ($4). A
general survey of the major fields of environmen-
tal pollution but with emphasis on legislation.
Cooley, Richard A. & Wandesforde-Smith, Geof-
frey. Congress and the Environment. 1970. Uni-
versity  of  Washington  Press,  Seattle,  Wash.
($8.95). Examination of the public policy issues
inherent in efforts  to improve the quality of the
environment, and a  collection of case studies of
recent legislation.
Council on Environmental Quality: Report of the
Council on Environmental Quality.  (1970, 71,
72.) U.S. Government Printing Office, Washing-
ton,  D.C.  ($1.75).  The first,  second and  third
reports to the Congress on the state of the Na-
tion's environment.
Davies J.  Clarence. The Politics of Pollution.
1970. Pegasus,  Division of Western  Publishing
Co.,  Inc., New York ($6).  A discussion of the
political process and its role hi the shaping of
the Nation's environment.
DeBell, Garett. editor. The Environmental Hand-
book. 1970. Ballantine  Books,  Inc., New York
($.95). Prepared for the first national environ-
mental teach-in, this handbook focuses on major
problems  and  suggests programs for community
action.
Dorst, Jean. Before Nature Dies.  1970. Houghton
Mifflin Co., New York ($8.95). (Transl.  from
the French.) Examines  the impact that man has
had on wildlife throughout the world and his be-
lated efforts to correct the damage.
Dnbos,  Rene.  So  Human  an  Animal.  1969.
Charles Scribner's, Totowa,  N.J. ($6.95; paper-
back $2.25). A continuation of earlier explora-
tions into man's relation to  his  natural environ-
ment and his adaption to the new environments
created by scientific technology.
Enrich, Paul R. The Population  Bomb.  Sierra
Club/Ballantine Book, Inc., New  York ($.95).
Assessment of the impact of unbridled population
increase upon  a finite environment.
Esposito, John C. Vanishing Air.  1970. Grossman
Publishers, Inc.  Order from: Viking Press, New
York ($7.95 hard cover; $.95 paper). A Ralph
Nader study group report on air pollution.
Fanning, Odom. Opportunities in Environmental
Careers.  1971.  Universal Publishing and Distrib-
uting Corp., New York  ($5.75). Discusses disci-
plines which will be required in  the next decade
to solve problems of the environment.
Fortune Magazine. The Environment: A National
Mission  for the Seventies. 'Perennial  Library,

                    26

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 1970. Order from: Harper & Row, Scranton, Pa.
 ($1.25). A reprint of 13 articles devoted to the
 environment which were first published  in  For-
 tune magazine.
Graham, Frank, Jr.  Since Silent Spring. 1970.
Houghton Mifflm Co.,  New York  ($6.95). A
tribute to the late Rachel Carson and a case his-
tory of the continued controversy over the use of
pesticides.
Guggisberg,  C. A. W. Men and Wildlife. 1970.
Arco Publishing Co., Inc.,  New York ($12.50).
An examination of the historical impact man has
had on  wildlife, his sporadic efforts to conserve
and protect  endangered species, and a survey of
national parks  and nature reserves throughout the
world.
Hardin, Garret, introduction by. Science, Conflict
&  Society: Readings  from  Scientific American.
 1969. W. H. Freeman & Co., San Francisco, Calif.
 ($10 hard, $5.75 paper). Anthology of articles,
papers, reviews and letters  to the  editor basic to
an understanding of man and the complexities of
his environment.
Hawkins, Mary E.  Vital View of the Environ-
ment. 1971. National  Science Teachers Associa-
tion, Washington, D.C.  ($1.50). Brief presenta-
tion of the major environmental concepts  on
which educational programs can be built.
Jarett, Henry,  editor. Environmental Quality  in a
Growing Economy. 1966.  The Johns Hopkins
Press,  Baltimore, Md.  ($1.95).  Essays  by  12
distinguished scholars who examine the  current
state of economic research into the problems of
the environment and  assess the public attitudes
that affect social, political and private action.
Johnson, Huey D. editor. No Deposit—No  Re-
turn: Man & His Environment, A View Toward
Survival. 1970. Addison-Wesley Co., Inc., Read-
ing, Mass.  ($4.95 paper). An edited anthology
of papers presented at the 13th National Confer-
ence for UNESCO.
Krutch, Joseph Wood. The Measure  of Man.
 1954. Grosset  & Dunlap, Inc., New York ($1.95
paper). An appraisal  of the unique  quality of
man and his interaction with his environment.
Love, Sam. editor. Earth Tool Kit: A Field Man-
ual for  Environmental  Action.  1971.  Pocket
Books, New York ($1.25). Prepared by the or-
ganizers of  Earth  Day, a  presentation of grass
roots community action to combat the degradation
of the environment.
McHarg, Ian L. Design With Nature. Published
for the  American Museum of Natural  History
Press, New York ($19.95; paper $5.95). A re-

                      27

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capitulation of the pollution and destruction that
has gone on and of what must be done to create
a balances and self-renewing environment.
McPhee, John.  Encounters With  the Archdruid.
1971. Farrar, Straus, Giroux, New York ($6.95).
A three-part series reprinted  from-  The  New
Yorker on David Brower (long the voice of the
Sierra Club but now the  leader of Friends of the
Earth).
Mumford, Lewis. The Myth of the Machine: The
Pentagon  of  Power.  1970. Harcourt, Brace  &
World,  Inc.,  New York  ($12.95). A  persuasive
argument  that man  can  direct the environment
within which he lives and shape  technological
change to his and society's advantage, rather than
endure the consequences  of unbridled growth.
Nader, Ralph, introduction by. Water Wasteland.
Zwick, David & Benstock, Marcy. 1971. Gross-
man Publishers,  New York ($7.95). Nader Task
Force Report on Water Pollution.
Nash,  Roderick.  The American  Environment:
Readings in  the History  of Conservation.  1968.
Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., Reading, Mass.
($2.95  paper). A collection of 36 essays (1832
to  1967) providing a historical  perspective on
conservation and its changing concepts.
National Geographic Society.  As  We  Live and
Breathe: The Challenge of  Our Environment.
1971. National Geographic Society, Washington,
D.C.  ($4.25  plus  400  postage). Explores  the
reticulated web of life that sustains man,  assesses
the ecological damage that society has  created,
and,  presents the  programs,  technological and
individual, that are applicable now to reverse the
trend toward  environmental disaster.
National Wildlife Federation. Conservation Direc-
tory,  1971, Washington,  D.C. ($1.50). A direc-
tory of organizations, agencies  and individuals
(private and  public)  concerned with natural re-
source use and management and the preservation
of wildlife.
Nicholson, M.  The Environmental  Revolution.
1970.  McGraw-Hill Co., New York ($10).  A
scientific approach to the vast  ecological  changes
that have occurred in recent years.
Ottinger, Berry Ann. What Every  Woman Should
Know—And  Do—About  Pollution.  1970. BP
Press,  New York ($1.95). An examination  of
the. "mess"  society  has  created in the  global
household with practical suggestions on  how  to
reverse environmental degradation.
President's Council  on  Recreation  and  Natural
Beauty. From Sea to Shining Sea: A Report on
the American Environment—Our N&tural  Heri-
                  28

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tage.  1968.  U.S.  Government  Printing Office,
Washington, D.C.  ($2.50). Case histories on the
American environment which  examine the past,
the present and the possible future environment of
the Nation.
Revelle,  Roger  and Hans  Landsberg—editors.
America's Changing Environment. 1970. Hough-
ton Mifflin Co., New York ($6.95). A collection
of 19 papers which explores the causes, dimen-
sions and possible  solutions for the distortions in
today's environment.
Saltonstall, Richard,  Jr. Your Environment and
What You Can Do About It.  1970. Walker & Co.,
New York ($6.95).  A review of environmental
problems with guidelines  for citizens action pro-
grams.
Sanders, Howard and Josephs,  Melvin. Chemistry
and the Environment. 1967. American Chemical
Society, Washington, D.C.  ($5.00). An assess-
ment of  the  environment  from  the perspective
of  chemistry's  contribution  to understanding
the solid earth, the oceans,  the atmosphere.
Sax,  Joseph L. Introduction by Senator George
McGovern. Defending  the Environment.  1971.
Alfred  A. Knopf, Inc.,  New  York ($6.95). Dis-
cusses  how to take  environmental  controversies
into court, use of established procedures and the
creative application of basic legal principles.
Scientific American. The Biosphere.  1970. W.  H.
Freeman & Co., San Francisco, Calif.  Volume 223,
#3, September 1970 ($1). This is  the full text
and the original illustrations from Scientific Amer-
ican's annual  single issue.
Scientific  American. Man  and the Ecosphere.
1971. W. H. Freeman & Co.,  San Francisco, Calif.
($5.75). A collection that analyses the state of
the ecosphere and its interaction with man.
Shephard, Paul,  editor. The Subversive Science:
Essays  Toward  on Ecology  of   Man.  1969.
Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston  ($5.95). A broad
perspective on man  and  his relation  to his en-
vironment by a group of noted scientists.
Wilson, Carroll L. Man's Impact on  the Global
Environment: Assessment & Recommendation for
Action. 1971. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
($3). A report from a conference of distinguished
scientists who examined the status of governmen-
tal and nongovernmental preparations for the 1972
U.N. Conference on the  Human Environment.
Wilson, Thomas  W., Jr.  International Environ-
mental Action: A Global Survey. 1971. Dunellen,
Inc.,  New York  ($12.50).  An assessment  of
worldwide response  to the  environmental  crisis
from political, social, economic, and  legal aspects.

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