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solid waste management
June 1975
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solid waste management
available Information materials
This catalog (SW-58.24) was prepared
by the Technical Information Staff,
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
u.s. environmental protection agency
June 1975
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U,S. Environments! Protection Agency
An environmental protection publication (SW-58.24) in the solid waste management series
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foreword
The importance of collecting and making available the information pertaining to solid-waste-related
research, demonstration projects, and other activities was emphasized by the specific authorization
contained in Section 204(b) of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, Public Law 89-272. The present booklet
lists publications and other available educational materials that have been collected or published by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in response to this directive.
—ARSEN J. DARNAY
Deputy Assistant Administrator
for Solid Waste Management
in
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contents
introduction , 1
office of solid waste management publications 2
national technical information service reports 19
exhibits 32
films 32
training programs 34
information kits 34
miscellaneous .34
author index 35
subject index 39
IV
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solid waste management
available information materials
The solid waste management information materials available from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) are from various sources. There are EPA publications and other materials
reporting on results of the research, development, and demonstrations authorized by the Solid Waste
Disposal Act of 1965, as amended. This far-reaching Federal program of grants and contracts has
generated solid-waste-related projects in many fields. Reports from the grantees and contractors are
published by EPA as soon as available. Presentations and policy statements by key personnel and results
of technical investigations conducted by EPA staff are printed by EPA, or submitted to professional
journals so that the reports will reach the most appropriate audience. In the latter case, reprints are
frequently purchased and distributed by EPA. Conference proceedings, findings of various commissions
and study groups, and other collateral literature are also made available as supplies permit. Certain of
the items have been grouped in various combinations in special information kits.
In addition to the titles currently available from EPA or the Superintendent of Documents, over
200 reports on grant and contract activities relating to solid waste management are available for purchase
from the Department of Commerce National Technical Information Service (NTIS). These reports are
issued through NTIS to make the data most readily available to the technical community. Author and
subject indexes, including both the OSWMP publications and the NTIS reports, are in the back of this
catalog.
In gathering and publishing this information on solid waste management, EPA hopes to assist
those engaged in the task of finding ways to manage the Nation's burden of solid wastes while at the same
time contributing to efforts for resource and energy conservation and land protection. The Agency
hopes, too, that by indicating the breadth of the solid waste management field, additional people may be
attracted to it—as investigators, as engineers, as managers—wherever their talents fit. And, most
important, we hope that the American citizen will see in the publications and other materials available
here evidence of progress made and of the need for highest-priority effort in response to the solid-waste-
related legislation enacted by the Congress.
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oswmp publications
oswmp
order nos.*
1. Abstracts; selected patents on refuse handling facilities for buildings. J. A. Connolly, ed. Public
Health Service Publication No. 1793. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968.
[320 p.]
2. Applying technology to unmet needs; report on the solid waste problem. Appendix v.5.
Technology and the American economy; report of the Commission. National Commission on
Technology, Automation, and Economic Progress. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1966. 12 p.
8. Composting developments in the United States. J. S. Wiley and O. W. Kochtitzky. Compost
Science, 6(2):5-9, Summer 1965. [Reprinted, Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1968.] 5 p.
9. Concept and design of the joint U.S. Public Health Service-Tennessee Valley Authority
Composting Project, Johnson City, Tennessee. J. S. Wiley, F. E. Gartrell, and H. G. Smith.
[Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 14 p.
11. Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills; an interim report. County of
Los Angeles, Department of County Engineer and Engineering-Science, Inc. Cincinnati, U.S.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [267 p.]
14. Evaluation of the Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator; operation test report, August 1968.
E. R. Kaiser. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [116 p.]
15. Experimental composting research and development; joint U.S. Public Health Service-Tennessee
Valley Authority Composting Project, Johnson City, Tenn. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1968. 6 p. [Flyer.]
21. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 1—12,
November 1956 to September 1961. J. S. Wiley, ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1969. 308 p.
22. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 13-20,
December 1961 to May 1964. J. S. Wiley, ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1969. 274 p.
26. The national solid wastes survey; an interim report. R. J. Black, A. J. Muhich, A. J. Klee, H. L.
Hickman, Jr., and R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, [1968]. 53 p.
28. Preliminary data analysis; 1968 national survey of community solid waste practices. A. J.
Muhich, A. J. Klee, and P. W. Britton. Public Health Service Publication No. 1867.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 483 p.
30. Proceedings; the Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste Management for Metropolitan
Washington, July 19-20, 1967. L. Weaver, ed. Public Health Service Publication No. 1729.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office. 194 p.
* See order form for OSWMP publications in back of catalog.
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33. Quad-City solid wastes project; an interim report, June 1, 1966 to May 31, 1967. Cincinnati, U.S.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [181 p.)
35. Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1954-1955. L. Weaver. Public Health
Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. B. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1956.
32 p.
36. Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1956-1957. E. R. Williams. Public
Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. C. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1958. 48 p.
37. Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1958-1959. E. R. Williams and R. J.
Black. Public Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. D. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1961. 73 p.
38. Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1960-1961. rev. ed. R. J. Black and
P. L. Davis. Public Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. E. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1966. 69 p.
39. Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1962-1963. R. J. Black, J. B. Wheeler,
and W. G. Henderson. Public Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. F. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1966. !34 p.
40. Refuse and litter control in recreation areas. L. Weaver. Public Works, 98(4):126-128, 160, Apr.
1967. Reprinted, Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967. 4 p.
44. The role of packaging in solid waste management, 1966 to 1976. A. Darnay and W. E. Franklin.
Public Health Service Publication No. 1855. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1969. 205 p.
47. Sanitary landfill facts. 2d ed. T. J. Sorg and H. L. Hickman, Jr. Public Health Service
Publication No. 1792. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 30 p.
53. Solid waste handling in metropolitan areas. [W. E. Gilbertson, R. J. Black, L. E. Crane, and P. L.
Davis.] Public Health Service Publication No. 1554. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1966. 41 p.
55. Solid waste management/composting; European activity and American potential. S. A. Hart.
Public Health Service Publication No. 1826. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1968. 40 p.
65. A study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man crews; final report.
Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. Public Health Service Publication No. 1892. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1969. 175 p.
77. Solid waste—a natural resource? R. P. Lonergan and E. M. Herson. In Man and the quality of
his environment; western resources papers, 1967. J. E. Flack and M. C. Shipley, eds.
[Boulder], University of Colorado Press, 1968. p. 107-120.
79. Solid wastes handling. R. J. Black. //; Environmental aspects of the hospital, v.2. Supportive
departments. Public Health Service Publication No. 930-C-16. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1967. p. 20-27. Reprinted as "Solid wastes handling [in hospitals]."
Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 9 p.
85. Summaries of solid waste management contracts, July 1, 1965-June 30, 1970. H. H. Connolly,
comp. Public Health Service Publication No. 1897. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1969. 46 p.
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86. An accounting system for sanitary landfill operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 2007. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 18 p.
89. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 21-31,
August 1964 to December 1967. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare, 1969. 387 p. [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]
91. Conversion of organic solid wastes into yeast; an economic evaluation. F. H. Meller. Public
Health Service Publication No. 1909. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.
173 p.
93. Observations of continental European solid waste management practices. M. E. Jensen. Public
Health Service Publication No. 1880. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969.
46 p.
94. Master plan for solid waste collection and disposal—tri-parish metropolitan area of New Orleans;
final report on a solid waste management demonstration. Albert Switzer & Associates, Inc.,
and Greenleaf/Telesca. Public Health Service Publication No. 1932. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1969. [359 p.]
95. Dismantling railroad freight cars; a study of improved methods with application to other
demolition problems. D. M. Butler and W. M. Graham. Public Health Service Publication
No. 1850. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 32 p.
101. Let DARE make your solid-waste decisions, A. J. Klee. American City, 85(2): 100-103, Feb.
1970.
104. Industrial and agricultural solid wastes and problems involved in their disposal. T. J. Sorg.
Public Health News (New Jersey), 51(3):67-69, Mar. 1970.
105. Kenilworth model sanitary landfill; interim report on a solid waste demonstration project,
December 1967-January 1969. District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary Engineering.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. [127 p.]
106. Automobile scrapping processes and needs for Maryland; a final report on a solid waste
demonstration. Management Technology, Inc. Public Health Service Publication No. 2027.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 64 p.
HO. Current concepts in the disposal of solid wastes. J. C. Kennedy. Journal of Environmental
Health, 31(2):149-153, Sept.-Oct. 1968.
111. An accounting system for incinerator operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 2032. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 17 p.
113. Planning and the national solid waste survey. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Journal of Environmental
Health, 32(4):402-405, Jan.-Feb. 1970.
115. Composting dewatered sewage sludge. G. L. Shell and J. L. Boyd. Public Health Service
Publication No. 1936. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 28 p.
116. Progress in solid waste management and needed developments. L. W. Lefke. In Proceedings; 8th
Annual Environmental and Water Resources Engineering Conference, Nashville, June 5-6,
1969. Technical Report No. 20. Vanderbilt University, p. 107-118. Reprinted, [Cincinnati],
U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 16 p.
117. Proposals for a refuse disposal system in Oakland County, Michigan; final report on a solid waste
demonstration grant project. Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd. Public Health Service Publication
No. 1960. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 146 p.
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118. Comprehensive study of solid waste disposal in Cascade County, Montana; final report on a
solid waste demonstration. Thomas, Dean & Hoskins, Inc. Public Health Service Publication
No. 2002. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 188 p.
122. Municipal-scale incinerator design and operation. Formerly titled "Incinerator guidelines—1969."
J. DeMarco, D. J. Keller, J. Leckman, and J. L. Newton. Public Health Service Publication
No. 2012. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 98 p.
123. Mathematical modeling of solid waste collection policies, v. 1-2. M. M. Truitt, J. C. Liebman,
and C. W. Kruse. Public Health Service Publication No. 2030. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1970. [311 p.]
124. Developing a state solid waste management plan. R. O. Toftner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 2031. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 50 p.
125. Louisville, Ky.-Ind. metropolitan region solid waste disposal study; interim report on a solid waste
demonstration project. v.l. Jefferson County, Kentucky. University of Louisville.
[Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 205 p.
127. Solid waste management; abstracts and excerpts from the literature, v.l—2. C. G. Golueke.
Public Health Service Publication .No. 2038. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1970. 147 p.
128. Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; first and second annual reports. C. G.
Golueke and P. H. McGauhey. Public Health Service Publication No. 2039. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1970. 245 p.
130. An appraisal of marine disposal of solid wastes off the west coast: a preliminary review and
results of a survey. C. G. Gunnerson. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare, 1970. 32 p.
131. America the beautiful; a collection of the nation's trashiest humor. A. Hamilton, comp. Public
Health Service Publication No. 2048. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 3970.
31 p.
133. Sample weights in solid waste composition studies. A. J. Klee and D. Carruth. Journal of the
Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers,
96(SA4):945-954, Aug. 1970.
134. Needs for chemical research in solid waste management. A. W. Breidenbach and E. P. Floyd.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 28 p.
136. Systeins analysis of regional solid waste handling. N. Morse and E. W. Roth. Public Health
Service Publication No. 2065. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. [294 p.]
137. DISCUS—a solid-waste management game. A. J. Klee. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience
Electronics, GE-8(3): 125-129, July 1970.
142. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 32,
April 1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 41 p.
[Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]
143. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 33,
August 1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969.
27 p. [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]
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144. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 34,
December 1968. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969.
29 p. [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]
145. International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 35, May
1969. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 46 p.
[Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.]
146. Decentralized solid waste collection facilities. R. M. Clark and B. P. Helms. Journal of the
Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers,
96(SA5): 1035-1043, Oct. 1970.
147. Mathematical analysis of solid waste collection. D. H. Marks and J. C. Liebman. Public Health
Service Publication No. 2104. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 196 p.
153. An accounting system for solid waste collection. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 2033. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 24 p.
154. Partial oxidation of solid organic wastes. W. W. Shuster. Public Health Service Publication
No. 2133. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 99 p.
156. Closing open dumps. D. R. Brunner, S. J. Hubbard, D. J. Keller, and J. L. Newton.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-61ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 19 p.
164. Intergovernmental approaches to solid waste management. R. O. Toftner and R. M. Clark.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-47ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 19 p.
165. Summaries of solid waste intramural research and development projects. A. W. Breidenbach,
comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-14r. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1971. 24 p.
166. An information system for solid waste operation. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1971. 3 p.
167. Solid waste management in recreational forest areas. C. S. Spooner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 1991. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 96 p.
169. American composting concepts. P. H. McGauhey. Public Health Service Publication No. 2023.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 23 p.
170. The role of nonpackaging paper in solid waste management, 1966 to 1976. W. E. Franklin and A.
Darnay. Public Health Service Publication No. 2040. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1971. 76 p.
171. The Solid Waste Disposal Act, Title II of Public Law 89-272-89th Congress, S,306-October 20,
1965; as amended by the Resource Recovery Act of 1970, Public Law 91-512-91st Congress,
H.R.11833-October 26, 1970; by Public Law 93-14-93rd Congress, H.R.5446-April 9, 1973 (To
extend the amended Solid Waste Disposal Act—for one year); and by Public Law 93-611-93rd
Congress, H.R.l6045-January 2, 1975 (To amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act to authorize
appropriations for fiscal year 1975). Environmental Protection Publication SW-1.3.
[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management
Programs, 1975. 14 p.
172. Proceedings; 1st National Conference on Packaging Wastes, Sept. 22-24, 1969. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-9rg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 242 p.
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176. An accounting system for solid waste management in small communities. E. R. Zausner. Public
Health Service Publication No. 2035. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
18 p.
177. Recovery and utilization of municipal solid waste; a summary of available cost and performance
characteristics of unit processes and systems. N. L. Drobny, H. E. Hull, and R. F. Testin.
Public Health Service Publication No. 1908. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 118 p.
182. An accounting system for transfer station operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service
Publication No. 2034. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 20 p.
187. Rubber reuse and solid waste management, pt.1-2. R. J. Pettigrew, F. H. Roninger, W. J.
Markiewicz, and M. J. Gransky. [Public Health Service Publication No. 2124.] Washington,
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 120 p.
188. Financing solid waste management in small communities. E. R. Zausner. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-57ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 14 p.
189. Sanitary landfill ... an answer to a community problem; a route to a community asset, rev. ed.
[R. J. Black.] Public Health Service Publication No. 1012. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1970. [8 p.]
190. Summaries of solid waste research and training grants—1970. L. W. Lefke, A. G. Keene, R. A.
Chapman, and H. Johnson, comps. Public Health Service Publication No. 1596. Washington,
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 134 p. Addendum through July 31, 1971. 8 p.
[Insert.]
192. Ocean disposal of barge-delivered liquid and solid wastes from U.S. coastal cities. D. D. Smith
and R. P. Brown. [Public Health Service Publication No. 2113.] Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1971. 119 p.
194. Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning Agencies, Sept. 9-11, 1969, St. Louis,
Mo. L. A. Gluckman, ed. Public Health Service Publication No. 2093. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1971. 92 p.
199. Feasibility study of the disposal of polyethylene plastic waste. K. Gutfreund. Public Health
Service Publication No. 2010. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971: 45 p.
200. Seven incinerators; evaluation, discussions, and authors' closure. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-51ts.lj. [Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 40 p.] (Includes
discussions and authors' closure for "An evaluation of seven incinerators" by W. C. Achinger
and L. E. Daniels.)
203. Available information materials; solid waste management. Office of Solid Waste Management
Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-58.24. Washington, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, June 1975. 48 p.
212. Composting of municipal solid wastes in the United States. A. W. Breidenbach et al.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-47r. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 103 p.
216, 1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region 1. Connecticut, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont. A. J. Muhich, A. J. Klee, and C. R.
Hampel. Public Health Service Publication No. 1866. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1969. 47 p.
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217. 1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region 2, v.l. Delaware, New Jersey,
New York. A. J. Munich, A. J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel. Public Health Service Publication
No. 1866. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 161 p.
218. 1968 National survey of community solid waste practices; region 2, v.2. Pennsylvania. A. J.
Munich, A. J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel. Public Health Service Publication No. 1866.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 409 p.
222. New chemical concepts for utilization of waste plastics. M. E. Banks, W. D. Lusk, and R. S.
Ottinger. [Public Health Service Publication No. 2125.] Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1971. 129 p.
223. Hydrogeology of solid waste disposal sites in northeastern Illinois; a final report on a solid waste
demonstration grant project. G. M. Hughes, R. A. Landon, and R. N. Farvolden.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-12d. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 154 p.
228. Cost of residential solid waste collection. R. M. Clark, B. L. Grupenhoff, G. A. Garland, and
A. J. Klee. Journal of the Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society
of Civil Engineers, 97(SA5):563-568, Oct. 1971.
229. Agricultural benefits and environmental changes resulting from the use of digested sewage sludge
on field crops; an interim report on a solid waste demonstration project. T. D. Hinesly, O. C.
Braids, and J. E. Molina. Environmental Protection Publication SW-30d. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1971. 62 p.
230. Recommended standards for sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation and model
sanitary landfill operation agreement. National Solid Wastes Management Association and
Federal solid waste management program. Environmental Protection Publication SW-86ts.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 23 p.
231. Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1964. J. A. Connolly and S. E. Stainback,
Public Health Service Publication No. 91-1964, Suppl. G. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1971. 280 p.
232. Solid waste management demonstration grant projects—1971; for grants awarded during the
period June 1, 1966-June 30, 1971. C. E. Sponagle and P. L. Stump. Public Health Service
Publication No. 1821. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 247 p.
235. Methods of predicting solid waste characteristics. G. B. Boyd and M. B. Hawkins.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-23c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1971. 28 p.
236. Design of a water-disposable glass packaging container, pt.1-3. S. F. Hulbert, C. C. Fain, and
M. J. Eitel. Environmental Protection Publication SW-llrg. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1971. 60 p.
238. Clean and green solid waste system in Alabama is widely copied. M. D. Bogue. Waste Age,
l(5):4-6,10-11, 36, Sept.-Oct. 1970. Reprinted, [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1971. 8 p.
239. Guidelines for local governments on solid waste management. National Association of Counties
Research Foundation. Public Health Service Publication No. 2084. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1971. 184 p.
242. A study of residential solid waste generated in low-income areas. G. R. Davidson, Jr.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-83ts. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1972. 14 p.
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243. The role of packaging in solid waste management—1966 to 1976. I. Kiefer. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-5c.2. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
[28 p.] [Condensation.]
244. Disposal of polymer solid wastes by primary polymer producers and plastics fabricators. C. W.
Marynowski. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34c. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1972. 92 p.
245. Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 1. A. A. Fungaroli. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-12rg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [200 p.J
246. Packaging industry and government. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Waste Age, 2(6):12-14, Nov.-Dec.
1971.
248. Solid waste management in residential complexes. Greenleaf/Telesca. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-35c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [419 p.]
249. Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; the planning phase.
Henningson, Durham & Richardson, Inc., and Veenstra & Kimm. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-14d. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [321 p.]
251. Fleet selection for solid waste collection systems. R. M. Clark and B. P. Helms. Journal of the
Sanitary Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 97(SA1):
71-78, Feb. 1972.
252. High-pressure compaction and baling of solid waste; final report on a solid waste management
demonstration grant K. W. Wolf and C. H. Sosnovsky. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-32d. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 163 p.
253. Digest of selected local solid waste management ordinances. M. D. Powell, B. P. Fiedelman, and
M. J. Roe. Environmental Protection Publication SW-38c. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1972. 376 p.
255. Creating a countywide solid waste management system; the case study of Humphreys County,
Tennessee. M. A. Kruth, D. H. Booth, and D. L. Yates. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-110. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 15 p.
256. Air classification of solid wastes; performance of experimental units and potential applications for
solid waste reclamation. R. A. Boettcher. Environmental Protection Publication SW-30c.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 73 p.
257. Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1965. J. A. Connolly and S. E. Stainback.
Public Health Service Publication No. 91-1965, Suppl. H. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1972. 216 p.
258. Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1966. Franklin Institute Research
Laboratories. Public Health Service Publication No. 91-1966, Suppl. I. Washington, U.S.
Govern ment Printing Office, 1972. 197 p.
259. Committee guide; study of solid waste management. League of Women Voters Publication No.
699. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, Nov. 1971. 8 p.
261. Design of consumer containers for re-use or disposal; proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources
Conference, [Columbus], May 12-13, 1971. G. F. Sachsel, comp. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-3p. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 330 p.
262. Satellite vehicle waste collection systems. J. E. Delaney. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-82ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 14 p. [Condensation.]
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264. Energy recovery from waste; solid waste as supplementary fuel in power plant boilers. R. A.
Lowe. Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d.ii. Washington, U.S. Government
Printing Office, 1973. 24 p.
265. 5000 Dumps. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.4. [Cincinnati],
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 7 p. [Film narrative.]
266. The third pollution. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c. 1.
[Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 9 p. (Film narrative.]
267. The stuff we throw away. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.7.
(Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]
268. Recycling. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.3. [Cincinnati],
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]
269. What's new in solid waste management? Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-39c.8. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 14 p. [Film
narrative.]
270. In the bag. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.5. [Cincinnati],
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 6 p. [Film narrative.]
271. Burn, bury, or what? Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.2.
[Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 8 p. [Film narrative.]
272. The green box. Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-39c.6. [Cincin-
nati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 7 p. [Film narrative.]
273. Recycling our resources. E. McGough. American Youth, 13(1): 18-21, Mar.-Apr. 1972.
274. New technologies in solid waste management. C. J. Dial. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-82. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 18 p.
275. The automobile cycle; an environmental and resource reclamation problem. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Federal solid waste management program. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-80ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 115 p.
277. Aerial and automotive reconnaissance of solid waste disposal sites in a rural county. T. J. Sorg.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-32ts. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1972. 12 p.
278. Industrial solid waste problems. T. J. Sorg. AIChESymposium Series, 68(122):l-5, 1972.
279. Solid waste management glossary. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Federal solid waste
management program. Environmental Protection Publication SW-108ts. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1972, 20 p.
280. Mission 5000; a citizens' solid waste management project. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-I15ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [16 p.]
281. Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature—1967. Franklin Institute Research
Laboratories. Public Health Service Publication No. 91-1967, Suppl. J. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1972. 404 p.
2.83. Computer planning for efficient solid waste collection. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-5rg.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [24 p.]
[Condensation.]
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284. Design criteria for solid waste management in recreational areas. H. R. Little. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-91ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 68 p.
286. Recycling; assessment and prospects for success. A. Darnay. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-81. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 14 p.
287. Sanitary landfill design and operation. D. R. Brunner and D. J. Keller. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-65ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 59 p.
288. Sanitary landfill; one part earth to four parts refuse. L. A. Haug and R. J- Black. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-6. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.
[22 p.] [Film narrative.]
290. Let's dump the dump; the ABC's of solid waste management. Greenfield, Mass., Channing L. Bete
Co., Inc., 1971. 16 p.
291. Clean and green. [Clanton, Ala., Chilton County, 1972.] [4 p.]
292. Solid waste management in high-rise dwellings; a condensation. I. Kiefer. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-27c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 19 p.
293. Salvage markets for materials in solid wastes. A. Darnay and W. E. Franklin. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-29c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 187 p.
294. Information retrieval services of EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. J. A.
Connolly. Environmental Protection Publication SW-91.2. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. 12 p.
295. Production of fungal protein from cellulose and waste cellulosics. C. J. Rogers, P. V. Scarpino, E,
Coleman, D. F. Spino, and T. C. Purcell Environmental Science & Technology, 6(8):715-719,
Aug. 1972.
296. Recycle; in search of new policies for resource recovery. League of Women Voters Publication
No. 132. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, 1972. 39 p.
297. Aerobic treatment of livestock wastes. D. D. Jones, D. L. Day, and A. C. Dale. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-16rg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 55 p.
298. A study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with multi-man crews; a
condensation. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication SW-9c. 1. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1972. 32 p.
299. The processing and recovery of Jon Thomas—cool cat! T. Marceleno. Washington, U.S. Govern-
ment Printing Office, 1972. [34 p.]
300. Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v.l. Summary,
conclusions, and recommendations. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-34d.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [263 p.]
301. Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v.3. Research on
systems development. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d.3.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [229 p.]
302, Current focus; solid waste—it won't go away. rev. ed. League of Women Voters Publication No.
675. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, Nov. 1971. 12 p.
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303. Community guide; solid waste management, the national issues, rev. ed. League of Women
Voters Publication No. 134. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, Nov.
1972. [4 p.]
304. Solid waste management; an overview. W. D. Ruckelshaus. Public Management, 54(10):2-4,
Oct. 1972.
305. Role of sanitary landfiJHng in solid waste management. R. J. Black. Waste Age,
3(5):28-30,32,54-57, Sept.-Oct. 1972.
307. Resource recovery, recycling, and reuse. In Annual report to the President and to the Council on
Environmental Quality for the year ending May 1972. Citizens' Advisory Committee on
Environmental Quality. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, [1972]. p.33-41.
Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [10 p.]
308. Glass and aluminum recovery in recycling operations. W. Herbert and W. A. Flower. Public
Works, 102(8):70, 110, 112, Aug. 1971. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1972. 2 p.
309. Waste processing complex emphasizes recycling. W. Herbert and W. A. Flower. Public Works,
102(6)-.78-81, June 1971. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1972. 4 p.
310. Improving manual solid waste separation studies. P. W. Britton. Journal of the Sanitary
Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers, 98(SA5):717-730,
Oct. 1972.
311. Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings of a Symposium, Cincinnati, May 4-6, 1971.
P. L. Stump, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-4p. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1972, 256 p.
312. Automatic amino acid analyses for determining the amount and quality of protein in fungal protein
and in other protein sources. W. E. Coleman. In Symposium; seed proteins. G. E. Inglett,
ed. Westport, Conn., Avi Publishing Company, Inc., 1972. p.277-283.
313. Waste not, want not. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [9 x 13 in. poster.]
314. Don't leave it all to the experts; the citizen's role in environmental decision making. Washington,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Nov. 1972. 20 p.
315. What the people want you to do with solid waste. L. Sharpe. APWA Reporter, 40(l):8-9, Jan.
1973. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 2 p.
316. Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics; a summary report. [Arthur D. Little, Inc.]
Environmental Protection Publication SW-41c, 1. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 18 p.
317. Patent abstracts; United States solid waste management, 1945-1969. J. A. Connolly and S. E.
Radinsky, comps. Public Health Service Publication No. 1793, Suppl. A. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1973. 452 p.
318. A litter bit is not enough. T. F. Williams. [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973.] 11 p.
319. Patent abstracts; international solid waste management, 1945-1969. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-78c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 437 p.
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322. Ecology of compost; a public involvement project. D. L. Dindal. Syracuse, State University of
New York, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, 1972. 12 p.
323. Regional management of solid wastes; a planning study. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-80.1. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 7 p.
[Condensation.]
324. Making polyethylene more disposable. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-14c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 24 p. [Condensation.]
325. Oregon's bottle bill; the first six months. E. Claussen. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-109. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 14 p.
326. The beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations. T. H. Bingham and P. F.
Mulligan. [Research Triangle Institute.] Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.
190 p.
327. The States' roles in solid waste management; a task force report. T. Anderson et al. Lexington,
Council of State Governments, 1973. 58 p. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, July 1973.
330. Solid waste; disposal, reuse present major problems. Congressional Quarterly; Weekly Report,
31(17):1019-1023, Apr. 28, 1973.
332. Environmental impacts of packaging. E. L. Claussen. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 10 p.
333. The salvage industry; what it is—how it works. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-29c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 32 p. [Condensation.]
334. The Federal resource recovery demonstration program. S. Hale. Professional Engineer,
48(6):28-31, June 1973.
335. There lived a wicked dragon. M. Finan. Environmental Protection Publication SW-105.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 30 p.
336. Developing a local and regional solid waste management plan. R. O. Toftner. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-101ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 29 p.
337. Solid waste transfer stations; a state-of-the-art report on systems incorporating highway
transportation, T. A. Hegdahl. Environmental Protection Publication SW-99. (See PB-
213 511.) Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 160 p.
339. Sanitary landfilling; report on a joint conference sponsored by the National Solid Waste
Management Association and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Kansas City,
Missouri, Nov. 14—15, 1972. J. E. Delaney, comp. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-5p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 190 p.
340. Who's on the clean-up crew? R. J. Black. In Polymers and ecological problems. J. Guillet, ed.
New York, Plenum Publishing Corporation, 1973. p. 181-184.
341. Solid waste recycling projects; a national directory. P. Hansen, comp. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-45. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 284 p.
342. Improving rural solid waste management practices. T. L. Goldberg, Environmental Protection
Publication SW-107. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 83 p.
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343. The national buyer's guide to recycled paper. S. Dane, comp. Washington, Environmental
Educators, Inc., 1973. 208 p.
344. Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-117. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 12 p.
345. Disposal of hazardous wastes; report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office
of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-115.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 110 p.
346. The private sector in solid waste management; a profile of its resources and contribution to
collection and disposal, v.1-2. Applied Management Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-5Id. 1. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [239 p.]
347. Shaving solid waste collection costs. G. A. Garland and B. R. Weddle. Nation's Cities,
12(2):13-14, 16-17, Feb. 1974.
348. Scrap tires as artificial reefs. R. B. Stone, C. C. Buchanan, and F. W. Steimle, Jr. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-119. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 33 p.
349. Films tell the solid waste management story, rev. ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1974. 6 p. [Film list.]
350. Resource recovery; the Federal perspective. J. H. Skinner. Waste Age, 5(1): 12,14,54, Jan.-Feb.
1974.
352. Resource recovery and source reduction; first report to Congress. 3d ed. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-118. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 61 p.
353. Resource recovery and source reduction; second report to Congress. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-118. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 112 p.
354. Solving the abandoned car problem in small communities. W. T. Dehn. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-70ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 23 p.
355. Bird/aircraft hazards at airports near solid waste disposal sites. G. R. Davidson, T. V. DeGeare,
T. J. Sorg, and R. M. Clark. Environmental Protection Publication SW-116. Washington,
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 30 p.
356. Heuristic routing for solid waste collection vehicles. K. A. Shuster and D. A. Schur.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-113. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1974. 45 p.
357. Statement; Samuel Hale, Jr., Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste Management
Programs, before the Subcommittee on the Environment, Committee on Commerce, United
States Senate, June 11, 1973 [and] June 22, 1973. S. Hale, Jr. [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974.] 43 p.
358. Statement of Arsen J. Darnay, Jr., Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste
Management Programs, Environmental Protection Agency, before the Subcommittee on
Minerals, Materials and Fuels, Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, United States Senate,
Washington, D.C., October 30, 1973. A. Darnay. [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974.] 20 p.
359. EPA press briefing on solid waste management and energy, February 8, 1974. [Cincinnati, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 6 p., attachments.
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360. Energy and the environment. T. F. Williams. Presented before the Plenary Session Panel
"Counterpoint" at 20th Annual Meeting of Keep America Beautiful, Inc., New York, Dec. 5-6,
1973. [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 6 p.
364. Environmental protection, residuals management, and resources—the future is now. A. Darnay.
Presented at Annual Meeting of National Packaging Association, Boca Raton, Fla., Mar. 12-16,
1974. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 23 p.
368. Gaseous emissions from municipal incinerators. A. A. Carotti and R. A. Smith. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-18c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 61 p.
369. Size reduction of solid waste; an overview. J. F. Mank. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-117. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 8 p.
370. User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste
management, v.l. Environmental Protection Publication SW-57c. Washington, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 99 p.
371. User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste
management. v.2. Environmental Protection Publication SW-58c. Washington, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 49 p.
372. Illinois report probes citizens' attitudes on refuse problems. Solid Wastes Management,
17(2):19,51-53,66,70,72, Feb. 1974; 17(3):26,74,84-85, Mar. 1974. Reprinted, [Washington],
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 6 p.
373. Basic issues on solid waste management affecting county government. National Association of
Counties. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1973. 40 p.
374. Users' guide to the solid waste information retrieval system thesaurus. J. A. Connolly, V. P.
Fuschini, and S. S. Radinsky, comps. Environmental Protection Publication SW-104.01.
Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 56 p.
375. Library holdings—nonperiodical; Federal solid waste management program, November 1972. R.
Gill and M. Bolly. Environmental Protection Publication SW-123. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1974. 150 p.
376. Pesticides and pesticide containers; regulations for acceptance and recommended procedures for
disposal and storage. Federal Register, 39(85):15235-15241, May I, 1974.
377. State solid waste management and resource recovery incentives act. In 1973 Suggested state
legislation, v.32. Lexington, Ky., The Council of State Governments, 1973. Reprinted,
[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. p.63-76.
378. Energy conservation through improved solid waste management. R. A. Lowe, M. Loube, and
F. A. Smith. Environmental Protection Publication SW-125. Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 39 p.
379. Environmental protection—the people's choice. T. F. Williams. Presented at 2d Northeast
Regional Conference of the National Audubon Society, Mohonk Mountain House, New Paltz,
N.Y., June 8, 1974. [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 17 p.
380. Waste management—private and public perspectives. A. Darnay. Presented at National Solid
Waste Management Association's International Waste Equipment and Technology Exposition,
Houston, June 25, 1974. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 15 p.
381. Separating paper at the waste source for recycling. S. Lingle. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-128. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 16 p.
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382. Incentives for tire recycling and reuse. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-32c.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 28 p.
383. Our effluent society; the States and sofrd waste management. The Council of State Governments.
[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 41 p.
384. Sanitary landfill; a bibliography. R. L. Steiner and R. Kantz. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-4rg.l. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 34 p.
385. Thermal processing and land disposal of solid waste; guidelines. Federal Register,
39(158):29327-29338, Aug. 14, 1974.
386. Mechanics of style; a guide for Solid Waste Management authors, secretaries, grantees, and
contractors. Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-7.2. Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 20 p.
387. Refuse as a supplementary fuel for power plants—November 1973 through March 1974; interim
progress report. G. W. Sutterfield. Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d.iii.
[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1974. 25 p.
388. The demonstration of systems for recovering materials and energy from solid waste. J. H.
Skinner. Presented at National Materials Conservation Symposium, National Bureau of
Standards, Gaithersburg, Md., Apr. 29, 1974. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 20 p.
389. COLMIS; a new solid waste management information system. Washington, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 6 p. [Flyer.]
390. Decision-makers guide in solid waste management. R. A. Colonna and C. McLaren, comps.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-127. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1974. 157 p.
391. Disposal of sewage sludge into a sanitary landfill. R. Stone, conip. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-71d. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 418 p.
392. Malgastar causa necesidad. Spanish version of "Waste not, want not." Washington, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. [9 x 13 in. poster.]
394. EPA publishes decision-makers guide for sanitation officials. R. A. Colonna. Solid Wastes
Management, 17(7):30,34,37, July 1974.
395. The Federal solid waste management programme; a review and prognosis. H. L. Hickman, Jr.
Presented at 76th Annual Conference of Institute of Solid Wastes Management, Scarborough,
England, June 18-21, 1974. London, Institute of Solid Wastes Management, 1974. 14 p.
396. U.S. finds a rich resource; the nation's trash pile. U.S. News & World Report, 76(19):63-64,66,
May 13, 1974.
397. Trends in wastepaper exports and their effects on domestic markets. F. L. Smith, Jr.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-I32. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 17 p.
398. Pesticides; EPA proposal on disposal and storage. Federal Register, 39(200):36847-36950, Oct. 15,
1974.
399. Federal program for hazardous waste management. J. P. Lehman. Waste Age, 5(6):6-7,66-68,
Sept. 1974.
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400. The economics of separate refuse collection. R, P. Stearns and R. H. Davis. Waste Age,
5(3):6-8,10-11,14-15,130-131, May/June 1974.
401. Markets and technology for recovering energy from solid waste. S. J. Levy. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-130. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
31 p.
402. Refuse shredders at EPA's Gainesville, Florida, experimental composting plant. J. A. Ruf.
Waste Age, 5(3):58,60-63,66, May/June 1974.
404. Debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities. C. G. Gunnerson. Journal of the
Environmental Engineering Division, Proceedings of the American Society of Civil Engineers,
99(EE3):229-243, June 1973.
405. Resource and environmental profile analysis of nine beverage container alternatives; final report.
v.1-2. R. G. Hunt, W. E. Franklin, R. O. Welch, J. A. Cross, and A. E. Woodall.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-91c. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 178 p.
406. Hospital wastes. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication SW-129. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1974. 36 p.
407. Fuel conservation in solid waste management. K. A. Shuster. Virginia Town & City, 9(12):7-9,
Dec. 1974.
408. Recovering resources from solid waste using wet-processing; EPA's Franklin, Ohio, demonstration
project. D. G. Arella. Environmental Protection Publication SW-47d. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1974. 26 p.
409. A five-stage improvement process for solid waste collection systems. K. A. Shuster.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-131. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1974. 38 p.
410. A legislative history of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, together with a section-by-
section index. U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Public Works. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1974. 503 p.
411. Dumps; a potential threat to our groundwater supplies. B. R. Weddle and G. A. Garland. Nation's
Cities, 12(10):21-22,24-25,42, Oct. 1974.
412. St. Louis/Union Electric refuse firing demonstration air pollution test report. L. J. Shannon,
M. P. Schrag, F. I. Honea, and D. Bendersky. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 107 p.
413. Resource recovery and land protection; an environmental imperative. A. Darnay. Presented at
Spring Meeting, Paperboard Group, American Paper Institute, Greenbrier, W.Va., May 21,
1974. New York, American Paper Institute, 1974. 7 p.
415. Where have all the toxic chemicals gone? W. H. Walker. Ground Water, 11(2):11-20, Mar.-Apr.
1973. Reprinted, [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 10 p.
416. Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl Stores program. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, [1974]. 3 p.
417. Pyrolysis of municipal solid waste. S. J. Levy. Waste Age, 5(7): 17-20, Oct. 1974.
418. One private plant treats oil, chemical residues in Denmark. P. Henriksen. Solid Wastes
Management, 17(5):77-78,139, May 1974.
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419. Suggested solid waste management ordinance for local government. National Association of
Counties Research Foundation. Environmental Protection Publication SW-73d. [Washington],
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 23 p.
420. Paper recycling in the United States. S. A. Lingle. Waste-Age, 5(8):6-8,10, Nov. 1974.
421. There's gold in your garbage. B. Peterson. Scouting, 62(7):47-48,84-86, Oct. 1974. Reprinted,
[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 4 p.
422. Packaging source reduction; can industry and government cooperate? E. L. Claussen.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-136. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 17 p.
423. Problem-solving in solid waste management through Federal-local cooperation; eight case studies.
B. R. Weddle and M. Madison. Environmental Protection Publication SW-134. Washington,
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974. 40 p.
424. Mas alia de la lata de basura. Spanish version of "Beyond the trash can." G. Allison, S. Mooser,
and P. Taylor. Environmental Protection Publication SW-7tg. [Washington], U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 23 p.
426. Health and safety in the solid waste industry. J. A. Cimino. American Journal of Public Health,
65(1):38^6, Jan. 1975.
427. Incineration in hazardous waste management. A. C. Scurlock, A. W. Lindsey, T. Fields, Jr., and
D. R. Huber. Environmental Protection Publication SW-141. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1975. 104 p.
428. Liners for land disposal sites; an assessment. A. J. Geswein. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-137. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 66 p.
429. Hazardous waste management facilities in the United States. A. J. Hayes. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-146. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec.
1974. 39 p.
430. Habia una vez un dragon malvado. Spanish version of "Once there lived a wicked dragon." M.
Finan. Environmental Protection Publication SW-105s. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1975. 31 p.
431. Baltimore demonstrates gas pyrolysis; resource recovery from solid waste. D. B. Sussman.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-75d.i. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
1975. 24 p.
432. A nationwide survey of resource recovery activities. R. E. Hopper. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-142. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Jan. 1975. 74 p.
433. Solid waste shredding and shredder selection. H. W. Rogers and S. J. Hitte. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-140. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nov.
1974. 87 p.
434. Residential collection systems, v. 1. Report summary. ACT Systems, Inc. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-97c.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 106 p.
437. An evaluation of the effectiveness and costs of regulatory and fiscal policy instruments on product
packaging. T. H. Bingham et al. Environmental Protection Publication SW-74c. Cincinnati, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 30! p.
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ntis reports
The following solid waste management publications are available from the National Technical
Information Service, U.S. Department of Commerce, Springfield, Virginia 22161. The price for a
microfiche film copy of each is S2.25; see back of catalog for paper copy prices.
ntis
order nos.*
PB-187 286 Special studies for incinerators for the government of the District of Columbia,
Department, of Sanitary Engineering. Day & Zimmerman. U.S. Department of Health,
Education, and Welfare, 1968. 80 p.
PB-187 299 Combustion power unit-400 (CPU-400); a technical abstract. Combustion Power
Company, Inc. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 15 p.
PB-187 301 Land reclamation project; an interim report. Harza Engineering Company. U.S.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [338 p.]
PB-187 306 Rail transport of solid wastes—a feasibility study; interim report, phase one. American
Public Works Association Research Foundation. U.S. Department of Health, Education,
and Welfare, 1969. 168 p.
PB-187 311 Gainesville compost plant; an interim report. Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion
Authority, Inc. U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 345 p.
PB-187 712 Technical-economic study of solid waste disposal needs and practices. Combustion
Engineering, Inc. Public Health Service Publication No. 1886. Washington, U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1969. [705 p.]
PB-196 148 Special studies of a sanitary landfill. R. C. Merz and R. Stone. U.S. Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. [222 p.]
PB-197 623 Collection, reduction, and disposal of solid waste in high-rise multifamily dwellings.
National Academy of Sciences—National Research Council. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1971. 169 p.
PB-197 931 Satellite vehicle systems for solid waste collection; evaluation and application. R. A.
Perkins. Environmental Protection Publication SW-82ts. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1971. 243 p.
PB-201 205 Codification of solid waste management authority in Kentucky; appendix A. Kentucky
State Department of Health. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 175 p.
PB-202 202 Organic pesticides and pesticide containers; a study of their decontamination and
combustion. R. C. Putnam, F. Ellison, R. Protzmann, and J. Hilovsky. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-21c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 175 p.
PB-208 154 Mathematical modeling and computer simulation for designing municipal refuse
collection and haul services. S. Wersan, J. Quon, and A. Charnes. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-6rg. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 446 p.
* See order form for NTIS reports in back of catalog.
19
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PB-208 674 Evaluation, extraction, and recycling of certain solid waste components. Great Lakes
Research Institute. Environmental Protection Publication SW-35d. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. 110 p.
PB-209 001 Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills. v.2. A. A. Fungaroli.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-12rg, 1. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1971. 216 p.
PB-209 002 Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v.3. A. A. Fungaroli.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-12rg.2. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1971. 169 p.
PB-212 398 Rural storage and collection container systems. Humboldt County and Garretson-
Elmendorf-Zinov-Reibin. Environmental Protection Publication SW-4!d.i. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 146 p.
PB-212 589 Evaluation of a multi-functional machine for use in sanitary landfill operations in
sparsely populated areas. V. L. Hammond. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-39d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 209 p.
PB-212 590 The use of bags for solid waste storage and collection. Ralph Stone and Company,
Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-42d. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1972. 264 p.
PB-212 729 A study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v.l. General
report. Battelle Memorial Institute. Environmental Protection Publication SW-40d.l.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 178 p.
PB-212 730 A study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization. v.2-7.
Aluminum, copper, lead, zinc, nickel and stainless steel, and precious metal reports.
Battelle Memorial Institute. Environmental Protection Publication SW-40d.2. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 608 p.
PB-212 731 A study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v.8-9. Paper and
textile reports. Battelle Memorial Institute. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-4Qd.3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 342 p.
PB-213 133 Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v.2.
Observations of local practices. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-34d.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [301 p.]
PB-213 135 Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v.4. Selection
and design of solid waste systems. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-34d.4. 'U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [189 p.]
PB-213 308 Management information for solid waste collection. R. M. Clark. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. 18 p.
PB-213 311 Analysis of Federal programs affecting solid waste generation and recycling. SCS
Engineers. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 153 p.
PB-213 340 Metropolitan housewives' attitudes toward solid waste disposal. National Analysts, Inc.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [114 p.]
PB-213 341 The beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations. T. H. Bingham and P. F.
Mulligan. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 201 p.
20
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PB-213 378 Corrosion studies in municipal incinerators. Battelle Columbus Laboratories. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 120 p.
PB-213 394 Urban solid waste management; economic case study. R. M. Clark. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 21 p.
PB-213 482 An investment decision model for control technology. R. M. Clark. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. 20 p.
PB-213 487 Landfill decomposition gases; an annotated bibliography. J. A. Geyer. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 28 p.
PB-213 488 An investigation of the biodegradability of packaging plastics. J. E. Potts, R. A.
Clendinning, and W. B. Ackart. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 80 p.
PB-213 511 Solid waste transfer stations; a state-of-the-art report on systems incorporating highway
transportation. T. A. Hegdahl. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 160 p.
PB-213 577 Identification of opportunities for increased recycling of ferrous solid waste. W. J.
Regan, R. W. James, and T. J. McLeer. [Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel, Inc.]
Environmental Protection Publication SW-45d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1972. 391 p.
PB-213 646 Solid waste and fiber recovery demonstration plant for the City of Franklin, Ohio; an
interim report. N. T. Neff. [A. M. Kinney, Inc.] Environmental Protection Publication
SW-47d.i. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 83 p.
PB-213 697 Ski mountain; a conceptual feasibility study in solid waste management. Metropolitan
Sanitary District of Greater Chicago. Environmental Protection Publication S\V-46d.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [324 p.]
PB-214 045 Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics. J. Milgrom. [Arthur D. Little, Inc.]
Environmental Protection Publication SW-41c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1972. 316 p.
PB-214 166 Generation of steam from solid wastes. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., and City of Lynn,
Massachusetts. Environmental Protection Publication SW-49d. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. 139 p.
PB-214 960 Baling solid waste to conserve sanitary landfill space; a feasibility study. City of San
Diego. Environmental Protection Publication SW-44d. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 89 p.
PB-215 722 Cellulose degradation in composting. R. Regan et al. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 153 p.
PB-218 672 Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills; final report on a solid
waste management demonstration grant. County of Los Angeles, Department of County
Engineer, and Engineering-Science, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-19d.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [511 p.]
PB-219 019 Solid waste management in the food processing industry. A. M. Katsuyama, N. A.
Olson, R. L. Quirk, and W. A. Mercer. [National Canners Association.] Environmental
Protection Publication SW-42c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 304 p.
PB-219 372 Analysis of airport solid wastes and collection systems; San Francisco International
Airport. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-48d. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 137 p.
21
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PB-220 316 Solid waste as fuel for power plants. Homer & Shifrin, Inc. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-36d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 146 p.
PB-220 479 Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing. D. F. Bender, M. L.
Peterson, and H. Stierli. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 203 p.
PB-221 095 Investigation of corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades. L. R. Fleischer.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [44 p.]
PB-221 171 Biological conversion of animal wastes to nutrients. B. F. Miller. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. [82 p.]
PB-221 172 Preparation and evaluation of activated carbon produced from municipal refuse. M. K.
Stevenson, J. O. Leckie, and R. Eliassen. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
[150 p.]
PB-221 239 Acid hydrolysis of cellulose in refuse to sugar and its fermentation to alcohol. A. O.
Converse, H. E. Grethlein, S. Karandikar, and S. Kuhrtz. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. [113 p.]
PB-221 464-Set A study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods. Booz
Allen Applied Research, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 3 v.
PB-221 465 v.l. Purpose, scope, approach and principal findings of study. [408 p.]
PB-221 466 v.2. [544 p.]
PB-221 467 v.3. [460 p.]
PB-221 621 A recirculating waste system for swine units. J. R. Miner. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. [247 p.]
PB-221 681 Study of the economics of hospital solid waste systems. R. G. Bond et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [329 p.]
PB-221 684 Municipal waste disposal by shipborne incineration arid sea disposal of residues. M. W.
First et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [603 p.]
PB-221 731 Incineration of bulky refuse without prior shredding. E. R. Kaiser, D. Kasner, and C.
Zimmer. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 91 p..
PB-221 851 First annual progress report on a study of corrosion in municipal incinerators. D. A.
Vaughan and P. D. Miller. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 34 p.
PB-221 876 Utilization of bark waste. R. A. Currier and M. L. Laver. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 185 p.
PB-221 877 Radiolytic hydrolysis of cellulose. J. A. Kelly. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. [26 p.]
PB-221 879 An analysis of the abandoned automobile problem. Booz Allen Applied Research, Inc.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [196 p.]
PB-222 000 Design and simulation of equalization basins. R. Smith, R. G. Eilers, and E. D. Hall.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [58 p.]
PB-222 001 Combustion products from the incineration of plastics. E. A. Boettner, G. L. Ball, and
B. Weiss. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [155 p.]
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PB-222 015 Pyrolysis of solid municipal wastes. D. A. Hoffman. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. [78 p.]
PB-222 018 Hospital solid waste disposal in community facilities. A. F- Iglar and R. G. Bond.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [350 p.]
PB-222 029 A mathematical model for aerobic digestion. R. Smith, R. G. Eilers, and E. D. Hall.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 50 p.
PB-222 031 Mathematical model for post aeration. R. Smith, R. G. Eilers, and E. D. Hall. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 44 p.
PB-222 051 Wood waste reuse in controlled release pesticides. G. G. Allan et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [97 p.]
PB-222 052 Use of domestic waste glass for urban paving. W. R. Matisch, D. E. Day, and B. G.
Wixson. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [107 p.]
PB-222 113 Biological consequences of plant residue decomposition in soil. W. C. Snyder, Z. A.
Patrick, and A. R. Weinhold. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 136 p.
PB-222 115 The nitrite-accelerated photochemical degradation of cellulose as a pretreatment for
microbiological conversion to protein. A. Fookson and G. Frohnsdorff. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [102 p.]
PB-222 148 The effect of processing poultry manure on disease agents. J. R. Howes, C. F. Hall,
and W. F. Krueger. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [36 p.]
PB-222 160 Microbiological studies of compost plant dust. D. H. Armstrong and M. L. Peterson.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [20 p.]
PB-222 165 Tentative procedure analyzing pesticide residues in solid waste. R. A. Carnes. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [23 p.]
PB-222 337 Survival of pathogens in animal manure disposal. S. L. Diesch, B. S. Pomeroy, and
E. R. Allred. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [134 p.]
PB-222 354 Study of utilization and disposal of lime sludges containing phosphates. R. E.
Opferkuch et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 119 p.
PB-222 396 Thermophilic aerobic digestion of organic solid wastes. J. F. Andrews and K.
Kambhu. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [83 p.]
PB-222 419 Studies on modifications of solid industrial wastes. C. S. Grove and C. M. Antoni.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. (179 p.]
PB-222 422 Composted municipal refuse as a soil amendment. C. C. Hortenstine and D. F.
Rothwell. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [67 p.]
PB-222 454 Photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid and liquid wastes. C. G. Golueke et
al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [94 p.]
PB-222 458 A study of incinerator residue analysis of water soluble components. R. J. Schoenberger
and P. W. Purdom. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [316 p.]
PB-222 467 Problems and opportunities in management of combustible solid wastes. International
Research and Technology Corporation. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
[517 p.]
23
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PB-222 468 Preventing landfill leachate contamination of water. E. J, Wren, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. [120 p.]
PB-222 588 Marketability of recovered and clarified incinerator residue in the New York
metropolitan area. Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-53d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 188 p.
PB-222 694 Study of the technical and economic feasibility of a hydrogenation process for utilization
of waste rubber. R. H. Wolk and C. A, Battista. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. [155 p.]
PB-222 709 Rail transport of solid wastes. American Public Works Association. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-22d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 148 p.
PB-222 710 Gainesville compost plant; final report on a solid waste management
demonstration, v.1-2. Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion Authority, Inc., and
Environmental Engineering, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-21d. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 237 p.
PB-222 995 Systems simulation and solid waste; a case study. R. M. Clark and J. I. Gillean. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [40 p.]
PB-223 034 Economic and technological impediments to recycling obsolete ferrous solid waste. O. W.
Albrecht and R. G. McDermott. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
[62 p.]
PB-223 162 Pneumo-slurry pipeline collection and removal of municipal solid waste. I. Zandi. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [128 p.]
PB-223 343 Sludge conditioning using sulfur dioxide and low pressure for production of organic feed
concentrate. M. S. Weinberg et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
90 p.
PB-223 345 A study of institutional solid wastes. J. C. Burchinal and L. P. Wallace. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 245 p.
PB-223 430 Poultry manure disposal by plow-furrow-cover. H. E. Besley. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 202 p.
PB-223 625 Utilization of fibrous wastes as sources of nutrients. J. M. Leatherwood. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 16 p.
PB-223 626 Design and control of incinerators, v.1-2. A. F. Sarofim et al. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 299 p.
PB-223 638 Public attitudes towards hazardous waste disposal facilities. L. L. Lackey et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 181 p.
PB-223 651 Incineration of plastics found in municipal wastes. R. W. Heimberg et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 246 p.
PB-223 740 The metallurgical upgrading of automotive scrap steel. O. N. Carlson and F. A.
Schmidt. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 90 p.
PB-223 873 Single-cell proteins from cellulosic wastes. C. D. Callihan and C. E. Dunlap. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 89 p.
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PB-224 579-Set Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of
hazardous waste. R. S, Ottinger et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
16 v.
PB-224 580 v.l. Summary report. 210 p.
PB-224 581 v.2. Toxicologic summary. 244 p.
PB-224 582 v.3. Ultimate incineration. 251 p.
PB-224 583 v.4. Miscellaneous waste treatment processes. 149 p.
PB-224 584 v.5. Pesticides and cyanide compounds. 146 p.
PB-224 585 v.6. Mercury, arsenic, chromium, and cadmium compounds. 207 p.
PB-224 586 v.l. Propellants, explosives, and chemical warfare materiel. 266 p.
PB-224 587 v.8. Miscellaneous inorganic and organic compounds. 79 p.
PB-224 588 v.9. Radioactive materials. 168 p.
PB-224 589 v.10. Organic compounds. 316 p.
PB-224 590 v.ll. Organic compounds (continued). 247 p.
PB-224 591 v.l2. Inorganic compounds. 330 p.
PB-224 592 v.l3. Inorganic compounds (continued). 290 p.
PB-224 593 v.l4. Summary of waste origins. 160 p.
PB-224 594 v.l5. Research and development plans. 109 p.
PB-224 595 v.l6. References. 424 p.
PB-224 820 Reuse of solid waste from water-softening processes. R. D. Nelson and E. Vey. [IIT
Research Institute.] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 108 p.
PB-224 996 Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; second annual report. VTN,
Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-57d. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 172 p.
PB-225 020 Socio-economic factors affecting demand for municipal collection of household refuse.
University of Chicago. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 58 p.
PB-225 159 Buffalo's crusher facility for bulky solid waste. Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-60d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. 79 p.
PB-225 160 Dairy waste management. C. L. Senn. Environmental Protection Publication SW-58d.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 152 p.
PB-225 164 Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites. Arthur
D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-46c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 85 p.
25
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PB-225 291 Tampa's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-52c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 93 p.
PB-225 296 Forsyth County's solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-50c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 88 p.
PB-225 299 Houston's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-51c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 79 p.
PB-225 332 Public regulation concept in solid waste management; a feasibility study. Applied
Management Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-54d. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 114 p.
PB-225 333 Solid waste management in the drug industry. D. M. Shilesky, K. W. Krause, and R. J.
Sullivan. Environmental Protection Publication SW-44c. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 102 p.
PB-225 346 Building an amphitheater and coasting ramp of municipal solid waste, v.1-2. W. M.
Beck, Jr. Environmental Protection Publication SW-52d.of. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 265 p.
PB-225 360-Set Sewage sludge disposal in a sanitary iandfil!. Ralph Stone and Company, Inc.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-61d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. 2 v.
PB-225 361 v.l. Summary and conclusions. 22 p.
PB-225 362 v.2. Description of study and technical data. 376 p.
PB-226 042 Solid waste management study for the Port of Tacoma. Kaiser Engineers. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-55d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 107 p.
PB-226 099 Developing a local and regional solid waste management plan. R. O. Toftner.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-101ts.l. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 35 p.
PB-226 420 Solid waste management in the industrial chemical industry. K. Holcombe and P. W.
Kalika. Environmental Protection Publication SW-33c. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1973. 225 p.
PB-226 551 Size-reduction equipment for municipal solid waste, v.l. Procedures for evaluating and
comparing equipment. v.2. Inventory of equipment. Midwest Research Institute.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-53c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. 126 p.
PB-227 005 Costs of hauling and land spreading of domestic sewage treatment plant sludge. W. F.
McMichael. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 19 p.
PB-227 075 A model for optimal design and operation of solid waste transfer stations. H. J. Yaffe.
National Science Foundation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 118 p.
PB-227 708 Hospital solid waste; an annotated bibliography. R. D. Singer et al. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 205 p.
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PB-228 119 Waste wood and bulky refuse disposal; St. Louis facilities. City of St. Louis, Missouri.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-63d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1974. 50 p.
PB-228 161 Baltimore's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 110 p.
PB-229 220 A case study and business analysis of the scrap industry. Resource Planning Institute. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 129 p.
PB-229 246 Chemical conversion of wood and cellulosic wastes. F. Shafizadeh et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 60 p.
PB-229 256 Feasibility of hydraulic transport and treatment of ground household refuse through sewers.
A. R. Guzdar and S. S. Rhee. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 222 p.
PB-229 727 Can Federal procurement practices be used to reduce solid wastes? J. Milgrom. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 232 p.
PB-229 816 Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap
iron and steel, v.l. J. F. Foran et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
207 p.
PB-229 817 Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap
iron and steel, v.2. J. F. Foran et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
100 p.
PB-229 901 An infrared spectral sensor for refuse sorting. P. F. Winkler. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 81 p.
PB-230 379 Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study. EMCON Associates. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-65d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 224 p.
PB-231 176 Reclamation of energy from organic waste. J. T. Pfeffer. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 143 p.
PB-231 203 Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing; four additional
methods. N. Ulmer. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 51 p.
PB-231 309 Optimization models for regional public systems. K. S, Vasan. National Science
Foundation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 137 p.
PB-232 559 Scrap rubber tire utilization in road dressings. B. G. Brand. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 51 p.
PB-233 178 The chemical conversion of solid wastes to useful products. J. F. Barbour, R. R. Groner,
and V. H. Freed. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 168 p.
PB-233 360 Optimal configuration of a regional solid waste management system. A. A. Pathak.
National Science Foundation and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 209 p.
PB-233 441 Dairy manure management methods. Washington State University. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-67d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 128 p.
PB-233 630 Program for the management of hazardous wastes, v.l. Battelle Memorial Institute.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 385 p.
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PB-233 631 Program for the management of hazardous wastes, v.2. Battelle Memorial Institute.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 778 p.
PB-233 641 An ion-exchange process for recovery of chromate from pigment manufacturing. D. J.
Robinson et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 92 p.
PB-233 871 Transportation rates and costs for selected virgin and secondary commodities. Moshman
Associates, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 234 p.
PB-233 873 The DCS Moines story; a report on the implementation of the solid waste management plan
for the Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency. R. C. Porter and Henningson,
Durham, and Richardson. Environmental Protection Publication SW-70d. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 272 p.
PB-233 878 Wichita's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 89 p.
PB-234 068 Kansas City's municipal solid waste management system. Applied Management Sciences,
Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 249 p.
PB-234 139 Jacksonville's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied
Management Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 156 p.
PB-234 140 Dallas' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 103 p.
PB-234 141 Fresno's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 174 p.
PB-234 496 A preliminary assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection. P. M. Meier et
al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 179 p.
PB-234 497 Modifications to the executive computer program for steady-state simulation of wastewater
treatment facilities. P. M. Meier and G. R. Fisette. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 70 p.
PB-234 498 Economic analysis of the processing and disposal of refuse sludges. P. Kos et al. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 85 p.
PB-234 499 Wet systems for residential refuse collection; a case study for Springfield, Massachusetts.
P. M. Meier. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 220 p.
PB-234 602 Tire recycling and reuse incentives. International Research and Technology Corporation.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-32c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1974. 88 p.
PB-234 605 The Atlanta household refuse compactor demonstration project. Bradbury Associates, Inc.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 155 p.
PB-234 612 Financing methods for solid waste facilities. Resource Planning Associates. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 376 p.
PB-234 713 Memphis' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 137 p.
PB-234 715 Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final
report, v. 1. A. M. Kinney, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-47d.l. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. [63 p.]
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PB-234 716 Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report.
v.2. A. M. Kinney, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-47d.2. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 368 p.
PB-234 930 Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v. 1. Summary and major findings.
J. J. Reinhardt and R. K. Ham. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 181 p.
PB-234 931 Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v.2. Data condensations. J. J.
Reinhardt and R. K. Ham. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 462 p.
PB-234 944 Study of solid waste management practices in the pulp and paper industry. Gorham
International, Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 185 p.
PB-234 945 Middletown's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied
Management Sciences. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 109 p.
PB-235 770 Aluminum as a component of solid waste and a recoverable resource. R. J. Talley and R.
H. Ongerth. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 31 p.
PB-235 857 Waste oil recycling and disposal. N. J. Weinstein. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 1974. 328 p.
PB-236 085 An assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection; summary report. P. M.
Meier, J. Kuhner, and R. E. Bolton. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 93 p.
PB-236 402 Agricultural benefits and environmental changes resulting from the use of digested sludge
on field crops. T. D. Hinesly. Environmental Protection Publication SW-30d.l. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 375 p.
PB-236 462 Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v. 1. VTN, Inc.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-57d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. 129 p.
PB-236 463 Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v.2. VTN, Inc.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-57d. 1. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1973. 128 p.
PB-236 543 A study of pneumatic solid waste collection systems as employed in hospitals. Ross
Hofmann, Associates. Environmental Protection Publication SW-75c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 260 p., app.
PB-236 659 Columbus' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-82c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 156 p.
PB-236 662 Detroit's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management
Sciences, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-81c. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1973. 94 p.
PB-236 904 Demonstration of waste flow reduction from households. S. Cohen and H. Wallman. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 103 p.
PB-237 264 Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, v.2.
Appendices. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-46c. 1. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 235 p.
29
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PB-237 525 Mine spoil potentials for soil and water quality, R. M. Smith et al. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 303 p.
PB-237 618 A technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt.l. Federal research on waste oil
from automobiles. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox. [Teknekron, Inc., and the
Institute of Public Administration.] Environmental Protection Publication SW-90c.l. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 107 p.
PB-237 619 A technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt.2. An investigation of dispersed
sources of used crankcase oils. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox. [Teknekron, Inc.,
and the Institute of Public Administration.] Environmental Protection Publication SW-
90c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 63 p.
PB-237 620 A technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt.3. Economic, technical, and
institutional barriers to waste oil recovery. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox.
[Teknekron, Inc., and the Institute of Public Administration.] Environmental Protection
Publication SW-90c.3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 143 p.
PB-238 145 Promising technologies for treatment of hazardous wastes. R. Landreth and C. Rogers. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 44 p.
PB-238 654 An analysis of the current impact of plastic refuse disposal upon the environment. D. A.
Vaughan, M. Y. Anastas, and H. H. Krause.
PB-238 674 Feasibility study of use of molten salt technology for pyrolysis of solid waste. V. L.
Hammond and L. K. Mudge. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 86 p.
PB-238 747 A study of corrosion in municipal incinerators versus refuse composition. D. A. Vaughan,
H. H. Krause, and W. K. Boyd. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 51 p.
PB-239 195 Mechanized residential solid waste collection. M. G. Stragier. Environmental Protection
Publication SW-74d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 176 p.
PB-239 196 Mechanized, non-stop residential solid waste collection. W. Da Vee and M. G. Stragier.
[City of Tolleson, Arizona.] Environmental Protection Publication SW-76d. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 66 p.
PB-239 327 Urban street cleaning. A. H. Levis. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 57 p.
PB-239 392 Where the boilers are; a survey of electric utility boilers with potential capacity for burning
solid waste as fuel. B. G. Tunnah, A. Hakki, and R. J. Leonard. [Gordian Associates, Inc.]
Environmental Protection Publication SW-88c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1974. 329 p.
PB-239 502 Fabrication of single cell protein from cellulosic wastes. W. H. Daly and L. P. Ruiz. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 71 p.
PB-239 736 A study of Federal subsidies to stimulate resource recovery. Resource Planning Associates,
Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-96c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1974. 144 p.
PB-239 775 Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; separate collection studies.
SCS Engineers, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-95c.l. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 157 p.
30
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PB-239 776 Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; collection center studies.
SCS Engineers, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-95c.2. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1974. 72 p.
PB-239 778 Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study. EMCON Associates. Environmental
Protection Publication SW-65d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 283 p.
PB-239 895-Set Routing of solid waste collection vehicles. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1974. 4 v.
PB-239 896 First annual report and appendix A; a linear programming approach for the
traveling salesman problem. J. C. Liebman and S. Hong. 70 p.
PB-239 897 First annual report and appendix B; optimal routing of solid waste collection
vehicles. J. C. Liebman and M. Wathne. 110 p.
PB-239 898 Final report and appendix A; manual for use of the computer codes. J. C.
Liebman. 55 p.
PB-239 899 Final report and appendix B; a heuristic solution to the m-postman problem.
J. C. Liebman and J. W. Male. 127 p.
PB-239 914 Preliminary design of a household refuse grinder. A. T. Fisk and A. Guzdar. U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 130 p.
PB-239 915 Feasibility of hydraulic transport of ground household refuse through sewer appurtenances.
D. A. Monaghan and A. Guzdar. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 130 p.
PB-240 365 Rural storage and collection container systems. Humboldt County, California.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-81d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1975. 126 p.
PB-240 395 San Jose's municipal solid waste system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
Environmental Protection Publication SW-78c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
1975. 153 p.
Please fill in the following information if you would like
of the Office of Solid Waste Management Programs.
Nflmp
Organization
rity State
Area of interest: G Quarterly catalog of OSWMP information materials
Q Solid waste management systems n Resource
O Hazardous waste D Land use and sanitary landfill
Mail to Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section,
Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268.
to receive the new publications
Zip rnrle
and energy recovery
D Waste reduction
U.S. Environmental Protection
31
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exhibits
For information on exhibits, write to Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268. Please include your phone number and
address.
Help preserve the good earth. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [6 x 6 ft permanent exhibit,
shipping wt 1,100 lb.]
Protect the good earth. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [2 x 2-1/2 ft, portable exhibit, 3
panels, carrying wt 35 lb.]
Solid waste—a valuable resource. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [3-1/3 x 5 ft, permanent
exhibit, 6 panels, shipping wt 500 lb.]
films
The following films may be borrowed from the Modern Talking Picture Service, 2323 New Hyde Park
Road, New Hyde Park, New York 11040. Allow 6 weeks for scheduling.
The big pickup. Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOOc. Describes America's $5-billion-a-year
chore—collecting solid waste. Shows the garbage collector's problems and illustrates new techniques
that can improve efficiency and effectiveness. [28-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1974.]
A day at the dump. How open dumping and burning came to an end at the Kenilworth dump in
Washington, D.C., and how the former cinder patch is becoming a garden spot. [15-min, 16-mm
motion picture, sound, color, 1968.]
The green box. The residents of Chilton County, Alabama, switched from rat-infested open dumps to a
trash collection system utilizing green boxes that were emptied every second day. Portrays an approach
specifically tailored for rural areas. [17-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1970. Cleared for
TV.]
In the bag. Describes the advantages of the brown paper sack in refuse storage, collection, and disposal.
Shows that the brown bag is versatile and easily handled by householders, collectors, and landfill or
incinerator operators. [19-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1969. Cleared for TV.]
The following films may be borrowed from Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268. Allow 4 weeks for scheduling.
Mt. Trashmore. A novel approach to the solid waste disposal problem. Virginia Beach decided to
combine its trash with that from neighboring communities—and to build a large sanitary landfill on top
of the ground. When finished, Mt. Trashmore will become a full-scale municipal recreation area
providing boating, swimming, fishing, a 10,000-seat amphitheater, and even an official soapbox-derby
coasting ramp, [3-min, 16-mm motion picture, TV news feature, sound, color, 1972.]
Portrait of the san-man. Environmental Protection Publication SW-6tg.l. A low-budget cinema verite film
based on actual interviews with the men who collect New York City's tons of garbage every day. [16-
min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, 1974. Cleared for TV.]
The third pollution. Describes 1966 solid waste disposal and the attendant problems of air and water
pollution. Helped call attention to the solid waste problem in the early days of the environmental
movement. [23-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1966.]
32
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The village green. Environmental Protection Publication SW-8tg. Documents a successful and self-
sustaining recycling center in New York City sponsored by the Environmental Action Coalition. [15-
min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1974. Cleared for TV.]
The following films may be borrowed from the Modern Talking Picture Service, 2323 New Hyde Park
Road, New Hyde Park, New York 11040, or purchased from the National Audiovisual Center, General
Services Administration, Washington, D.C. 20409. Prices are listed with each film. Allow 6 weeks for
scheduling of films from the Modern Talking Picture Service, and 4 weeks for films from the National
Audiovisual Center.
The realities of recycling. Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.3. Examines technology of
recycling glass, aluminum, and steel containers; paper; and old car hulks. [38-min, 16-mm motion
picture, sound, color, 1971. Cleared for TV. SI54.50]
Recycling. Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.4. Shows some emerging techniques on reuse,
recovery, and recycling of resources—how materials now ending up as municipal solid waste may be
used to extend the supply of natural resources. [21-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1971.
Cleared for TV. $89.75]
Sanitary landfill; one part earth to four .parts refuse. Environmental Protection Publication SW-99c.
Describes the well-planned landfill—from site selection to use of the completed fill. Designed with
technical audiences in mind; includes consideration of equipment types, climate, operating procedures,
and topographical and soil conditions. [24-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1969. Cleared for
TV. $97.75]
The stuff we throw away. Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.2. Describes the enormous
burdens that communities face in collecting and disposing of solid wastes. Covers in less detail the
information included in "What's new in solid waste management." [22-min, 16-mm motion picture,
sound.color, 1970. Cleared for TV. $93.75]
What's new in solid waste management? Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.l. A look at
solid waste management 5 years after initiation of the Federal research and demonstration program.
Describes new techniques available for controlling and processing solid waste—equipment, management
techniques, alternative systems, etc. [37-min, 16-mm motion picture, sound, color, 1970. Cleared for
TV. $146.75]
The following films may be rented or purchased from the National Audiovisual Center, General
Services Administration, Washington, D.C. 20409. Allow 4 weeks for scheduling.
Operation responsible; safe refuse collection. Dramatizes the problems and responsibilities of solid waste
collectors and the importance to the community of professional solid waste collection. Aimed primarily
at motivating the employees to safe work techniques, it lays the groundwork for the technical sessions
of a training course for refuse collectors. (See Training Programs, next page.) [22-min, 16-mm motion
picture, sound, color, 1972. Cleared for TV. $75]
Sanitary landfill—you're the operator. Through the device of an interview with a visiting newsman, a
sanitary landfill foreman gives you an inside look at his job. Interesting to citizen groups and those
concerned with improving conditions in the sanitation industry. Serves as the introduction to a
technical training program for landfill personnel. (See Training Programs, next page.) [22-min, 16-mm
motion picture, sound, color, 1973. Cleared for TV. $70]
A few copies of the two films above are available on a free loan basis to government agencies from
Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincin-
nati, Ohio 45268.
33
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training programs
These training programs may be purchased from the National Audiovisual Center, General Services
Administration, Washington, D.C. 20409.
Operation responsible; training for safe refuse collection. Refuse collectors suffer 10 to 15 times as many
injuries as the average worker. This three-part safety training package aimed at reducing such injuries
includes a 16-mm film (22-min, sound, color); an instructor's manual with 24 color slides, 35-mm; and
a trainee's manual with 241 color slides, 35-mm.
Training for sanitary landfill employees. Even the best planned and most carefully engineered sanitary
landfills will fail to meet current standards if the personnel charged with daily operation are not fully
trained in their assigned duties. This three-part training package includes a 16-mm film (22-min, sound,
color); an instructor's manual with 206 color slides, 35-mm; and a trainee's manual with 10 color slides,
35-mm. (A few sets of this training program are available on a free loan basis to government agencies
from Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45268.)
information kits
Request by title of kit from Solid Waste Information Materials Control Section, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268.
Concerned citizens. Contains information on solid waste management and citizen participation, resource
recovery, solid waste management programs, studies, and information sources.
Resource recovery—I. General information on recycling and resource recovery.
Resource recovery—II. Technical information on recycling and resource recovery.
Students information. General information on solid waste management.
miscellaneous
351. Sanitary landfill synopsizer. J. E. Delaney and J. M. Sweeten. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1972. [Pocket-size calculator and instructions.]
393. 'State solid waste management agencies. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Oct.
1974. 6 p. [List.]
403. Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication
SW-117.1. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. [16-3/4 x 22 in.
mailing piece.]
414. Recycle; use it again, Sam. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] [Bumper
sticker.]
34
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author index
Numbers following entries are order numbers, by which the publications are listed in this catalog. PB
numbers refer to National Technical Information Service reports, which are listed in a separate section.
A
Achinger, W. C, 200
Ackart, W. B., PB-213 48S
ACT Systems, Inc., 434
Albert Swn/.er & Associates, Inc.. 94
Albrecht, O. W., PB-223 034
Allan, G. G., PB-222 051
Allison, G., 424
Allred, E. R., PB-222 337
American Public Works Association, PB-222 709
American Public Works Association Research
Foundation, PB-187 306
A. M. Kmney, Inc., PB-234 715-PB-234 716
Anastas, M. ~Y., PB-238 654
Anderson, T., 327
Andrews, J. F., PB-222 396
Antoni, C. M., PB-222 419
Applied Management Sciences, Inc., 346, PB-225 291,
PB-225 296, PB-225 299, PB-225 332, PB-228 161,
PB-233 878, PB-234 068, PB-234 139-PB-234 141,
PB-234 713, PB-234 945, PB-236 662, PB-240 395
Arella, D. G., 408
Armstrong, D. H., PB-222 160
Arthur D. Little, Inc., 316, PB-225 164
B
Bail, G. L., PB-222 001
Banks, M. E., 222
Barbour, J. F., PB-233 178
Battelle Columbus Laboratories, PB-213 378
Battelle Memorial Institute, PB-212 729-PB-212 731,
PB-233 630-PB-233 631
Battista, C. A., PB-222 694
Beck, W. M., Jr., PB-225 346
Bender, D. F., PB-220 479
Bendersky. D., 412
Besley, H. E., PB-223 430
Bete, Charming L. See Charming L. Bete Co.,
Inc.
Bingham, T. H., 326, 437, PB-213 341
Black, R. J., 26, 37-39, 53, 79, 189,
288, 305, 340
Boettcher, R. A., 256
Boettner, E. A., PB-222 001
Bogue, M. D., 238
Bolly, M., 375
Bolton, R. E., PB-236 085
Bond, R. G., PB-221 681, PB-222 018
Booth, D. H., 255
Booz Allen Applied Research, Inc.,
PB-221 464-Set, PB-221 465-PB-221 467,
PB-221 879
Boyd, G. B., 235
Boyd, 3. L., 115
Boyd, W. K... PB-238 747
Bradbury Associates, Inc., PB-234 605
Braids, O. C., 229
Brand, B. G., PB-232 559
Bmdenbach, A. W., 134, 165, 212
Britton, P. W., 28, 310
Brown, R. P., 192
Brunner, D. R., 156, 287
Buchanan. C. C., 348
Burchinal, J. C., PB-223 345
Butler, D. M., 95
Callihan, C. D., PB-223 873
Carlson, O. N., PB-223 740
Carnes, R. A., PB-222 165
Carotti, A. A., 368
Carruth, D., 133
Channing L. Bete Co., Inc., 290
Chapman, R. A., 190
Charnes, A., PB-208 154
Chicago, University of, PB-225 020
Cimino, J. A., 426
Citizens' Advisory Committee on Environmental
Quality, 307
Clark, R. M., 146, 164, 22S, 251, 355, PB-213 308,
PB-213 394, PB-213 482, PB-222 995
Claussen, E. L., 325, 332, 422
Clendinning, R. A., PB-213 488
Cohen, S., PB-236 904
Coleman, E., 295
Coleman, W. E., 312
Colonna, R. A., 390, 394
Combustion Engineering, Inc., PB-187 712
Combustion Power Company, Inc., PB-187 299
Connolly, H. H., 85
Connolly, J. A., 1, 231, 257, 294, 317, 374
Converse, A. O., PB-221 239
Council of State Governments, 377, 383
Crane, L. E., 53
Cross, J. A., 405
Cukor, P., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Currier, R. A., PB-221 876
D
Dale, A. C, 297
Dane, S., 343
Daniels, L. E., 200
Darnay, A. J., 44, 170, 286, 293, 358, 364, 380, 413
Da Vee, W., PB-239 196
Davidson, G. R., Jr., 242, 355
Davis, P. L., 38, 53
Davis, R. H., 400
Day, D. E., PB-222 052
35
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Day, D. I.., 297
Day & Zimmerman, PB-187 286
DeGeare, T. V., 355
Dehn, \V. T., 354
Delaney, J. E., 262, 339, 351
DeMarco, J., 122
Dial, C J., 274
Diesch, S. L., PB-222 337
Dindal. D. L., 322
District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary
Engineering, 105. PB-187 286
Drobny, N. L., 177
Dunlap, C. E., PB-223 873
E
Eilers. R. G., PB-222 000, PB-222 029,
PB-222 031
Eitcl, M. J.. 236
Eliassen, R., PB-221 172
Ellison, F., PB-202 202
EMCON Associates, PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Engineering-Science, Inc., 11, PB-218 672
Environmental Engineering, Inc., PB-222 710
Esco/Greenleaf, 300-301, PB-213 133, PB-213 135
F
Fain, C. C, 236
Farvolden, R. N., 223
Fiedelman, B. P., 253
Fields, T, Jr., 427
Finan, M., 335, 430
Finley, Stuart. Sec Stuart Finley, Inc.
First, M. W., PB-221 684
Fisette, G. R., PB-234 497
Flack, J. E., 77
Fleischer, L. R., PB-221 095
Flower, W. A., 308-309
Floyd, E. P., 134
Fookson, A., PB-222 115
Foran, J. F., PB-229 8J6-PB-229 817
Franklin Institute Research Laboratories, 258,
281
Franklin, W. E., 44, 170, 293, 405
Freed, V. H., PB-233 178
FrohnsdorfT, G., PB-222 115
Fungaroli, A. A., 245, PB-209 001-PB-209 002
Fuschini, V. P., 374
Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion Authority,
Inc., PB-187 311, PB-222 710
Garland, G. A., 228, 347, 411
Garretson-Elmendorf-Zinov-Reibin, PB-212 398
Gartrell, F. E., 9
Geswein, A. J., 428
Geyer, J. A., PB-213 487
Gilbertson, W. E., 53
Gill, R., 375
Gillean, J. I., PB-222 995
Gluckman, L. A., 194
Goldberg, T. L., 342
Golueke, C. G., 127-128, PB-222 454
Gordian Associates, Inc., PB-239 392
Gorham International, Inc., PB-234 944
Graham, W. M., 95
Gransky, M. J., S87
Great Lakes Research Institute, PB-208 674
Greenleaf/Telesca, 94, 248
Grethlein, H. E., PB-221 239
Groncr, R. R., PB-233 178
Grove, C. S., PB-222 419
Grupenhoff, B. L., 228
Guillet, J., 340
Gunnerson, C. G., 130, 404
Gusdar, A. R., PB-229 256
Gutfreund, K.., 199
H
Hakki, A., PB-239 392
Hale, S., 334, 357
Hall, C. F., PB-222 148
Hall, E. D., PB-222 000, PB-222 029, PB-222 031
Ham, R. K., PB-234 930-PB-234 931
Hamilton, A., 131
Hammond, V. L., PB-212 589
Hampel, C. R., 216-218
Hansen, P., 341
Han, S. A., 55
Harza Engineering Co., PB-187 301
Haug, L. A., 288
Hawkins, M. B., 235
Hayes, A. J., 429
Hegdahl, T. A., 337, PB-213 511
Heimberg, R. W., PB-223 651
Helms, B. P., 146, 251
Henderson, W. G., 39
Henningson, Durham & Richardson, Inc., 249, PB-233 873
HenriUsen, P., 418
Herbert, W., 308-309
Herson, E. M., 77
Hickman, H. L., Jr., 26, 47, 113, 246, 395
Hilovsky, J., PB-202 202
Hincsly, T. D., 229. PB-2.36 402
Hitte, S. J., 433
Hoffman, D. A., PB-222 015
Hofmann, Ross, Associates, PB-236 543
Holcombe, K., PB-226 420
Honea. F. I., 412
Hong, S., PB-239 896
Hopper, R. E., 432
Homer & Shifrin, Inc., 264, PB-220 316
Honenstine, C. C., PB-222 422
Howes, J. R., PB-222 !48
Hubbard, S. J., 156
Huber. D. R.. 427
Hughes, G. M., 223
Hulbert, S. F., 236
Hull, H. E., 177
Humboldt County, California, PB-212 398, PB-240 365
Hunt, R. G., 405
I
Iglar, A. F., PB-222 018
Inglett, G. E., 312
Institute of Public Administration,
PB-237 618-PB-237 620
International Research and Technology Corp.,
PB-222 467, PB-234 602
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal,
89, 142-145
Israel Program for Scientific Translations, 89,
142-145
James, R. W., PB-213 577
Jensen, M. E., 93
Johnson, H., 190
Jones, D. D., 297
Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd., 117
36
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K
Kaiser Engineers. PB-226 042
Kaiser, E. R., 14, PB-221 731
Kalika. P. W.. PB-226 420
Kambhu, K., PB-222 396
Kantz, R.,
Karandikar,
Kasner, D.,
384
S., PB-221 239
PB-221 73 i
Katsuyama. A. M., PB-219 019
Kealon, M. }., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Keene, A. G.. 190
Keller, D. J., 122, 156, 287
Kelly, J. A., PB-221 877
Kennedy. J. C., 1 10
Kentucky State Department of Health, PB-201 205
Kiefer, 1., 243, 283, 292, 298, 323-324, 333,
382, 406
Kinney, A. M. See A. M. Kinney, Inc.
Klee, A. J., 26, 28, 101, 133, 137, 216-218, 228
Kocluitiky, O. W., 8
Kos, P., PB-234 498
Krause, H. H., FB-238 654, PB-238 747
Krause, K. W,, PB-225 333
Krueger, W, F., PB-222 148
Kruse, C. W., 123
Kruth, M. A., 255
Kuhner, J.. PB-236 085
Kuhrtz. S., PB-221 239
Lackey, L. L., PB-223 638
Landon, R. A., 223
Laver. M. L., PB-221 876
League of Women Voters of the U.S., 259, 296,
302-303
Leatherwood, J. M., PB-223 625
Leckie, J. O., PB-221 172
Leckman, J., 122
Lefke, L. W., 116, 190
Lehman, J. P., 399
Leonard, R. J., PB-239 392
Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc., PB-222 588,
PB-225 159
Levis, A. H., PB-239 327
Levy, S. J., 401, 417
Liebman, J. C., 123, 147, PB-239 896-PB-239 899
Lindsey, A. W., 427
Lingle, S., 381, 420
Little, Arthur D. See Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Little, H. R., 284
Lonergan, R. P., 77
Los Angeles County, Department of County
Engineer, 11, PB-218 672
Loube, M., 378
Louisville, University of, 125
Lowe, R. A., 378
Lusk. W. D., 222
Lynn, Massachusetts, City of, PB-214 166
M
McDermott, R. G., PB-223 034
McGauhey, P. H., 128, 169
McGough, E., 273
McLaren, C., 390
McLeer, T. J., PB-213 577
McMichael, W. F., PB-227 005
Madison, M., 423
Male, J. W., PB-239 899
Maiisch, W. R., PB-222 052
Management Technology, Inc., 106
Mank, J. F., 369
Marceleno, T., 299
Markiewicz, W. J., 187
Marks, D. H., 147
Marynowski, C. W., 244
Meier, P. M., PB-234 496-PB-234 497,
PB-234 499, PB-236 085
Metier, F. H., 91
Mercer, W. A., PB-219 019
Mcrz, R. C., PB-196 148
Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., PB-214 166, PB-219 372
Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater
Chicago, PB-213 697
Midwest Research Institute, PB-226 551
Milgrom, J., PB-214 045, PB-229 727
Miller, B. F., PB-221 171
Miller, P. D., PB-221 851
Miner, J. R., PB-221 621
Molina, J. E., 229
Mooser, S., 424
Morse, N., 136
Moshman Associates, Inc., PB-233 87!
Muhich. A. J., 26, 2S, 216-218
Mulligan, P. F., 326, PB-213 341
National Academy of Sciences, PB-197 623
National Analysts, Inc., PB-213 340
National Association of Counties, 373
National Association of Counties Research
Foundation, 239, 419
National Commission on Technology, Automation,
and Economic Progress, 2
National Research Council, PB-197 623
National Solid Wastes Management Association,
230
Neff, N. T., PB-213 646
Nelson, R. D., PB-224 820
Newton, J. L., 122, 156
O
Olson, N. A,, PB-219 019
Ongerth, R. H., PB-235 770
Opfcrkuch, R. E., PB-222 354
Ottinger, R. S., 222, PB-224 579-Set,
PB-224 580-PB-224 595
Pathak, A. A., PB-233 360
Patrick, Z. A., PB-222 113
Perkins, R. A., PB-197 931
Peterson, B., 421
Peterson, M. L., PB-220 479, PB-222 160
Peuigrew, R. J., 187
Pleffer, J. T., PB-231 176
Pomeroy, B. S., PB-222 337
•oner, R. C., PB-233 873
otts, J. E., PB-213 488
'owell, M. D., 253
'rntymann. R., PB-202 202
'urcell, T. C., 295
urdom. P. W., PB-222 458
Putnam, R. C., PB-202 202
Quirk, R. L., PB-219 019
Quon, J., PB-208 154
37
-------
R
Radinsky, S., 317, 374
Ralph Stone and Co., Inc., 65, PB-212 590,
PB-225 360-Set, PB-225 361-PB-225 362
Regan, R., PB-215 722
Regan, W. J., PB-213 577
Reinhardt, J. J., PB-234 930-PB-234 931
Resource Planning Associates, PB-234 612
Resource Planning Institute, PB-229 220
Rhee, S. S., PB-229 256
Robinson, D. J., PB-233 641
Roe, M. J., 253
Rogers, C. J., 295
Rogers, H, W., 433
Roninger, F. H., 187
Ross Hofmann, Associates, PB-236 543
Roth, E. W., 136
Rothwell, D. F., PB-222 422
Ruckelshaus, W. D., 304
Ruf, J. A., 402
Sachsel, G. F., 261
San Diego, City of, PB-214 960
Sarofim, A. F., PB-223 626
Scarpino, P. V., 295
Schmidt, F. A., PB-223 740
Schoenberger, R. J., PB-222 458
Schrag, M. P., 412
Schur, D. A., 356
SCS Engineers, PB-213 311, PB-239 775-PB-239 776
Scurlock, A. C., 427
Senn, C. L., PB-225 160
Shafizadeh, F., PB-229 246
Shannon, L. J., 412
Sharpe, L., 315
Shell, G. L., 115
Shilesky, D. M., PB-225 333
Shipley, M. C, 77
Shuster, K. A., 356. 407, 409
Shuster, W. W., 154
Singer, R. D., PB-227 708
Skinner, J. H., 350, 388
Smith, D. D., 192
Smith, F. A., 378
Smith, F. L., Jr., 397
Smith, H. G., 9
Smith, R., PB-222 000, PB-222 029, PB-222 031
Smith, R. A., 368
Smith, R. M., PB-237 525
Snyder, W. C, PB-222 113
Sorg, T. J., 47, 104, 277-278, 355
Sosnovsky, C. H., 252
Spino, D. F., 295
Sponagle, C. E., 232
Spooner, C. S., 167
Stainback, S. E., 231, 257
Stearns, R. P., 400
Steimle, F. W., Jr., 348
Steiner, R. L., 384
Stevenson, M. K., PB-221 172
Stierii, H., PB-220 479
St. Louis, Missouri, City of, PB-228 119
Stone, R., 391, PB-196 148
Stone, Ralph. See Ralph Stone and Co., Inc.
Stone, R. B., 348
Stragier, M. G., PB-239 195-PB-239 196
Stuart Finley, Inc., 265-272
Stump, P. L., 232, 311
Sullivan, R. J., PB-225 333
Sussman, D. B., 431
Sutterfield, G. W., 387
Sweden, J. M., 351
Switzer, Albert. Sec Albert Switzer & Associates,
Inc.
Talley, R. J., PB-235 770
Taylor, P., 424
Teknekron, Inc., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Testin, R. F., 177
Thomas, Dean & Hoskins, Inc., 118
Tofmer, R. O., 124, 164, 336, PB-226 099
Tolleson, Arizona, City of, PB-239 196
Truitt, M. M., 123
Tunnah. B. G., PB-239 392
U
Ulmer, N., PB-23I 203
U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Public
Works, 410
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 203
Vasan, 1C. S., PB-231 309
Vaughan, D. A.. PB-221 851. PB-23R 654, PB-238 747
Vaughan, R. D., 26
Veenstra & Kimm, 249
Vey, E., PB-224 820
VTN, Inc., PB-224 996
W
Walker, W. H., 415
Wallace, L. P., PB-223 345
Wallman, H., PB-236 904
Washington State University, PB-233 441
Wathne, M.. PB-239 897 '
Weaver, L., 30, 35, 40
Weddle, B. R., 347, 411, 423
Wegman, Leonard S. See Leonard S. Wegman Co.
Inc.
Weinberg, M. S., PB-223 343
Weinhold, A. R.. PB-222 113
Weirwiein, N. J., PB-235 857
Weiss, B., PB-222 001
Welch, R. O., 405
Wersan, S., PB-208 154
Wheeler, J. B., 39
Wilcox, G., PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Wiley, J. S., 8-9, 21-22
Williams, E. R., 36-37
Williams, T. F., 318, 360, 379
Winkler, P. F., PB-229 901
Wixson, B. G., PB-222 052
Wolf, K. W., 252
Wolk, R. H., PB-222 694
Woodall, A. E., 405
Wren, E. J., PB-222 468
XYZ
Yaffe, H. J., PB-227 075
Yates, D. L., 255
Zandi, I., PB-223 162
Zausner, E. R., 86, HI, 153, 176, 182, 188
Zimmer, C., PB-221 731
38
-------
subject index
Numbers following entries are order numbers, by which the publications are listed in this catalog. PB
numbers refer to National Technical Information Service reports, which are listed in a separate section.
A
Accession bulletin; Solid Waste Information
Retrieval System, 195
Activated carbon from refuse, 431, PB-221 172,
PB-229 246
Activated sludge process for disposal of
hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
Aerated lagoons for disposal of hazardous
wastes, PB-224 583
Aerobic treatment of organic wastes, 297,
PB-222 029, PB-222 031, PB-222 396,
PB-225 160, PB-233 441
Agricultural benefits from the use of sewage
sludge on Held crops, PB-236 402
Agricultural wastes, 104
photosynthetic reclamation, PB-222 454
prediction, PB-222 467
See also Livestock wastes; Plant residue
decomposition in soil
Air classification of solid wastes, 256
Air pollution from incinerators, 292, 412
film. See The Third Pollution in
Films section of catalog
Airport solid wastes, PB-219 372
Akron, Ohio, solid waste management system, 423
Alcohol from cellulose wastes, PB-221 239
Aluminum
from solid waste, PB-235 770
recycling, 308, PB-208 674, PB-212 729
Analysis of solid wastes. See Composition
and analysis
Antilitter campaign of Keep America Beautiful,
Inc., 318
See also Litter
Arsenic wastes, PB-224 585
Atlanta household refuse compactor
demonstration project, PB-234 605
Attitudes of citizens on refuse problems, 372,
PB-213 340
Automobile disposal, 106, PB-221 879
in small communities, 354
recycling, 275, 353, Pfi-223 034
upgrading automotive scrap steel,
PB-223 740
B
Bagging, 248, 270, 390, PB-212 590
film. See In the Bag in Films section
of catalog
Baling of solid waste. See Compaction of
solid waste; Shredding and baling; also
Size reduction of solid wastes
Baltimore solid waste management system, 123, 283,
PB-228 161
gas pyrolysis, 353, 388, 431
Bark waste, recycling, PB-221 876
Beverage containers, 326, 353, 405, 424, PB-213 341
See al.w Tin cans
Bibliographies on solid waste management,
S27-128, 203, 231, 257-258, 281-282
Bureau of Solid Waste .Management
intramural research, 165
collection and disposal, 35-39
Federal contract research, 85
Federal demonstration grant projects (1971),
232
Federal research and training grants (1970),
!90
film list, 349
hazardous wastes, PB-224 595
hospital solid wastes, PB-227 708
local ordinances, 253
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
publications, 203
patents (abstracts), 1, 317, 319
sanitary landfill, 47, 384, PB-213 487
waste oil disposal, PB-237 618
Biodegradability of plastics. 199, 324, PB-213 4S8
Biological treatment of wastes, 345
cellulose wastes, PB-223 625
hazardous wastes, PB-224 58.3
livestock wastes, 297, PB-221 171,
PB-222 396
with photosynthetic bacteria, PB-222 454
Bird hazards to aircraft near solid waste
disposal sites, 355
Boilers (electric utility) with capacity for
burning waste a.s fuel, PB-239 392
Buffalo, New York, crusher facility,
PB-225 159
Bumper stickers, 414 (See Miscellaneous
section of catalog)
Bureau of Solid Waste Management intramural
research, 165
Cadmium wastes, PB-224 585
Calculator for sanitary landfills. 351
(Sec Miscellaneous section of catalog)
Carbon (activated) from refuse, 431, PB-221 172,
PB-229 246
Cascade County, Montana, solid waste disposal,
118
Cellulose wastes, PB-223 625
activated carbon from, PB-221 172, PB-229 246
degradation in composting, PB-215 722
levulinic acid from, PB-229 246
protein from, 295, PB-222 115, PB-223 873
sugar from, PB-221 877, PB-229 246
See also Wood wastes
39
-------
Chemical industry wastes, 418, PB-221 464, PB-221 466,
PB-224 587, PB-224 589-PB-224 592,
PB-226 420
Chemical research in soiid \vasie management, 134
Chemical warfare materiel waste;;, PB-224 586
Chilton County, Alabama, sanitary landfill, 291
Chromate from pigment manufacturing, PB-233 641
Chromium wastes, PB-224 585
Citizen action
League of Women Voters publications, 259, 303
Mission 5000, 280
recycling, 273, 296, 303
Clay industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Collection, 37-38, 65, 94, 146-147, 390, 409, 424
accounting systems, 153, 182
airport solid wastes. PB-219 372
bagging, 248, 270, 390, PB-212 590
bibliographies, 35-36
by pneumo-slurry pipeline, PB-223 162
case studies:
Des Moines, 249
New Orleans, 94
San Jose, California, PB-240 395
Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239 196
costs, 228, 347, 400
crews, 65, 298
film. See Portrait of the San-Man in
Fiims section of the catalog
equipment, 251
films. See The Big Pickup and The Green Box
in Films section of catalog
heuristic routing, 356
hydraulic transport through sewers, PB-229 256
in high-rise buildings, 292, PB-197 623,
PB-213 133, PB-213 135
in hospitals, PB-213 133, PB-213 135. PB-236 543
in low-income areas, 242
in residential complexes, 248
in rural areas, 255, 271-272, 342, 390,
PB-212 398, PB-240 365
management and planning, 409, 423, 434,
PB-213 308, PB-231 309,
PB-239 195-PB-239 196, PB-240 365,
PB-240 395
computer planning, 123, 147, 166, 283, 347,
370-37!, 389, PB-239 895-Set, PB-239 896-
PB-239 899
mathematical models, 123, 147, 166, 283,
PB-208 154
mechanized, PB-239 195-PB-239 196
public demand, PB-225 020
role of private sector, 346
routing, 356, PB-239 895-Set, PB-239 896-
PB-239 899
safety and health of workers, 426
satellite vehicle systems, 262, PB-197 931
separate. See Newspaper, separate collection;
Source separation
transfer stations, 182, 337, PB-213 511,
PB-227 075
wet systems, PB-234 496, PB-234 499,
PB-236 085
Collection Management Information System
(COLMIS), 347, 389
User's manual, 370-371
Colorado Planning Region No. 10 (Montrose, Colorado)
solid waste management system, 423
Coloring book on solid waste disposal, 335
Spanish language version, 430
Combustion power unit-400, PB-187 299
Compaction of solid waste, 248, 252, 292, 339,
390, PB-214 960
Atlanta household compactor demonstration
project, PB-234 605
Sec nlso Crushing solid waste; Shredding and
baling; Size reduction
Composition and analysis of solid wastes,
133, 235, 252, 388, PB-220 479. PB-231 203
agricultural wastes, PB-222 454
aluminum, PB-208 674
and corrosion in municipal incinerators,
PB-23S 747
beverage containers, 326
cellulose, 295
ferrous metals, PB-20S 674
fungal protein, 312
glass, PB-208 674
incinerator residue, 154, PB-222 458
landfill decomposition gases, PB-213 487,
PB-218 672, PB-234 930-PB-234 931
livestock wastes, PB-222 337
paper, PB-208 674
partial oxidation products, 154
pesticides, PB-222 165
plant residue in soil, PB-222 113
plastics, 324, PB-208 674
combustion products, PB-222 001
sewage sludge, 229, PB-222 396
wastewater sludge, PB-222 396
Compost plant dust, microbiological studies,
PB-222 160
Composting, 8, 9, 21-22, 55, 89, 142-143, 145,
212, PB-222 422, PB-225 160
air classification of compost, 256
and ecology, 322
cellulose degradation in, PB-215 722
compost plant dust studies, PB-222 160
concepts in America, 169
Gainesville plant, PB-187 311, PB-222 710
in Europe, 21-22, 55, 89, 142, 212
in the Middle East, 212
sewage sludge, 115, 144-145, 229, PB-236 402
U.S. Public Health Service-Tennessee
Valley Authority project, 8-9, 15
Concrete industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-22! 467
Conference of Instituie of Solid Wastes
Management (1974), speech by H. L.
Hickman, Jr., 395
Conferences. See Proceedings
Consumer attitudes. See Public opinion on
refuse problems
Consumer role. See Public participation in
solid waste management
Containers. See Packaging and containers
Contracts, Office of Solid Waste Management
Programs, 85
Cook County, Illinois, ski mountain, PB-213 697
Copper, recycling, PB-212 729
Corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine
blades in refuse-fueled power plants, PB-221 095
Corrosion in incinerators, PB-213 378,
PB-221 85!, PB-238 747
Costs of solid waste management, 345
hauling and land spreading of sewage
sludge, PB-227 005
County government's role in solid waste
management, 373
CPU-400, PB-187 299
Crankcase oil, waste, PB-237 618-PB-237 620
Crop residue decomposition in soil, PB-222 113
40
-------
Crushing solid waste, PB-225 159
See also Compaction of solid waste; Shredding
and baling; Size reduction
Cyanide wastes, PB-224 584
D
Dairy manure, PB-225 160, PB-233 441
See also Livestock wastes
Dallas solid waste management system, PB-234 140
DARE, 101
Debris accumulation in ancient and modern
cities, 404
Decision Alternative Ration Evaluation.
See DARE
Decision-makers guide in solid waste
management, 394
Decisionmaking and games. See Management and
planning—decisionmaking and games
Deep well disposal of hazardous wastes, PB-224 582
Demonstration grants, 311, 334, 353, 388
Des Moines solid waste management system,
249, PB-233 873
Detroit solid waste management system, PB-236 662
Dialysis for separation of hazardous wastes,
PB-224 583
Directories
recycled paper sources, 343
recycling projects, 341
Disease among solid waste collection workers,
426
Disincentives to recycling, 353, 424
Disposal, solid waste
bibliographies, 36
developments, 110, 267, 274
League of Women Voters publications, 259, 296,
302-303
See also Incineration; Ocean disposal;
Sanitary landfill
District of Columbia. See Washington, D.C.
Drug industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466,
PB-225 333
Dumping, 156, 290, 424
and water pollution, 411
film. See A Day at the Dump in Films
section of catalog
Mission 5000, 265, 280
East Peoria, Illinois, soiid waste management
system, 423
Economics of solid waste management, 345,
PB-I87 712, PB-213 394
collection, 400
hospital systems, PB-221 681
oil re-refining industry, PB-237 620
recycling, PB-223 034
sewage sludge treatment plants, PB-222 000
Electricity from solid waste, 401
Elect rodialysis for separation of hazardous
wastes, PB-224 583
Energy conservation, 378
speech by Arsen Darnay, 364
speech by Thomas F. Williams, 360
Energy recovery from waste, 357-358, 388,
390, 424, PB-231 176
Baltimore gas pyrolysis facility, 431
EPA press briefing (1974), 359
fuels from waste, 401
Energy recovery from waste (continued)
markets and technology, 401
refuse-fueled power plants, 264, 387,
PB-187 299
steam and electricity from solid wastes,
401, 431, PB-214 166
wastepaper as fuel, 420
Environmental protection, 379
effects of;
packaging and containers, 33.\ 405
plastic refuse disposal,
PB-238 654
waste automotive crankcase oil,
EPA studies, PB-237 618
film. See The Third Pollution in Films
section of catalog
speeches by Arsen J. Darnay, 364, 380, 413
speeches by Thomas F. Williams, 318, 360
See also Air pollution; Water pollution
Environmental Protection Agency press briefing
on solid waste management and energy (1974),
359
Equalization basins for sewage sludge
treatment plants, PB-222 000
Equipment, refuse handling, 1, 248, PB-228 161
collection, PB-239 195
containers, PB-240 365
sanitary landfill, 47, 287, 291, 305, PB-212 589
shredders, 402, 433
size reduction, PB-226 551
Explosives, 345, PB-221 464, PB-221 466,
PB-224 586
Exports (wastepaper), effects on domestic
markets, 397
Federal demonstration grant projects, 311, 334
Federal information activities in solid waste
management, 318
Federal-local cooperation in solid waste
management, 423
Federal policies on:
solid waste disposal, PB-222 467
virgin and secondary materials use, 353, 357,
PB-239 736
waste lubricating oil disposal, PB-237 618,
PB-237 620
Federal procurement practices and solid waste
reduction, PB-229 727
lubricating oils and re-refined oils,
PB-237 618, PB-237 620
Federal programs
affecting solid waste generation and
recycling, PB-213 311
hazardous waste management, 399
solid waste management, speech by H. L.
Hickman, Jr., 395
waste oil research, PB-237 618
Federal role in solid waste management, 246, 345, 380, 424
Federal subsidies for resource recovery, PB-239 736
Feed from waste. See Nutrients from waste
Ferrous metals, recycling, 352, PB-208 674,
PB-212 729, PB-213 577, PB-223 034,
PB-229 816-PB-229 817
Franklin, Ohio, project, PB-213 646
Fibrous wastes. See Cellulose wastes; Wood wastes
Film scripts, 265-272, 288
Films on solid waste management, 349
Financing solid waste systems, 188, 342, 390,
PB-213 482, PB-228 161, PB-234 612, PB-240 365
41
-------
Flash pyrolysis system for municipal solid waste,
417
Food industry wastes, PB-219 019, PB-221 464,
PB-221 466
Forsyth County, North Carolina, solid waste
management system, PB-225 296
Franklin, Ohio, waste processing complex, 309, 353, 388,
408, 421, PB-213 646
Fresno, California, solid waste management
system, PB-234 141
Fuel conservation in solid waste management,
407
Fuel oi! from solid waste, 417
from waste rubber, PB-222 694
Fuel, refuse as, 387, 412, 420, PB-214 166,
PB-220 316, PB-239 392
See also Energy recovery from waste
Gainesville, Florida, composting plant,
PB-187 311, PB-222 710
refuse shredders, 402
Gas pyrolysis, Baltimore facility, 353, 388, 431
Gases (decomposition) in sanitary landfill,
11, 47, 223, 245, 287, 305, 391, PB-196 148,
PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-213 487, PB-218 672,
PB-230 379, PB-234 930-PB-234 931, PB-239.778
Generation of solid waste
in low-income areas, 242
prediction, PB-222 467
See also Source reduction
Glass
industrial wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Oregon's Minimum Deposit Act, 325
recycling, 308, 352, PB-208 674
as urban paving, 431, PB-222 052
Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
water-disposable, 236
See also Packaging and containers
Glossary, solid waste management, 279
Government role in solid waste management.
See Federal role in solid waste management;
Stale solid waste management—roles; also
under Management and planning
Groundwater pollution. See Water pollution
Guide for decisionmakers in solid waste
management, 394
Guidelines for solid waste management. See-
Standards and guidelines
H
Hazardous wastes, 345, PB-221 464-PB-221 467,
PB-224 579-Set, PB-225 164, PB-233 630-PB-233 631
bibliography, PB-224 595
biological treatment, PB-224 583
chemicals, 415
inorganic, 418, PB-224 587,
PB-224 59I-PB-224 592
organic, 418, PB-224 587, PB-224 589-
PB-224 590
composition and analysis, PB-224 580
cyanide compounds, PB-224 584
deep well disposal, PB-224 582
disposal
costs, 345
facilities in the United States, 429
Federal program, 399
health effects, PB-221 464-PB-221 465, PB-221 467
Hazardous wastes (continued)
incineration, 418, 427, PB-224 582
landfill disposal, PB-224 582
legislation, 345
miscellaneous treatment processes, PB-224 583
ocean dumping, PB-224 582
public attitudes towards disposal facilities,
PB-223 638
pyrolysis, PB-224 582
recommended exposure levels. PB-224 581
recovery or disposal, PB-224 579
reduction and neutralization, PB-224 579
report to Congress by EPA, 345
research and development plans, PB-224 594
sources, forms and quantities, PB-224 593
toxicity data, PB-224 581
See a/so Chemical industry wastes; Hospital
wastes; Radioactive wastes; individual
substances; e.g., Arsenic; Cyanides;
Pesticides
Health of solid waste collection personnel, 426
Heuristic routing in solid waste collection, 147, 347,
356, PB-239 899
High-rise buildings, collection and disposal
systems, 292, PB-197 623
History of solid waste management, 404
Hospital solid wastes, 79, 300-301, 406, PB-213 133,
PB-213 135, PB-221 464, PB-221 467, PB-222 018,
PB-227 708
economics, PB-221 681
pneumatic collection systems in hospitals,
PB-236 543
Hot Springs, Arkansas, solid waste management
system, 423
Household refuse, PB-236 904
Houston, Texas, solid waste management system,
P13-225 299
Hurnboldt County, California, collection container
system, PB-240 365
Humor, 131
Humphreys County, Tennessee, solid waste
management system, 255
Hydraulic transport of refuse through sewers,
PB-229 256
Hydrogenation process for utilizing waste
rubber, PB-222 694
Hydrogeology of sanitary landfill, 223, 287
Incentives for recycling and source reduction, 352
taxes on packaging and containers. 246, 353, 424,
437
Incentives for resource recovery, 357, PB-239 736
Incineration, 33, 154, 385, 390
accounting system. 111
bulky refuse, PB-221 731
centralized system for hospitals in the
Minneapolis-St. Paul area, PB-221 681
guidelines, 385
hazardous wastes, 427, PB-224 582
in Oakland County, Michigan, 117
management and planning, PB-222 467
plastics, PB-222 001, PB-223 65!
Quad-City regional project, 33
shipborne, PB-221 684
See also Partial oxidation; Pyrolysis
Incinerators
corrosion, PB-213 378, PB-221 851, PB-238 747
design and operation, 122, 368, PB-223 626
District of Columbia studies, PB-187 286
42
-------
Incinerators (continued)
emissions, 292, 368
evaluation, 14, 200
guidelines, 122
refuse-fueled, PB-214 166
residue analysis, 154, PB-222 45S
residue marketability, PB-222 588
Industrial solid wastes, 104, 278, PB-222 419
chemical industry, PB-226 420
clay industry, PB-22! 464, PB-221 467
concrete industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
drug industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 466,
PB-225 333
fabricated metal products, PB-221 464,
PB-221 467
food industry, PB-219 019, PB-221 464,
PB-221 466
glass industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
leather industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
paper industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
petroleum industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
power utilities, PB-221 464, PB-2Z1 467
prediction, PB-222 467
steel industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
stone industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
textile industry, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Industry, role in solid waste management, 340,
345, 380, 422, 424
Information retrieval services, Office of
Solid Waste Management Programs, 294
Infrared sensor for refuse sorting, PB-229 901
Inglewood, California, bagging study,
PB-212 590
Injuries among solid waste collection workers,
426
Insects and rodents, 292, PB-225 160
Institutional solid wastes, PB-223 345
See also Hospital solid wastes
Intergovernmental approaches to solid waste
management, 164, 323, 327, 331, 336, PB-233 873
International Research Group on Refuse
Disposal, 2S-22, 89, 142-145
Ion exchange process for:
recovery of chromate from pigment
manufacturing, PB-233 641
separation of hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
Iron, scrap—influence of transportation costs
on use of, PB-229 816-PB-229 817
See also Metals
Jacksonville, Florida, solid waste management
system, PB-234 139
Jefferson County, Kentucky, solid waste
demonstration project, 125
Johnson City, Tennessee, composting project, 8, 9, 15
Jon Thomas, cool cat, 299
Kansas City, Missouri, solid waste management
system, PB-234 068
Keep America Beautiful, Inc., antilitter
campaign, 318
Kentucky solid waste management legislation,
PB-201 205
Land burial of hazardous wastes, PB-224 582
Land disposal. See Dumping; Sanitary landfill
Land protection. See Environmental protection
Land use, 339, PB-218 672
Landfill. See Sanitary landfill
"Landgard" pyrolysis system, 417, 43!
Latah County, Idaho, solid waste management system,
423
Leachates, 11, 223, 245, 287, 391,
PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-218 672, PB-222 468,
PB-224 996, PB-225 360-PB-225 362, PB-230 379,
PB-234 930-PB-234 931, PB-239 778
See also Water pollution—by landfills
Lead, recycling, PB-212 729
League of Women Voters publications, 259, 296,
302-303
Leather industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Legislation, 345, PB-225 332
Federal, 171, 330, 345
packaging and containers, 246
Resource Recovery Act (1970), 246
Kentucky, PB-201 205
local, 253
suggested, 419
recycling, 296
Solid Waste Disposal Act, 171
State, 345
State solid waste management and resource
recovery incentives act (proposed), 377
Levulinic acid from cellulose wastes, PB-229 246
Lime sludges, PB-222 354
Liners, sanitary landfill, 428
Litter, 40, 318
beverage container content, 326
plastics, PB-238 654
Little Rock, Arkansas, solid waste management
system, 423
Livestock wastes, 297
dairy manure, PB-225 160, PB-233 445
pathogen content, PB-222 337
poultry manure, PB-221 171, PB-223 430
swine wastes, PB-221 621
Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana regional solid
waste disposal study, 125
Lubricating oii. See Oil, lubricating
M
Madison, Wisconsin
milled refuse project, PB-234 930-PB-234 931
separate newspaper collection program, 400
Management and planning, 2, 53, 110, 304
accounting systems, 176
Bureau of Solid Waste Management
intramural research, 165
case studies:
Akron, Ohio, 423
Baltimore, PB-228 161
Cascade County, Montana, 118
Chilton County, Alabama, 238
Colorado Planning Region No. 10, Montrose,
Colorado, 423
Dallas, PB-234 140
Des Moines, 249, PB-233 873
Detroit, PB-236 662
East Peoria, Illinois, 423
Forsyth County, North Carolina, PB-225 296
Fresno, California, PB-234 14!
Hot Springs, Arkansas, 423
Houston, PB-225 299
Humphreys County, Tennessee, 255
Jacksonville, Florida, PB-234 139
43
-------
Management and planning (continued)
case studies
Jefferson County, Kentucky, 125
Kansas City, Missouri, PB-234 068
Latah County, Idaho, 423
Little Rock, Arkansas, 423
Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana metropolitan
region, 125
Memphis, PB-234 713
Middletown, Ohio, PB-234 945
New Orleans, 94
Oakland County, Michigan, 117
Port of Tacoma, Washington, PB-226 042
Portland, Maine, 423
San Jose, California, PB-240 395
Southeastern Oakland County (Michigan)
Incinerator Authority, 423
Tampa, Florida, PB-225 291
Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239 196
Washington, D.C., 30, 271
Wichita, PB-233 878
COLMIS (Collection Management Information
System), 389
county government's role, 373
Decision-makers guide in solid waste
management, 394
decisionmaking and games, 101, 137, 390, 394,
PB-213 482
DARE, 101
developments, 116
economics, PB-187 712, PB-213 394, PB-221 681
Federal-local cooperation, 423
Federal rote, 345, 424
films. See The Stuff We Throw Away and
What's New in Solid Waste Management in
Films section of catalog
financing, 188, 342, PB-213 482, PB-228 161,
PB-234 612, PB-240 365
hospital solid waste systems, 300-301, 406,
PB-213 133, PB-213 135, PB-221 681
in Europe, 89
in high-rise buildings, 248, 300-305,
PB-213 133, PB-213 135
in recreational areas, 40, 167, 284
in residential complexes, 248
in rural areas, 342
in the food processing industry, PB-219 019
in the pulp and paper industry, PB-234 944
intergovernmental approaches, 164, 323, 327,
336, PB-233 873
local, 336, 373, 424
mathematical analysis, 95, 283
mathematical model of a wastewater sludge
treatment plant, PB-222 396
predicting amounts of combustible solid
wastes, PB-222 467
predicting solid waste characteristics, 235
private and public roles, 345-346, 380, 390
Quad-City regional project, 33
regional, 33, 125, 336, 390, PB-226 099
mathematical models, PB-231 309
See also Management and planning—
intergovernmental approaches
State agencies, 393
States' roles, 124, 194, 327, 345, 383, 424
systems analysis, 128, 136, PB-222 995
Manual separation of solid waste.
See Source separation
MARC landfill project, 339
Markets for energy recovered from waste, 401
Materials recovery. See Resource recovery
Mathematical model for-.
aerobic digestion of waste organic
sludges, PB-222 029
post aeration of sewage sludges, PB-222 031
Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator, 14
Memphis solid waste management system, PB-234 713
Mercury wastes, PB-224 585
Metal mining wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Metal products industry wastes, PB-221 464,
PB-221 467
Metals
ferrous, 352, 431, PB-208 674, PB-213 577,
PB-213 646, PB-223 034, PB-239 736
nonferrous, 256, 352, PB-212 729, PB-221 464,
PB-22! 467
recycling, 256, 352, 431, PB-208 674, PB-212 729,
PB-213 577, PB-213 646, PB-223 034
Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
See also specific metals; steel, scrap
Middletown, Ohio, solid waste management system,
PB-234 945
Milling of solid wastes. See Shredding and baling
Mine spoil, soil and water pollution, PB-237 525
Mineral fillers from water-softening process
sludge, PB-224 820
Mission 5000, 265, 280
Municipal wastes. See Collection; Management
and planning
N
National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969),
!72
National Survey of Community Solid Waste
Practices (1968), 26, 28, 113, 216-218
New Orleans solid waste management demonstration,
94
Newspaper, separate collection, 381, 400, 420-42!
Nickel and stainless steel, PB-212 729
Nitrite-accelerated photochemical degradation
of cellulose for microbiological conversion
to protein, PB-222 115
Nonferrous metals, 256, PB-212 729
industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
recycling, 352
See also specific metals
Nutrients from waste, PB-221 171, PB-222 115,
PB-222 454, PB-223 343, PB-223 625,
PB-223 873
O
Oakland County, Michigan, refuse disposal
system, 117
Ocean disposal, 130, 192, PB-221 684
hazardous wastes, PB-224 582
Oceanside, California, solid waste management,
PB-225 360-PB-225 362
Office of Solid Waste Management Programs
contract research, 85
Oil (fuel) from solid waste, 417
Oil, lubricating, 390, PB-237 618-
PB-237 620
evaluation and testing, PB-237 620
Oil re-refining industry, economics of, PB-237 620
Oil, waste, 390, 418
disposal by individual consumers, PB-237 619
recovery and recycling, PB-235 857, PB-237 618-
PB-237 620
44
-------
Oregon's bottle bill (Minimum Deposit Act), 325, 396, 421
Oxidation (partial) of organic solid wastes, 154
Oxidation ponds for disposal of hazardous wastes,
PB-224 583
Packaging and containers, 44, 172, 243, 353, 358
beverage containers, 326, 353, 424, PB-213 341
environmental impacts, 332
glass, 325
water-disposable, 236
government regulatory and fiscal policies, 437
legislation, 246
Oregon's Minimum Deposit Act, 325
pesticides, 376, PB-202 202
plastics, biodegradability, PB-213 488
Proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources
Conference (1971), 261
recycling, 353
source reduction, 246, 353, 421^22, 424, 437
Red Owl Stores program, 416
speech by Arsen J. Darnay, 364
taxes on, 246, 353, 424, 437
tin cans, PB-208 674, PB-223 034
See also Glass; Plastics
Paper
directory of recycled paper sources, 343
influence of raw material transportation
costs on use, PB-229 816-PB-229 817
recycling, 170, 256, 352, 381, 413, 420,
PB-208 674, PB-212 729
Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
Franklin, Ohio, project, 309, PB-213 646
incentives, 357
refuse sacks, 248, 270, 390, PB-212 590
source separation, 381, 390, 400, 421
Paper industry, solid waste management practices,
PB-234 944
Paper industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Partial oxidation of organic solid wastes, 154
Patents (abstracts)
international, 319
refuse handling facilities for buildings, 1
United States, 317
Paving with waste glass, PB-222 052
Pesticides, 345, PB-202 202, PB-224 584
containers, 376, PB-202 202
disposal and storage regulations, 376, 398
from wood waste, PB-222 05!
residues in solid waste, PB-222 165
water contamination from, 415
Petroleum industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222 354
Photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid
wastes, PB-222 454
Phytotoxip.s in crop residues in soil, PB-222 113
Pipeline collection of solid waste, PB-223 162
Plant residue decomposition in soil, PB-222 113
Plastic refuse sacks, 248, 390, PB-212 590
Plastics, 199, 244, 324, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
biodegradability, 199, 324, PB-213 488
effects of refuse on the environment, PB-238 654
incineration, PB-223 651
incineration products, PB-222 001
recycling, 222, 316, 352, PB-208 674,
PB-214 045
See also Packaging and containers
Pneumatic waste collection systems in hospitals,
PB-236 543
Pneumo-slurry pipeline collection of municipal
wastes, PB-223 162
Pocket calculator for sanitary landfills, 351
Port of Tacoma, Washington, solid waste
management study, PB-226 042
Portland, Maine, solid waste management system,
423
Post aeration of sewage sludges, PB-222 031
Posters
Waste No!, Want Not, 313
Spanish language version, 392
Poultry manure, PB-221 171, PB-222 148,
PB-223 430
Power plants, refuse-fueled, 387,
PB-187 299, PB-220 316, PB-221 095
Power utilities wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Precious metals, recycling, PB-212 729
Private sector, role in solid waste
management, 246, 340, 345, 380, 422, 424
Problem-solving in solid waste management, 423
Proceedings:
Conference of Institute of Solid Wastes
Management (1974), 395
International Research Group on Refuse
Disposal, 21-22, 89, 142-145
National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969),
172
sanitary landfill conference (1972), 339
Solid Waste Demonstration Projects (1971), 311
Solid Waste Resources Conference (1971), 261
Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste
Management for Metropolitan Washington
(1967), 30
Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste
Planning Agencies (1969), 194
Product design and prices and solid waste
management, 353
Propellants, PB-224 586
Protein
analysis of fungal protein, 312
from cellulose wastes, PB-222 115,
PB-223 873
Public opinion on refuse problems, 372, PB-213 340
hazardous waste facilities, PB-223 638
purchase of recycled oil, PB-237 619
recycling, 315, 344
Public participation in solid waste management,
266, 313-314, 318, 340, 392, 424
in rural areas, 273, 342
information kit. See Concerned Citizens in
Information Kits section of catalog
recycling, 344, 403 (See Miscellaneous
section of catalog)
Public regulation concept in solid waste
management, PB-225 332
"Purox" pyrolysis system, 417
Pyrolysis, 154, 417, 431, PB-222 015
Baltimore gas pyrolysis facility, 353, 388, 431
hazardous wastes, 427, PB-224 582
Quad-City regional project, 33
R
Radioactive wastes, 345, PB-221 464, PB-221 467,
PB-224 588
Rail transport of solid wastes, 252, 339,
PB-187 306, PB-222 709
45
-------
Railroad freight car demolition, 95
Recreation areas, solid waste management, 167,
284
Recycling, 268, 286, 307, 396, PB-212 729
and air classification of wastes, 256
centers, PB-239 776
film. See The Village Green in Films
section of catalog
citizen action 273, 296, 303
film. See The Village Green in Films
section of catalog
directory of recycling projects, 341
effects of Federal programs, 296, PB-2'3 311
films. See The Realities of Recycling and
Recycling in Films section of catalog
Franklin, Ohio, waste processing complex, 309
information kits. See Resource Recovery in
Information Kits section of catalog
legislation, 296
public opinion, 315, 344
public participation, 273, 344, 403 (See
Miscellaneous section of catalog)
See also under specific materials; e.g.,
Aluminum; Bark waste; Glass; Paper; Textiles;
also Packaging and containers; Resource
recovery; Salvaging and salvage markets
Red Owl Stores source reduction program, 416
Regional solid waste management, 164, 323, 336,
339, 390, 423, PB-226 099, PB-231 309,
PB-233 873
Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana study, 125
Quad-City project, 33
Washington, D.C., area, 30
Residential complex solid wastes, 248
Resource conservation, 44, 77, 407
and refillable beverage containers, 405
speech by Arsen Darnay, Jr., 364
statement by Arsen Darnay, Jr., before the
Subcommittee on Minerals, Materials and
Fuels, U.S. Senate (1973), 358
See also Energy conservation; Land use;
Recycling; Resource recovery
Resource recovery, 177, 246, 307, 350, 380, 388
390, 396, 421, 424, PB-233 178
activated carbon from refuse, PB-221 172,
PB-229 246
alcohof from ceffulose, PB-221 239
aluminum from solid waste, PB-235 770
Baltimore gas pyrolysis process, 353, 388, 431
by wet processing, 408
chromate from pigment manufacturing,
PB-233 641
demonstration grants, 311, 334, 353, 388
Federal
policies, PB-222 467
solid waste management program, 395
subsidies, PB-239 736
from hazardous wastes, PB-224 579
fuel oil from rubber tires, PB-222 694
glucose from cellulose, PB-221 877
information kits. See Resource Recovery and
Concerned Citizens in Information Kits
section of catalog
levulinic acid from cellulose, PB-229 246
mineral fillers from water-softening process
sludge, PB-224 820
nutrients from agricultural wastes, PB-222 454
nutrients from fibrous wastes, PB-223 625
oil, waste, 390, PB-235 857, PB-237 618-
PB-237 620
Resource recovery (continued)
organic feed concentrate from sludge,
PB-223 343
paper fiber, PB-213 646
phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222 354
protein from cellulose, PB-222 115, PB-223 873
protein from poultry manure, PB-221 171
reports to Congress by EPA, 352-353
Resource Recovery Act (1970), 246
State and local projects, 432
statement by Arsen Darnay, Jr., before the
Subcommittee on Minerals, Materials and
Fuels, U.S. Senate (1973), 358
statements by Samuel Hale, Jr., before the
Subcommittee on the Environment, U.S.
Senate (1973), 357
sugar from cellulose, PB-221 239, PB-229 246
yeast from solid wastes, 91
See also Composting; Energy recovery; Recycling
Reverse osmosis for separation of hazardous
wastes, PB-224 583
Routing collection vehicles, 147, 347, 356, 409,
PB-239 895-Set, PB-239 896-PB-239 899
Rubber, scrap
influence of transportation costs on use,
PB-233 871
recycling, 187, 382
by a hydrogenation process, PB-222 694
tires. See Tires
Rural solid waste management, 255, 272, 342,
PB-212 398, PB-240 365
Sacks, paper, 248, 270, PB-212 590
Sacramento, California, recycling program, 273
Safety and health of solid waste collection
personnel, 426
Salvaging and salvage markets, 293, 296, 333,
PB-232 729-PB-212 731, PB-229 220
wastepaper, 397, 420
See also Resource recovery
San Diego baling study, PB-214 960
San Francisco International Airport solid waste
and collection system, PB-219 372
San Jose, California, solid waste system,
PB-240 395
Sanitary landfill, 47, 189, 287-288, 305, 424,
PB-196 148
accounting system, 86
bibliography, 47, 384
Chilton County, Alabama, 238, 29!
conference (1972), 339
Cook County, Illinois, ski mountain, PB-213 697
costs, 47
decomposition gases. Sec Gases (decomposition)
in sanitary landfills
design and operation, 11, 223, 390, PB-224 996
equipment, 47, 287, 291, 305, PB-212 589
films. See Mt. Trashmore and
Sanitary Landfill; One Part Earth to Four
Parts Refuse in Films section of catalog
guidelines and standards, 11, 230, 385,
PB-218 672
hazardous waste disposal, PB-224 582
hydrogeology, 223, 287
in high water table areas, PB-224 996
in rural areas, 255, PB-212 589
Kenilworth (Washington, D.C.), 105
46
-------
Sanitary landfill (continued)
leachates. See Leachatcs
liners, 428
MARC project, 339
model operation agreement, 230
sewage sludge disposal, 391, PB-225 36O-PB-225 362
shredded and baled refuse disposal, 339
site selection, 11, 47, 223, 305, 339
Sonoma County, California, stabilization
study, PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting
ramp, PB-225 346
water pollution, 11, 47, 245, 305, 415,
PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-218 672, PB-222 468,
PB-224 996, PB-239 778
Sanitation workers
safety and health, 426
training. See Operation Responsible; Safe
Refuse Collection and Sanitary Landfill—
You're the Operator in Films section of
catalog; and Training Programs section
of catalog
Satellite vehicle systems in solid waste
collection, 262, PB-197 931
Scottsdale, Arizona, mechanized collection system,
PB-239 195
Scrap metals. See Metals; Steel, scrap
Separate collection. See Newspaper, separate
collection; Source separation
Separation of solid wastes
by air classification, 256
by infrared sensor, PB-229 901
by reverse osmosis, PB-224 583
manual. See Source separation
Septic tank sludge, 391, PB-225 360-PB-225 362,
PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Sewage sludge, 144-145, 390, PB-225 360-PB-225 362
aerobic digestion, PB-222 029, PB-222 396
as composi, 115, 144-145, 229, PB-236 402
costs of hauling and land spreading, PB-227 005
disposal into sanitary landfill, 391,
PB-225 360-PB-225 362
lime sludges, PB-222 354
post aeration, PB-222 031
treatment plants with upstream equalization
basins, PB-222 000
Shipborne disposal, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Shipborne incineration, PB-221 684
Shredding and baling, 248, 252, 339, 390, 433,
PB-214 960, PB-221 731
Gainesville, Florida, composting plant, 402
Madison, Wisconsin, project, PB-234 930-PB-234 931
Site selection for sanitary landfills, 11, 47,
223, 277, 339
Size reduction of solid wastes, 110, 252, 369,
390, PB-214 960
Buffalo, New York, crusher facility, PB-225 159
equipment, PB-226 551
in high-rise buildings, 292, PB-197 623
Sec.' also Compaction of solid wastes; Shredding
and baling
Ski mountain from sanitary landfill, PB-213 697
Sludges, refuse
activated process for disposal of hazardous
wastes, PB-224 583
aerobic digestion, PB-222 029
economics of disposal, PB-234 498
organic feed concentrate from, PB-223 343
See also Dairy manure; Septic tank sludge;
Sewage sludge; Wastewater sludge
Social costs of solid waste systems, PB-221 681
Soil
effect of digested sewage sludge application,
PB-236 402
pollution by mine spoil, PB-237 525
Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings
of a Symposium (1971), 311
Solid Waste Disposal Act, 171, 410
Solid Waste Information Retrieval System
users' guide to thesaurus, 374
Solid waste processing. See Composting;
Incineration; Pyrolysis; Size reduction
Solid Waste Resources Conference (1971), 261
Solidification of hazardous solid wastes, PB-224 583
Solvent residues, disposal, 418
Sonoma County, California, sanitary landfill
stabilization study. PB-230 379, PB-239 778
Sorting of solid wastes. See Separation of
solid wastes
Source reduction, 357
and Federal procurement practices, PB-229 727
packaging and containers, 246, 353, 421-422, 437
Red Owl Stores program, 416
reports to Congress by EPA, 352-353
See also Generation of solid waste
Source separation, 310, 381, 390, 400. 420-421,
PB-239 775-PB-239 776
Southeastern Oakland County (Michigan) Incinerator
Authority, 423
Springfield, Massachusetts, wet system for
collection, PB-234 499
St. Louis, Missouri:
refuse firing demonstration, 412
waste wood and bulky refuse disposal, PB-228 119
St. Louis/Union Electric solid waste plant,
412, 421
Stainless steel, recycling, PB-212 729
See also Metals
Standards and guidelines
for local governments, 239
for sanitary landfill, 11, 230, 385, PB-218 672
State solid waste management:
agencies, 393 (See Miscellaneous section of
catalog)
plans, !24
roles, 194, 327, 339, 345, 380, 383, 424
State solid waste management and resource
recovery incentives act (proposed), 377
Steam and electricity from solid wastes, 401, 431,
PB-214 166
Steel industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Steel, scrap
influence of transportation costs on use of,
PB-229 816-PB-229 817, PB-233 871
metallurgical upgrading, PB-223 740
recycling, PB-212 729
Federal subsidies, PB-239 736
See also Automobile disposal
Stone industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Street cleaning, PB-239 327
Style guide for Office of Solid Waste
Management Programs publications, 386
Sugar from cellulose wastes, PB-221 239,
PB-229 246
Sulfur dioxide for production of feed concentrate
from sludge, PB-223 343
Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste
Management for Metropolitan Washington
(1967), 30
Sxvine wastes, PB-22) 621
47
-------
SWIRS. See Solid Waste Information Retrieval
System
Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste
Planning Agencies, 1969, 194
Systems analysis of solid waste management,
128, 136, PB-222 995
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
contract research, 85
press briefing on solid waste management
and energy (1974), 359
U.S. Public Health Service-Tennessee Valley
Authority composting project, 8-9, 15
Tacoma, Port of, PB-226 042
Tampa, Florida, solid waste management system,
PB-225 291
Taxes
affecting secondary materials use, 246, 353, 357,
424, 437
on packaging and containers, 246, 353, 424, 437
Technology and the American Economy, 2
Tennessee Valley Authority composting project,
8-9, 15
Textile industry wastes, PB-221 464, PB-221 466
Textiles, recycling, 352, PB-212 729
Thermaf processing of solid waste, 345, 390
guidelines, 385
See also Incineration
Tin cans, recycling, PB-208 674, PB-223 034
Tires, 348, 390
recycling, 353, 382, PB-208 674, PB-234 602.
by a hydrogenation process, PB-222 694
in road dressings, PB-232 559
Tolleson, Arizona, mechanized collection system,
PB-239 196
Toxicity data on hazardous wastes, PB-224 581
Toxicology of:
arsenic wastes, PB-224 585
cadmium wastes, PB-224 585
chromium wastes, PB-224 585
cyanide compounds, PB-224 584
mercury wastes, PB-224 585
pesticide wastes, PB-224 584
propellants, explosives and chemical warfare
materiel, PB-224 586
Training sanitation workers. See Operation
Responsible; Safe Refuse Collection and
Sanitary Landfill—You're the Operator in
Films section of catalog; and Training
Programs section of catalog
Transfer stations, 182, 337, 390, PB-213 511,
PB-227 075
Transportation of refuse through sewers, PB-229 256
Transportation rates for virgin and
secondary commodities, 353, 424, PB-229 816-
PB-229 817, PB-233 871
Trash. See Debris accumulation in ancient and
modern cities; also Liner
Trickling filter process for disposal of
hazardous wastes, PB-224 583
U
Union Electric refuse firing demonstration, 412
U.S. Department of Defense waste management,
PB-221 464, PB-221 467
Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting ramp,
PB-225 346
W
Washington, D.C.
areawide conference, 30
incinerator studies, PB-1S7 286
Kenilworth sanitary landfill, 105
Waste reduction. See Source reduction
Wastepaper as fuel, 420
Wastepaper exports, effects on domestic markets,
397
Wastewater
computer program for steady-state of treatment
facilities, PB-234 497
Franklin, Ohio, treatment facility, 309
Wastewater sludge, PB-222 396
mineral fillers from, PB-224 820
-Set- also Sewage sludge
Water absorption by solid wastes in landfill,
391, PB-196 148
Water pollution
by dairy manure, PB-225 160, PB-233 441
by dumps, 411
film. Sit? The Third Pollution in
Films section of catalog
by hazardous wastes, 345
by landfills, 11, 47, 245, 305, 415,
PB-209 001-PB-209 002, PB-218 672,
PB-222 468, PB-224 996, PB-239 778
by mine spoil, PB-237 525
by pesticides, 415
by sewage sludge compost, PB-236 402
by toxic chemicals, 415
regulations. 415
See also Leachates
Wet-processing of solid wastes for resource
recovery, 408
We! systems for refuse collection, PB-234 496,
PB-234 499, PB-236 085
Wichita solid waste management system, PB-133 878
Wood waste:
reuse in controlled-release pesticides,
PB-222 051
St. Louis disposal facilities, PB-22S 119
Sec a/so Cellulose wastes
Workers, sanitation. Sec Sanitation
workers
XYZ
Yeast from solid waste, 9!
Zinc, recycling, PB-212 729
yrjll96
48
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