AVAILABLE
INPORA\ATION
iUATEKIALS
on Solid Waste Management
Total listing, 1966 to 1978
This catalog (SW-58.29), listing all
reports published by the Office of
Solid Waste from January 1966
through September 1978, was
prepared under contract and is
reproduced as received
  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1979

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An environmental protection publication (SW-58.29) in the solid waste management series

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                        Foreword
   Collecting and making available information pertaining to solid-waste-related

research, demonstration projects, and other activities was originally authorized

by section 204(b) of the  1965 Solid Waste Disposal Act,  Public Law 89-272.

The collection and dissemination of solid waste information was more recently

mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law

94-580), section 8003, which amends the Solid Waste Disposal Act. The follow-

ing comprehensive catalog lists publications and other educational materials on

solid waste that have been published or collected by the  U.S. Environmental

Protection Agency in response to these directives. The subject index reflects the

entire scope of the work undertaken by EPA's solid waste program from 1966 to

the present and is intended for researchers.

                                        -STEFFEN W. PLEHN
                                         Deputy Assistant Administrator
                                         for So lid Waste
                                 111

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                                     Contents
Introduction: EPA's Information Materials
     on Solid Waste Management	1

Guidelines, Regulations, and Basic Information Related to the
     Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976	3

Teaching Materials	9

     a. Junior and Senior High School Students	9

     b. Films	12

     c. Technical Training Programs	  15

Subject Index	,	 16

EPA Solid Waste Publications	 53

NTIS Reports	  95

Title Index 	127

Author Index	150

List of Depository Libraries as of August 1, 1977	157

Order Blanks (EPA Materials, NTIS Reports)	180

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Page Intentionally Blank

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                                     Introduction

                  Information  Materials Available from EPA
                          on  Solid  Waste Management
   The solid waste management information materials 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 by the
Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976. This far-reaching Federal program  that includes technical
and financial  assistance and research, development,  and demonstrations has  generated solid-waste-related
projects in many fields from 1966 to the present. Reports from grantees and contractors are published by
EPA as soon as available. Presentations and policy statements by key personnel and results of technical investi-
gations 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.

   In addition to the titles available from EPA, from various library systems, or from  the Superintendent of
Documents, over 520 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,
title, and subject indexes supplementing this  volume  refer to both  EPA-published documents and the NTIS
reports. The subject index precedes the reports section, followed by title and author indexes. An integrated
list of EPA publications and NTIS reports, by title, is also included.  In the back of the volume is an NTIS
order form, an EPA solid waste information-materials  request form, and a list of U.S. Government Depository
Libraries.

   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 safely and efficiently while also con-
tributing to efforts to conserve energy and our  natural resources.

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Page Intentionally Blank

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   Guidelines,   Regulations,   and  Basic   Information
Related to the  Resource  Conservation  and Recovery Act  of  1976
   The following materials have been selected from this catalog to provide an orientation to some of the issues
related to the national effort to improve solid waste management: resource/energy conservation, solid waste
systems management and land  protection, and hazardous wastes management.  To order, see form for EPA
solid waste publications in the back of this catalog. There is no  charge for single copies of EPA publications.
 EPA Order Nos.*

     171  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Public Law 94-580, 94th Congress, s. 2150-Oct.
          21, 1976. [Environmental Protection Publication SW-1.4. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
          Office], 1976. [47 p.] (Amends 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 93-61 l-93rd Congress, H.R. 16045-January 2, 1975 (To amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act
          to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 1975).)

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

     603  Statement of Honorable Douglas M. Costle, Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency, before
          the Subcommittee on Transportation and Commerce, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
          House of Representatives, April 16, 1977. D. M. Costle. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
          Agency]. 14 p.

     618  Implementation plan for the Resource Conservation Committee; 1st report to the President and
          Congress of the United States mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
          (Public Law 94-580). Washington, Resource Conservation Committee, Apr. 1977. 89 p.

     643  Balancing environment, economic, and resource conservation issues in the implementation of RCRA.
          T. C. Jorling. Presented at the meeting of the 6th National Congress on Waste Management Technology
          and Resource and Energy Recovery, of the National Solid Waste Management Association, Nov. 14,
          1977. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 15 p.

     663  EPA activities under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; annual report to the
          President and the Congress, fiscal year 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection
          Publication SW-663. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. 80 p.

     694  Solid waste facts. Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-694. [Washington],
          U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, May  1978. 13 p.

     707  Technical assistance to state and local governments. Resource Conservation & Recovery Panels
          Program. Environmental Protection Publication SW-707. [Washington], U.S.
          Protection Agency, 1978. [4 p.]
*See order form for EPA solid waste publications in back of catalog.

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•  Guidelines and  Regulations


463   Solid waste management guidelines for beverage containers. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
      Federal Register, 41(184):41202-41205, Sept. 21,  1976.

490   Promulgation resource recovery facilities guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal
      Register, 41(184):41208-41211, Sept. 21, 1976.

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

529   Vinyl chloride; recommended procedures for disposal of aerosol cans. Federal Register, 41(112):23226-
      23227, June 9, 1976.

563   The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a brief look at Public Law 94-580.
      [Environmental  Protection Publication] SW-563. [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection
      Agency, [1977]. 3 p.

564   The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a summary of Public Law 94-580. [Washington,
      U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.] 14 p.

610   Hazardous waste guidelines and regulations; advance notice of proposed rulemaking. U.S.
      Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(84):22332-22334, May 2,  1977.

629   Solid waste planning and disposal; advance notice of  proposed rulemaking. U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(128):34446-34448, July 5, 1977.

637   Implementation of the Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976;  interim regulations. U.S.
      Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(201):5606-5608, Oct. 20, 1977.

649   Public  participation in solid waste management;  interim guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection
      Agency. Federal Register, 43(8):1902-1906, January  12, 1978.

660   Research and demonstration grants; interim regulations. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
      Federal Register, 38(93): 12784-12790, May 15, 1973.

661   Noise emission standards for new truck-mounted  solid waste compactors. U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(166):43226-43243, Aug. 26,  1977.

665   State hazardous waste programs; proposed guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal
      Register, 43(22):4366-4373, Feb. 1, 1978.

668   Solid waste disposal facilities; proposed classification criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
      Federal Register, 43(25):4942-4955, Feb. 6, 1978.

670   Toxic substances control and solid waste disposal. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal
      Register, 43(12):  2637-2644, Jan.  18, 1978.

683   Implementation plan for the PCB marking and disposal regulation: facility approval process. M. Straus.
      [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb. 22, 1978. [33 p.]

689   Standards applicable  to transporters of hazardous wastes.  U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency.
      Federal Register, 43(83): 18506-18512, Apr. 28, 1978.

691   Preliminary notefication of hazardous waste activites; proposed procedures. U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency. Federal Register, 43(133): 29908-29916, July 11, 1978.

702   Transportation of hazardous waste materials; proposed provisions, hearings. U.S. Department of
      Transportation. Federal Register, 43(l02):22626-22634,  May 25, 1978.

713   Federal environmental laws and you. In Current Focus. Publication no. 564. Washington, League of
      Women Voters Education Fund, [1978]. 12 p.

714   State solid waste management plans; guidelines for development and implementation. U.S.
      Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 43(167): 38534-38546, Aug. 28,  1978.

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•  Hazardous Waste Management


345   Disposal of hazardous wastes; report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of
      Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-115. Washington, U.S.
      Government Printing Office, 1974. 110 p. (Available as PB-257-637.)

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

429   Hazardous waste management facilities in the United States. M. Straus. Environmental Protection
      Publication SW-146.3.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb. 1977. 60 p

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

530   State hazardous waste  regulations and legislation; a synopsis of information on seven selected states.
      P. Waldrop. Environmental Protection Publication SW-530. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency, 1976. 47 p.

535   Effective hazardous waste management (non-radioactive); position statement. U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency. Federal Register, 41(161):35050-35051,  Aug. 18, 1976.

540   Hazardous waste guidelines: plans and prospects. W. W. Kovalick, Jr. Presented at Hazardous Waste
      Research Symposium, Residual Management Land Disposal, Tucson, Feb. 2, 1976. [Washington], U.S.
      Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.  [7 p.]

546   Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 3]. Office of Solid Waste Management
      Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-151.3. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
      Protection Agency, 1976. [15 p.] ( SeePB-261-156.)

584   Overview and objectives of hazardous waste management. J. P. Lehman. Presented at National
      Conference on Hazardous Waste Management, San Francisco, Feb. 1, 1977.  [Washington], U.S.
      Environmental Protection Agency. 17 p.

612   State decision makers guide for hazardous waste management. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
      Office of Solid Waste, Hazardous Waste Management Division. Environmental Protection Publication
      SW-612. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office,  1977.  103 p.

630   Safe storage and disposal of pesticides. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, May,
      1977. 9 p.

635   Model state hazardous waste  management act (annotated). M. Newton. Environmental Protection
      Publication SW-635. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [56 p.]

677   Upgrading hazardous waste disposal sites; remedial approaches. D.G. Farb. Environmental Protection
      Publication SW-677. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Jan. 1978. [44 p.]

683   Implementation plan for the PCS marking and disposal regulation: facility approval process. M. Straus.
      [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb. 22, 1978. [33 p.]

688   Industrial waste exchanges; fact sheet. R.P. Hill. Environmental Protection Publication SW-688.
      [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. [6 p.]
 •  Solid Waste Systems Management and Land Protection


 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. ( See PB-204-403.)

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. ( See PB-227-565.)

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520    Don't walk away from an open  dump. K. Anderson and M. Cowart. American City & County,
       91(2):37-38, Feb. 1976.

548    Wrapping up the solid waste management problem; a model for regional solid waste management
       planning. Mitre Corporation. Environmental Protection Publication SW-137c. [Washington], U.S.
       Environmental  Protection Agency, 1977. 12 p.

556    Municipal sludge: what shall we do with it?  H. McNulty and L. Sharpe. League of Women Voters
       Publication No. 627. Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, [1976]. 8 p.

611    Procedures manual for ground water monitoring at solid waste disposal facilities. Wehran Engineering
       Corporation and Geraghty and Miller, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-611.
       [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [273 p.]

617    Successful sanitary landfill siting: County of San Bernardino, California. N. G. Dunne. Environmental
       Protection Publication SW-617. [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  1977. 31 p.

624    Metals in municipal landfill leachate and their health effects. S. C. James. American Journal of Public
       Health, 67(5):429-432, May 1977.

639    Solid waste on Federal lands in Alaska,  executive summary report. Office  of Solid Waste.
       [Environmental Protection Publication SW-639. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
       1978]. 86 p.

669    Municipal solid waste disposal...how cities site landfills. National League of Cities  and United States
       Conference of Mayors. [Washington, 1978]. [77 p.]

696    Municipal sludge management; overview of EPA policy and programs [Pamphlet]. S.W. Plehn.
       [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1978. [8 p.]


motion picture:

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 tech-
niques  that  can improve  efficiency  and effectiveness.  (28  min, 16-mm, sound, color,  1974.)  See
films section for cost  and availability information.
technical training programs:

Operation  responsible; safe  refuse  collection.  1972. A 3-part  training package  instructing refuse
collectors in safe methods of collection, as they suffer 10 to 15 times as many injuries as the average
worker.  Directed to the solid waste collection industry, both public and private. Two programs: a
one-day  session to  train supervisors and materials for supervisors to train collectors. See films section
for cost and availability information.

Sanitary landfill -  you're the operator. 1973. A 3-part training package illustrating the careful plan-
ning and precise techniques to achieve maximum standards and demonstrates that a sanitary landfill
can be a good neighbor and a community asset. Two programs: one for instructors; one for trainees.
See films section for cost and availability information.
•  Resource/Energy Conservation Issues


432    Waste reduction and resource recovery activities; a nationwide survey. L. B. McEwen, Jr.
       Environmental Protection Publication SW-142. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1977.
       78 p.

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461    Proceedings; 1975 Conference on Waste Reduction, April 2-3, 1975, Washington, D.C. U.S.
       Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental
       Protection Publication SW-7p. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 152 p. (Available
       as PB-258-157.)

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

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

501    The resource recovery industry;  a survey of the industry and its capacity.  Mitre Corporation.
       Environmental Protection Publication SW-501c. [Washington], U.S. Government Printing Office,
       1976. 92  p.

532   t Yosemite test of beverage container refund; environmental news [Press release]. U.S.  Environmental
       Protection Agency, Washington, July 20, 1976. 2 p.

553    Residential paper recovery; a community action program. National Center for Resource Recovery.
       [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-553. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
       [1976]. [20 p.]

570    Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; a review of energy recovery technologies.
       S. J. Levy and S. A. Lingle. Waste Age, 7(ll):26-27, 30-31, Nov.  1976. Reprinted, [Environmental
       Protection Publication SW-570. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 4 p.]

571    Use it again, Sam; a guide for Federal office paper recycling programs. C.M. Miller.  Environmental
       Protection Publication SW-571. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. (In press.)

572    Untrashing Yosemite Park. EPA Journal,  2(9):12-13, Oct. 1976.

600    Resource recovery and waste reduction; fourth report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection
       Agency,  Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-600. Washington, U.S.
       Government Printing Office, 1977. 142 p.

601    Recycling. Reprinted  from Government and the Nation's  Resources: Report of the National
       Commission on Supplies and Shortages, Dec.,  1976. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-601.
       [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. p. 155-172.

616    Use it again, Sam; recycle; the  Federal Government high-grade paper recovery program [Pamphlet].
       Office of Solid Waste. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-616. [Washington], U.S.
       Environmental Protection, 1977. [4 p.]

618    Implementation plan for the Resource Conservation Committee; 1st report to the President and
       Congress of the United States mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
       (Public Law 94-580). Washington, Resource Conservation Committee, Apr. 1977. 89 p.

620    Resource recovery implementations; a status report. L. McEwen and S. Levy. Resource Recovery &
       Energy Review, 4(l):21-25, Jan.-Feb. 1977.

632    The impact of source separation and waste  reduction on the economics of resource recovery facilities.
       J. H. Skinner. Resource Recovery & Energy Review,  4(2):22-26, Mar./Apr. 1977.

675    Save a paper, warm a home. A. Awner. In  Conservation News, 43(2): 8-11, Jan.  15, 1978. Reprinted,
       Washington, National Wildlife  Federation,  1978. [4 p.]

676    Resource conservation:  how industry might help. S.W.  Plehn. Presented to the Forest Industries
       Advisory Council, Boca Raton, Feb. 10,  1978. Environmental Protection Publication SW-676.
       [Washington] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, lip.

686    Thermal  methods for the codisposal of sludges and municipal residues. D.B. Sussman, and H.W.
       Gershman. Presented at the Fifth National Conference on Acceptable Sludge Disposal Techniques,
       Jan. 31-Feb. 2, 1978. Environmental Protection Publication SW-686. [Washington], U.S.
       Environmental Protection Agency. 21 p.

687    Co-disposal of sewage sludge and solid wastes-it works.  D.  B. Sussman. American City & County,
       92(10):55-58, Oct. 1977.

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688    Industrial waste exchanges; fact sheet. R.P. Hill. Environmental Protection Publication SW-688.
       [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. [6 p.]

 690   EPA Journal reprint: resource recovery. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.
       1978. 7p.

 708   Status report on solid waste disposal charge analysis; 3d report to the President and Congress of the
       United States mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580).
       The Resource Conservation Committee. [Washington], Resource Conservation Committee, July 1978.
       [170 p.]

 712   Baltimore; a lesson in resource recovery. R.A. Haverland, and D.B. Sussman. Presented  at the
       American Society of Civil Engineers Environmental Engineering Division Specialty Conference, July
       10-12, 1978. Environmental Protection Publication SW-712. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
       Protection Agency, 1978. 7 p.

 715   Resource recovery project development grants under the Presidents urban policy: notice of meeting
       and request for  comments. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 43(147): 33670-
       33674, July  31,  1978.

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Teaching  Materials
 a.  Junior and  Senior  High Schools
     epa

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

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

 430    Habia una vez un dragon malvado [Spanish version of "Once there lived a wicked dragon"]. M. Finan.

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

 563    The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a brief look at Public Law 94-580.
        [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-563.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
        Agency, [1977]. 3 p.

 564    The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a summary of Public Law 94-5 80. [Washington,
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1976.] 14 p.

 566    The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; everybody's business.  S. Meyers. Presented
        at 5th National Congress on Waste Management Technology and Resource and Energy Recovery,
        Dallas, Dec. 8, 1976. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.]  13 p.

 694    Solid waste facts. Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-694. [Washington],
        U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  May 1978. 13 p.

 701    Keeping public laws  public. T.F. Williams. [ Office of Solid Waste ]. Journal of Soil and Water
        Conservation, 33(l):4-5, Jan.-Feb. 1978.
 •  Hazardous Waste Management
 406    Hospital wastes. I. Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication SW-129. Washington, U.S.
        Government Printing Office, 1974. 36 p.

 450    Hazardous wastes. Environmental Protection Publication SW-138. Washington, U.S. Government
        Printing Office, 1975. 24 p. ( See PB-260-089.)

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

 584    Overview and objectives of hazardous waste management. J. P. Lehman. Presented at National
        Conference on Hazardous  Waste Management, San Francisco,  Feb. 1, 1977. [Washington], U.S.
        Environmental Protection Agency. 17 p.

 630    Safe storage and disposal of pesticides. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May,
        1977. 9 p.
 *See order form for EPA solid waste publications in back of catalog.

 fSuitable for elementary school.

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 slide presentation:

Hazardous wastes, the gross national product. Environmental Protection Publication SW-502. Depicts
damage from improper hazardous waste disposal on the land. Identifies sources of waste, gives quan-
tities and types of waste being generated, and explains the effect of exposure to hazardous materials.
Available methods of management of hazardous wastes are described, as well as the status of hazard-
ous waste programs. (18 min, 35-mm slide show, sound, color, 1975.) Script included. See films sec-
tion for cost and availability information.
• Solid Waste Systems Management and  Land Protection


fmotion pictures:

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, sound, color, 1974.) See films section
for cost and availability information.

Portrait of the san-man. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-6tgl. Actual interviews with the
men who collect New York City's tons of garbage every day. (16 min, 16-mm, sound, 1974. Cleared
for TV.) See films section for cost and availability information.
• Resource/Energy Conservation Issues


313   Waste not, want not [Poster]. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [9 by 13 in.].

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

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

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

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

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

531   Price comparison survey of beer and soft drinks in refillable and nonrefillable containers. C. Peterson.
      Environmental Protection Publication SW-531 [Washington,] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
      1976.  [34 p.]

553   Residential paper recovery; a community action program. National Center for Resource Recovery.
      [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-553. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
      [1976]. [20 p.]
fSuitable for elementary school.


                                              10

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560   EPA and municipal resource recovery. S. Meyers. NCRR [National Center for Resource Recovery]
      Bulletin, 6(3):62-65, Summer 1976.
572   Untrashing Yosemite Park. EPA Journal, 2(9):12-13, Oct. 1976.
666   Paper profits; solid waste project. Environmental Action Foundation.  Garbage Guide, No. 9, 1977.
      Reprinted, [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, [1978]. [4 p.]
671   Curbing trash; community guide. [ S. J. Valdes-Cogliano ]. League of Women Voters Publication No.
      147. Washington, League of Women Voters Education Fund, 1977. 6 p.
675   Save a paper, warm a home. A. Awner. In Conservation News, 43(2): 8-11, Jan. 15, 1978. Reprinted,
      Washington, National Wildlife Federation, 1978. [4 p.]
690   EPA Journal reprint:  resource recovery. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.
      1978.  7p.


motion pictures:
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, sound, color, 1974. Cleared for TV.) See films section for cost and availability informa-
tion.

Resource recovery is ... Describes  major approaches and processes  in resource recovery. Aimed at
general audiences, it  is a status report; it tells what resource recovery is and how it works, and ex-
amines the outlook for the conservation of natural resources through the widespread application of
resource recovery. Produced  by the National Center for  Resource Recovery. (20 min, 16 mm, sound,
color, 1977. Cleared for TV.) See films section for cost and availability information.
                                              11

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 b.  Films
 The films listed below are available from one or more of the following sources:

 (MTP)    Modern Talking Picture Service, 2323 New Hyde Park Road, New Hyde Park, New York 11040.
          Allow 4 weeks for scheduling. Available by free loan.
 (NAC)    National Audiovisual Center,  Government Services  Administration, Washington, DC 20409. Allow
          4 weeks for scheduling. Available by rental or sale.

 (NCRR)  National Center for Resource Recovery, Incorporated, 1210  Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Washing-
          ton, DC
 (RHR)    RHR Filmedia, Inc., 1212 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10036. Allow 6 weeks for
          scheduling. Available by free loan.

 (SWI)    Solid Waste Information, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268. Allow 4
          weeks for scheduling. Available by free loan.


 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, sound, color, 1974.) NAC sale $162.50; RHR; SWI.

 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, sound, color, 1968.] SWI.
 The green box. The residents of  Chilton County, Alabama, switched from rat-infested open  dumps to a trash
 collection system utilizing green  containers that were emptied every second day. Portrays an approach specif-
 ically tailored for rural areas. (17  min, 16-mm, sound, color, 1970. Cleared for TV.) RHR; SWI.
 Hazardous wastes, the  gross national  byproduct. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-502. Depicts
 damage from improper hazardous waste disposal on the land. Identifies  sources of the waste, gives quantities
 and types of waste being generated, and explains the effect of exposure to hazardous materials. Available
 methods of management of hazardous wastes are described, as well as the status of hazardous waste programs.
 (18 min, 35-mm slide show, sound, color, 1975.) Script included. NAC sale $12.50.
 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, sound, color, 1969. Cleared for TV.] SWI.
 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, TV
 news features, sound, color, 1972.] SWI

Operation responsible;  safe refuse collection. 1972. A 3-part training package  instructing refuse collectors
in safe methods of collection, as they suffer 10 to 15 times as many injuries as the average worker. Directed
to the solid waste collection industry, both public  and private. Two programs: one-day session to train super-
visors; and, materials for supervisors to train collectors. NAC package sale $154.50.
   Operation responsible; safe refuse collection. 16-mm motion picture (20 min, sound, color) NAC rental
   $12.50, sale $116; SWI.
  Operation responsible, safe refuse collection. Instructor's course. A 30-page instruction manual included.
  (24 2 by 2 slides, color) NAC sale $12.50.
* Of historic interest.
                                                 12

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   Operation responsible; safe  refuse collection. Training course. A 144-page instruction manual included
   (241 2 by 2 slides, color) NAC sale $26.

The phoenix.* Explores the materials use cycle and its role in solid waste. Traces the collection, transporta-
tion, and disposal of waste in Kansas, and analyzes attempts to recover materials and energy from the solid
waste stream. (22 min,  16-mm film, sound, color, 1975). NAC rental $12.50, sale $127.50.
Portrait of the  san-man. Environmental Protection Publication SW-6tgl. Actual interviews with the men who
collect New York City's tons of garbage every  day. (16 min, 16-mm, sound, 1974. Cleared for TV.) NAC
sale $49.50; SWI.
The realities of recycling.* Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.3. Examines technology of recycling
glass, aluminum, and steel containers; paper; and old car hulks. (39 min, 16mm, sound, color, 1971. Cleared
for TV.) NAC rental $15, sale $226.50; SWI.
Recycling.* Environmental Protection Publication SW-98c.4. Shows some emerging techniques on reuse, re-
covery, and recycling of resources—how materials now ending up as municipal solid waste may be used to ex-
tend the  supply of natural resources.  (21 min, 16 mm, sound,  color, 1971. Cleared for TV.)  NAC rental
$12.50, sale $127.50; SWI.

Resource recovery is ... Describes major approaches and processes in resource  recovery. Aimed at general
audiences, it is a status report; it tells what resource recovery is and how it works, and examines the outlook
for the conservation of natural resources through the widespread application of resource recovery. Produced
by the  National Center  for Resource Recovery. (20 min, 16-mm, sound color, 1977 Cleared for TV.) MTP;
NCRR sale $100.

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.  Concerns landfills with a capacity of at least 200 tons per day but allows for application of infor-
mation to smaller facilities. (24 min, 16-mm, sound, color, 1969. Cleared for TV.) NAC sale $139.25;RHR;
SWI.

Sanitary landfill - you're the operator. 1973. A  3-part training package illustrating the careful planning and
precise techniques to achieve maximum standards and  demonstrates that a sanitary landfill can be a good
neighbor and a community asset. Two programs: one for instructors; one for trainees. NAC package sale $165;
SWI.
      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. NAC rental $12.50, sale $127.50; SWI.
     Sanitary landfill -  you're the operator. Instructor's package. Shows professional operating techniques
     and practices: workshops, case studies, etc. Entitled: Training sanitary landfill employees. Instructor's
     manual. (206 2 by 2 slides,  color). A 203-page manual is included. NAC sale $26; SWI.
     Sanitary landfill - you're the operator. Trainee's package. Discusses safety, letter control, public rela-
     tions,  equipment care and maintenance, etc. Entitled: Training sanitary landfill employees. Trainee's
     manual. A 233-page manual is included. (10 2 by 2 slides, color). NAC sale $12.50; SWI.

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." (23  min, 16 mm, sound, color, 1970. Cleared for TV.) NAC
rental $12.50, sale $133.50; SWI.
*Of historic interest.

                                                 13

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The third pollution.* Describes 1966 solid waste disposal and the attendant problems of air and water pollu-
tion. Helped  call attention to the solid waste problem in the early days of the environmental movement.
(23 min, 16 mm, sound, color, 1966.) SWI.

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, sound,
color, 1974. Cleared for TV.) RHR; SWI.

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, alterna-
tive systems,  etc. (37 min, 16 mm, sound, color, 1970.  Cleared for TV.) NAC rental $15, sale $208.75; SWI.
*Of historic interest

                                                14

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c.  Technical  Training  Programs
Operation responsible; safe refuse collection. 1972. A 3-part training package instructing refuse collectors in
safe methods of collection, as they suffer 10 to 15 times as many injuries as the average worker. Directed to
the solid waste collection industry, both public and private. Two programs: a one-day session to train super-
visors and materials for supervisors to train collectors. NAC package sale $154.50.
      Operation responsible; safe refuse collection. 16 mm motion picture (20 min, sound, color) NAC rental
      $12.50, sale $116; SWI.
      Operation responsible, safe refuse collection. Instructor's course. A 30-page instruction manual includ-
      ed. (24 2 by 2 slides, color) NAC sale $12.50.
      Operation responsible; safe refuse collection. Training course.  A 144-page instruction manual included
      (241 2 by 2 slides, color) NAC sale $26.
 Sanitary landfill - you're the operator. 1973. A 3-part training package illustrating the careful planning and
 precise techniques to achieve maximum standards and demonstrates that a sanitary landfill can be a good
 neighbor and a community asset. Two programs: one for instructors; one for trainees. NAC package sale $165;
 SWI.
       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. NAC rental $12.50, sale $127.50; SWI.
       Sanitary landfill - you're the operator. Instructor's package. Shows professional operating techniques
       and  practices: workshops, case studies, etc. Entitled: Training sanitary landfill employees. Instructor's
       manual. (206 2 by 2 slides, color). A 203-page manual is included. NAC sale $26; SWI.
       Sanitary landfill - you're the operator. Trainee's package. Discusses safety, letter control, public rela-
       tions, equipment care and maintenance, etc. Entitled: Training  sanitary landfill employees. Trainee's
       manual. A 233-page manual is included. (10 2 by 2 slides, color). NAC sale $12.50; SWI.
 •  Addresses of State and Regional Solid Waste Offices


 393   State solid waste management agencies. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [List,
       updated periodically.]
 439   [ Regional solid waste management representatives. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
       Agency.] 1 p. [List, updated periodically.]
                                                 15

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                                             Subject  Index
Accession Bulletin; Solid Waste
              Information Retrieval System, 195

accounting systems for solid waste management, 86, 111, 153
              176, 182, 451, 493, PB-249-747

acid hydrolysis of cellulose, PB-270-085

acrylonitrile manufacture
    anticipated waste regulations
         economic assessment, PB-279-645

Act, Solid Waste, 171
    see also Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
              (1976)

activated carbon  from refuse, 431,  PB-221-172, PB-229-246
              PB-270-961

activated sludge process for disposal of hazardous wastes
              PB-224-583

aerobic treatment
    of organic wastes, 297, PB-222-029, PB-222-031
              PB-222-396, PB-225-160, PB-233^41
    of solid wastes, PB-269-502

agricultural uses  of solid waste. See composting

agricultural wastes, 104,  120, PB-215-289,  PB-256-496
              PB-257-311
    see also composting; livestock wastes; plant residue
              decomposition in soil
    bibliographies, 658
    generation, PB-222-467
         in California, 175
         in New York State, 233
    photosynthetic reclamation, PB-222-454
    surveys, PB-256-954
    use in construction  materials, PB-271-007

aid (Federal) for  solid waste management.  See Federal
              grants for solid waste management

air classification  of solid wastes, 102, 256

air pollution, PB-226-960, PB-256-349
    abatement, 713, PB-256-349, PB-256-926
    bibliographies, 658
    controls, effects on solid waste generation, PB-238-819
    film. See The Third Pollution in the
              films section of the catalog
    from burning solid wastes, 30, 62, 100,  175, 213, 264
              292, 448, 467
         Baltimore plant, 537
         Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245-674
         St Louis plant, 412, 581, PB-243-634
    from incineration, PB-216-586, PB-266-355
    from landfills, 494
    from use of virgin and recycled steel  and  aluminum
              PB-253-487
airport solid wastes, 355, PB-219-372
Akron, Ohio. See Ohio

Alabama
     Baldwin County, solid waste management system
              PB-234-612
     Chilton County, sanitary landfill, 220, 238, 291, 311
     Mobile, composting unit, PB-228-165

Alaska
     solid waste disposal, site analysis and inventory, 639

alcohol from cellulose wastes, PB-221-239

Alexandria, Virginia. See Virginia

alkali wastes, PB-244-832

Alsterberg (AZID) modification, PB-256-946, PB-256-953

Altoona, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania

aluminum
     recycling and recovery,  225, 261, 308, 353, 448, 491, 550
              558, 582, 600, 642, PB-208-674, PB-212-730
              PB-235-770, PB-272-051
          environmental effects of virgin and recycled alumi-
              num, 642, PB-253-487, PB-272-051
          forecasts for 1972  to 1990, PB-245-924
          markets. See markets for recycled and recovered
              materials
          specifications for recovered aluminum, PB-242-540
          taxes affecting use of recycled aluminum
              PB-240-988, PB-264-886
     transportation rates for  virgin and secondary materials
              PB-233-871, PB-264-886

aluminum fluoride wastes, economic assessment of regulation
              PB-263-210

Amarillo, Texas. See Texas

Ames, Iowa. See Iowa

anaerobic digestion of solid waste
     codisposal of sewage sludge, 667, 687
     to methane,  178, 378, 448,  458, 600, 710
     to protein, PB-270-085

analysis and composition of solid wastes
     volatility, PB-256-358, PB-256-364, PB-256-365
              PB-256-370

analysis of solid wastes. See composition and analysis

animal processing industry wastes, 20

animal wastes. See livestock wastes

Annual report to the President and Congress, 663

antilitter
     see also  litter
     campaign of Keep America Beautiful, Inc., 318, 455
     legislation, 455
                                                             16

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application for a chemical waste land disposal facility
               demonstration grant, PB-249-747
Arbuckle, Oklahoma. See Oklahoma

Arizona
     Graham County, sanitary landfill, PB-265-391
     Maricopa County,  solid waste management and planning
               PB-215-699
     Scottsdale, mechanized collection system, 220
               PB-239-195
     Tolleson, mechanized collection system,  311, PB-239-196

Arkadelphia, Arkansas.  See Arkansas

Arkansas
     Arkadelphia City Dump, PB-243-029
     Clark County, solid waste management system, 479
               PB-243-029
     Hot Springs, solid  waste management system, 423
               PB-234-612
     Little Rock, solid waste management system, 423

arsenic wastes, PB-275-103,  634, PB-224-585, PB-258-953
     in groundwater, 634, PB-275-103
     in soils, PB-266-905

asbestos  wastes, PB-257-951
     in soils, PB-266-905

ash, utility coal, PB-244-312

asphalt-glass aggregate as paving, 261, 431, PB-222-052
assistance available under the Solid Waste Disposal Act. See
               Federal  grants for solid waste management
associations and organizations for resource recovery, 470

Atlanta,  Georgia. See Georgia

attitudes of citizens on refuse problems. See public opinion
               on refuse problems

automobile disposal, 6, 30, 106, PB-221-879, PB-227-000
     see also  salvaging and salvage markets;  steel, scrap
     aerial and automotive reconnaissance for dumping sites
               277
     in Kentucky, PB-268-327
     in small communities, 354, PB-216-585
     in Washington, D.C., 191
     President's message on the environment  (1970),  129
     recycling, 275, 353, PB-223-034
     upgrading automotive scrap metal,  PB-223-740

bacteria
     see also  pathogens
     destruction in incinerators, 73, 88,  184
     in solid wastes, PB-256-374, PB-256-389
bagging,  60, 248, 270, 390, PB-212-590
Baldwin  County, Alabama. See Alabama
baling and balefills, 248, 252, 390, 497, PB-214-960
               PB-247-185
     see also  compaction of solid  waste; shredding; size re-
               duction  of solid wastes
     gas and leachate generation with baled fill, 497
     Tezuka, Japan, compression system, 69

Baltimore, Maryland. See Maryland
bark waste,  recycling, PB-221-876
Battelle Memorial Institute, classification of hazardous
               substances, 489

batteries industries wastes, PB-241-204
     reprocessors of heavy metals and batteries, 429
beer cans. See beverage containers
beryllium wastes in soils, PB-266-905

beverage containers, 326, 353, 405, 424, 448, 456, 461, 462
               600, 646, 647, 648, PB-213-341
     see also  food packaging; packaging and containers; tin
               cans
     Defense Department deposit system, 690
     deposit laws, 325, 396,  421, 461, 462, 487, 600
          conservation committee, public meeting, 654
          economic impacts of returnables, 325, 353, 456, 461
               462, 487, 600
          effect on industry, 325, 461, 462, 487, 600
          effect on resource recovery,  505, 600
          Oregon's bottle bill, 325, 396, 421, 461, 462
          speech by Russell Train, 460
          statement by John Quarles, Jr., before the Subcom-
               mittee on the Environment, 459
          Vermont beverage container law, 462, 487
     Eco Pak Milk Carton, 447, 461
     energy savings with returnables, 326,  378, 405, 600
               PB-213-341
     environmental impacts, 332, 405
     plastic, 261
     price comparison survey of refillables and nonrefillables
               531
     Proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources Conference on
               Design of Consumer Containers for Re-use or
               Disposal (1971), 261
     recycling nonreturnables, 225, 642
     standards and guidelines, 463
     water-disposable glass,  236, 261
     Yosemite National Park deposit system, 532^ 572,  600
               PB-270-266

bibliographies on solid waste management, 127, 128, 203, 231
               257, 258, 281, 282, 544, 555, PB-147-220
               PB-148-097,  PB-215-202
     collection and disposal, 35,  36, 37, 38, 39, PB-147-220
               PB-148-097,  PB-215-202
     composting, PB-147-220, PB-148-097, PB-215-202
     disease and solid waste, 48
     Federal contract research, 85
     Federal demonstration  grant projects  (1971), 232
     Federal research and training grants (1970),  190
     film list, 349
     hazardous wastes, 475, PB-224-595, PB-257-951
               PB-266-905,  PB-269-002
     hospital solid wastes, PB-227-708
     local ordinances, 253
     Office of Solid Waste Publications, 203, 544
     patents  (abstracts), 1, 317, 319
     resource recovery and waste reduction, 470, 536, 600
     sanitary landfill, 46, 47, 384, PB-213-487
     Solid Waste Management; Monthly
               Abstracts Bulletin, 513
     SWIRS Accession Bulletin, 195
     waste oil disposal, PB-237-618
     water pollution by land disposed solid wastes
               PB-256-391
                                                               17

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biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), PB-256-946, PB-256-947
              PB-256-953

biodegradability of plastics, 199, 254, 324, PB-213-488

biological treatment of wastes, 178, 345
     cellulose wastes,  178, 295
     hazardous wastes, PB-224-583, PB-275-054
     leachates, PB-269-502
     livestock wastes,  297, PB-221-171, PB-222-396
     with photosynthetic bacteria, PB-222-454

biowastes. See livestock wastes; nutrients from waste

bird hazards to aircraft near solid waste disposal sites, 355
     see energy recovery from waste-steam and electricity
              from solid wastes

boilers with capacity for burning waste as fuel, 711
              PB-239-392
     Federally owned, PB-255-695

Booz-AIlen Applied Research, Inc. classification of
              hazardous substances, 489

Bowerman  classifier, PB-208-674

Braintree, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts

Brevard County, Florida. See Florida

Brookhaven, New York. SteeNew York

Broomall, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania

Broward County, Florida. See Florida

Buffalo, New York. See New York
bulky refuse, PB-221-731, PB-228-119
     see also wood wastes

bulletin of courses in Solid Waste Management Training
              (1971-1972), 208

Bullitt County, Kentucky. See Kentucky

bumper sticker, 414, 685

Bureau of Solid Waste Management. See Office of Solid
              Waste
cadmium wastes, PB-224-585, PB-241-204, PB-257-951
              PB-258-953
     in solids,  PB-266-905

calculator for sanitary landfills, 351

California
     chemical  wastes, 175
     Concord
         RDF incineration/pyrolysis, 667,  687
     Contra Costa County
         co-disposal  system,  687
         codisposal system, 667
     El Cajon, pyrolysis facility (proposed),  442
     Fresno, solid waste management system, 84, PB-234-141
     generation of agricultural wastes,  175
     hazardous waste management
         classification of hazardous substances, 489
         program, 497
         regulations  and legislation, 530
     Humboldt County, collection container system, 174
              PB-240-365
     Inglewood bagging study, PB-212-590
     Los Angeles County, solid waste  management system, 30
              120
     Merced county demonstration project,  PB-252-865
California (cont'd)
     Mountain View
          sanitary landfill, 583, 587, 600, 620, 690, 710
     Oakland, metropolitan region study, 178
     Oceanside, solid waste management system, PB-225-360
              PB-225-361, PB-225-362
     Palos Verdes
          gas recovery system, 710
     Sacramento, solid waste management, 273, PB-234-612
     San Bernardino, sanitary landfill, 617
     San Diego
          baling study, 353, 388, 417, 442, 528, 582, 600, 620
              PB-214-960, PB-222-015
          public meeting (RCRA), 679
          pyrolysis system, 690
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     San Francisco
          Bay area solid waste management system
              PB-234-808
          Bay Region forecast of solid waste generation, 178
          International Airport solid waste and collection sys-
              tem, PB-219-372
          Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
              and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 596
     San Jose, solid waste management system, PB-240-395
     Santa Clara, sanitary landfill, 54
     solid waste  management study and  plan,  175
     Sonoma County, sanitary landfill stabilization study
              PB-230-379, PB-239-778, PB-254-550
     Ventura County, solid waste management system
              PB-234-612
     Yosemite Park, beverage container deposit program, 532
              572, 600, PB-270-266

carbon
     activated, from refuse, 431,  PB-221-172, PB-229-246
              PB-270-961
     black, from tires, PB-234-602
     content in solid wastes, 193, PB-256-371, PB-256-373
              PB-256-379, PB-257-306

Cascade County, Montana. See Montana

Catron County, New Mexico. See New Mexico

cellulose wastes, PB-223-625
     see also wood wastes
     activated carbon from, PB-221-172, PB-229-246
              PB-270-961
     alcohol from, PB-221-239
     degradation in composting,  126, 205,  PB-215-722
     levulinic acid from, PB-229-246
     liquefaction, PB-239-509
     protein from, 119,  186, 254, 295, PB-222-115
              PB-223-873, PB-270-085
     sugar from, PB-221-877, PB-229-246

cement manufacture, kilns for waste disposal,  PB-280-118

cement-waste glass products, 261

characteristics of solid waste. See composition and analysis
              of solid wastes

charges, disposal. See waste charges

charges, waste. See waste charges

chemical methods of pesticide disposal, PB-252-864
              PB-262-804

chemical oxygen demand in compost, 206
                                                              18

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chemical research in solid waste management, 134

chemical warfare material wastes, 162, PB-224-586
chemical wastes, 415, 418, 450, 475, PB-214-056, PB-221-464
               PB-224-579, PB-226-420, PB-244-832
     see also hazardous wastes; industrial solid wastes; sani-
               tary landfill-hazardous waste disposal
     alternative treatment processes, PB-278-059
     asbestos, PB-257-951
     batteries industry, PB-241-204
     cadmium,  PB-257-951
     chlorinated hydrocarbons
          disposal by cement kiln process, PB-280-118
     clearinghouse, 453, 554
     diseases from, 48, PB-257-951
     economic  assessment of regulation, PB-263-210
               PB-279-645
     hexachlorobenzene, PB-253-051
     in California, 175
     incineration, PB-265-540, PB-265-541, PB-267-987
               PB-268-232, PB-278-059
     inorganic,  418, 453, PB-224-587, PB-224-591, PB-224-592
               PB-244-832, PB-258-953, PB-263-210
               PB-274-565
     landfill  disposal, PB-249-747, PB-266-905,  PB-278-059
     ocean disposal, 130, 162, 192
     organic, 418,  516, PB-224-587, PB-224-589, PB-224-590
               PB-251-307, PB-258-953
     paint and  allied products industry, PB-251-669
     pharmaceutical industry, 508
     polychlorinated biphenyls
          disposal by cement kiln process, PB-280-118
     polychorinated biphenyls, guidelines for disposal, 516
     pyrolysis,  PB-268-232
     recycling and recovery, PB-224-579, PB-226-420
               PB-233-641
     regional approach, 497
     spilled materials disposal, 506, PB-243-386
     swapping, 453, 554
     textile industry, PB-258-953
     treatment processes, 418, 475, 506, PB-22M64
               PB-224-579, PB-241-204, PB-249-747
               PB-251-307, PB-264-204, PB-267-987
               PB-275-054
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and Ener-
               gy Recovery
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643
     wet air  oxidation, PB-267-987

Cheyenne, Wyoming. See Wyoming

Chicago, Illinois. See Illinois
Chilton County, Alabama. See Alabama

chlorinated hydrocarbon, disposal in cement kiln, PB-280-118

chlorine wastes, PB-244-832
     economic  assessment of regulation, PB-263-210

chloromethane  manufacture
     anticipated waste regulations
          economic assessment, PB-279-645
chromate from  pigment manufacturing, PB-233-641
chrome wastes, economic assessment of regulation
               PB-263-210
chromium wastes, PB-224-585, PB-241-204, PB-258-953
     in soils, PB-266-905
cities' role in solid waste management, 331, 669
citizen action
     see also public participation in solid waste management;
              Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
              (1976)- public meetings, transcripts
     League of Women Voters publications, 259, 303
     Mission 5000, 280
     recycling, 159, 273, 296, 303, 446, 622, 638, 642
     Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976), 585
              640, 697
Clark County, Arkansas. See Arkansas

classification criteria
     solid waste disposal facilities, 668, 679, 698, 699, 700
              706
classification systems for hazardous substances. See hazard-
              ous wastes
clay industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-238-819

Clean Air Act, 713
Clean Air Act classification of pollutants, 489
clearinghouses for industrial wastes, 429, 453, 554, 688, 690
              695, PB-258-068, PB-261-287

coatings operations, factory, PB-251-669
cobalt in textile  industry wastes, PB-258-953

codisposal
     sewage sludge and  solid wastes, 667, 687
     sludge, 686
     thermal methods, 686
collection, 30, 37, 38, 65, 94, 146, 147, 390, 409, 424
     accounting systems, 153, 182
     airport solid wastes, PB-219-372
     and planning, film. See Portrait of the San-
               Man in the films section of the catalog
     bagging, 60, 248, 270, 390, PB-212-590
     beverage container guidelines (proposed), 463
     bibliographies, 35, 36, 658
     case studies
          Akron, Ohio, 423
          Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234-612
          Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, Okla-
              homa, PB-234-612
          Baldwin County, Alabama,  PB-234-612
          Baltimore, PB-228-161
          California, 175
          Cheyenne, Wyoming, PB-234-612
          Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243-029
          Dallas, PB-234-140
          Des Moines, 6, 249
          Fresno, California, PB-234-141
          Genesee County, Michigan, 52
          Humboldt County, California, 174, PB-240-365
          Jacksonville, Florida, PB-234-139
          Kansas City, PB-234-068
          Kentucky, 181
          Lawrence, Kansas, PB-217-775
          Memphis, PB-234-612, PB-234-713
          Merced County, California, PB-252-865
          Middletown, Ohio, PB-234-945
          Minneapolis, PB-234-612
          New Orleans, 94
                                                              19

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collection (cont'd)
         Sacramento County, California, PB-234-612
         San Jose, California, PB-240-395
         Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239-196
         Washington, D.C., 191
         Wichita, PB-233-878
         Wichita  Falls, Texas, 311
     commercial, 472, PB-244-841
     comparison of different systems, 423, 434, 436
     computer planning. See collection-management and
              planning
     costs, 65, 142, 167, 228, 298, 347, 353, 390, 400, 436
              440, 441, 466, 526, PB-239-917, PB-241-468
         see also accounting systems for solid waste manage-
              ment; collection management information sys-
              tem (COLMIS)
         litter control, 455
         user charges. See user  charges for collection and
              disposal
     crews, 65, 298, 441, 466, 472, PB-239-917
         film. See Portrait of the San-Man in
              the films section of the catalog
         training  and safety. See Operation
              Responsible in technical training programs
              section of the catalog
     decisionmaking and games.  See decisionmaking and
              games
     DISCUS. See DISCUS
     effect of household compactors, PB-234-605
     equipment. See equipment
     facilities, commercial, 472
     Federal grants for studies, 121
     films. See The Big Pickup, The Green Box in the
              films section of the catalog
     filmscripts, 270, 272
     guidelines, 454, 504
     hospital wastes, PB-213-133, PB-213-135, PB-236-543
     hydraulic transport through sewers, PB-229-256
     in Germany, 59
     in high rise buildings, 292, PB-197-623, PB-213-133
              PB-213-135
     litter, 455
     low-income area  wastes, 242
     management and planning, 331, 390, 409, 423, 434, 436
              441, 466, 671, PB-213-308, PB-231-309
              PB-239-195, PB-239-196, PB-240-365
         computer planning, 123, 147, 166, 283, 370, 371
              389, 671, PB-239-117, PB-239-494, PB-239-895
              PB-239-917, PB-276-707, PB-276-708
         mathematical models, 65,  123, 147,  166, 283
              PB-208-154, PB-231-309, PB-239-117
              PB-239-494
     mechanized, 220, 311, PB-239-195, PB-239-196
              PB-241-468
     Merced County demonstration project, PB-252-865
     pipeline (pneumatic),  30, 84, 120, PB-223-162
              PB-229-256, PB-236-543
     productivity, 436, 440, 441,  466
         effects of bagging, 60
     public demand, PB-225-020
     recreation area wastes, 167
     residential complex wastes, 248
     role of private sector, 346
     routing, 356,  441, 472, PB-239-895
         heuristic, 356, 409, 472, PB-239-117, PB-239-494
     rural, 225, 271, 272, 342, 390, 479, PB-212-398
              PB-240-365, PB-243-029
collection (cont'd)                 :
     safety and health of workers. See safety and health
     satellite vehicle systems, 262, PB-197-931
     standards and guidelines, 454; ,
     transfer stations,  182, 337; PB-213-511, PB-227-075
     wet systems, PB-234-496, PB-234r499, PB-236-085

collection management information system (COLMIS), 347
              38ST
     user's manual,  370, 371

COLMIS. See collection management information system
Colorado
     Colorado Springs
          municipal sludge landfills, 705
     Denver
          municipal sludge landfills, 705
          Regional  Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
              and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 594
          solid waste management, PB-234-612
     planning region no. 10 (Montrose, Colorado), 423
     solid waste  management system, PB-234-612

coloring book on solid waste disposal, 335
     Spanish language version, 430

combined incineration of solid wastes, PB-266-355

combustion power unit-400, PB-187-299

Commerce, Secretary of, role in resource recovery, 171

commercial solid wastes
     see also collection; generation of solid waste; manage-
              ment and planning; storage of solid wastes
     generation,  240, 293,  443, 445, 533, 657, PB-215-289
     hazardous,  562

community solid waste management
     small-scale  incineration, 678

compaction of solid  waste, 248, 252, 292, 339, 390
              PB-214-960               /
     see also baling and balefills; crushing solid waste; shred-
              ding; size reduction of solid wastes
     Atlanta household compactor demonstration project
              PB-234-605
     truck-mounted compactors,  661

composition and  analysis of solid wastes, 4, 22, 125, 133, 143
              170, 235, 252, 388,  PB-220-479, PB-222^54
              PB-231-203, PB-256-390, PB-256-958
     see also
              specific industries under industrial solid wastes
     e.g., textiles
     agricultural wastes, PB-215-289, PB-222-454
     air classification of solid wastes,  102, 256
     aluminum, PB-208-674
          and corrosion in municipal incinerators, PB-238-747
     bacteria, PB-256-374
     beverage containers, 326
     carbon, 193, PB-256-371, PB-256-373, PB-256-379
              PB-257-306
     commercial wastes, 443, 445, 533
     compost,  158, 212, 488
     European wastes, 59
     food wastes, 443, 445
     fungal protein,  312, PB-256-372
     glass, 445, PB-208-674
     heat content, PB-256-378
     heat of combustion, PB-256-368, PB-256-382, PB-256-383
     household wastes, 443, 445,  533, PB-257^99
                                                              20

-------
composition and analysis of solid wastes (cont'd)
     household wastes (cont'd), PB-257-500, PB-266-684
     hydrogen, 193, PB-256-379, PB-257-306
     incinerator residue, 154, PB-222-458, PB-265-540
               PB-265-541, PB-267-987, PB-268-232
     industrial wastes, 508, 634, PB-216-100, PB-239-119
               PB-258-953, PB-259-097, PB-270-897
               PB-275-103
          residuals, metal  smelting and refining,-PB-276-172
     institutional solid wastes, 237
     Japan vs. the  United  States, 568
     landfills
          decomposition gases, 583, 587, PB-213-487
               PB-218-672, PB-234-930, PB-234-931
          temperatures,  PB-256-356
     livestock wastes, PB-222-33T
     material flow estimates, 550
     metal, 443, 445, PB-208-674
          from magnetic separation, 682
     nitrogen, PB-256-505
     oxygen,  PB-256-365,  PB-256-366
     paper, 445, PB-208-674
     partial oxidation products, 154
     particle  size, PB-256-357
     pesticides, PB-222-165
     petroleum industry wastes, PB-237-620, PB-259-097
     phosphates, PB-256-377
     plant residue  in soil, PB-222-113
     plastics, 324,  445, PB-208-674
          combustion products, PB-222-001
     rubber, 443, 445, PB-208-674
     sample size, 97
     selenium,  148, 634, PB-256-367, PB-275-103
     sewage sludge, 229, PB-222-396
     textiles,  433, 445
          industry wastes, PB-258-953
     volatiles, PB-256-358, PB-256-364, PB-256-370
     wastewater sludge,  PB-222-396
     water absorption in landfill, PB-256-359
     wood     443, 445

composting, 3, 8, 9, 21, 22, 30, 52,  55, 89, 142, 143, 145, 212
               550, 600, 620, PB-222-422, PB-225-160
               PB-256-505
     see also  resource recovery
     air classification of composts,  102, 256
     and ecology, 322
     bibliographies, PB-147-220,  PB-148-097, PB-215-202
     cellulose degradation in, 126, 205, 448, PB-215-722
     chemical oxygen demand measurement, 206
     compost plant dust studies,  PB-222-160
     concepts in America, 169, 321
     costs, 22, 55,  89, 144, 212, 488, 619, PB-187-311
               PB-214^)56,  PB-222-710, PB-225-160
     dairy manure, PB-23 3-441
     decomposition, 204
     economics, 1, 212,  321, 488, PB-187-311, PB-214-056
               PB-222-710,  PB-225-160
     effects on field and garden crops, 488, PB-236-402
               PB-269-352
     equipment, 61
     Federal  projects, 121, PB-214-056
          Gainesville, Florida, plant, 30, PB-187-311
               PB-222-710
          Johnson City, Tennessee, project,  8, 9,  15, 30, 74
               190, 212, 488
     in Europe, 21, 22, 55, 59, 89,  142, 212, PB-270-219
     in the Middle East, 212
composting (cont'd)
     land reclamation, PB-234-808
     markets for compost, 30, 55, 89, 120, 212
     municipal waste, PB-228-165
     organic wastes, PB-147-220, PB-215-202
     parasites in compost, 224
     pesticide residues in compost, 29
     ph characteristics of compost, 158
     poultry manure, 82
     selenium in compost, 148
     sewage sludge, 115,  144, 145, 229, 484, 556, 614, 619
               PB-214-056, PB-236-402, PB-245-271
               PB-269-352
         codisposal with solid wastes, 667, 687
         Johnson City, Tennessee, project, 8, 9,  15, 74, 212
               254, 488,  PB-214-056
     speech by Russell Train, 476
     USEPA/TVA project, 8, 9, 15, 30, 74, 190,  212, 254
               488, PB-214-056

compression of solid waste. See size reduction of solid wastes

Concord, New Hampshire. See New Hampshire

concrete industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
               PB-238-819

conferences
     see also  proceedings
     of Institute of Solid Wastes Management (1974), speech
               by H.L. Hickman, Jr., 395
     on Management of Non-Nuclear Hazardous Wastes
               (1977X 591
     on Waste Reduction
          (1975), 497
          (1976), 599
          (1977), 643

Connecticut
     Ansonia
          refractory incinerator,  667, 687
     Housatonic Valley, resource recovery system, RFP sum-
               mary, 552
     Norwalk
          co-disposal system, 667, 687
     Resources Recovery Authority, 586
          contract summaries, 552
     solid waste management system, 586

construction
     see also  management and planning-case studies
     materials from solid wastes,  PB-271-007
     wastes, generation, 443, PB-265-392

consumer
     attitudes. See public opinion on refuse problems
     research in packaging, 261
     role. See public participation in solid waste  management

Consumer Product Safety Commission
     classification of hazardous substances, 489

containers. See equipment-collection,
               containers; packaging and containers

contracts
     for commercial refuse collection, 472
     for resource recovery plants, 470, 480, 495, 496, 552
     Office of Solid Waste, 42, 76, 85, 98, 121, 469
     with electric utilities to burn refuse, 467
                                                              21

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control laboratory for District of Columbia incinerator, 62

Cook County, Illinois. See Illinois

copper
     precipitation plants in the United States, 518
     recyling and recovery, 491,  PB-212-729
          taxes affecting the use of recycled copper
              PB-264-886
          textile industry wastes, PB-258-953
     wastes in soils, PB-266-905

corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades in
              refuse-fueled power plants, PB-221-095

corrosion in incinerators, PB-213-378, PB-221-851
              PB-238-747

corrugated (recycled) markets, 465

cost-effectiveness in solid waste management. See costs of
              solid waste management; economics of solid
              waste management

costs of solid waste management, 107, 178, 390, 639
              PB-256-348
     see also  accounting systems for solid waste management;
              financing solid waste systems; management
              and planning-case studies; sanitary landfill
     activated carbon from refuse, PB-270-961
     air classification of solid wastes, 102
     baling, 69, 252, 390, PB-247-185
     clean  up, 639
     collection. See collection-costs
     composting. See composting—costs
     construction materials from solid wastes, PB-271-007
     electronic components manufacturing industry
              PB-265-532
     electroplating industry,  PB-264-349
     equipment,  PB-256-956
     glass and aluminum recovery plants,  558
     groundwater
          control and decontamination technology, 677
     hauling and land spreading of sewage sludge, 619
              PB-227-005
     hazardous waste disposal, 345, 506, 508, 545,  PB-241-204
              PB-244-832,  PB-251-307, PB-251-669
              PB-258-953,  PB-259-097, PB-261-018
              PB-263-210,  PB-264-349, PB-265-532
              PB-265-981,  PB-274-565
          metal  smelting and refining, PB-276-172
     in New York State,  233
     in recreation areas, 167, PB-270-266
     incineration, 114, PB-270-897
          pyrolytic, small-scale,  678
     leachate control, 509, 514, 517
     magnetic separation,  559
     ocean disposal, 157, 192
     paper collection in a compartmentalized vehicle
              PB-257-969
     paper manufacture with secondary fiber, PB-250-798
              PB-250-802,  PB-250-905
     producing methane from solid waste  and sewage sludge
              458
     pyrolysis, PB-268-232
     refuse as fuel in electric utility plants, 467
     resource recovery plants, 180, 321, 352, 353, 388, 417
              431, 442, 448, 471, 480, 482, 550, 605
              PB-243-634
     salvaging operations, 293, 296, 333
     sanitary landfills, 178, 321,  475, 476, 477, 478, 479,  705
costs of solid waste management (cont'd)
     sanitary landfills (cont'd), PB-249-747, PB-256-444
     separate collection of paper, 381, 400, 486
     shredding. See shredding
     single cell protein production, PB-270-085
     size reduction equipment at Washington,  D. C. plant, 62
     speeches by
          Sheldon Meyers, 549
          Russell Train, 525
     spills of oil and hazardous wastes, 506
     to meet air and water pollution standards in production
               of steel and aluminum with virgin and recycled
               materials, PB-253-487
     transfer station. See transfer stations
     wet air oxidation  process, PB-267-987

Council Bluffs, Nebraska. See Nebraska

Council of State Governments, PB-257-311

Council on Environmental Quality,  129

County goverment's role in solid waste management,  373, 586

course schedule, Solid  Waste Management Training (1971-
               1972), 208

CPU-400, PB-187-299

crankcase oil waste, PB-237-618, PB-237-620

Crawford County, Ohio. See Ohio

crop residue decomposition in soil, PB-222-113

crushing solid waste, PB-225-159
     see compaction of solid waste; shredding; size reduction
               of solid waste

Cuyahoga County, Ohio. See  Ohio

cyanide wastes, PB-224-584
     in soils, PB-266-905

Dade County, Florida. See Florida

dairy manure. See livestock wastes

Dallas, Texas. See Texas

DARE (decision alternative ration evaluation), 101, 226

data acquisition and analysis program (DAAP) for collection
               data, 434, PB-239-917

debris accumlation in ancient  and modern cities, 404

decision alternative ration evaluation. See DARE

Decision -Maters Guide in Solid
               Waste Management, 390, 394
decision trees in solid  wastes  planning,  10
decisionmaking and games, 101, 338, 390, 394, PB-213-482
               PB-257-499, PB-257-500, PB-257-951
               PB-266-684
     DARE, 101, 226
     decision trees, 10
     DISCUS, 137
     facilities selection, mathematical models,  219
     PERT, 135
     WRAP, 548, 573, 574

decomposition of compost, 204

deep-well disposal of hazardous wastes,  PB-269-000

definition of hazardous substances,  464, 489, 512
                                                               22

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dehydration of solid wastes, PB-256-506
DeKalb County, Georgia. See Georgia

Delaware
     resource recovery RFP and contract summaries, 552
     solid waste treatment  plant, 690
     Wilmington, 353, 388, 528, 600

Delaware County, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania
demonstration grants. See Federal grants for solid
               waste management

Denmark
     central chemical waste treatment plant, 418
     solid waste management, PB-270-219
Denver, Colorado. See Colorado

Department of Transportation classification of
               hazardous substances,  489
Des Moines, Iowa. See Iowa

design of packaging and containers, proceedings of a confer-
               ence, 261
deterrents to recycling.  See disincentives to recycling
detiiuiing plants in the United States,  518
Detroit, Michigan.  See Michigan
developments in disposal, 3, 110, 267,  274
     see also incineration;  ocean disposal; sanitary landfill
dialysis for separation of hazardous wastes, PB-224-583
directories
     hazardous waste facilities, 429
     New England recycling centers, 638
     recycled paper sources, 343
     recycling project, 341
     solid waste management equipment, PB-256-956
DISCUS, a solid waste management game, 137

disease
     see also public health aspects of solid waste manage-
               ment; safety and health
     among waste collection workers, 426
     relationship to solid waste, 48
disincentives to recycling, 330, 353, 424, PB-264-886

disposal. See incineration;  management and planning;
disposal charges. See user  charges for collection and disposal
               waste charges
disposal facilities
     proposed classification criteria, 668, 679, 692, 693, 698
               699, 700, 706
     sludge disposal, 705
disposal site  abandonment. See Federal lands

draft environmental impact statement
     Solid Waste Disposal Facilities (40CFR-Pt. 259)
              692,693

drinking water standards, pesticide residues, 489, 713

drug industry wastes, PB-22M64, PB-22M66, PB-225-333
               PB-238-819
     see pharmaceutical industry wastes
Dulong analysis, PB-256-383
dumping, 156, 290, 424
     see also  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
               (1976)
     and water pollution, 411, 435, PB-256-391
     Arkadelphia City Dump, Arkansas, 520, PB-243-029
     fact sheet, 694
     film. See A Day at the Dump in the
               films section of the catalog
     hazardous wastes
          metal smelting and refining industry, PB-276-169
               PB-276-170, PB-276-171, PB-276-172
     in California, 175
     leather industry wastes, PB-261-018
     Mission 5000, 265, 280
          flyer, 202
          poster, 201
     reconnaissance of sites by plane and auto,  277

East Peoria,  Illinois. See Illinois

Eastern Appalachia Health Region solid waste system, 323
               PB-214-089

Eco Pak  milk carton, 447, 461

economics of solid waste management,  103, 178, 643, 658, 671
               PB-187-712, PB-213-394, PB-239-631
     see also
               costs of solid waste management; financing
               solid waste systems; markets for recycled and
               recovered materials
     asbestos industry wastes,  PB-257-951
     asphalt-glass aggregate as paving,  261
     beverage containers
          effects of laws, 456, 459
          price comparison of refillables and nonrefillables
               531
     bibliographies, 658
     cadmium industry wastes, PB-257-951
     collection, 400
     composting and compost plants. See composting—
               economics
     effects of:
          beverage container laws, 456, 459
          pricing mechanisms, PB-239-116
          reduced energy consumption, 461
     El Cajon pyrolysis facility (proposed), 442
     equipment, PB-256-956
     explosives industry
          analysis of effects of anticipated regulation
               PB-279-645
     glass and aluminum recovery plants, 558, PB-272-051
     hazardous waste disposal, 345
          pesticides, 519
     hazardous waste service industry,  PB-257-187
     hospital systems, PB-221-681
     impact of beverage container laws, 325, 353, 456, 461
               462, 487, 600
     incineration, 114, PB-266-355
     inorganic chemicals industry, PB-244-832, PB-263-210
     Lee County, Mississippi,  project, PB-241-468
     methane production from solid waste, 458
     oil re-refining industry, PB-237-620, PB-251-716
               PB-272-267
     organic  chemicals industry
          analysis of effects of anticipated regulation
               PB-279-645
                                                               23

-------
economics of solid waste management (cont'd)
     paper collection in a compartmentalized vehicle
               PB-257-969
     paper manufacture with secondary fiber, PB-250-798
               PB-250-802, PB-250-905
     paving with waste glass, PB-242-536
     pesticides industry
          analysis of effects of anticipated regulations
               PB-279-645
     price comparison  of refillable and nonrefillable
               beverage containers, 531
     public utility concept, 160, 161, PB-225-332
     recycling, 225, 331, PB-223-034, PB-239-631
     refuse as fuel, 264, 378, 467, PB-213-534
          in Federally  owned  boilers, PB-255-695
     regulatory levels for hazardous waste, PB-280-117
     resource  recovery, 62, 91, 180, 321, 491, PB-245-674
               PB-245-924
          magnetic separation of metals, 682
     sanitary landfill, 705, PB-245-924
          gas  treatment, 583, 587
     sewage sludge treatment plants and landspreading, 619
               PB-222-000, PB-245-271
     source separation, PB-264-214
     tire retreading, PB-243-028
     waste exchange, PB-258-068, PB-261-287
          industrial, 688
     wastewater sludge disposal, PB-244-311
     Yosemite National Park beverage container deposit pro-
               gram, PB-270-266

economics of solid waste management/waste exchange, 695

efficiency in solid waste collection. See productivity
               in solid waste management

El Cajon, California. See California

electricity from solid waste, 264, 321, 378,  388, 401,  431, 602
               PB-213-534, PB-214-166

electrodialysis for separation of hazardous wastes, PB-224-583

electronic components  manufacturing industry wastes
               PB-265-532

electroplating  industry  wastes, PB-264-349, PB-265-981

elemental phosphorous  wastes, economic assessment of regula-
               tion,  PB-263-210

energy conservation, 378, 503
     and Federal use of retreaded tires, PB-243-028
     and waste reduction, 461
     speeches  by:
          Arsen Darnay, 364
          Thomas F. Williams, 360
     with resource recovery, 353,  448,  600
          waste oil recovery, PB-251-716
     with returnable beverage  containers, 326, 378, 405
               PB-213-341
     with use  of recycled steel and aluminum, PB-253-487

energy, organic. See energy recovery from waste

energy recovery from waste, 321,  329,  357, 358, 390, 424, 550
               600, 602, 632,  PB-231-176
     see also  fuel; refuse-derived  fuel (RDF); resource recov-
               ery
     Ames, Iowa, solid waste system, 467
     economics, 321
     effect on wastepaper markets, 465
     El Cajon facility (proposed),  442
energy recovery from waste (cont'd)
     ERDA research and development plans, 497
     Federal demonstration grants, 30, 311, 334, 353, 388, 528
               560, 570, 600
          Baltimore  gas pyrolysis facility, 353, 388, 417, 431
               537, 600, 641
          San Diego pyrolysis process, 353, 388, 417, 442, 582
               600
          St. Louis plant, 180, 234, 264, 311, 353,  387, 388
               396, 412, 421, 467, 581, 600, PB-213-534
          Wilmington, Delaware, facility, 353
     forecasts  for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
     fuels from waste, 264, 329, 401, 417, 442, 448, 458, 499
               503, 537, 550, 570, 599, 600, 641, 711
               PB-213-534, PB-222-694, PB-239-509
               PB-255-695, PB-268-232
     in Europe, PB-270-219
     markets and technology, 264, 401, 448, 458, 467, 499
               570
     methane  from solid waste, sewage sludge, and sanitary
               landfills, 458, 488, 583, 587, 710
     Monroe County, New York, resource recovery plant, 467
     Onondaga County, New York, energy recovery project
               467
     Philadelphia project, 497
     refuse-fueled power plants. See
               steam and electricity from solid wastes
     resource  recovery plants. See resource recovery plants-
               implementation
     sewage sludge, pyrolysis,  556
     speeches  by:
          Sheldon Meyers, 526, 560
          Roger Strelow, 523
          Russell Train, 460
     steam and electricity from solid wastes, 7, 62, 180, 264
               321, 378, 388, 401, 431, 467, 499, 503, 537
               PB-214-166, PB-255-695, PB-263-396
     tires as fuel, PB-234-602
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and Ener-
               gy Recovery:
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643
     wastepaper as fuel, 420
     wood wastes as fuel, PB-265-392

enforcement of solid waste regulations, 171, 253, 327,  330
               331,  345, 419, 455, 457, 640, PB-201-205

engineers, role in solid waste management,  227

England, solid waste management, PB-270-219

environmental health. See public health aspects of
               solid waste disposal
environmental protection, 112, 306, 379
     see also  air pollution; water pollution
     bibliographies, 658
     effects of:
          Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245-674, PB-272-051
          garbage grinders, 13
          hazardous wastes, 450, 452
          packaging and containers, 261, 332, 405
          plastic refuse disposal, PB-238-654
          recycled and virgin steel and aluminum,  PB-253-487
          Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)
               643
          resource recovery and source reduction,  352, 353
               448,  600
                                                               24

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environmental protection (cont'd)
          resource recovery facilities, 448, 600, 643
          San Diego pyrolysis plant, 442
          waste automotive crankcase oil, EPA studies
               PB-237-618
     film. See The Third Pollution in the
               films section of the catalog
     speeches by:
          Barbara Blum, 609
          Arsen J. Darnay, 364, 380, 413
          Sheldon Meyers, 526
          Roger Strelow, 523
          Russell Train, 460
          Thomas F. Williams, 318, 360

Environmental Protection Agency. See U.S. Environmental
               Protection Agency

environmentalists' views, 461, 515

epichlorohydrin manufacture
     anticipated waste regulations
          economic assessment, PB-279-645

equalization basins for sewage sludge treatment plants
               PB-222-000

equipment, 1,  248, 658, PB-228-161, PB-256-956
     bibliographies, 658
     collection, 65, 298, 311, 436, 441, 455, 472, PB-217-775
               PB-233-878, PB-234-068, PB-234-139
               PB-234-140, PB-234-141, PB-234-713
               PB-234-945, PB-239-915, PB-239-917
               PB-240-365, PB-241-468, PB-244-841
               PB-257-969
          container trains, 311
          containers, 59, 167, 436, 441, 455, 497, PB-240-365
               PB-241-468, PB-243-029
          fleet selection, 251
     composting, 61
     household garbage grinders,  PB-229-206
     kilns, 712
     resource recovery, 497, 501
          magnetic separators, 559
     sampler for microorganisms in incinerator stack emis-
               sions, 151
     sanitary  landfill, 47, 287, 291, 305, 497, PB-212-589
               PB-265-391
     shredders, 402, 433, 712, PB-245-672
     size reduction,  114, PB-226-551

Erie County-Torrax solid waste demonstration project, 311

estimation of solid waste charactistics and volume. See
               generation  of solid waste

Europe, solid waste management,  3, 21, 55, 59,  89, 142, 212
               PB-148-097, PB-270-219

evaluation of:
     Baltimore Landgard system, 641
     Franklin, Ohio, plant, PB-245-674, PB-272-051
     St. Louis resource recovery plant, PB-243-634

exchange  for industrial wastes, 453, 554, 688, 695
               PB-258-068, PB-261-287

explosives, 345, PB-213-534, PB-221-464,  PB-221-466
     Franklin, Ohio,  plant, PB-251-307
     waste regulations on disposal
          economic  assessment, PB-279-645
explosives industry
     alternative waste management, PB-278-059
exports (wastepaper), effects on domestic markets, 397
facilities for disposal of hazardous wastes, 468, 644

fact sheet on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
               1976, 563

Falls Township, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania

Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act classification of haz-
              ardous substances, 489

Federal grants for solid waste management, 18, 19, 31, 41, 80
               81, 171, PB-214-924
     see also
              Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
              (1976)
     demonstration grants, 16, 18, 19, 25, 30, 31, 41, 42, 52
              66, 71,  76, 81, 98, 108,  109, 121, 171, 196, 197
              220, 260, 311, 334, 353, 388, 570, 600, 601
              PB-213-646, PB-215-867,  PB-269-502
          abstracts, 168
          application for a chemical waste landfill facility
              PB-249-747
          Baltimore gas pyrolysis process, 353, 388, 417, 431
              528, 537, 600, 602, 620, 623
          El Cajon facility (proposed), 442
          Franklin, Ohio, plant, 309, 311, 353, 388, 408, 421
              528, 558, 600, 620, PB-234-715, PB-234-716
              PB-245-674, PB-272-051
          Lowell, Massachusetts, facility, 353, 388, 491
          Mountain View, California, sanitary landfill project
               583, 587, 600, 620
          regulations, 221
          San Diego project,  353, 388, 417, 442, 528, 582, 600
              620
          Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, source
              separation program, 510, 551, 575, 600
          Sonoma County, California, sanitary landfill stabili-
              zation,  PB-230-379,  PB-239-778, PB-254-550
              PB-269-502
          St. Louis plant, 180, 234, 264,  311, 353, 387, 388
              396, 412, 421, 467, 528, 581, 600, 620
              PB-243-634
          Wilmington, Delaware, facility, 353, 388,  528, 600
     implementation grants, 600
     regulations, 19, 221
     research and training grants, 16, 31, 41,  42, 67, 72, 76
               81, 98,  171
     speech by Sheldon Meyers,  549
     State planning grants. See State solid waste manage-
              ment-- planning grants
     technical assistance
          state and local government, 707

Federal information activities in solid waste management, 707
     attitudes toward the public,  171, 318, 636, 701
Federal lands disposal  site abandonment
               639
Federal-local cooperation in solid waste management, 696
              423, PB-227-578
     public participation

federal policies on:
               334, 353, 357, 380, 490, 600, 715
     solid waste disposal, 713, PB-222-467
     virgin and secondary materials use, 353,  357, PB-239-736
                                                               25

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federal policies on: (cont'd)
     virgin and secondary materials use (cont'd), PB-264-886
     waste lubricating oil disposal, PB-237-618, PB-237-620

Federal procurement practices and solid waste management
     guidelines for products containing recycled materials,  490
     lubricating oils and re-refined oils,  PB-237-618
               PB-237-620
     products containing recycled materials, 171
     solid waste as fuel for federally owned boilers
               PB-222-467, PB-255-695
     solid waste management, 490, PB-222-467, PB-229-727
               PB-241-729

Federal programs, PB-214-071
     see also  Office of Solid Waste-program
     affecting solid waste generation and recycling
               PB-213-311
     hazardous waste management, 399, 504, 512, 541, 542
               584
     solid waste management, 250, 276, 395
     surveys  of industrial waste, 545
     waste oil research, PB-237-618

Federal Register guidelines and regulations
     see also
               U.S.Environmental Protection
               Agency—guidelines for solid waste
     beverage containers, 463
     citizen suits, 640
     disposal facilities
          classification criteria, 668
     grants for disposal and resource recovery,  19, 221
     hazardous waste, advance notice of proposed rulemaking
               610
     hazardous waste management (nonradioactive),  535
     hazardous waste programs, 665, 691
     hazardous waste,  transportation, 689,  702
     identification of regions and agencies,  615
     implementation,  637
     municipal sludge  management, 657
     pesticides, 328, 376, 398
     planning and disposal, advance notice of proposed rule-
               making, 629
     polychlorinated biphenyl wastes, 516
     procurement of secondary materials products by the Fed-
               eral government, 490
     public participation, 649
     research and demonstration  grants, 660
     resource recovery and source separation, 473, 715
     resource recovery facilities in Federal  agencies, 490
     State solid waste management plans, 714
     storage and  collection, 454, 504
     thermal processing and land disposal,  385
     toxic substances control and disposal,  670
     toxic substances control; disposal, 670
     truck mounted compactor noise, 661
     vinyl chloride aerosol can disposal, 529

Federal research and training grants, 16, 30, 31, 41, 42, 67, 71
               76,  81, 98, 190, 260
Federal role in solid waste management, 56, 141,  197, 215
               306, 331, 380, 424, 441,  557, 600
     and the packaging industry,  246, 456,  461
     hazardous wastes, 345
     in paper recycling, 511
     in waste reduction, 461, 500
     informing the public, 701
     speeches by:
Federal role in solid waste management (cont'd)
          Ralph J. Black, 31
          Sheldon Meyers, 526, 549
     use of retreaded passenger tires, PB-243-028

Federal solid waste disposal practices
     guidelines for collection and storage, 454, 504
     in the Washington, DC area, 30

Federal subsidies for resource recovery, PB-222-467
               PB-234-602, PB-239-736

Federal surveys of industrial waste, 545

Federal Water Pollution Control Act
     classification  criteria  for disposal facilities, 688
     criteria for hazardous substances,  489
     section 208,  regional  planning, 599, 612

feed from waste. See nutrients from waste

ferrous metals
     smelting and refining industry, PB-276-172

ferrous metals, recycling and recovery, 352, 550, PB-208-674
               PB-212-729, PB-213-577, PB-223-034
               PB-229-816, PB-229-817
     Franklin, Ohio, project, 408, PB-213-646
     magnetic separation,  682
     St. Louis project, 264

fertilizer consumption and production in the United States
               484

fibrous wastes. See cellulose wastes; wood wastes

film scripts, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270,  271, 272, 288

films on solid waste management, 207,  349
     see also  films section of catalog
     flyers     70,209,210,211,214,485,502

financing solid waste systems, 103, 132, 188, 306, 342,  390
               PB-213-482, PB-228-161, PB-233-878
               PB-234-068, PB-234-139, PB-234-141
               PB-234-612, PB-234-713, PB-234-945
               PB-240-365, PB-243-029
     see also  management and planning-case studies;
        user charges for collection and disposal
     chemical waste landfill, PB-249-747
     cities' roles, 331
     electric companies using solid waste as fuel, 467
     public utility concept, 160, 161, PB-225-332
     resource recovery plants, 448, 471, 480, 482, 497,  501
               533,  599, 606
     rural, 342, PB-240-365, PB-265-391
     states' roles, 327

fires in municipal solid wastes, 444

flash pyrolysis system for  muncipal solid waste, 417

flies in poultry manure, 82
     see also insects and rodents  in solid  waste

Florida
     Brevard County solid waste management system
               PB-234-612
     Broward County solid waste management system
               PB-234-612
     Dade County proposed beverage container legislation
               461
     Gainesville
          composting plant, PB-187-311, PB-222-710
          composting plant, refuse shredding, 402
                                                               26

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Florida (cont'd)
     Jacksonville solid waste management system, PB-234-139
     Lake County  sanitary landfill, PB-265-391
     Leon County  sanitary landfill, PB-265-391
     Orange County solid waste management system
              PB-224-996, PB-234-612, PB-236-462
              PB-236-463
     Tampa solid waste management system, PB-225-291

Floyd County, Georgia. See Georgia

flyers for solid waste management films, 70, 209, 210, 211
              214, 485, 502

food Industry waste, 198, 461, PB-219-019, PB-221-464
              PB-221^66

food packaging, 261
     see also beverage containers; packaging and containers
food waste, generation, 175, 433, 445

forecasts
     generation of household solid waste, PB-257-499
              PB-257-500, PB-266-684
     resource recovery, PB-245-924

Forsyth County, North Carolina. See North Carolina

foundry wastes, PB-256-955, PB-265-981

Fox Valley, Illinois. See Illinois

France
     Dieppe
         codisposal system, 667, 687
     solid waste management, PB-270-219
Franklin, Ohio. Sec Ohio

freight rates for  recovered materials, 601, PB-264-886

Fresno, California, See California

fuel
     see also California-San Diego, pyrolysis system
              energy recovery from waste; Maryland—
              Baltimore, solid waste
              management by gas pyrolysis; Missouri™
              StLouis, solid waste plant; refuse-derived fuel
              (RDF)
     conservation in solid waste management, 407
     oil from solid waste, 388, 401, 417, 442,  528, PB-270-961
         cellulose liquefaction, PB-239-509
         from waste rubber, PB-222-694
     refuse as, 264, 311, 321, 378, 387, 388, 396, 401, 420
              431, 503, 528, 550, 599, 600, 602, 620
              PB-187-299, PB-213-534, PB-214-166
              PB-220-316, PB-234-602, PB-239-392
              PB-240-723, PB-266-355, PB-270-219
         EPA/Edison Electric Institute meeting (1975), 467
         in federally owned boilers, PB-255-695
     specifications  for recovered organics, PB-242-540
furfural manufacture
     anticipated  waste regulations
         economic assessment, PB-279-645
Gainesville, Florida.  See Florida

Garrett pyrolysis system, 321, 353, 417, 442, 448

gas (industrial) wastes, PB-244-832
gas migration barrier for sanitary landfills, PB-239-357
gas pyrolysis, 321, 550
     Baltimore facility, 353, 388, 417, 431, 528
     codisposal of sludge and solid wastes, 667, 687
gases (decomposition) in sanitary landfill, 11, 47, 223, 245
              287, 305, 391, 448, 458, 497, 583, 587
              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
              PB-254-550, PB-256-356
     economics, 583
     methane as fuel, 448, 458, 497, 550, 587, 690
     migration and migration barrier, 583, PB-239-357

generation of solid waste, 44, 56, 58, 170, 178, 183, 235, 293
              388, 443, 445, 448, 498, 500, 526, 550, 600
              PB-213-311, PB-222-467, PB-239-117
              PB-239-494, PB-239-631, PB-243-366
     see also management and planning—ease studies; source
              reduction
     and land use, 247
     baseline forecasts, 498, PB-245-924
     bulky refuse, PB-228-119
     commercial, 240, 293, 443, 445
     construction, 443
     effects of air and water pollution controls, PB-238-819
     hazardous wastes, 453, 508, 545, PB-222-467
              PB-224-593, PB-226-420, PB-249-747
              PB-251-669, PB-258-953, PB-259-097
              PB-261-018, PB-272-267
          effects of pollution controls, PB-257-951
              PB-263-210
     highway litter, 455
     household, 235,  443, 445, PB-257-499, PB-257-500
              PB-266-684
     industrial, 240, 293, 443, 508, 543, 545, PB-238-819
              PB-239-631, PB-241-204, PB-244-832
              PB-251-307, PB-258-953, PB-259-097
              PB-264-349, PB-265-532, PB-265-981
          effects of pollution controls, PB-238-819
              PB-263-210
     institutional wastes, 237, 443, 445
     livestock wastes, 484
     low-income areas, 242
     mapped for the  United States, 149
     material flow estimates, 443, 445, 498
     per capita, 56, 58, 120, 234, 241, 443, 445, 533
     plastics, 443, 445, 549, PB-243-366
     recreation areas, 167, PB-270-266
     sewage sludge, 484
     wastepaper, 443, 445, PB-250-798

Genesee County, Michigan. See Michigan
Georgia
     Atlanta
          household  refuse compactor demonstration project
              PB-234-605
          Regional Public Meetings on  Resource Conserva-
              tion and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 592
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612
          State Fanner's Market solid waste management sys-
              tem, PB-215-289
     DeKalb County
          incinerator study, PB-216-586
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Floyd County, solid waste disposal system, PB-256-945
     Habersham County, sanitary landfill, PB-265-391
     solid waste disposal, 49
                                                              27

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 Germany
     Krefeld
          waterwall combustion unit, 667, 687
     solid waste management, 59, PB-270-219

 glass, 261
     see also  packaging and containers
     containers. See beverage containers; packaging and con-
               tainers
     generation of waste glass, 443, 445
     industrial wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
     mechanical separation, PB-272-051
     Oregon's Minimum Deposit Act, 324,  396, 421, 461, 462
     recovery plant, Franklin, Ohio, PB-272-051
     recycling and recovery, 225, 308, 352,  353, 442, 448, 491
               550, 558, 582, 642, PB-208-674, PB-241-729
               PB-272-051
          as cement products, 261
          as urban paving, 431, PB-222-052, PB-242-536
          economics, 321
          effects of Federal procurement policies on use of re-
               cycled glass, PB-241-729
          effects of taxes on use of recycled glass, PB-240-988
          Federal subsidies, PB-239-736
          forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
          impact of design changes, 261
          markets, 293, 448, 518, PB-245-924
          specifications for recovered cullet, PB-242-540
     separate collection, 261
     transportation rates for virgin and secondary materials
               PB-233-871
     water-disposable, 236

glossary, solid waste management, 279

government role in solid waste management
               See Federal role in solid waste management;
               state solid waste management-roles; manage-
               ment and planning-Federal  role

Graham County, Arizona. See Arizona

grants. See Federal grants for solid waste management

grass clipping, anaerobic digestion,  178

Great Falls, Montana. See Montana

grinders, power requirements, PB-256-506

grinding, PB-256-390, PB-256-506
     see also  shredding
     garbage
          effects on sewage system, 13
          household, PB-229-206
     Madison, Wisconsin, project, 220
groundwater pollution. See water pollution
grouting (In situ), 677

guidelines.  See regulations for solid waste management;
               standards and guidelines; U.S. Environmental
               Protection Agency
               -guidelines for solid waste management
guides for:
     decisionmakers in solid waste  management, 390, 394
     hazardous waste transportation control, 512
     municipal officials for resource recovery plants, 470, 471
               480, 482, 493, 495,  496, 550
     State decisionmakers in hazardous waste management
               612
Habersham County, Georgia. See Georgia

hammermills, PB-256-506

handbooks for public officials for resource recovery, 470, 471
              480, 482, 493, 533, 550
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania

Hartsfield incinerator study, PB-256-940

hauling. See transportation—solid waste

hazardous waste practices, PB-276-169, PB-276-171
hazardous wastes
              450, 452, PB-221-464, PB-224-579, PB-225-164
              PB-233-631
     see also  chemical wastes; hospital solid wastes; individu-
              al substances, e.g., arsenic wastes; cyanide
              wastes; industrial solid wastes; polychlorinated
              biphenyl wastes; radioactive wastes; Resource
              Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)
     assessment
          solubility tests, PB-276-172
     bibliographies, 475, PB-224-595, PB-266-905, PB-269-002
     biological treatment, PB-224-583
     chemicals. See chemical wastes
     classification system for hazardous substances, 464, 489
              508, 512, PB-251-669
     clearinghouse for industrial wastes, 453, 612, PB-258-068
     composition and analysis, PB-224-580, PB-261-018
     Conference on the Management of Non-Nuclear Hazard-
              ous Wastes (1977), 591
     costs of disposal, 345, 475, 508, PB-226-420, PB-241-204
              PB-251-669, PB-258-953, PB-259-097
              PB-261-018, PB-263-210, PB-279-645
          pesticides, 519
     damage reports, 345,  449, 492, 494, 546, PB-249-747
     disposal facilities in the United States, 429, 468, 506, 562
              612, PB-226-420, PB-251-669, PB-257-187
              PB-269-003, PB-269-004, PB-274-565
     economic assessment of regulation, PB-279-645
     fact sheet, 694
     Federal  program, 399, 504, 512, 541, 542, 584, 644, 663
     film  flyer, 502
     film. See Hazardous Wastes, the Gross National Byproduct
              in the films section of the catalog
     generation, 453, 508, PB-221-464, PB-222-467
               PB-224-593, PB-226-420, PB-251-669
               PB-253-051,  PB-258-953, PB-259-097
              PB-261-018, PB-261-052, PB-262-673
               PB-263-210, PB-264-349, PB-265-532
               PB-265-981, PB-272-267
     guidelines and standards, 171, 535, 540, 651, 652
          advance notice of proposed rulemaking, 610
          pesticides, 328, 376, 398
          polychlorinated biphenyl wastes,  516, 683
          proposed programs, 665, 691
          proposed State programs, 680,681,684,691
     health effects and toxicity data, PB-221-464, PB-221-465
               PB-221-467, PB-224-581,  PB-257-951
     incineration, 418, 427, 475, PB-224-582, PB-253-485
               PB-259-097,  PB-265-540, PB-265-541
               PB-266-355,  PB-267-987, PB-268-232
     industrial practices, assessment, PB-251-307, PB-251-669
               PB-258-953,  PB-259-097, PB-261-018
               PB-263-210,  PB-264-349, PB-265-532
               PB-265-981,  PB-269-000
                                                              28

-------
hazardous wastes (cont'd)
          metal smelting and refining, PB-276-169
               PB-276-170, PB-276-171, PB-276-172
     landfill disposal, 415, 453, 475, 497, 506,  540, 569,  599
               PB-221-464, PB-224-579, PB-226-420
               PB-241-204, PB-249-747, PB-258-953
               PB-259-097, PB-261-018, PB-264-349
               PB-265-532, PB-271-013
          damage reports, 345, 449, 492, 494,  546
               PB-249-747
          municipal sludge management, 696
          upgrading, 662, 677
     legislation, 345, 541, 542, 612, 635, 644, 650
          economic impact on industry, PB-280-117
     liability, 599
     Missouri Hazardous Waste Management  Law, 586
     ocean  dumping, 157, 162,  192, 489, PB-224-582
     pesticides.  See pesticides
     properties and  uses, PB-251-669, PB-263-210
     public attitudes towards disposal facilities, PB-223-638
     pyrolysis,  PB-224-582, PB-268-232, PB-270-961
     recommended exposure levels, PB-224-581
     recycling and recovery, PB-224-579, PB-226-420
     report to Congress by EPA, 345
     research and development plans, PB-224-594
     risk-benefit analysis, PB-257-951
     service industry, 543, PB-257-187
     slide show.  See Hazardous Wastes in the
               films section of the catalog
     small batch disposal, 562, 612
     special machinery industry, PB-265-981
     speeches by Sheldon Meyers,  526, 549
     spilled wastes disposal, 506, PB-243-386
     State Decision Ma Jeers Guide for
               Hazardous Waste  Management, 612
     State management activities, 171, 457, 497, 584, 599, 612
               665
          legislation. See legislation-state
     surveys, 464, 545, 612, PB-262-673
     toxic substances control and disposal, 670
     transportation control,  171, 512, 612, 653
          standards, 689, 702
     treatment processes, 418, 475, 506, 508, PB-221-464
               PB-224-579, PB-241-204, PB-244-832
               PB-249-747, PB-251-307, PB-251-669
               PB-258-953, PB-259-097, PB-261-018
               PB-262-804, PB-263-210, PB-264-204
               PB-264-349, PB-265-532, PB-265-981
               PB-267-987, PB-268-526, PB-269-000
               PB-272-267, PB-275-054
          alternatives, PB-278-059
          lagoons, PB-276-169, PB-276-170, PB-276-171
               PB-276-172
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and  Ener-
               gy Recovery,
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643

 health of solid waste personnel. See safety and health;
               public health aspects of  solid waste disposal

 heat of combustion of solid wastes. See composition and
               analysis of solid wastes
 heater pollution by dumps, film. See The Third
               Pollution in the films section of the
               catalog
heavy metals
     in ground water, 634, PB-275-103
     in sludges, 229, 391, 484, 488, 556,  PB-221-464
              PB-224-579, PB-225-360, PB-225-362
              PB-236-402, PB-241-204, PB-244-309
              PB-244-832, PB-266-649, PB-269-352
     reprocessors of heavy metals and batteries, 429

Hempstead, New York. See New York
heuristic routing in  solid waste collection, 356, 409, 472
              PB-239-899

hexachlorobenzene waste disposal, PB-253-051
     damage report, 546
high rise buildings,  collection and disposal systems, 292
              PB-197-623

history of solid waste management, 404
     Solid Waste Disposal Act, 260, 410

hog manure. See livestock wastes; swine wastes
Holland, solid waste management, PB-270-219

hospital solid wastes, 73, 79, 300, 301, 406, PB-213-133
              PB-221-464, PB-222-018, PB-227-708
     economics,  PB-221-681
     pneumatic collection systems in hospitals, PB-236-543
     Washington, D.C., system, 191

Hot Springs, Arkansas. See Arkansas

Housatonic Valley,  Connecticut.  See Connecticut
household refuse, 45, 562, PB-236-904, PB-257-499
              PB-257-500, PB-266-684
     see also collection; generation of solid waste—household;
              management and planning—case studies
Houston, Texas. See Texas

Humboldt County, California. See California
humor,  131

Humphreys County, Tennessee. See Tennessee
hydraulic transport  of refuse  through sewers, PB-229-256
hydrofluoric acid wastes, economic assessment of regulation
              PB-263-210

hydrogen content of solid wastes, 193
     see also composition and analysis of solid wastes

hydrogenation process for utilizing waste rubber, PB-222-694
hydrogeology of sanitary landfill, 223, 287, PB-236-462
              PB-236-463

Idaho
     Latah  County, solid waste management system, 423
     solid waste management system, PB-234-612
Illinois
     Aurora, Fox Valley disposal site leachate damage assess-
               ment, 514
     Chicago, Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conser-
               vation and Recovery Act (1976), transcript
               598
     Cook County,  ski mountain, PB-213-697         :
     East Peoria, solid waste management system, 423'
     Fox Valley (Aurora), disposal site leachate damage as-
              sessment, 514
     hydrogeology  of solid  waste disposal sites, 223
     Rockford, Peoples Avenue disposal site leachate damage
                                                               29

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Illinois (cont'd)
               (cont'd)  assessment, 517
     solid waste management system, 586
     Waukegan
          municipal sludge landfills, 705

taper-wall technique,  677

implementation grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
               management

implementation of resource recovery plants, 448, 470, 471, 480
               482

incentives
     see also waste charges
     for recycling and waste reduction, 330, 352, 500
          taxes on packaging and containers, 246, 261, 353
               424, 437
     for resource  recovery, 311, 357, PB-239-736, PB-264-886
          tire recycling and reuse, PB-252-602
     systems for collection crews, 436, PB-239-917

incineration, 3,  33, 114, 154, 385, 390, PB-263-396
     see also management and planning—case studies; partial
               oxidation of organic solid wastes; pyrolysis;
               wet  air oxidation for disposal of chemical
               wastes
     accounting system, 111
     bacteria destruction, 88
     bibliographies,  658
     bulky refuse, PB-221-731
     cement kiln  disposal, PB-280-118
     centralized system for hospitals in the Minneapolis-St.
               Paul area, PB-221-681
     combined, PB-266-355
     combustion heat of solid waste, PB-256-368, PB-256-382
               PB-256-383
     economics, 114, PB-265-540, PB-266-355
     Erie County-Torrax Solid Waste Demonstration Project
               311
     Federal grants for studies, 121
     guidelines, 385
     hazardous wastes, 427, 475, 529,  PB-224-582
               PB-259-097, PB-263-396, PB-265-540
               PB-265-541, PB-266-355, PB-267-987
               PB-268-232, PB-270-961
     hospital wastes, 73
     in Europe, PB-270-219
     in Germany, 59
     in Oakland County, Michigan,  117
     industrial  wastes, PB-216-100
     management and planning, PB-222-467, PB-256-355
     pesticide, PB-253-485
     plastics, PB-222-001, PB-223-651
     Quad-City regional project, 33
     sewage sludge, 6, 154, 556, PB-266-355
     shipborne, PB-221-684
     technologies, 30
     tires, PB-234-602
     versus sanitary landfill, 75

 incinerators, PB-256-958
     corrosion, PB-213-378, PB-221-851, PB-238-747
     design and operation, 75, 122, 368, PB-216-586
               PB-216-588, PB-223-626, PB-226-960
               PB-256-378, PB-256-926, PB-256-940
               PB-256-943, PB-256-959, PB-263-396
               PB-265-540
          Alexandria, Virginia, study, PB-216-588
incinerators (cont'd)
          Braintree, Massachusetts, study, PB-226-960
          DeKalb County, Georgia, study, PB-216-586
          Hartsfield study, PB-256-940
          New Orleans East study, PB-256-959
          Washington, D.C. studies, 62, PB-187-286
          Weber County, Utah, study, PB-256-926
     dust explosions, PB-256-948
     emissions, 62, 148, 213, 292,  368, 412, PB-256-349
               PB-263-396, PB-265-540, PB-265-541
               PB-266-355, PB-267-987
          portable sampler, 151
     evaluation, 14,  200, PB-251-291, PB-256-389, PB-263-396
               PB-270-897
     explosive hazard of dust, PB-256-948
     guidelines, 122
     high-temperature vortex incinerator, PB-240-723
     mineral recovery from residue, 491
     pit incinerators, PB-256-349
     pyrolytic, small scale, 678
     quench water, PB-256-946, PB-256-947, PB-256-953
          pathogens, 184
     refuse-fueled, 412, PB-214-166,  PB-240-723, PB-251-291
               PB-255-695, PB-266-355
          for codisposal of sludge and solid waste, 667, 687
     residue analysis,  148, 154, PB-216-588, PB-222-458
               PB-226-960, PB-256-946, PB-263-396
               PB-265-540, PB-265-541, PB-267-987
               PB-268-232, PB-270-897
     residue marketability, PB-222-588
     small modular, 570, 599, 600, 620, PB-251-291
     wet air oxidation, PB-267-987

Indiana
     Jasper, PB-229-206
     regional (Louisville,  Kentucky) solid waste  disposal study
               125

industrial gas wastes, PB-244-832, PB-270-897

industrial solid wastes, 104, 278, 526, 694, PB-216-100
               PB-222-419
     see also hazardous wastes; State solid waste manage-
               ment—plans
     animal processing, 20
     aromatic hydrocarbons, PB-216-100, PB-272-267
     batteries industries, PB-241-204
          economic  impact of hazardous waste regulations
               PB-280-117
          reprocessors of heavy metals and batteries, 429
     bibliographies, 658
     chemical, 175, 475, 506, PB-226-420, PB-233-641
               PB-238-819, PB-251-307, PB-263-210
               PB-272-267, PB-274-565
          economic  assessment of regulation, PB-279-645
     chlorinated hydrocarbons
          disposal by  cement kiln process, PB-280-118
     classification systems, PB-239-119
     clay, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-238-819
     clearinghouses, 453,  688, 695, PB-258-068, PB-261-287
     concrete,  PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-238-819
     costs of disposal, 345, 506, PB-241-204, PB-244-832
               PB-251-307, PB-270-897, PB-279-645
     deep-well injection, PB-269-000
     disposal sites, 634, PB-275-103
     drug, PB-221-464, PB-221-466,  PB-225-333
     electronic components manufacturing, PB-265-532
     electronics industry, PB-280-117
     electroplating, PB-264-349
                                                              30

-------
industrial solid wastes (cont'd)
     explosives, PB-251-307
         economic assessment of regulation, PB-279-645
     fabricated metal products, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
     food, 175, 198, 461, PB-219-019, PB-221-464
              PB-221-466
     foundries, PB-256-955
     generation.  See generation-industrial wastes; manage-
              ment and planning—case studies; State solid
              waste management—plans
     glass, PB-221-464,  PB-221-467
     heavy metals, PB-272-267
     hexachlorobenzene, PB-253-051
     incineration, PB-265-540, PB-265-541, PB-267-987
              PB-268-232, PB-270-897
     leather, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-261-018
              PB-264-204
     lumber, 175
     metal finishing, PB-264-349
     metals  mining. See mining wastes
     National Conference on Management and Disposal of
         Residues from Treatment of Industrial
         Wastewaters   (1975),453
     nitrochlorobenzene waste (NCB), PB-270-897
     nonferrous  smelting and refining, PB-238-819
     ocean disposal,  130, 162, 192
     paint and allied products, PB-251-669
     paper,  PB-221-464, PB-221-466, PB-238-819
     PCB-containing capacitors, PB-270-897
     pesticides, PB-251-307
          economic assessment of regulation, PB-279-645
     petroleum,  175, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-259-097
          re-refiners, 429
     pharmaceutical, 508
     phenols,  PB-272-267
     polychlorinated biphenyls
          disposal by cement kiln process, PB-280-118
     polychlorinated biphenyls, guidelines, 516
     power  utilities, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
     pyrolysis, PB-268-232
     special machinery, PB-265-981
     special machinery  industry, PB-280-117
     steel, PB-221-464,  PB-221-467, PB-238-819
     stone,  PB-221-464, PB-221-467
     surveys,  121, 139,  545, 658, PB-214-924, PB-256-954
     textile, PB-221-464, PB-221-466, PB-258-953
     use in  construction materials, PB-271-007
     waste exchanges, 631, 688, 695, PB-258-068, PB-261-287

 industrial wastewater, effects on groundwater,  656

 industry
     effects of beverage container deposit laws,  325, 461, 462
               487
     hazardous  wastes,  PB-276-169, PB-276-170
     role in solid waste management, 179, 246, 340, 345, 380
               422, 424, 557
          cooperation with government, 676
     views on:
          conservation, 515
          reduction, 461

 infiltration controls
     hazardous  waste disposal sites, 677

 information retrieval of oceanographic data, PB-256-928

 information retrieval services, Office of Solid Waste, 549, 636
     see also public information
information, solid waste management. See information
              retrieval services, Office of Solid Waste; pub-
              lic information

infrared sensor for refuse sorting, PB-229-901

Inglewood, California. See California
Initiating A National Effort to Improve Solid Waste Mana-
          gement, 260
injuries among solid waste personnel, 32, 48, 426, 477, 478
              481, PB-247-566, PB-247-567

Injury Reporting and Information System. See IRIS
              (Injury Reporting and Information System)

input-output analysis of solid waste generation by households
              PB-257-499,  PB-257-500, PB-266-684

insects and rodents in solid waste, 20, 32, 48, 82, 292, 444
               520, PB-225-160
     rat infestation of municipal solid waste, 155, 444

institutional solid wastes, PB-223-345
     see also  collection; generation of solid waste; hospital
               solid wastes; management and planning; stor-
               age of solid wastes
     hazardous, 562
insulation from wastepaper,  675

intergovernmental approaches to solid waste management. See
                regional solid waste management

International Congress (3d), International Research Group on
               Refuse Disposal (1965),  43

International Paper Company Eco Pak  milk carton, 447, 461

International Research Group on Refuse Disposal, 21, 22, 89
               142, 143, 144, 145

interstate solid waste  management. S*ie regional solid waste
               management

inventory of deep-well systems, PB-269-003

investment decisions in solid waste management. See
               financing solid waste systems

ion exchange process  for
     recovery of chromate from pigment manufacturing
               PB-233-641
     separation  of hazardous waste, PB-224-583

 Iowa
     Ames
          solid  waste system, 466, 467,  620, 711
     Des Moines, solid waste management system, 6, 249, 311
               PB-233-873, PB-234-612

 IRIS  (Injury Reporting and Information System) for solid
               waste management, 477, 478, 481, PB-247-566
               PB-247-567

 iron, scrap
     see also  ferrous metals-recycling  and recovery; markets
               for recycled and recovered materials—ferrous
               metals; metals
     influence of transportation costs on use of, PB-229-816
               PB-229-817
     magnetic separation of, 559, 682

 iron wastes in soils, PB-266-905

 Italy,  solid waste management PB-270-219
 Jacksonville, Florida. See Florida
                                                               31

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Japan
     solid waste management, 3, 568
     Tezuka, refuse compression system, 69

Jasper, Indiana See Indiana

Jefferson County, Kentucky. See Kentucky

Johnson City, Tennessee. See Tennessee

Jon Thomas, cool cat, 299

Kansas
     feed lot wastes, film. See The Phoenix in
               the films section of the catalog
     Lawrence, solid waste management system, PB-217-775
     Wichita, solid  waste management system, PB-233-878

Kansas City, Missouri. See Missouri

Keep America Beautiful, Inc., antilitter campaign, 318

Kentucky
     automobile disposal, PB-268-327
     Bullitt County, aerial and automotive reconnaissance for
               dumps, 277
     Fort  Knox
          beverage  deposit  system, 690
     hazardous waste regulations and legislation, 530
     Jefferson County, solid waste  demonstration project,  125
     Louisville-Indiana regional solid waste disposal study
               125
     solid waste management plan, 181, PB-201-205

Klamata County, Oregon. See Oregon

Knoxville, Tennessee. See Tennessee

KUKA 'Shark' collection vehicle, 311

labor views on waste reduction, 461
     see also manpower in solid waste management

laboratory (control) for Washington, D. C. incinerator, 62

lagoon disposal of hazardous wastes. See hazardous wastes-
               treatment processes

Lake County, Florida. See Florida

land availability for composting and disposal of solid waste
               484

land burial of hazardous wastes, PB-224-582

land disposal. See dumping; sanitary landfill

land pollution, 71, 175, 339
     see also dumping; environmental protection; dumping;
               packaging and containers—environmental im-
               pacts; water pollution—by landfills
     speeches by
          Sheldon Meyers, 526
          Roger Strelow, 523                       ;
land protection. See environmental protection

land reclamation
     by accelerated stabilization, 54, PB-187-301
     using composted refuse, PB-234-808
     with sewage sludge, 556, PB-269-352
land use, 30, 84, 247, 339, 484,  612, PB-218-672

landfill. See sanitary  landfill
Landgard pyrolysis system. See Maryland
landspreading petroleum industry wastes, PB-259-097
Lane County, Oregon. See Oregon

Latah County, Idaho. See Idaho

Lawrence, Kansas. See Kansas

Lawrence, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts

leachate plume management by groundwater pumping, 677

leachates,  11, 90, 223, 245, 287, 435, 497, 599, 624
              PB-209-001, PB-209-002, PB-218-672
              PB-222-468, PB-224-996, PB-230-379
              PB-234-930, PB-234-931, PB-236-462
              PB-236-463, PB-239-778, PB-249-747
              PB-254-550, PB-266-905, PB-269-502
              PB-271-013
     see also water pollution—by landfills
     damage assessment studies of disposal sites, 509, 514, 517
              662
     Falls Township, Pennsylvania, leachate treatment plant
              PB-269-502
     from sewage and septic tank sludge in landfills, 391
              PB-225-360, PB-230-379, PB-239-778
              PB-254-550, PB-264-032
     prediction by water balance method, 483
     treatment, chemical/physical, PB-269-502
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and Ener-
              gy  Recovery
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643

lead wastes, PB-241-204, PB-258-953
     in soils, PB-266-905
     recycling, PB-212-729
          taxes affecting use of recycled lead, PB-264-886

League of Women Voters
     publications, 259,  296, 302, 303, 456, 556, 671
     views on waste reduction, 461

leather
     generation of waste leather, 443, 445
     industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-261-018
              PB-264-204

Lee County, Mississippi. See Mississippi

legislation, 306, 327, 345, PB-225-332
     see also regulations for solid waste management; Re-
              source Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)
     antilitter, 455
     authority for  solid waste agencies
          Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency
              249, 311, PB-233-873
          Washington metropolitan area, 30
     beverage container,  448, 461
          Resource Conservation Committee, public meeting
              654
          statement by John Quarles, Jr., before the Subcom-
              mittee on the Environment (1974), 459
     bibliographies, 658
     Federal, 171,  175, 330,  331, 345, 526, 713
          groundwater, 656
          packaging and containers, 246, 459
          Resource Recovery Act (1970), 241, 246
          Solid Waste Diposal Act, 171, 410
          solid waste product charges,  662, 664, 672
          toxic chemicals, 415.
     hazardous waste, 541, 542
     local, 183, 253                    '
                                                              32

-------
legislation (cont'd)
         suggested, 419
     ocean dumping, 130,  157, 192
     recycling, 296
     State,  64, 183, 327, 331, 345
         California, 175,  530
         Hazardous Waste Management Act (model), 635
         hazardous wastes, 453, 530, 612
         Kentucky, 181,  PB-201-205
         Massachusetts, 530
         Minnesota, 530, PB-249-747
         New York, 233, 530
         Oregon, 530
         solid waste management and resource recovery in-
              centives act,  377
     tire recycling (proposed), PB-252-602
     toxic chemicals, 415
     Washington, D.C., 191
     Washington (State), 530

Leon County, Florida.  See Florida

levee stabilization using compost, PB-234-811

levulinic acid from cellulose wastes,  PB-229-246

liability and insurance  in solid waste management, 599
lime sludges, PB-222-354,  PB-269-502
liners, sanitary landfill, 428, 599, PB-256-378, PB-271-013
     for hazardous wastes, 677

literature surveys. See bibliographies on solid waste
              management

litter, 40, 159, 318
     see also antilitter
     beverage container content, 326
     costs,  455
     Highway Litter Study (1974), 455
     impact of beverage container laws, 325, 461, 487, 600
     plastics, PB-238-654
     Yosemite Park beverage container deposit program, 572
              PB-270-266

Little Rock, Arkansas. See Arkansas
livestock wastes, 297, PB-257-311
     anaerobic digestion,  178
     dairy  manure, PB-225-160, PB-233-441
     film on Kansas feed-lot wastes. See  The Phoenix
              in the films section of the catalog
     generation,  484
     pathogen content, PB-222-337
     poultry manure, 82, PB-221-171, PB-223-430
     public health hazards, 20
     swine wastes, PB-221-621

local government role in solid waste management, 175
              306, 327,  331, 336, 373, 419, 424, 441, 511
              671,696
locational models for disposal facilities, 173, 178
Los Angeles County, California. See California
Louisiana
     New Orleans
          public meeting (RCRA), 680
          solid waste management, 94, PB-234-612
     New Orleans East incinerator, PB-256-389, PB-256-959
Louisville,  Kentucky. See Kentucky
Lowell, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts
Lower Rio Grande Valley solid waste disposal plan
              PB-213-347
lubricating oil. See oil, lubricating
lumber industry wastes, generation in California,  175
     see cellulose wastes; wood wastes
Lynn, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts
machine shop wastes, PB-265-981
Madison, Wisconsin. See Wisconsin

magnetic separation of solid wastes,  559, 600
magnetic separators, 682

Maine, Portland, solid waste management system, 423

Maiden, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts

management and planning, 2, 5, 53, 110, 120, 304, 657
     see also composition and analysis of solid wastes; fi-
              nancing solid waste systems; generation of sol-
              id waste; incineration; state solid waste man-
              agement-planning grants
     accounting systems,  86, 111,  153, 176,  182, 451
     bibliographies, 658
     Bureau of Solid Waste Management Intramural Research
              165
     case  studies
          Akron, Ohio, 423
          Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234-612
          Amarillo, Tx.,  PB-227-000
          Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, Okla-
              homa, PB-234-612
          Atlanta, PB-234-612
          Atlanta State Farmer's  Market, PB-215-289
          Baldwin County, Alabama, PB-234-612
          Baltimore, PB-228-161
          Braintree, Massachusetts,  PB-234-612
          Brevard County, Florida,  PB-234-612
          Brookhaven, New York, PB-234-612
          Broward County, Florida, PB-234-612
          Buffalo, N.Y., PB-227-000
          California, 175
          Cascade County, Montana, 118
          Chilton County, Alabama, 238
          Clark County,  Arkansas, 479, PB-243-029
          Colorado, 423, PB-234-612
          Dallas, PB-234-140
          DeKalb County, Georgia, PB-234-612
          Denver, PB-234-612
          Des Moines, 6, 249, 311, PB-233-873, PB-234-612
          Detroit, PB-236-662
          East Peoria, Illinois, 423
          Eastern Appalachia, N.C., PB-214-089
          Floyd County, Ga.,  PB-256-945
          Forsyth County, North Carolina, PB-225-296
          Fresno,  California, 84, PB-234-141
          Genesee County, Michigan,  52
          Great Falls, Montana, PB-234-612
          Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, PB-234-612
          Hot Springs, Arkansas, 423, PB-234-612
          Houston, PB-225-299
          Humphreys County, Tennessee, 255
          Idaho, PB-234-612
          Jacksonville, Florida, PB-234-139
          Jefferson County, Kentucky, 125
          Kansas City, Missouri,  PB-234-068, PB-234-612
                                                              33

-------
management and planning (cont'd)
         Kansas City, Missouri (cont'd), PB-255-133
         Kentucky, 181
         Knoxville, PB-234-612
         Latah County, Idaho, 423
         Lawrence, Ks, PB-217-775
         Little Rock, Arkansas, 423
         Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana metropolitan region
              125
         Lower Rio Grande Valley, PB-213-347
         Maiden, Massachusetts, PB-234-612
         Maricopa County, Az., PB-215-699
         Maryland, PB-257-305
         Memphis, PB-234-612, PB-234-713
         Merced County,  California, PB-252-865
         Middletown, Ohio, PB-234-945
         Minneapolis, PB-234-612
         Mountain View,  California, 710
         Nashville, PB-234-612
         New Orleans, 94, PB-234-612
         New York City,  PB-234-612
         New York State, 233
         Oakland County, Michigan, 117
         Omaha-Council Bluffs solid waste management plan
              183
         Orange  County, Florida, PB-234-612
         Oregon, 168
         Port of Tacoma,  Washington, PB-226-042
         Portland, Maine, 423
         Portland, Oregon, PB-234-612
         Prove, Ut., PB-227-000
         Rhode Island, PB-234-544
         Sacramento County, California, PB-234-612
         San Diego County, PB-234-612
         San Francisco Bay area, PB-234-808
         San Jose, California, PB-240-395
         Saugus,  Massachusetts, PB-234-612
         Seattle, PB-234-612
         Southeastern Oakland  County (Michigan) Inctaera-
              tor Authority, 423, PB-234-612
         St. Louis, PB-227-000, PB-234-612
         Tampa,  Florida, PB-225-291
         Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239-196
         Ventura County,  California, PB-234-612
         Vermont, PB-234-612,  PB-235-319
         Washington, D.C., 30,  191, 271
         Washington State, PB-234-612
         Weber County, Utah, PB-234-612
         Wichita, PB-233-878
         Wichita  Falls, Texas, PB-276-708
         Wyoming, PB-234-612
    cities' role, 331
         EPA policy and planning, 696
    classification criteria of disposal facilities, 668, 696
    collection. See collection—management and planning
    COLMIS (Collection Management Information System)
              347, 370, 371, 389
    county government's role, 373, 586
    decisionmaking and games. See decisionmaking and
             games
    Decision-Makers Guide in  Solid
              Waste Management, 390,  394
    developments, 116
    economics, PB-187-712, PB-213-394,  PB-221-681
             PB-239-116, PB-239-631, PB-241-468
    Europe, 3, 21, 22, 55, 59, 89, 142, 212, PB-270-219
    Federal-local cooperation, 423, 649, PB-227-578
management and planning (cont'd)
     Federal planning grants. See state solid waste manage-
              ment—planning grants
     Federal role, 56,  197, 306, 345, 424, 441, 707
     films. See The Stuff We Throw Away
               in the films section of the catalog
     financing.  See financing solid waste systems
     food processing industry, PB-219-019
     high-rise buildings, 248, 300, 301, PB-213-133
               PB-213-135
     household garbage grinders, PB-229-206
     in foundries, PB-256-955
     in industry, PB-214-924, PB-216-100
     in Yellowstone National Park, PB-256-952
     institutional, 237
          hospital solid waste systems, 191, 300, 301, 406
               PB-213-133, PB-213-135, PB-221-681
     intergovernmental approaches. See regional solid
              waste management
     Japan, 3, 568
     land use planning and solid  waste generation, 247, 705
               PB-218-672
     local, 306, 331, 336, 373, 419, 424, 441
     mathematical analysis,  95, 99, 283, 338, PB-231-309
               PB-256-365
          models, 103, 173, 178,  PB-231-309, PB-243-407
              PB-244-841
          models, aerobic digestion of waste organic sludges
              PB-222-029
          models, collection, 123, 147, 166, 283, PB-208-154
         models, decisionmaking, 219, 338
          models, financing solid waste systems, 103
          models, generation of wastes, 178, PB-257-499
              PB-257-500, PB-266-684
          models, locating disposal facilities, 173, 178, 219
         models, post aeration of sewage sludges, PB-222-031-
         models, wastewater sludge treatment plant
              PB-222-396
     National Academy of Engineering-National Academy
              of Science report, 112
     operational simulation, PB-276-708
     PERT method, 135
     plastics industry,  PB-216-587
     predicting
         amounts of combustible solid wastes, PB-222-467
         production of re-refined oil, PB-272-267
         solid waste characteristics, 235
     President's message on the environment (1970), 129
     private and public roles, 345, 346, 380, 390
     productivity, 60, 306, 320, 466
     public utility concept. See public utility concept in solid
         waste management
     pulp and paper industry, PB-234-944
     RCRA implementation strategy
         fact sheet, 694
     RCRA implementation strategy (draft),  645
     recreational areas, 40, 167, 284
     regional approaches. See regional solid waste manage-
              ment
     residential complexes, 248
     resource recovery plant implementation. See resource
              recovery
     speech by H.L. Hickman, Jr., 234
     State
         activities, 457, 663
         agencies, 393
         roles,  124, 194, 306, 327, 345, 355, 383, 424
                                                             34

-------
management and planning (cont'd)
     systems analysis, 3, 84, 99,  112, 120, 128, 135, 136
              173, 178, PB-213-304, PB-222-995
              PB-245-376
         WRAP, 548, 573, 574
manpower in solid waste management, 390, 422, 461, 466, 486
              495, 501, 539, 612, 619, 682
manual separation of solid waste. See source separation

manufacturers of solid waste management equipment
              PB-256-956
map of the United States reflecting quantities of
              solid waste generated,  149

MARC landfill project,  339

Maricopa County, Arizona. See Arizona

marine disposal of solid wastes. See ocean disposal
Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act criteria for
              ocean  dumping of hazardous substances, 489

markets for recycled and recovered materials, 119, 225, 293
              321, 353, 438, 448, 466, 480, 491, 499, 518
              599
     see also
               salvaging and salvage markets
     aluminum,  491, 499, 518, PB-245-924
     compost, 30, 55, 89, 120, 212
     energy, recovered from waste, 401, 466, 499
     ferrous metals, 114, 293, 491, PB-245-924
     forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
     from small-scale pyrolytic incinerators, 678
     glass, 293, 491, 499, 518, PB-245-924
     steam and electricity, 499
     steel and ferrous metals, 518
     wastepaper, 293, 397, 408, 420, 438, 448, 486, 499, 511
               518, 666, 675, 676, PB-245-924, PB-250-798
               PB-250-802, PB-250-905
     yeast from  organic wastes, 91
Maryland
     see also pyrolysis
     Baltimore
          Landgard project, 417, 431, 641, 712
          solid waste management by gas pyrolysis, 353, 431
               537, 600, 620, 690
          solid waste management system, 123, 283, 353, 417
               431, 620, PB-228-161
     Montgomery County
          municipal sludge landfills,  705
     solid waste management system, PB-257-305

Massachusetts
     Braintree
          incinerator  study, PB-226-960
          refuse-fired steam generator emissions, 537
          solid waste management system, 620, PB-234-612
     citizen action, 697
     hazardous waste regulations and legislation, 530
     Holyoke
          refractory incinerator, 667, 687
     Lawrence, resource recovery system RFP summary, 552
     Lowell
          resource recovery facility, 353, 491, 690
     Lynn, energy recovery plant, PB-214-960
     Maiden, solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Marblehead
          source separation project, 510, 551, 575, 600, 690
     Newton public meeting (RCRA), 681
Massachusetts (cont'd)
     Saugus, solid waste management system, 599, 620
              PB-234-612
     Somerville
          source separation program, 510, 551, 575, 600, 690
     Springfield, wet system for collection, PB-234-499
material flow estimates of waste generation, 443, 445, 533

materials coating wastes, PB-265-981

materials recovery. See resource recovery

mathematical models. See management and planning-
              mathematical analysis, models

meat processing plant wastes, 20

Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator, 14

Memphis, Tennessee. See Tennessee

Merced County, California. See California

mercury wastes, PB-224-585, PB-241-204
     in soils, PB-266-905

metal finishing industry wastes, PB-264-349

metal mining wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-466

metal products industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
     smelting and refining
          disposal practices, PB-276-169, PB-276-170
              PB-276-171, PB-276-172

metals
     see also automobile disposal; specific metals, e.g.,  alumi-
              num; steel, scrap
     ferrous, 261, 311, 352, 431, 491, 559, PB-208-674
              PB-213-577, PB-213-646, PB-223-034
              PB-234-715, PB-239-736, PB-241-729
              PB-242-540, PB-245-924
     generation of waste metals, 443, 445
     nonferrous, 102, 256, 352, 491, PB-212-729, PB-221-464
              PB-221-467, PB-241-204, PB-242-540
     recycling and recovery, 114,  256, 261, 264, 311, 352, 408
              431, 442, 491, PB-208-674, PB-212-729
              PB-213-577, PB-213-646, PB-223-034
              PB-234-715, PB-234-716, PB-241-729
          economics, 321
          effect of Federal procurement policies on use of re-
              cycled metal, PB-241-729
          effect of recycled and virgin steel and aluminum on
              the environment, PB-253-487
          Federal subsidies, PB-239-736, PB-264-886
          forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
          magnetic separation, 559, 682
          markets. See markets for recycled and recovered
              materials
          separation by air classification, 102
          specifications for recovered metals, PB-242-540
     salvage and recycled metal markets, 114, 293, 438, 491
              PB-245-924

methane
     see also gases (decomposition) in sanitary landfill; sani-
              tary landfill-end uses
     as fuel from
          codisposal process, 667, 687
          sanitary landfills, 378, 448, 497, 550, 587, 600, 620
              690
          solid waste and sewage sludge, 458, 550
                                                               35

-------
methanol from sanitary landfill gases, 583
Michigan
     citizen action, 697
     Detroit
          resource recovery system, RFP summaries, 552
          solid waste management system, PB-236-662
     Genesee County, solid waste system, 52
     Oakland (Southeastern) County,  Incinerator Authority
              423, PB-234-612
     Oakland County, refuse disposal system, 117

microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions, portable sam-
              pler, 151

microorganisms in waste degradation. See composting

microscopy in solid waste management, PB-256-357

microwave plasma detoxification of hazardous wastes
              PB-268-526

Middlesex County, New Jersey. See New Jersey

Middletown, Ohio. See Ohio

milling of solid wastes. See shredding; baling and balefills

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. See Wisconsin

mine spoil, soil and water pollution, PB-237-525

mineral fillers  from water-softening process sludge
              PB-224-820

mineral recovery from incinerator residues, 491

mining wastes
     metals, PB-261-052
     soils  and water pollution, PB-237-525
     uranium,  PB-238-819

Minneapolis, Minnesota. See Minnesota

Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota. See Minnesota

Minnesota
     hazardous waste regulations and legislation, 530
     Minneapolis, solid waste management system
              PB-234-612
     Minneapolis-St. Paul, centralized hospital incineration
              system, PB-221-681

Mission 5000,  265, 280
     flyer, 202
     poster, 201

Mississippi, Lee County, solid waste disposal project
              PB-241-468

Missouri
     Hazardous Waste Management Law, 586
     Kansas City
          metropolitan area solid waste management planning
              PB-255-133
          public meeting (RCRA), 699
          Regional Public Meeting on the Resource Conserva-
              tion and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 588
          solid waste management system, PB-234-068
              PB-234-612
     St. Louis
          energy recovery project, 690
          hazardous wastes, 651
          solid waste management system, PB-227-000
          solid waste plant, 234, 264,  311, 353, 387, 388, 412
              421, 467, 528, 581, 600, 620, PB-213-534
              PB-234-612, PB-243-634
Missouri (cont'd)
          waste  wood and bulky refuse disposal, PB-228-119

Mobile, Alabama. See Alabama

monitoring sites, 705

Monroe County, New York. See New York

Montana
     Cascade County, solid waste disposal, 118, PB-265-391
     Great Falls, solid waste management plan, PB-234-612

Mountain View,  California. See California

Mt Trashmore, PB-225-346
     film. See Mt. Trashmore in the
              films section of the catalog

municipal wastes. See collection; generation of solid waste;
              management and planning; resource recovery;
              sanitary landfill

Nashville, Tennessee. See Tennessee

National Academy of Sciences classification of hazardous
              substances, 489

National Cancer Institute classification  of hazardous
              substances, 489

National Commission on Productivity, 440, 441

National Commission on Supplies and Shortages, report on
              recycling, 601

National Conference of Solid Wastes Management
              PB-245-376

National Conference on Acceptable Sludge Disposal Tech-
              niques(Sth),  686

National Conference on Management and Disposal of Resi-
              dues from the Treatment of Industrial Was-
              tewaters (1975), 453

National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969), 172

National Congress; Waste Management Technology and Re-
              source and Energy Recovery
     4th (1975), 497
     5th (1976), 599
     6th (1977), 643

national effort towards solid waste management, 260

National Industrial Pollution Control Council, 129

National Industrial Solid Wastes Management Conference
              PB-216-100

National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health
              classification of hazardous substances, 489

national parks, PB-256-952

national solid waste management effort, goals and objectives
              645

National Solid Wastes Management Association, 141

National Survey  of Community Solid Waste Practices (1968)
              26, 28, 98,  113, 216, 217, 218, 260, 443

National Symposium on Animal Waste Management
              PB-257-311

natural resources. See energy conservation; land use;
              resource conservation
                                                             36

-------
New Hampshire
     Bridgewater
          pyrolytic incinerators facility, 678
     Candia
          pyrolytic incinerator facility, 678
     Concord, Regional Public Meeting on the Resource Con-
               servation, 593
     Meredith
          pyrolytic incinerator facility, 678
     Nottingham, resource recovery system, 642
     Plymouth
          incineration-recycling facility, 678
New Jersey
     Middlesex County, solid waste management system, 599
     Newark, resource recovery system RFP summary, 552

New Mexico, Catron County, sanitary landfill, PB-265-391

New Orleans, Louisiana. See Louisiana
New York Bight waste disposal, PB-264-264
New York City. See New York (State)
New York (State)
     Brookhaven, solid waste management system
               PB-234-612
     Buffalo
          crusher facility, PB-225-159
          solid waste management system, PB-227-000
     generation of agricultural wastes, 233
     Glen Cove
          co-disposal of sludge and solid  waste, 667
          codisposal of sludge and solid waste, 687
     hazardous waste regulations and legislation, 530
     Hempstead
          resource recovery system, 620
          RFP summary, 552
     Islip, Sayville disposal site leachate damage assessment
               509
     Monroe County
          resource recovery plant, 467
          resource recovery system RFP  and contract sum-
               maries, 552
     New York City
          Regional Meeting on Resource Conservation and
               Recovery Act (1976), transcripts, 591
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Oceanside, resource recovery system, 620
     Onondaga County
          energy recovery project, 497
          Rock Cut Road Plant No.l, PB-245-672
          Solid Waste Disposal Authority shredding facilities
               PB-245-672
     solid waste management system, 233

Newark, New Jersey. See New Jersey

Newcastle, Wyoming. See Wyoming
newspaper
     see also markets for recycled  and recovered
              materials—was tepaper
     anerobic digestion, 178
     recycling and recovery, 622, 642
          markets, 465, 675
          specifications for recovered newsprint, PB-242-540
     separate collection, 381, 400, 420, 421, 486, PB-257-969
nickel, PB-258-953
     and stainless steel, PB-212-729
nickel sulfate wastes, economic assessment of regulation
              PB-263-210

nitrate-accelerated photochemical degradation of cellulose for
              microbiological conversion to protein
              PB-222-115
nonferrous metals, 102, 256, PB-212-729,  PB-241-204
              PB-242-540
     see also specific metals, e.g., copper
     industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467
          smelting and refining, PB-276-169, PB-276-170
              PB-276-172
     recycling, 352, 491
Norfolk, Virginia. See Virginia

North Carolina
     Charlotte, landfill site selection, 669
     Eastern Appalachia, solid waste management and plan-
              ning, PB-214-089
     Forsyth County, solid waste management  system
              PB-225-296
     Winston-Salem, landfill gas barrier, PB-239-357
Nottingham, New Hampshire. See New Hampshire
nutrients from waste, PB-221-171, PB-222-115, PB-222-454
              PB-223-343, PB-223-625,  PB-223-873
              PB-270-085
     agricultural wastes, PB-222-454
     fibrous wastes, PB-223-625
     protein from cellulose, 295, PB-222-115, PB-223-625
              PB-223-873, PB-270-085
          poultry manure, PB-221-171
     yeast, 91, 254

Oakland, California. See California
Oakland County, Michigan. See Michigan
ocean disposal, 130, 140, 157, 162, 192, 556, PB-221-684
     hazardous wastes, 489, 713, PB-224-582, PB-256-928
              PB-259-097, PB-264-264
oceanographic data, PB-256-928

Oceanside, California.  See California
Oceanside, New York. See New York (State)
office machinery industry wastes,  PB-265-981

Office of Solid Waste, 41,  108,  109, 119,  171
     attitude toward public information, 701
     contract research, 42, 85, 98, 108, 121, 469
     demonstration grants. See federal grants for solid waste
              management—demonstration grants
     funding, 112, 276
     information retrieval services, 549, 636
     organization, 260, 263
     program, 250, 276, 359, 549
          hazardous wastes, 399,  504, 512,  541, 542
     publications, 203, 536
     regional representatives, 439
     schedule  of courses in solid waste management (1971-
               1972), 208
     technical assistance activities, 16, 30, 68, 171, 260
office paper recovery program, 666
Ogden, Utah. See Utah
Ohio
     Akron, solid waste management system, 423
     Cincinnati
                                                              37

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Ohio (cont'd)
          public meeting (RCRA), 706
          Resource Conservation Committee, public meeting
              672
     Crawford County, sanitary landfill, PB-253-3Q4
     Cuyahoga County, resource recovery system RFP ,  con-
              tract summary, 552
     Franklin
          evaluation of waste processing complex, PB-245-674
          waste processing complex, 220, 309, 353, 388,  408
              421, 528, 558, 600, 602, 620, 667, 687, 690
              PB-213-646, PB-234-715, PB-234-716
              PB-272-051
     Middletown, solid waste management system
              PB-234-945

oil (fuel) from  solid waste, 321, 401, 417, PB-222-694

oil, lubricating, 390, PB-237-618, PB-237-620, PB-265-532
     evaluation and testing, PB-237-620, PB-251-716
     re-refining, 577

oil re-refining industry, economics of, PB-237-620, PB-251-716
              PB-265-532, PB-272-267

oil waste, 390, 418, 600
     disposal by individual consumers, PB-237-619
     ocean disposal, 130, 162, 192
     processing facility design, PB-242-461
     recovery and  recycling, 655, PB-235-857, PB-237-618
              PB-237-620, PB-243-222, PB-251-716
              PB-272-267
     spills, 506

Oklahoma
     Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, PB-234-612
     citizen action, 697

Omaha, Nebraska. See Nebraska

Onondaga County, New York. See New York (State)

operations research, 99
     see also management and planning—mathematical anal-
              ysis; management and planning-systems anal-
              ysis

Orange County, Florida. See Florida

Oregon
     bottle bill (Minimum Deposit Act), 325, 396, 421, 461
              462
     hazardous waste  regulations and legislation, 530
     Klamata  County, PB-216-585
     Lane County
          resource recovery system RFP summary, 552
          solid waste  management system, 586,  620
     Portland
          public meeting (RCRA), 700
          Resource Conservation Committee, public meeting
              664
          resource recovery system RFP summary, 552
          solid waste  management system, PB-234-612
     solid waste  management plan, 168
organic energy. See energy recovery from waste

organic wastes. See cellulose wastes; livestock wastes;
              nutrients from waste
organization chart  for Office of Solid Waste Management
              Programs, 263
organizations and associations in resource recovery, 470
oxidation
     see also partial oxidation of organic solid wastes
     accelerated, in sanitary landfill, 54
     ponds for disposal of hazardous wastes, PB-224-583
oxygen in solid wastes, PB-256-365, PB-256-366
packaging and containers, 3, 27, 44, 172, 243, 353, 358
     see also glass; plastics
     beverage containers. See beverage containers
     Conference on Waste Reduction (1975), 461
     energy and resource consumption, 352, 353, 405, 456
              461, 515, PB-245-924
     environmetal impacts,  332, PB-238-654
     forecasts of resource recovery for 1972 to 1990
              PB-245-924
     glass, 261, 325
          water-disposable, 236
     government regulatory and fiscal policies, 437
     legislation, 246
          Oregon's  Minimum Deposit Act, 325, 396, 421, 461
              462
          solid waste product charges, 662, 664, 672,  708
          Vermont  beverage container law, 462, 487
     paper, plastic-coated, 261
     pesticides, 527, 534, PB-202-202
     plastics
          biodegradability,  199, 324, PB-213-488
          recycling, 261
     Proceedings of the Solid Waste Resources Conference on
              Design of Consumer Containers for Reuse or
              Disposal (1971), 261
     recycling, 261, 353, 488
     source reduction, 246, 353, 421, 422, 424, 437, 456
          Eco Pak milk carton, 447, '461
          Red Owl Stores program, 416
          role of industry,  107, 246, 422, 448, 456
     speeches by
          Arsen J. Darnay, 364
          Sheldon Meyers,  526
          Roger Strelow, 523
          Thomas F. Williams, 515
     taxes on, 246,  353, 424, 437, 662
     tin cans, 261, 448, PB-208-674, PB-223-034
     vinyl chloride aerosol  cans,  529
paint and  allied products industry wastes, PB-251-669
              PB-265-981
paper
     see also fuel-refuse as; refuse-derived fuel (RDF)
     as fuel, 420, 465
     as waste, PB-213-304
     bibliographies, 658
     costs of wastepaper, 465, PB-250-798, PB-250-802
     directory of recycled paper sources, 343
     exports of wastepaper, effects on domestic markets, 379
              465
     generation of wastepaper, 443, 445, 600, PB-250-798
     influence of raw material transportation costs on use of
              recycled paper, PB-229-816, PB-229-817
              PB-264-886
     recycling and recovery, 170,  225, 256, 311, 352, 353, 381
              408, 413, 420, 448, 465, 505, 550, 571, 600
              616, 622, 632, 666, PB-208-674, PB-212-729
              PB-234-715, PB-234-716, PB-264-214
          citizen action, 446, 642, 675
          economics, 321, 632
                                                              38

-------
paper (cont'd)
          EPA intramural program, 507
          Federal subsidies,  311, PB-239-736, PB-264-886
          forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
          Franklin, Ohio, project, 309, PB-213-646
          incentives, 357
          markets for wastepaper. See markets for recycled
               and recovered materials-wastepaper
          packaging and containers, 261
          refuse sacks, 248,  270, 390,  PB-212-590, PB-256-960
          separation by air classification, 120
          speech by Steffen  W. Plehn, 676
          taxes affecting recycled paper use, PB-240-988
               PB-264-886
          vehicle for separate newspaper collection
               PB-257-969
     selenium in wastepaper, 148
     source separation, 381, 390, 400, 421, 486, 571, 600, 666
               PB-239-775, PB-239-776, PB-264-214
          Federal guidelines, 473
     specifications for recovered corrugated paper and news-
               print, PB-242-540
     transportation rates for virgin and secondary materials
               PB-233-871

paper industry
     effects of pollution controls on solid waste generation
               PB-238-819
     industry-Government cooperation
          resource  recovery, 676
     recycling and recovery
          economics, 676
     solid waste management practices, PB-234-944
     wastes, PB-221-464,  PB-221-466

papermill sludge landfill, PB-239-618, PB-239-869, PB-264-032

parasites in compost, 224

partial oxidation of organic solid wastes, 154
     see also incineration; wet air oxidation for disposal of
               chemical wastes

patents (abstracts)
     deep-well systems, PB-269-002
     international, 319
     refuse handling facilities for buildings, 1
     United States, 317

pathogens
      see also bacteria
     in  incinerator residue,  73, 88, 184, PB-256-389
     in  sludges. See sewage sludge; sludges

paving with waste glass, PB-222-052,  PB-242-536

PCB. See polychlorinated biphenyl wastes

Pennsylvania
      Allegheny County, collection, PB-234-612
      Altoona, resource recovery system, 620
      Broomall, incinerator study, PB-256-943
      Delaware County, No. 3 incinerator study, PB-256-943
      Falls Township, leachate treatment plant, PB-269-502
      Harrisburg, solid waste management system, 620
                PB-234-612
      Philadelphia
           generation of industrial wastes, 695
           generation of transferable industrial wastes
                PB-261-287
           resource recovery project, 497
      Pittsburgh
Pennsylvania (cont'd)
          Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
               and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 590
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612

Peoples Avenue disposal site in Rockford, Illinois. See
               Dlinois

per capita waste generation, 549

PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) method
               for solid waste management, 135

pesticides, 29, 345,  506, 519, 527, PB-202-202, PB-224-584
               PB-251-307, PB-256-496
     see also  hazardous wastes-damage reports
     alternative treatment processes, PB-278-059
     chemical methods  of disposal, PB-252-864, PB-262-804
     containers, 527, 534, PB-202-202
     disposal facilities in the United States, 429
     drinking water standards, 489
     from wood waste,  PB-222-051
     incineration, 427, PB-202-202, PB-253-485, PB-278-059
     landfill disposal, 569, PB-250-717, PB-278-059
     regulations for disposal and storage, 376, 398, 519, 630
               PB-244-557
          economic assessment,  PB-279-645
     residues in solid waste, 29,  519, PB-222-165
     spills disposal, 506
     water contamination from,  415

petroleum industry wastes, 175,  PB-221^64, PB-221-467
               PB-259-097, PB-268-232
     see also oil waste
     re-refiners, 429,  PB-272-267

pharmaceutical industry wastes, 508
     See also drug industry wastes

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. See Pennsylvania

phosphates content in solid wastes, PB-256-377

phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222-354

phosphorus trichloride wastes, economic assessment of regula-
               tion, PB-263-210

photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid wastes
               PB-222-454

phytotoxins in crop residues in soil, PB-222-113

pigment (inorganic) wastes, PB-244-832
pipeline collection of solid waste, 30, 84, 120, PB-223-162
               PB-229-256, PB-236-543

pit incinerators. See incinerators
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  See Pennsylvania

planning grants. See state solid waste management-planning
               grants

plant residue  decomposition in soil, PB-222-113
plants, effects of sewage sludge applications on, PB-266-649

plastic refuse sacks, 60, 248, 390, PB-212-590, PB-256-960
 plastics, 199,  244, 324, PB-221-464, PB-221-466
      see also  packaging and containers
      biodegradability, 199, 324, PB-213-488
      effects of refuse on the environment, PB-23 8-654
      generation of waste plastics, 443, 445, PB-243-366
      incineration, 100,  PB-223-651
          products, PB-222-001
                                                                39

-------
plastics (cont'd)
     industry, role in waste management, 179, 340
              PB-216-587
     recycling and recovery, 222, 316, 352, 353, PB-208-674
              PB-214-045, PB-243-366
         forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
         salvage markets, 293
         taxes affecting use of recycled plastic, PB-240-988

pneumatic pipeline collection of solid waste. See pipeline
              collection of solid waste

pocket calculator for sanitary landfills, 351

poisoning incidents from chemical wastes, 415, 449, 450, 474, 494
pollution. See air pollution; water pollution

polychlorinated bipbenyl wastes, 634, PB-275-103
     disposal, burning in cement kiln, PB-280-118
     disposal guidelines, 516
     marking and disposal regulation, 683
Port of Tacoma, Washington. See Washington (State)

Portland, Maine. See Maine

Portland, Oregon. See Oregon

post aeration of sewage sludges, PB-222-031

post-consumer solid wastes. See commercial solid wastes;
              residential solid wastes
     Mission 5000, 201
     Return your soft drink containers, 647
     Return your soft drink containers and get a $.05 refund
              too, 646
     Waste Not,  Want Not, 3\3
         Spanish language version, 392
     You can make a difference and contribute to a better
              environment, 521

poultry manure, 82, PB-221-171, PB-222-148, PB-223^30

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

prediction of quantity and characteristics of solid waste.
              See generation of solid waste

President's  message on the environment (1970), 129

press briefing on solid waste management and energy, 359

pricing mechanisms in solid waste management, PB-239-116

Private Sector Collection Survey (1971), 443
private sector,  role in solid waste management, 107, 141, 246
              340, 422, 424, 501, 539

problem-solving in solid waste management 423

proceedings
     ad hoc conference on solid waste training (1964), 72
     Conference of Institute of  Solid Wastes Management
              (1974), 395
     Conference on the Management of Non-Nuclear Hazard-
              ous Wastes (1977), 591
     Conference on Waste Reduction (1975), 461
     Environmental Protection Agency/Edison
              Electric Institute Meeting (1975), 467
     International Congress, International Research Group
              on Refuse Disposal{3rd, 1965), 43
proceedings (cont'd)
    International Research Group on Refuse Disposal, 21,
              22, 89, 142, 143, 144, 145
    National Conference on Management and Disposal of
              Residues from the Treatment of Industrial
              Wastewater, 453
    National Conference on Packaging Wastes (1969), 172
    National Conference on Solid Waste Management
              (1966),PB-245-376
    National Congress; Waste Management Technology
              and Resource and Energy Recovery
         4th (1975), 497
         5th (1976), 599
         6th (1977), 643
    National Industrial Solid Wastes Conference, PB-216- 100
    Public Hearing on the Proposed Classification
              Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities
         Cincinnati, Ohio. 706
         Kansas City, Missouri, 699
         Portland, Oregon, 700
         San Diego, California, 679
         Washington, D.C., 698
    Public Hearing on the Proposed Regulations for
              Transportation  of Hazardous Wastes and
              Materials, 703
    Public Meeting on Strategy for  the Implementation of
              the Resource Conservation and Recovery
              Act of 1976,673
    Public Meeting on the Draft Solid Waste Grant Regula-
              tions for Implementation of the Resource
              Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
              (1977), 626
    Public Meeting on the Public Participation Guidelines,
              Section  7004(b) of the Resource Conserva-
              tion and Recovery Act of 1976 (1977), 627
    Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and
              Recovery Act of 1976; Subtitle C,
              Hazardous Waste Management, 650
    Regional Public Meetings on the Resource
              Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)
         Arlington, Virginia (1978), 673
         Atlanta (1977), 592
         Chicago  (1977), 598
         Concord, New Hampshire  (1977), 593
         Dallas (1977), 595
         Denver (1977), 594
         Des Plaines, Illinois (1977), 653
         Kansas City, Missouri (1977), 588
         New Orleans  (1978), 680
         New York City (1977), 591
         Newton,  Massachusetts (1978), 681
         Pittsburgh (1977), 590
         Richmond, Virginia (1977), 589
         Salt Lake City (1977), 594
         San Francisco (1977), 596
         Scottsdale (1977), 652
         Seattle (1977), 597
         St. Louis (1977), 651
         Worcester, Massachusetts (1977), 593
    Resource Conservation Committee
         product charges, 662
         public meeting, beverage container deposit  legisla-
              tion, 654
         public meeting, product charges, 664, 672
     sanitary landfill conference (1972), 339
     Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; a symposium (1971),
     Solid Waste Resources Conference on Design of
              Consumer Containers for Reuse or
              Disposal, 261
                                                            40

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proceedings (cont'd)
     Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste Manage-
               ment for Metropolitan Washington, 30
     Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning
               Agencies, 194
     Symposium on Solid Waste, PB-227-578
     U.S.-Japan joint conferences, 568

procurement of
     contractors for resource recovery plants, 480
     products containing recycled materials, by Federal agen-
               cies, 171, 490, 623

product charges, 600
     legislation, 662, 664, 672
product design and solid waste management, 261, 353
productivity in solid waste management, 60, 306, 320,  436
               440, 441, 466

propellants, PB-224-586
properties of solid waste. See composition and analysis
               of solid wastes
protein
     analysis of fungal protein produced from waste, 312
               PB-256-372
     from cellulose wastes, 119, 186, 295, 312, PB-222-115
               PB-223-873, PB-270-085
     recovery from leather wastes, PB-264-204

Provo, Utah. See Utah
psychology of solid waste management, 87,  138
public affairs activities of State solid waste management
               agencies, 64, 457
     see also public relations in solid waste management
public health aspects of solid waste disposal, 20, 23, 32, 48
               80, 128, 155, 175,226,444PB-257-951
public hearings. See public meetings
public information, 64, 138, 261, 457, 472,  PB-249-747
     see also  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
               (1976)
     Government agency attitudes, 701
     Somerville and Marblehead,  Massachusetts, source sepa-
               ration project, 510, 551
     waste clearinghouses and exchanges, 688, 695
               PB-261-287
public meetings
     classification criteria, disposal facilities, 679, 698, 699
               700, 706
     first meeting on RCRA(1976), 578
     grant regulations  for RCRA(1976) implementation
               (draft), 626
     public participation guidelines
          sect. 7004(b) of new RCRA (1976), 627, 673, 703
     Resource Conservation Committee
          beverage container deposit legislation, 654
          solid waste product charges, 662, 664, 672
public opinion on refuse problems, 87, 315, 344, 372
               PB-213-340, PB-223-638
     hazardous waste facilities, PB-223-638
     mechanization of collection, PB-239-196
     national effort for improvement, 260
     purchase  of recycled oil, PB-237-619
     recycling, 315, 344, 622
     salvage, 293
     sanitary landfills, 466, 617, PB-239-631
     waste reduction, 461
public participation, 713

public participation in solid waste management,  138, 159, 261
              266, 313, 314, 318, 392, 424, 446, 461, 585
              663, 697
     see also
              citizen action; proceedings; Resource Conser-
              vation and Recovery Act (1976)
     community incineration systems, 678
     EPA intramural program,  507
     films. See The Phoenix and The Village Green in the
              films section  of the catalog
     guidelines, 644, 649
     hazardous wastes disposal, 683
     in rural areas, 273, 342
     public meeting, 673
     recycling and resouce recovery, 697
     recycling and resource recovery, 273, 344, 403, 446, 557
              642, 646, 647, 648
          Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, source
              separation project, 510, 551
     sludge disposal  alternatives, 705

public regulation concept in solid waste  management
               PB-225-332

public relations in solid waste management, 64,  138, 261, 457
              472, 617, 671, PB-249-747
     Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, source sepa-
              ration project, 510, 551

public utility concept in solid waste management, 160, 161
              PB-225-332

'Purox' pyrolysis system. See pyrolysis

pyrolysis, 154, 178, 321, 329, 352,  417, 431, 550, 570, 600
               602, 629, PB-263-396, PB-270-961
     Baltimore gas pyrolysis facility, 353, 388, 417, 431, 528
               600,602,620,712
     Baltimore gas pyrolysis system, 641
     chemical wastes, PB-268-232
     codisposal of sewage sludge and solid  waste, 667, 687
     El Cajon facility (proposed), 442
     hazardous wastes, 427, PB-224-582
     in Europe,  PB-270-219
     in small-scale incinerators, 678
     industrial wastes, PB-216-100
     management and planning, PB-256-355
     'Purox'  pyrolysis  system, 417, 599, 602
     San Diego project, 321,  353, 417, 442, 448, 528, 582, 600
               620
     sewage  sludge,  154, 556, PB-222-015,  PB-266-355
     tires,  PB-234-602

Quad-City regional project, 33

Quarterly Safety Management Report, 477, 478
radioactive wastes, 162, 233,  345, PB-221-464, PB-22M67
               PB-224-588
rail transport of solid wastes, 252, 339,  PB-187-306
               PB-222-709

railroad freight car demolition,  95

rat infestation of municipal solid waste. See insects and
               rodents in solid waste
RCRA. See Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)
                                                               41

-------
RDF. See refuse-derived fuel (RDF)

reconnaissance for dumps by plane and auto, 277

recreation areas from sanitary landfills, 30, 105, 287
              PB-213-697, PB-218-672, PB-225-346

recreation areas, solid waste management, 40, 167, 284, 572
              600
     Yosemite National Park beverage container deposit ex-
              periment, 532, 572, 600, PB-270-266

recycled materials. See secondary materials
              use and resource conservation

recycling, 96, 286, 307, 311,  330, 396, 600, 601, PB-212-729
     see also aluminum; bark waste recycling; beverage con-
              tainers; glass; packaging and containers; paper;
              resource recovery; salvaging and salvage mar-
              kets; source separation; textiles; under specific
              materials, e.g., wood wastes
     and air classification of wastes, 256
     bumper sticker, 685
     centers, PB-239-776
         directory, 341, 638
         film. See The Village Green in the
         films section of the catalog
     citizen action, 159, 273, 296, 303, 642
         incineration-recycling facility, 678
     directory of recycling projects, 341, 638
     economics, 225, 331, PB-223-034, PB-239-631
     effects of Federal  programs, 296, PB-213-311
     energy savings with, 352, 353, 448,  600
     films.  See Realities of Recyliag and
              Recycling in the films section of the
              catalog
     filmscript, 268
     highway litter, 455
     in Europe, PB-270-219
     legislation, 296, PB-234-544
     markets for recycled materials. See markets for recycled
              and recovered materials
     National Commission on Supplies and Shortages (1976)
              report,  601
     packaging and containers, 261, 353, 448, 600
     programs, PB-234-544
     public opinion, 315, 344
     public participation, 273, 344, 403, 446
     separate collection of recyclable wastes, 381, 390, 400
              421, 486, 510, 575, 600, PB-239-775
              PB-239-776
     speech by Roger Strelow, 523
     statistics, U.S., 533

Red Owl Stores  source reduction program, 416, 461

referendum on proposed Dade County, Florida, beverage con-
              tainer, 461

refuse as fuel. See refuse-derived fuel (RDF)

refuse-derived fuel (RDF), 667,  686, 690, 711
     see also fuel; paper
     codisposaL,  667, 687

refuse, moisture  content of. See sanitary landfill

Regional Office of Solid Waste representatives, 439
regional public meetings on Resource Conservation and
              Recovery Act (1976). See Resource Conserva-
              tion and Recovery Act (1976)-public meetings,
              transcripts
regional solid waste management,  164, 171, 327, 331, 336, 339
              390, 423, 599, 696, PB-226-099, PB-231-309
              PB-233-873, PB-239-631
     Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PB-234-612
     Arbuckle Regional Development Authority, Oklahoma
              PB-234-612
     Arlington, Virginia, 650
     Baldwin County, Alabama, PB-234-612
     Brevard County, Florida, PB-234-612
     Broward County, Florida, PB-234-612
     chemical wastes, 497
     Colorado, PB-234-612
     DeKalb County, Georgia, PB-234-612
     Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency, 249
              311, PB-233-873
     Des Plaines, Illinois, 653
     Eastern Appalachia Health Region, 323, PB-214-089
     EPA Region X hazardous waste management survey
              PB-262-673
     Fresno, California, area,  84
     Genesee County, Michigan,  52
     guidelines, 615
     Idaho,  PB-234-612
     Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana study, 125
     Lower  Rio Grande Valley, PB-213-347
     Maricopa County, Arizona,  PB-215-699
     New York State, 233
     Omaha-Council Bluffs plan, 183
     Orange County, Florida, PB-234-612
     Oregon, 168
     Quad-City project, 33
     representatives,  EPA, 439
     resource recovery, 431, 466, 599,  600, PB-239-631
     Sacramento County, California, PB-234-612
     San Diego County, California, PB-234-612
     Scottsdale, Arizona, 652
     Southeastern Oakland County Incinerator Authority, Mi-
              chigan, 423, PB-234-612
     St. Louis, Missouri, 651
     Ventura County, California, PB-234-612
     Vermont, PB-234-612
     Washington, D.C., area,  30
     Washington (State), PB-234-612
     Weber  County,  Utah, PB-234-612
     WRAP (Waste Resources Allocation Program), 548, 573
              574
     Wyoming, PB-234-612
regulations for solid waste management,  306
     see also
              legislation; standards and guidelines;  U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency-guidelines
              for solid waste management
     beverage container deposit legislation, 654
     disposal sites, classification systems, 668
     Federal grants for solid waste disposal projects, 19, 221
              660, 715
     hazardous waste, 612, 644, 650, 651, 652, 665,  691
          disposal sites, 497
          inorganic chemicals industry, PB-263-210
          proposed State programs, 680, 681, 684
          transportation, 512, 653, 676, 689, 702
     Kentucky, 181
                                                              42

-------
regulations for solid waste management (cont'd)
     ocean dumping, 130, 157, 192
     Oregon, 168
     proposed regulations for disposal facilities, 692, 693
     public participation, 673, 703
     solid waste product charges, 662, 664, 672
     solid waste public -utilities by States, 161
     State plans for standards and guidelines, 714
     toxic substances control and disposal, 670
Reports to Congress by the Office of Solid Waste
     disposal practices, ground water, 656
     hazardous wastes, 345
     resource recovery, 352, 353, 448, 600
     solid waste on Federal lands, 639
reports to Congress, by the Resource Conservation Committee
               618, 708
requests for proposals for resource recovery systems, 552
research and development in solid waste management, 98, 644
               660, PB-227-561
     pesticides, 527
     resource recovery, 600
research and development projects (intramural) of the Federal
               Government in solid  waste, 41, 42,  165, 600
research and training grants. See Federal research and
residential solid wastes. See collection; generation of solid
               waste—household; management and planning-
residuals. See hazardous wastes; sewage sludge;
resource conservation, 44, 77, 407
     see also  energy conservation; land use; recycling; Re-
               source Conservation and Recovery Act (1976);
               resource recovery
     and refillable beverage containers, 405
     beverage container deposits, 654
     effect of secondary material use, 353, 448
     EPA policy (1978), 676
     fact sheet, 694
     impact of Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
               1976, 623, 643
     Senate Commerce Committee plans, 461
     speeches by
          Arsen Damay, Jr., 364
          Sheldon Meyers, 526, 549, 560
          Steffen W. Plehn, 676
          Russell E. Train, 525
          Thomas F. Williams, 515
     timber supply, PB-250-798, PB-250-802
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976), 171, 549
               565,  586, 599, 623, 625
               Solid Waste Disposal Act
     activity coordination, 645
     citizen action, 585, 640, 649, 697
     EPA annual report to the President and Congress, 663
     EPA intent to develop rulemaking,  579
     fact sheet, 563, 694
     grant regulations (draft), 626
     hazardous wastes management provisions, 584, 644
          fact sheet, 694
          marking and disposal regulations  (PCB's), 683
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976) (cont'd)
     impact on resource recovery, 623
     implementation, 637, 713
          plan for Resource Conservation Committee, 618
          resource recovery in industry, 676
          strategy, 643
          waste clearinghouses and exchanges, 688
     implementation plan for Resource Conservation Commit-
               tee, 618, 708
     issues for discussion, 576
     proposed regulation for disposal facilities, 692, 693
     provisions for discussion, 580
     public meetings, transcripts
          Arlington, Virginia, 650
          Atlanta (1977), 592
          Chicago (1977), 598
          Concord, New Hampshire (1977), 593
          Dallas  (1977),  595
          Denver (1977), 594
          Des Plaines, Illinois, 653
          Kansas City, Missouri (1977), 588
          Kansas City, Missouri (1978), 699
          New York City (1977), 591
          Pittsburgh (1977), 590
          Portland, Oregon, 700
          proposed regs. for transp. of haz. wastes and
               materials, 703
          Richmond, Virginia (1977), 589
          Salt Lake City (1977), 594
          San Diego, California (1978), 679
          San Francisco (1977), 596
          Scottsdale, Arizona, 652
          Seattle (1977), 597
          St. Louis, Missouri, 651
          strategy for implementation, 673
          Washington, D.C. (1978), 578, 626, 627, 654, 698
          Worcester, Massachusetts (1977), 593
     regulations,  637
     Resource Conservation Committee, public meeting, 654
     speeches by
          Douglas M. Costle, 613
          John P. Lehman, 584
          Sheldon Meyers, 566, 628
          Thomas F. Williams, 585, 621
     speeches by Thomas F. Williams, 701
     State solid waste management provisions, 607, 713
     statement by Douglas M. Costle, before the Subcommit-
               tee on Transportation and Commerce, U.S.
               House of Representatives (1977), 603
     summary, 564, 694
     technical assistance
          state and local governments, 707

 Resource Conservation and Recovery Panels Program, 707

 Resource Conservation Committee
     implementation plan, 618
     public meeting, Cincinnati, Ohio
          solid waste product charges, 672
     public meeting, Portland, Oregon
          solid waste product charges, 664
     public meeting, Washington, D.C.
          beverage container deposit legislation, 654
          solid waste product charges, 662
     solid waste disposal charge analysis, 708
                                                               43

-------
resource recovery, 96, 112, 119, 177, 241, 289, 306, 307, 321
              350, 352, 353, 380, 390, 396, 421, 424, 466
              557, 600, 646, 647, 648, PB-227-000
              PB-233-178
     see also composting; energy recovery from waste; recy-
              cling; Resource Conservation and Recovery
              Act  (1976); source separation
     Act (1970), 196
     activated carbon from refuse, 431, PB-221-172
              PB-229-246, PB-270-961
     activities, State and local, 432, 457, 599, 690
     alcohol from cellulose, PB-221-239
     aluminum. See aluminum—recycling and recovery
     Ames, Iowa, system,  466, 467, 620, 711
     bibliographies,  203, 470, 536, 600
     by detoxification, PB-274-565
     by wet processing, 408
          see also Ohio, Franklin
     carbon black from tires, PB-234-602
     chromate from pigment manufacturing, PB-233-641
     cities' roles, 331, 642
     construction materials from solid wastes, PB-271-007
     costs of plants, 321, 388, 448, 466
     counties' roles, 586
     demonstration  grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
              management
     economics, 62, 91, 180, 321, 491, 575,  600, PB-245-674
              PB-245-924, PB-274-565
     energy savings with,  352, 353, 448, 600
     EPA activities, 663, 715
     EPA policy  (1978), 676
     Federal
          activities, 663
          demonstration grants. See Federal grants for solid
              waste management
          facilities guidelines, 171, 490
          policies, 171, 334, 353, 357, 380,  560
          procurement, 490, 600, PB-222-467, PB-229-727
              PB-237-618, PB-237-620, PB-241-729
          solid waste management program, 395
          subsidies, PB-222-467, PB-234-602, PB-239-736
              PB-264-886
     forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
     from hazardous wastes, PB-224-579
     from industrial wastes, PB-275-054
     from institutional solid wastes, 237
     from waste. See Fuel-oil from solid wastes; fuel-refuse as;
     glass-recycling and recovering; refuse-derived fuel (RDF)
     guidelines, 473
     guides for public officials,  390, 470, 471, 480, 482, 493
              495, 496, 550, 552, 567, 612
     in Europe, PB-270-219
     industry, 539,  PB-216-100
          survey, 501
     legal issues,  606
     levulinic acid from cellulose, PB-229-246
     management and planning, 466, 641
          see also resource recovery-plants,
          implementation
     markets for  recycled and recovered materials.
          See markets for recycled and recovered materials
     metals.  See  metals—recycling and recovery
     mineral fillers  from water-softening process sludge
               PB-224-820
     minerals from incinerator  residues, 491
     Monroe, New  York, plant, 467
     nutrients from waste. See nutrients from waste
resource recovery (cont'd)
     oil, waste, 390, 577, 655, PB-235-857, PB-237-618
               PB-237-619, PB-237-620
     organic feed concentrate from sludge, PB-223-343
     organizations and associations, 470
     paper. See paper-recycling and recovery
     Philadelphia project, 497
     phosphates from lime sludges, PB-222-354
     plants financing. See financing solid waste system-
               resource recovery plants
     plants, implementation, 448, 470, 471, 480, 482, 493, 497
               499, 533, 567, 604, 606, 620
          accounting system, 493
          financing, 448, 471, 480, 482, 497, 501, 533, 606
          markets, 497, 499
          procuring contractors, 480, 495, 497, 533, 552, 567
          technologies, 550
     product charges, 600
     projects, State and local, 432, 457
     protein from
          cellulose,  186, 295, PB-222-115,  PB-223-873
               PB-270-085
          leather wastes, PB-264-204
          poultry manure, PB-221-171
     pyrolysis, 712
     regional approaches, 431, 466, 599, 600, PB-239-631
     reports to Congress by EPA, 352, 353, 448, 600
     Resource Recovery Act (1970), 246
     secondary materials specifications, PB-242-540
     speeches by
          Douglas M. Costle, 613
          Samuel Hale, Jr., 320
          H.  L. Hickman, Jr., 234
          Sheldon Meyers, 526, 549, 560
          Steffen W. Plenn, 676
          Roger Strelow, 523
          John Tally, 196
          Russell Train, 460, 525
          T. F. Williams, 515
     state activities, 432, 457, 599, 600
     state roles, 327
     statements by
          Douglas M. Costle, before the Subcommittee on
               Transportation and Commerce, U.S. House of
               Representatives (1977), 603
          Arsen Darnay, Jr., before the Subcommittee on
               Minerals .Materials and Fuels, U.S.  Senate
               (1973), 358
          Samuel Hale, Jr., before the Subcommittee on the
               Environment, U.S. Senate (1973), 357
          H.  Lanier Hickman, Jr. before the subcommittee on
               Advanced Energy Technologies and Energy
               Conservation Research,
               Development and Demonstration, U.S.
               House of Representatives (1977), 655
     statistics, U.S., 533
     sugar from cellulose, PB-221-239, PB-221-877
               PB-229-246
     systems in the United States, 470, 600, PB-245-924
     technology update from the EPA, 528, 537, 570, 575
               581, 582, 623, 667
     Vermont plan,  PB-235-319
     vs. waste reduction, 261, 461, 500, 505
     waste clearinghouses and exchanges, 429, 453, 554, 608
               631, 690, PB-258-068, PB-261-287
          industrial, 688, 695, PB-261-287
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and Ener-
               gy Recovery
                                                              44

-------
resource recovery (conf d)
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643
     wet processing system. See Ohio-Franklin, waste
               processing complex
     wood. See wood waste-recycling and recovery
     yeast from solid wastes, 91, 254
reverse osmosis for separation of hazardous wastes
               PB-224-583
Rhode Island
     resource recovery system, 599
     solid waste management plans, PB-234-544

Richmond, Virginia. See Virginia

risk-benefit analysis, hazardous wastes, PB-257-951
risks in resource recovery contracts, 496

Rock Cut Road Plant No.l, Onondaga County, New York.
               See New York (State)

rodents in solid waste.  See insects  and rodents in solid
               waste

Rollins Environmental  Services, Inc., Deer Park, Texas
               PB-270-897

routing collection vehicles, 147, 356, 409, 472, PB-239-895

rubber manufacturing industry wastes, PB-268-232
     rubber, scrap
          generation, 443, 445
          recycling, 187, 382
          recycling by a hydrogenation process, PB-222-694
          recycling forecasts for 1972 to  1990, PB-245-924
          recycling taxes affecting  use of recycled rubber
               PB-240-988
          salvage markets, 293
          tires. See tires
          transportation rates for virgin and secondary
               materials, PB-233-871

rural solid waste management, 174, 255, 342, 390, 479, 642
               PB-212-398, PB-212-589,  PB-240-365
               PB-241^68, PB-243-029,  PB-265-391
               PB-268-327
     aerial reconniassance for auto dumping sites, 277
     Chilton County, 220, 238, 291, 311
     Federal aid, 171
     filmscripts, 271, 272

sacks, paper, 248, 270, PB-212-590

Sacramento, California. See California
safety and health
     solid waste personnel 32, 426, 472, 477, 478, 481, 488
               671, PB-247-566, PB-247-567
          management reports, 477, 478
          training ptogram.See Operation Responsible
               in technical training programs section of the
salvaging and salvage markets, 3, 30, 293, 296, 333
               PB-212-729, PB-212-731,  PB-229-220
     see also markets for recycled and recovered materials

sample size in analysis of solid waste, 97
sampler for microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions
               151
San Bernardino, California. See California

San Diego, California. See California
San Francisco, California. See California

San Jose, California. See California
sanitary landfill, 12, 23, 43, 47, 114, 189, 305, 424
              PB-196-148, PB-243-407
     accounting  system, 86
     air pollution from,  494
     bale fills, 339, PB-214-960, PB-247-185
     bibliographies, 46, 47, 384, 658
     bird hazards to aircraft, 355
     calculator, 351
     Cascade County, Montana, PB-265-391
     Catron County, New Mexico, PB-265-391
     Chilton County, Alabama, 238, 291, 311
     Clark County, Arkansas, 479, PB-243-029
     conference  (1972),  339
     costs, 47, 178, 321, 475, 479, PB-249-747, PB-265-391
     Crawford County,  Ohio, PB-253-304
     Des Moines sanitary landfills, 6
     design and  operation, 11,  23, 90,  186, 223, 285, 287,  390
              475, 617, PB-224-996, PB-264-032, PB-269-502
          contouring and grading procedures, 677
          model operation agreement,  230
     economics,  PB-245-924
          see also sanitary landfill-costs
     end uses, 11, 30, 58, 120, 285, 287, PB-218-672
          Cook  County, Illinois, ski mountain, PB-213-697
          Kenilworth (Washington, D.C.) recreation area, 105
          Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting ramp
               PB-225-346
     equipment, 47, 287, 291, 305, 497, PB-212-589
               PB-265-391
     fact sheet, 694
     Federal activities, 663
     Federal grants for  studies, 121
     film. SeeMT. Trashmore and Sanitary  Landfill: One
              Pan Earth to Four Parts Refuse in the films
               section of the catalog
     film script, 288
     Floyd County, Ga., PB-256-945
     Genesee County, Michigan, 52
     Germany, 59
     Graham County, Arizona, PB-265-391
     guidelines and standards, 11, 83,  171, 230, 385, 629,  644
               668, 696, PB-218-672
     guidelines and standards (proposed), 700, 706
     Habersham County, Georgia, PB-265-391
     hazardous  waste disposal, 449, 453, 475, 492, 494, 506
               508, 527, 540, 599, 612, 624,  644, PB-221-464
               PB-224-582, PB-226-420, PB-241-204
               PB-244-832, PB-251-307, PB-258-953
               PB-259-097, PB-261-018, PB-264-349
               PB-265-532, PB-266-905, PB-271-013
               PB-274-565
          pesticides, 569
          upgrading, 662, 677
          vinyl  chloride-containing aerosol cans, 529
     high water table area, 94, PB-224-996, PB-225-346
               PB-236-462, PB-236-463
     hydrogeologyy 90, 223, 287, PB-236-462, PB-236-463
     Kansas City, Missouri, PB-255-133
     Lake County, Florida, PB-265-391
     landfill gas production
          methane, 710
                                                              45

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sanitary landfill (cont'd)
     landfill gas recovery, 710
     leachates.  5ee leachates
     Lee County, Mississippi, PB-241-468
     Leon County, Florida, PB-265-391
     liability, 599
     liners      428, 475, 599, PB-271-013
     Los Angeles County Sanitation District landfills, 30
     Madison, Wisconsin, landfill, 311, PB-234-930
               PB-234-931
     MARC project, 339
     Merced County demonstration project, PB-252-865
     moisture content of refuse, PB-256-359
     Mountain  View, California, 583, 587
     municipal  wastes, 669
          EPA policy and programs, 696
     New York State, 233
     on abandoned strip mines, 311, 484, PB-257-305
     operations training. See technical training programs sec-
               tion of the catalog
     papermill  sludge, PB-239-618, PB-239-869
     pesticide disposal, PB-250-717
     public attitudes, 466, 617, PB-239-631
     recreation  area, 167
     rural, 255, PB-212-589, PB-243-029, PB-265-391
     San Bernardino County, California, 617
     sewage sludge disposal, 6, 391, 484, 556, PB-225-360
               PB-225-362
     site selection, 6, 11, 47, 90,  138, 223, 233, 305, 339, 599
               617, 668, 669, PB-236-462, PB-236-463
               PB-249-747
          hazardous wastes, 475
          landbanking, 466
     sludge disposal alternatives, 705
     social effects, PB-239-631
     speech  by  Russell Train, 525
     stabilization, 54
          Sonoma County, California stabilization study
               PB-230-379, PB-239-778, PB-254-550
     State activities, 457
     temperature, PB-256-356
     waste analysis methods,  612
     Waste Management Technology and Resource and Ener-
               gy Recovery
          4th National Congress (1975), 497
          5th National Congress (1976), 599
          6th National Congress (1977), 643
     water pollution. See management and planning-case
               studies: water pollution-by landfills

sanitation. See  public health aspects of solid waste disposal

sanitation workers. See safety and health; training
               sanitation workers

Santa Clara,  California. See California
satellite vehicle systems in solid waste collection, 262
               PB-197-931

Sangus, Massachusetts.  See Massachusetts

Sayvffle, New York.  See New York (State)
schedule of courses in solid waste management training
               (1971-1972), 208

Scottsdale, Arizona. See Arizona
scrap metals. See iron, scrap; metals; steel, scrap
Seattle, Washington. See Washington (State)
secondary materials use and resource conservation, 353, 448
               600, PB-264-886
     by the Federal Government, 490, PB-237-618
               PB-237-620, PB-241-729, PB-264-886
     environmental effects, 332, 352, 353, 405, 448, 600
     in industry, PB-216-100
     in paper manufacture, PB-250-798, PB-250-802
               PB-250-905
     markets for secondary materials. See markets for recy-
               cled and recovered materials
     speech by Samuel Hale, Jr., 320
     taxes affecting, 246, 353, 424, 437, PB-240-988
               PB-264-886

selenium wastes, 148,  PB-256-367
     in groundwater, 634, PB-275-103
     in soil, PB-266-905
separate collection. See newspaper-separate collection;
               source separation

separation of solid wastes, 114, 225
     air classification, 102, 256
     Bowerman classifier, PB-208-674
     infrared sensor, PB-229-901
     magnetic,  559, 600, 682
     manual. See source separation
     reverse osmosis,  PB-224-583
septic tank sludge, 391, PB-225-360, PB-225-362,  PB-230-379
               PB-239-778, PB-254-550

sewage sludge,  144, 145, 390, 556, 657, PB-225-360
               PB-225-362
     see also sludges
     aerobic digestion, PB-222-029,  PB-222-396
     anaerobic  digestion to methane, 458
     codisposal, 667, 686, 687
     compost, 21, 22, 115,  144, 145, 229, 484, 488, 556, 599
               PB-236-402, PB-245-271, PB-266-649
     cost of hauling and land spreading, 6, 619, PB-227-005
     generation, 484
     incineration, 6, 556, 686
          pyrolysis, 154, 556, PB-266-355
     land reclamation, 556
     landfill, disposal, 6, 391, 484, 556, PB-225-360
               PB-225-362
          criteria classification, 668
     lime sludges,  PB-222-354
     methane from, 458
     ocean disposal, 157, 192, 556
     post aeration, PB-222-031
     treatment plants, 619
          with upstream equalization basins, PB-222-000
shipborne disposal, PB-221-464, PB-221-467, PB-221-684

shredding, 248, 252, 390, 433, 497, 711, 712, PB-214-960
               PB-247-185, PB-256-444
     see also  grinding
     explosion  protection in, 599
     Gainesville, Florida, composting plant, 402
          gas and  leachate generation with shredded landfill
               497
     Madison,  Wisconsin, Project, 57, PB-234-930
               PB-234-931
     Onondaga County, New York, shredding facilities (Rock
               Cut Road Plant No. 1), PB-245-672
                                                               46

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shredding (cont'd)
     USEP A/Tennessee Valley Authority composting project
               488

single cell protein production from solid waste, PB-270-08S

site reconnaissance for automobile dumps by plane and auto
               277

site selection
     analysis, 639
     disposal facilities, 173,  178, 668
          polychlorinated biphenyl marking and disposal, 683
     geological factors, 710
     sanitary landfills, 6, 11, 47, 90,  138, 223, 339, 497, 617
               669, PB-214-089
          sludge, 705

size reduction of solid wastes, 30,  110, 114, 252, 369, 390
               PB-214-960
     see also  baling and balefills;  compaction of solid waste;
               shredding
     Buffalo, New York, crusher facility, PB-225-159
     equipment, 114,  PB-226-551
          costs at Washington, D. C. plant, 62
     in high-rise buildings, 292, PB-197-623
     Tezuka, Japan, compression system, 69

ski mountain from sanitary  landfill, PB-213-697

sludges
     see also  livestock wastes; septic tank sludge;  sewage
               sludge; wastewater sludge
     activated  process for disposal of hazardous wastes
               PB-224-583
     aerobic digestion, PB-222-029, PB-233-441
     battery industry, PB-241-204
     bibliography, 658
     codisposal, 667,  687
     economics of disposal,  619, PB-234-498
     electronic components  industry, PB-265-532
     environmental assessment of disposal, 547,  656, 657
     in New York State, 233
     land application, PB-269-352
     leaded gasoline,  PB-259-097
     metal smelting and refining, PB-276-171, PB-276-172
     municipal management
          EPA policy and programs, 696
     ocean disposal, PB-264-264
     organic feed concentrate from, PB-223-343
     papermill sludge landfill, PB-239-618, PB-239-869
               PB-264-032
     textile industry,  PB-258-953

social costs of solid waste systems, PB-221-681, PB-239-631

sodium dichromate wastes, economic assessment of regulation
               PB-263-210

sodium silicofluoride wastes, economic assessment of regula-
               tion, PB-263-210

soil properties, PB-266-649, PB-266-905
     effect of compost, 488, PB-236-402
     effect of pollution by mine spoil, PB-237-525
     effect of sludge  application, PB-269-352
     moisture  content, PB-256-359
     transport of solid waste, PB-266-649, PB-266-905

solid waste accident trends, 477
Solid Waste Act. See Resource Conservation and Recovery
              Act (1976)

Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings of a
              Symposium (1971), 311
Solid Waste Disposal Act, 31,  50, 171
     see also Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
              (1976)
     amendment of 1968, report of the Committee on Public
              Works, 51
     history, 410
     overall strategy (draft), 645
     public participation, guidelines, 649

Solid Waste Facts (1978), 694

solid waste from use of virgin  and recycled steel and alumi-
              num, PB-253-487
Solid Waste Information Retrieval System (SWIRS), 658
     abstracts bulletin, 127, 231, 257, 258, 281, 282, 555
     Accession  Bulletin, 195
     brochure, 538
     users' guide to thesaurus, 374
solid waste management. See management and planning
solid waste planning grants, PB-256-348

solid waste processing. See composting; incineration;
              pyrolysis; size  reduction of solid wastes
Solid Waste Resources Conference on Design of Consumer
              Containers for Re-use or Disposal (1971), 261
solidification of  hazardous solid wastes, PB-224-583
solvent  reclamation operations, PB-251-669
solvent  residues, disposal, 418, PB-265-532

Somerville, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts

Sonoma County, California. See California
sorting  of solid wastes.  See separation  of solid wastes

source reduction, 357, 456,  599, 600, PB-274-565
     see also generation of solid waste
     bibliographies, 203, 536
     by taxation. See taxes-on packaging and  containers
     Conference on Waste Reduction (1975), 461
     Federal procurement practices, PB-229-727, PB-243-028
     legislation,  456, 600
     packaging and containers, 246, 261, 353, 437, 441, 442
              456, 461, 600
          Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461
          Red Owl Stores program, 416
          Yosemite National Park refund, 532, 600
              PB-270-266
     reports to Congress by EPA, 352, 353, 448, 600
     speeches by
          Samuel Hale, Jr., 320
          Sheldon Meyers, 526, 549, 560
          John H. Skinner, 500
          Roger Strelow, 523
          Russell Train, 460, 525
          T. F.  Williams, 515
     State activities, 457
     vs. resource recovery,  261, 461, 500, 505
source separation, 225,  310, 390, 400, 510, 551, 575, 599, 600
              PB-239-775, PB-239-776
     glass, 261,  632
     guidelines
                                                               47

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source separation (cont'd)
          beverage container, 463
          resource recovery, 473
     in Europe, PB-270-219
     metals, 632, 682
     paper, 381, 400, 420, 421, 486, 571, 616, 632, 666
               PB-257-969, PB-264-214
     pyrolytic incineration facility, 678
     Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, project, 510
               551
     speeches by
          Sheldon Meyers, 526
          Steffen W. Plenn, 676
          Roger Strelow, 523
          Russell Train, 525

South Charleston, West Virginia. See West Virginia

Southeastern Oakland County,  Michigan. See Michigan

Spain, solid waste management, PB-270-219

Spanish language materials
     coloring book, 430
     document, recycling, 424
     poster, 392

special machinery industry wastes, PB-265-981

specifications for recovered materials, 601, PB-242-540

spills of oil and hazardous wastes,  506, PB-243-386

Springfield, Massachusetts. See Massachusetts
St. Louis, Missouri. See Missouri

stabilization of sanitary landfills, 54, PB-230-379, PB-239-778
               PB-254-550

stainless steel, recycling, PB-212-729
     see also metals-recycling  and recovery; steel, scrap

standards and guidelines
     see also legislation; regulations for solid waste manage-
               ment; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-
               guidelines for solid  waste management
     beverage container, 463
     disposal and resource recovery grants, 221
     hazardous wastes, 691
          non-radioactive, 535
          State programs, proposed, 680, 681, 684
          toxic substances, 670
          transportation control, 689, 702
     local government, 239
     noise emissions, 661
     pesticides, 376, 398, PB-244-557
     polychlorinated biphenyl wastes, 516
     procurement of products containing recycled materials
          by the Federal government, 490
     research and demonstration grants, 660
     resource recovery and source  separation, 473, 715
     resource recovery facilities in  Federal agencies, 490
     sanitary landfill, 11, 83, 230, 385, PB-218-672
     solid waste disposal facilities,  668
     source separation, 473
     storage and collection, 454, 504
     toxic chemicals
          control and disposal, 670
          in water, 415
State Decision Makers Guide for
               Hazardous Waste Management, 612
State solid waste management
     see also  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
               (1976)
     activities, 457, 526, 600, 694
     agencies, 163, 233
          guidelines for identification, 615
          list, 393, 429, 562
     California,  175, 497
     Colorado, PB-234-612
     Connecticut, 586
     Georgia, 49
     hazardous waste, 599
          fact sheet, 694
          model state hazardous waste act, 612, 635
          proposed guidelines, 680, 681, 684
          regulations and legislation,  171, 512,  530, 665
          State Decision Makers Guide for
               Hazardous Waste Management, 612
          surveys, 464,  PB-262-673
          transportation regulation, 171,  512
     Illinois, 586
     Oregon, 168
     planning grants, 16, 42, 64, 71, 163, 171, 215, 260
               PB-256-348
          regulations, 221
     plans, 124, 713
          California, 175
          Kentucky, 181
          New York, 233
          Oregon, 168
          Rhode Island, 599, PB-234-544
          Vermont, PB-235-319
     program implementation guide, 464
     regulations
          hazardous waste transportation, 512
          land disposal  of hazardous wastes, 453, 512, 530
          public participation, 649, 714
          public utilities,  169
     roles, 80, 194, 233, 306, 327, 339, 345, 380, 383, 424
               497, 526, 623, PB-227-578, PB-234-612
          antilitter, 455
          in paper recycling, 511
     surveys, 16, 64, 464,  612, PB-256-348, PB-256-954
          Georgia, 49
          Oregon, 168
     technical assistance through  RCRA, 707
     Tennessee hazardous waste program, 497
     Vermont, PB-234-612
     Washington, PB-234-612
     waste exchanges, 688, 695, PB-258-068, PB-261-287
     Wyoming, PB-234-612

State Solid Waste Management and Resource
               Recovery Incentives Act (proposed), 377
steam and electricity from solid wastes, 7, 264,  321, 401,  431
              448, 499, 503, 550, 582, 600, 602, 605, 620
              686, PB-214-166, PB-234-602, PB-251-291

steel industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467,  PB-238-819

steel, scrap
     see also  automobile  disposal; metals
     influence of transportation costs on use of, PB-229-816
              PB-229-817, PB-233-871
     markets. See markets for recycled and recovered materi-
               als—steel and ferrous metals
     recycling, 261, 311, PB-212-729
                                                              48

-------
steel, scrap (cont'd)
          environmental impacts of virgin and recycled steel
               PB-253-487
          Federal subsidies, PB-239-736, PB-264-886
          magnetic separation, 559, 682
          taxes affecting use of recycled steel, PB-240-988
               PB-264-886

stone industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-467

storage of solid wastes,  155, 167, 444
     see also  collection
     household, 45
     standards and guidelines, 454, 504

street cleaning, PB-239-327

strip mines
     as sanitary landfill, 220, 311, PB-257-305
     reclamation with compost, 488

style guide for Office of Solid Waste publications, 386

styrene manufacturing wastes, PB-268-232

subsidies for resource recovery, 600, PB-222-467,  PB-239-736
               PB-252-602, PB-264-886
sugar from cellulose wastes, PB-221-239, PB-229-246
sulfur  dioxide for production of feed concentrate from sludge
               PB-223-343

Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste Management
               for  Metropolitan Washington (1967), 30

surveys, solid waste. See industrial solid wastes-surveys;
               State solid waste management-surveys; Na-
               tional Survey of Community Solid Waste
               Practices

swapping  chemical  wastes, 453, 554
Sweden, solid waste management, PB-270-219
swine  wastes, PB-221-621
SWIRS. See Solid Waste Information Retrieval System
               (SWIRS)
Switzerland, solid waste management, PB-270-219

Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning
               Agencies (1969), 194
synopsizer, sanitary landfill, 351
systems analysis of solid waste management, 3, 84, 99, 112
               120, 128,  135, 136,  173, 178, 311, PB-213-304
               PB-217-775, PB-222-995, PB-245-376
     collection
          Wichita  Falls, Texas, PB-276-707, PB-276-708

Tacoma, Washington. See Washington (State)
Tampa, Florida. See Florida
tannery wastes. See leather
taxes
     affecting secondary materials use, 246, 353, 357,  424, 437
               600, 601, PB-240-988, PB-264-886
     on packaging  and  containers, 246, 261, 353, 424, 437
     tire  disposal (proposed), PB-252-602

technical  assistance available
     see also Federal grants for solid waste management
     Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (1976), 623
     Solid Waste Disposal Act, 16, 30, 68, 260
technical assistance available (cont'd)
     state and local government, 707

technical training programs. See technical training programs
              section of the catalog

Technology and the American Economy, 2

temperature of landfill. See sanitary landfill

Tennessee
     hazardous waste program, 497
     Humphreys County, solid waste management system, 255
     Johnson City, composting project, 8, 9,  15, 74, 212, 254
              488, PB-214-056
     Knoxville, solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Memphis, solid waste management system, PB-234-612
              PB-234-713
     Nashville, solid waste management system, 537,  600, 605
              620, PB-234-612

Tennessee Valley Authority composting project, 8, 9,  15, 74
              212, 254, 488, PB-214-056

Texas
     Amarillo, solid waste management system, PB-227-000
     Dallas
          Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
              and Recovery Act (1976),  transcript, 595
          solid waste management system, PB-234-140
     Houston, solid waste management system, PB-225-299
     Wichita Falls
          container-train collection, 311
          solid waste collection management, systems analysis
              PB-276-707, PB-276-708

textile industry wastes, PB-221-464, PB-221-466, PB-258-953

textiles
     generation of waste, 443,  445
     recycling, 225, 352, PB-212-729
     salvage markets, 293

Tezuka, Japan. See Japan

thermal processing of solid waste,  345, 390
     see also  codisposal; incineration;  pyrolysis
     guidelines, 385

thesaurus of solid waste management terms,  374

third pollution. See land pollution

timber supply, PB-250-798, PB-250-802

tin cans
     recycling and recovery, 261, 353, 448, 518, PB-208-674
               PB-223-034, PB-245-924
     Washington D. C. plant,  62

tires, 390, 461
     100,000-mile passenger car tire, 461
     recycling, 353, 382, PB-208-674, PB-252-602
          by a hydrogenation  process,  PB-222-694
               PB-252-602
          by retreading, PB-243-028, PB-252-602
          forecasts for 1972 to 1990, PB-245-924
          in artificial reefs, 348, PB-252-602
          in road dressings, PB-232-559,  PB-252-602

titanium dioxide wastes, economic assessment of regulation
               PB-263-210
Tolleson, Arizona. See Arizona
                                                               49

-------
toxicity data on hazardous wastes; PB-224-581

toxicology of
     arsenic wastes, PB-224-585, PB-258-953, PB-266-905
     asbestos wastes, PB-257-951
     cadmium wastes, PB-224-585, PB-257-951, PB-258-953
               PB-266-905
     chromium wastes, PB-224-585, PB-258-953, PB-266-905
     cyanide wastes, PB-224-584, PB-266-905
     mercury wastes, PB-224-585
     pesticide wastes, PB-224-584
     propellants, explosives and chemical warfare material
               PB-224-586

training grants. See Federal grants for solid waste
               management-research and training  grants

training sanitation workers, 472
     see also Operation Responsible,
               Safe Refuse Collection and Sanitary
               Landfill -  You 're the Operator in the
               films and technical training program sections
               of the catalog
     management training courses, 208

transcripts of public meetings on the Resource Conservation
               and Recovery Act (1976). See Resource
               Conservation and Recovery Act (1976)

transfer stations,  182, 337, 390, PB-213-511, PB-227-075
               PB-256-444, PB-265-391
     expansion into resource recovery facilities, 497

transportation
     hazardous wastes, 653
         Federal standards, 689, 702
         State control, 512, 612
     rates of virgin and secondary commodities, 327, 353, 424
               PB-229-816, PB-229-817, PB-233-871
     solid waste, 30
         in hospitals, PB-236-543
         in New York State, 233
         in sewage lines, 84, PB-229-256
         in soil. See soil properties
trash. See debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities;
               litter

tree waste disposal  in Des Moines, 6

trickling filter process for disposal of hazardous wastes
               PB-224-583
TRW Systems Group classification of hazardous substances
               489

U.S. Coast Guard classification of hazardous substances, 489
U.S. Department of Defense waste management, PB-221-464
               PB-221-467
U.S. Department of the Army classification of hazardous
               substances, 489
U.S. Department of the Navy classification of hazardous
               substances, 489
U.S. Department of Transportation
     standards, transportation of hazardous wastes, 689, 702
U.S. Department of Transportation  classification of
               hazardous substances, 512
U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration plans
               for energy recovery from waste, 497
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, PB-214-071
     see also
               Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
               (1976)
     agency guidelines, 645
     classification of hazardous substances, 489
     contract research, 85, 469
     guidelines for solid waste management
          beverage containers, 463, 560
          classification criteria for disposal facilities, 679, 692
               693, 698, 699,  700, 706
          grants for disposal and resource recovery, 19, 221
          hazardous wastes, 540, 610, 665, 670, 680, 681, 684
               691
          identification of regions and agencies, 615
          land disposal, 629
          pesticides, 328,  376, 398
          planning and disposal, advance notice of proposed
               rulemaking, 629
          poly chlorinated biphenyl wastes,  516
          procurement of secondary materials products
               by the Federal Government, 490
          public participation, 627, 673, 703
          research and demonstration grants, 660
          Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
               notice
          of intent to develop rulemaking,  579
          resource recovery and source separation, 473, 560
               715
          resource recovery facilities in Federal agencies, 490
          State planning, 629, 714
          storage and collection, 454, 504
          thermal processing and land disposal, 385
          toxic substances control and disposal, 670
          transportation of hazardous wastes, 689, 702
          vinyl chloride aerosol can disposal, 529
          wastewater sludge disposal, 629
     Office of Solid  Waste. See Office of Solid Waste
     oil waste recycling, 655
     paper recycling program,  507, 616
     policy on solid waste program (1978),  694
     press briefing on solid waste management and energy
               (1974), 359
     public information activities, 701
     regional solid waste management offices, 429
     regional solid waste management representatives, 439
               PB-262-673
     resource recovery demonstration grants. See Federal
               grants for solid waste management--
               demonstration grants
     response to President Carter's urban policy, 715

U.S. Public Health Service/Tennessee Valley Authority
               composting project. See USEPA/Tennessee
               Valley Authority composting project

U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit to Germany (1967), 59

Union Electric  Company's Meramec and Labadie plants, 467
University of Illinois solid waste system, 237
uranium mining, effects of pollution controls on solid
               waste generation, PB-238-819

Use It Again, Sam paper recycling program, 507, 616

USEPA/Edison Electric Institute Meeting  (1975), 8, 467
                                                              50

-------
USEPA/Tennessee Valley Authority composting project, 8, 9
               15, 74, 212, 254, 488

user charges for collection and disposal, 6, 160, 161, 188, 320
               327, 342, 390, 600, PB-225-291, PB-233-878
               PB-239-116, PB-240-365, PB-240-395
     see financing solid waste systems; management and plan-
               ning-case studies; waste charges

Utah
     Ogden, incinerator study, PB-256-926
     Provo, solid waste management system, PB-227-000
     Salt Lake City, Regional Public Meetings on Resource
               Conservation and Recovery Act (1976), tran-
               script, 594
     Weber County, solid waste management system
               PB-234-612, PB-256426

utility coal ash, PB-244-310, PB-244-312

vanadomolybdophosphoric acid analysis, PB-256-377

vectors. See insects and rodents in solid waste

Ventura County, California. See California

Vermont
     beverage container law, 462, 487
     resource recovery plan, PB-235-319
     solid waste management system, PB-234-612, PB-235-319

vinyl chloride containing aerosol cans, guidelines for
               disposal, 529

vinyl chloride manufacture
     anticipated waste regulations
          economic assessment, PB-279-645

Virginia
     Alexandria
          incinerator design and operation study,  PB-216-588
          incinerator study, PB-216-558
          RCRA public meeting, 703
     Arlington
          hazardous wastes, 650
          RCRA public meeting, 673
     Lorton
          municipal sludge landfills, 705
     Norfolk
          refuse fired steam generator emissions, 537
          resource recovery system, 620
     Richmond
          Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
               and Recovery Act (1976) transcript, 589
          resource recovery system, 599
     Virginia Beach amphitheater and coasting ramp
               PB-225-346

Virginia Beach, Virginia. See Virginia

volatility of solid wastes, PB-256-358,  PB-256-364
               PB-256-365, PB-256-370

Washington, D.C.
     areawide conference, 30
     automobile disposal,  191
     incinerator studies, 62, PB-187-286
     Kenilworth sanitary landfill, 105
     proposed  mandatory deposit law for beverage containers
               461
     Public Meeting
          Draft Solid Waste Grant Regulations for Implemen-
               tation of Resource Conservation and Recovery
               Act (1976), transcript, 626
Washington, D.C. (cont'd)
          Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste, 698
          Public Meeting (First) on the Resource Conserva-
              tion and Recovery Act (1976), transcript, 578
          Public Participation Guidelines of Resource Conser-
              vation and Recovery Act  (1976), transcript
              627
          Resource Conservation Committee, 654, 662
     solid waste management plan,  191
Washington State
     hazardous waste regulations and legislation,  530
     papermffl sludge, PB-264-032
     Seattle
          public meeting, 684
          Regional Public Meeting on Resource Conservation
              and Resource Act (1976), transcript, 597
          resource recovery system RFP summary, 552
          solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Tacoma
          Port of,  solid waste management system
              PB-226-042
          solid waste management system, 160

waste charges, 560, 600, 676
     see also user  charges for collection  and disposal

waste clearinghouses and exchanges, 429, 453, 554, 608, 612
              631, 690, 695, PB-258-068, PB-261-287
     industrial, 688

waste management and control recommendations,  112

Waste Management Technology and Resource Energy Recov-
              ery
     4th National Congress (1975), 497
     5th National Congress (1976), 599
     6th National Congress (1977), 643

waste oil. See oil waste

waste reduction.  See source reduction

Waste Resources Allocation Program. See WRAP

wastepaper. See paper

wastewater
     computer program for steady-state of treatment facilities
              PB-234-497
     Franklin, Ohio, treatment facility, 309

wastewater sludge, PB-222-396,  PB-244-310, PB-244-311
     see also sewage sludge
     environmental assessment of subsurface disposal, 547
     guidelines and standards, 629
     hauling and landspreading costs,  619
     mineral fillers from, PB-224-820

water absorption by solid wastes in landfill, 391, PB-196-148
              PB-256-359

water balance method for predicting leachate generation, 483

water conservation with use of recycled steel and aluminum
              PB-253-487

water-disposable glass container, 236

water pollution, 448, 656
     see also leachates
     bibliographies, 658
     by animal wastes, PB-257-311
     by dairy manure,  PB-225-160
                                                              51

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water pollution (cont'd)
     by dumps, 411, PB-256-391
          film. See The Third Pollution in the
              films section of the catalog
     by hazardous wastes, 345, 449, 492, 662
     by landfills, 11, 47, 83, 90, 175, 245, 305, 415, 435, 460
              483, 497, 526, 599, 624, 634, PB-209-001
              PB-209-002, PB-218-672, PB-222-468
              PB-224-996, PB-236-462, PB-236-463
              PB-239-778, PB-256-391, PB-275-103
     by mine spoil, PB-237-525
     by ocean dumping, PB-264-264
     by resource recovery facilities, 448
          effects of Franklin,  Ohio,  plant, PB-245-674
     by sewage sludge compost, PB-236-402
     by use of recycled and virgin steel and aluminum
              PB-253-487
     groundwater,  656
     oxygen demand, PB-256-946, PB-256-947, PB-256-953
     pesticides, 415
     pumping and treatment
          groundwater, 677
     regulations, 415, 713, PB-256-349
          effects on solid waste generation, PB-238-819
     solid waste control, 677
waterwall combustion system, 550, 600, 602, 620
     co-disposal of sewage sludge  and solid waste
          in France and Germany, 687
     codisposal of sewage sludge and solid waste
          in France and Germany, 667

Weber County, Utah. See Utah
well monitoring of industrial wastes, 634, PB-275-103
Wells Dairy Eco Pak milk carton, 447, 461

West Virginia, South Charleston,  resource recovery system
              599, 620
wet air oxidation for disposal of chemical wastes, PB-267-987
     see incineration; oxidation; partial oxidation of organic
              solid wastes

wet-processing of solid wastes for resource recovery, 178, 408
              600, 602,  PB-245-674
wet systems for refuse collection,  PB-234-496, PB-234-499
              PB-236-085

Wichita Falls, Texas. See Texas
Wichita, Kansas. See Kansas
Wilmington, Delaware. See Delaware

Winkler method, PB-256-953

Winston-Salem, North Carolina. See North Carolina

Wisconsin
     Madison
         milled refuse project, 57, 220, 311, PB-234-930
              PB-234-931
         newsprint recycling, 675
         separate newspaper collection program, 400
         waste disposal planning, 669
     Milwaukee
         resource recovery system,  620
         resource recovery system,  RFP and contract sum-
              maries, 552

wood resources, PB-250-798, PB-250-802

wood waste, PB-221-876, PB-265-392
     see also cellulose wastes
     by dairy manure, PB-233-441
     generation, 443, 445
     recycling and recovery, PB-265-392
     reuse in controlled-release pesticides, PB-222-051
     St. Louis disposal facilities, PB-228-119
     tree waste disposal in Des Moines, 6

wood wastes, 293

WRAP (Waste Resources Allocation Program) method for
              management, 548
     programmer's manual, 573
     user's guide, 574

Wyoming, PB-216-585
     Cheyenne, solid waste management system, PB-234-612
     Newcastle, solid waste management system, PB-216-585
     solid waste management system, PB-234-612

yeast from  solid waste, 91, 254

Yellowstone National Park solid waste disposal, PB-256-952

Yosemite National Park beverage  container deposit program
              532, 572, 600, PB-270-266

zinc wastes, PB-241-204, PB-257-951, PB-258-953
     in soils, PB-266-905
     recycling and recovery, 491, PB-212-729
                                                              52

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                   EPA  Solid   Waste  Publications
   epa
 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.] ( See
              PB-216-888.)

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

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

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

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

     6      f Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; a systems engineering
              approach to the overall problem of solid waste management; an interim report. Henningson, Durham
              & Richardson, Inc. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1968. [324 p.]
              (Available as PB-187-302.)

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

     8      t 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. ( See
              PB-215-299.)

     9      f 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.

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

     11     t 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.] (Available as PB-217-036).

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

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

     14       Evaluation of the Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator;  operation test report, August 1968. E. R.
              Kaiser. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [116 p.] (Available as
              PB-217-062.)

     15     t Experimental composting research and development; joint U.S.  Public Health Service-Tennessee
              Valley Authority Composting  Project, Johnson City, Tenn. [Flyer]. Washington, U.S. Government
              Printing Office, 1968. 6 p.

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

     17     t Gainesville compost plant; an interim report. Gainesville Municipal Waste Conversion Authority, Inc.
              Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1969. [345 p.] ( SeePB-187-311.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


                                                  53

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    epa
 order  nos.*


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

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

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

     21       International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 1-12,
              November  1956  to September 1961. J. S. Wiley, ed. Washington, U.S. Government Printing  Office,
              1969, 308 p. (Available as PB-217-842.)

     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. (Available as PB-217-723.)

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

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

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

     26      f The national solid wastes  survey; an interim report. R. J.  Black, A. J. Munich, A. J. Klee, H. L.
              Hickman, Jr., and R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
              [1968], 53 p.  ( SeePB-260-102.)

     27      J Packaging and solid waste management. R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
              Education, and Welfare, [1968].  llp.(t Scrap Age, (12):143, 150, 155, Dec. 1968.)

     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. (Available as PB-205-655.)

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

     30      f 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 PB-215-878  and PB-218-252.)

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

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

     33      f Quad-City  solid wastes project; an interim report, June 1,  1966 to May 31, 1967. Cincinnati, U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [181 p.] (Available as PB-217-244 and PB-228-
              311.)

     34      f Rail transport of solid wastes, a feasibility study; interim report: phase one. American Public  Works
              Association Research  Foundation. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education,  and Welfare,
              1969. 168 p. ( SeePB-187-306.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    54

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   epa
 order nos.*


    35      t 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. (Available
              as PB-215-376.)

    36      f 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.
              (See PB-215-951; Also available as PB-217-052).

    37      t 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. ( SeePB-215-934 and PB-217-061.)

    38      f 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. ( SeePB-216-208.)

    39      t Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography,  1962-1963. R. J. Black, J. B. Wheeler, and
              W. G. Henderson. Public Health Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. F. Washington, U.S. Government
              Printing Office, 1966. 134 p. ( SeePB-216-196.)

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

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

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

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

    44   .     The role of packaging in solid waste management, 1966 to 1976. A. Darnay and W. E. Franklin. Public
              Health Service Publication No. 1855. Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office,  1969. 205 p.
              ('See PB-204-405.)

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

    46      t Sanitary landfill; a bibliography. R. L. Steiner and  R. Kantz. Public Health Service Publication No.
              1819. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 37 p. ( SeePB-215-904.)

    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. ( See PB-204-403.)

    48      t Solid waste/disease relationships;  a literature survey. T. G. Hanks. Public Health Service Publication
              No. 999-UIH-6. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1967.  179 p. ( See PB-216-480.)

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

    50      t The Solid Waste Disposal Act; Title II of Public Law 89-272, 89th Cong., S. 306, October 20,  1965.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1966. ( See order no. 171.)

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

    52     f Solid waste  disposal study; technical report; Genesee County, Michigan, June 1968. Cincinnati, U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. [251 p.] (Available as PB-215-758.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    55

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    epa
  order nos.*
     53      t 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. (Available as PB-215-952 and PB-216-385.)

     54      f Solid wastes landfill stabilization; an interim report. Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. Cincinnati, U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. [145 p.] (Available as PB-216-754.)

     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. ( See
              PB-205-656.)

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

     57      f Solid waste reduction/salvage plant, an interim report; City of Madison pilot plant demonstration
              project, June 14 to December 31,  1967. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
              Welfare, 1968. 25 p. ( See PB-260-262.)

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

     59      f Solid wastes management in Germany; report of the U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit, June 25-July
              8, 1967.  S. A. Hart. Public Health Service Publication No. 1812. Washington, U.S. Government
              Printing Office, 1968. 18 p. ( See PB-206-585.)

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

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

     62      f Special studies for incinerators; for the government of the District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary
              Engineering.  Day & Zimmerman. Public Health Service Publication No. 1748. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing Office, 1968.  80 p. (  SfeePB-187-286.)

     63      f State/interstate solid waste planning grants  and agencies—January 1969. Public Health Service
              Publication No. 1912. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education,  and Welfare, 1969. 17
              p. (Available as PB-260-278.)

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

     65      f 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. (Available as  PB-217-820.)

     66      f Summaries; solid wastes demonstration grant projects—1969. C. E. Sponagle and P. L. Stump. Public
              Health Service Publication No. 1821.  Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1969. 175 p.
              (Available as PB-216-460.)

     67      f Summaries of solid wastes research and training grants—1968 [with a supplement—insert]. L. W. Lefke,
              comp. Public Health Service Publication No.  1596. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
              1968. 48 p. Supplement (insert), Jan. 1, 1968-July 1, 1970. 8 p. ( See PB-216-460.)

     68      f Technical assistance activities of the  solid wastes program. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Cincinnati, U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1968. 12 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOat of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available  in public and university libraries.


                                                   56

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    epa
 order nos.*


     69     f The Tezuka refuse compression system; a preliminary report. American Public Works Association
              Research Foundation. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 47 p.
              (Available as PB-217-051.)

     70     f The third pollution [Flyer]. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1967]. 4 p.

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

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

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

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

     75     f Municipal incineration. M. D. Bogue. [Cincinnati],  U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
              Welfare, 1968. 27 p.

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

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

     78     f Solid wastes demonstration grant abstracts; grants awarded January 1-June 30, 1969. C. E. Sponagle.
              [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 47 p.

     79     f Solid wastes handling. R. J. Black. In Environmental aspects  of the hospital, v. 2. Supportive
              departments. Public Health Service Publication No. 930-C-16. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
              Office, 1967. p. 20-27. Reprinted as 'Solid wastes handling [in hospitals].' Cincinnati, U.S. Department
              of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1968. 9 p. (Available as PB-227-562.)

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

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

     82     f Utilization and disposal of poultry manure. J. S. Wiley. Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health,
              Education, and Welfare, 1969. 14 p. (Available as PB-260-033.)

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

     84     f A systems study of solid waste  management in the Fresno area; final report on a solid waste
              management demonstration. Aerojet-General Corporation. Public Health Service Publication No.
              1959. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1969. 411 p. (Available as PB-187-290.)

     85     f 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. (Available as PB-214-556.)

     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. (  See PB-215-907.)

     87     J The psychology of solid waste management. A. J. Klee. APWA Reporter, 36(5):14-15,18,20, May 1969.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.

                                                    57

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 order nos.*


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

     89        International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information  bulletin numbers 21-31,
               August 1964 to December 1967. Rockville, Md., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
               1969. 387 p. [Translated by the Israel Program for Scientific Translations.] ( SeeVE-216-840.)

     90        See order no. 223.

     91        Conversion of organic solid wastes into yeast; an economic evaluation. F. H. Meller. Public Health
               Service Publication No.  1909. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 173 p.  (  See
               PB-217-834.)

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

     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. ( SfeePB-205-
               657.)

     94      f 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.] (Available as PB-187-801.)

     95        Dismantling railroad freight cars; a study of unproved 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. ( See PB-204-404.)

     96      J Recycling and reuse of waste materials; an essential feature of solid waste control systems for the future.
               R. D.  Vaughan. Waste Age, l(l):6-7,  Sept. 1969.

     97      f Analysis of solid waste composition; statistical technique  to determine sample size. D. Carruth and
               A. J. Klee. Environmental Protection Publication SW-19ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
               Education, and Welfare,  1969. 25 p. ( SeePB-216-584.)

     98      J Research and development for better solid waste management. A. W. Breidenbach and R. W. Eldredge.
               BioScience, 19(11):984-988,  Nov.  1969.

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

    100      f Solid wastes and air pollution. R. D. Vaughan. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education,
               and Welfare, 1969. 16 p.

    101      { Let DARE make your solid-waste decisions.  A. J. Klee. American City, 85(2):100-103, Feb. 1970.

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

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

    104      J 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.] (Available as PB-217-835.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NT1S (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.

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    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. (Available as PB-216-227.)

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

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

    109     J Bureau attacks nation's solid waste. R. D. Vaughan. Environmental Science & Technology, 3(8):705-
              707, Aug. 1969.

    110     % Current concepts in the disposal of solid wastes. J. C. Kennedy. Journal of Environmental Health,
              31(2):149-153, Sept.-Oct. 1968.

    Ill       An accounting system for incinerator operations. E. R. Zausner. Public Health Service Publication
              No. 2032. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 17 p. ( SeePB-217-821.)

    112     f Policies for solid waste management. National Academy of Engineering and  National Academy of
              Sciences. Public Health Service Publication No. 2018. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
              1970. 64 p. ( SeePB-216-654.)

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

    114     f Solid waste processing; a state-of-the-art report on unit operations and processes. R. B. Engdahl. Public
              Health Service Publication No. 1856. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 72 p. ( See
              PB-216-653.)

    115     f 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. (Available as PB-215-845.)

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

    117       Proposals for a refuse disposal system in Oakland County, Michigan; final report on a solid waste
              demonstration grant project. Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd. Public Health Service Publication No.
              1960. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office,  1970. 146 p.  (Available  as PB-216-663.)

    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. (Available as  PB-216-104.)

    119     J Reuse of solid wastes: a major solution  to a major national problem. R. D. Vaughan.  Waste Age,
              1(1):10,14-15, Apr.  1970.

    120     J Where will we put all that garbage?  T. Alexander. Fortune, 76(5):149-151, 189-190, 192, 194,  Oct.
              1967. Reprinted,  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1970]. 13 p.

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

    122       Municipal-scale incinerator design and operation. Formerly titled "Incinerator guidelines-1969." J.
              DeMarco, D. J. Keller, J. Leckman, and J. L. Newton. Public Health Service  Publication No. 2012.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1969.  98 p. (Available as PB-216-130.)

    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.] (Available as PB-218-417.)
•See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available  in public and university libraries.


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    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. ( See PB-215-844.)

    125     f Louisville, Ky.-Ind. metropolitan region solid waste disposal study; interim report on a solid waste
              demonstration project, v. 1. Jefferson County, Kentucky, University of Louisville.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 205 p. ( SeePB-217-958.)

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

    127      Solid waste management; abstracts and excerpts  from the literature, v.  1-2. C. G. Golueke. Public
              Health Service Publication  No. 2038. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1970. 147  p.
              (Available as PB-216-191.)

    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. ( See PB-218-265.)

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

    130      An appraisal of marine disposal of solid 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     f America the beautiful; a collection of the nation's trashiest humor. A. Hamilton, couip. Public Health
              Service Publication No. 2048. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1970. 31 p.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    138     f Citizen support for solid waste management. National Association of Counties  Research Foundation.
              [Cincinnati], U.S. Department  of Health, Education, and Welfare, [1970]. 20  p. (Also published as
              ch.  8 of Public Health Service Publication No. 2084.) (Available as PB-226-996.)

    139     f Planning a comprehensive in-plant solid waste survey. R. L. Cummins, W. T. Dehn, H. Hudson, and
              M.  L. Senske. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-58ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of
              Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 9 p.

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

    141     f The public-private partnership in solid waste management. H. L. Hickman,  Jr. [Cincinnati], U.S.
              Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 16 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
JAvailable in public and university libraries.


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    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.] ( See PB-216-369.)

    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.] ( See PB-216-348.)

    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.] ( SeePB-216-370.)

    146     } Decentralized solid waste collection facilities. R. M. Clark and B. P.  Helms. Journal of the Sanitary
              Engineering Division, Proceedings; 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. ( SeePB-216-105.)

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

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

    150     } Clean and green solid waste system in Alabama is widely copied. M. D. Bogue. Waste Age, l(5):4-6,
              10-11, 36, Sept-Oct.  1970.

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

    152     fThe Resource Recovery Act;  Public Law 91-512, 91st Cong., H.R. 11833, October 26, 1970.
              [Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970.] 9 p.  ( See order no. 171.)

    153     f 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. ( See PB-216-735.)

    155     f Control of domestic rats and mice. rev. ed. B. J. Bjornson, H. D. Pratt, and K. S. Littig. Public Health
              Service Publication No. 563. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. Reprinted, [Bureau
              of Solid Waste Management], 1970. 41 p. (Available as PB-217-838.)

    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.

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

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

    159     J The mess we're in. S. Edmund. Ranger Rick's Nature Magazine, 4(6):4-10, July 1970.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


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    160     J Manage solid wastes as a utility. R. M. Clark, R. O. Toftner, and T. W. Bendixen. American City,
              86(2):45-47, Feb. 1971.

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

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

    163     f State solid waste planning grants, agencies, and progress-1970;  report of activities through June 30,
              1970. R. O. Toftner, D. D. Swavely, W. T. Dehn, and B. L. Sweeney, comps. Public Health Service
              Publication No. 2109. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 26 p. ( SeePB-214-441.)

    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. ( See PB-214-448.)

    165     f 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. ( See PB-214-440.)

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

    167     f Solid waste management in recreational forest areas. C. S. Spooner. Public Health Service Publication
              No. 1991. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 96 p. ( See PB-203-622.)

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

    169       American composting concepts. P. H.  McGauhey. Public Health Service Publication No. 2023.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.  23  p. ( SeePB-213-376.)

    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       Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Public Law 94-580, 94th Congress, s. 2150-Oct.
              21, 1976. [Environmental Protection Publication SW-1.4.  Washington,  U.S. Government Printing
              Office],  1976. [47 p.]  (Amends 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 93-61 l-93rd Congress, H.R. 16045-January 2, 1975 (To amend the Solid Waste Disposal Act
              to authorize appropriations for fiscal year 1975).)

    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. ( See
              PB-215-328.)

    173     J Locational models for solid waste management. B. P. Helms and R.  M. Clark. Journal of the Urban
              Planning and De velopment Division, Proceedings; American Society of Civil Engineers,91(\JP\):\-\^,
              Apr. 1971.

    174     t Solid waste transfer and disposal for rural areas. D. R. Andres and F. W. Cope. California Vector
              Views, 17(7):67-76, July 1970.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available  in public and university libraries.


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    175     f California solid waste management study (1968) and plan (1970). California State Department of Public
              Health. Public Health Service Publication No. 2118. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
              1971. [303 p.] (Available as PB-214-019.)

    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. ( StePB-213-
              492.)

    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. (Available
              as PB-204-922.)

    178     f Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; third annual report. C. G. Golueke. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-lOrg. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1971. 201 p.
              (Available as PB-213-576.)

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

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

    181     f Kentucky solid waste management plan; status report,  1970. Kentucky State Department of Health.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-6tsg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
              160 p. (See PB-215-903.)

    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. (Available as PB-214-029.)

    183     f Omaha-Council Bluffs  solid waste management plan;  status report, 1969. Henningson, Durham &
              Richardson, Inc. Public  Health Service Publication No.  2117. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
              Office, 1971. [225 p.] (Available as PB-215-882.)

    184     f Pathogens associated with solid waste processing; a progress report. M. L. Peterson. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-49r.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  26  p.

    185     | Sanitary landfill design,  construction, and evaluation. M. J. Wilcomb and H. L. Hickman, Jr., comps.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-88ts. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
              11 p. ( See PB-203-623.)

    186     f Construction of a chemical-microbial pilot plant for production of single-cell protein from cellulosic
              wastes. C. D. Callihan and C. E. Dunlap. Environmental Protection Publication SW-24c. Washington,
              U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.  126 p. ( See PB-223-873 and PB-203-620.)

    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. (Available as PB-203-619.)

    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. (Available as  PB-213-
              372.)

    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     f Summaries of solid  waste research and training grants-1970 [Insert]. 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. (  StePB-216-106.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.

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    191     f District of Columbia solid waste management plan; status report, 1970. District of Columbia.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-4tsg. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
              138 p. (Available as PB-216-134.)

    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. ( SeePB-213-473.)

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

    194     f 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. ( SeePB-218-263; also available as PB-213-438.)

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

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

    197     f Activities in managing solid wastes. J. DeMarco. In Proceedings; 2nd  National Symposium on Food
              Processing Wastes, Denver, Mar. 23-26, 1971. Pacific Northwest Water Laboratory, EPA; and
              National Canners Association, p. 41-50.  Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S.  Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1971. 10  p.

    198     | Solid waste management in the food processing industry. H. T. Hudson. In Proceedings; 2nd National
              Symposium on Food Processing Wastes, Denver, Mar. 23-26,  1971.  Pacific Northwest Water
              Laboratory, EPA; and National Canners Association, p.  637-654.  Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 18 p. (See PB-219-019.)

    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. ( SeePE-214-032.)

    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.)
              (Available as PB-216-372.)

    201     f Mission 5000; let's find a better way! [Poster]. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
              1 p.  [16 by 20 in.].

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

    203       Available information materials; solid waste management. L.  B.  Clark, comp. Environmental
              Protection  Publication SW-58.29 [Washington], U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency,  1979.


    204     t Compost studies; part 1. R. D. Lossin. Compost Science, 11(6):16-17, Nov.-Dec. 1970.

    205     t Compost studies; part 2. R. D. Lossin. Compost Science, 12(1):12-13, Jan.-Feb. 1971.

    206     J Compost studies;  part 3.  R. D. Lossin. Measurement of the chemical oxygen demand of compost.
              Compost Science,  12(2):31-32, Mar.-Apr.  1971.

    207     | Fums tellthe story- [Flyer.] Washington,  U.S. Government Printing  Office, 1971. 6 p.

    208     f Solid waste management  training bulletin of courses, July  1971-December 1972. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing  Office, 1971.  16 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    209     f Five-thousand (5000) dumps [Flyer]. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971.] 6 p.

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

    211     t The stuff we throw away [Flyer]. Falls Church, Va., Stuart Finley, Inc., [1971]. 6 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. ( See
              PB-213-478.)

    213     f Study report  on a pilot-plant conical incinerator. W. C. Achinger. Environmental Protection
              Publication 14ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 56 p. ( See
              PB-216-192.)

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

    215     f State  and interstate solid waste planning;  a case study  of Federal-State partnership. H. L. Hickman,
              Jr.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14 p. [Restricted distribution.]

    216     f National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 1. Connecticut, Maine,
              Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont. A. J. Munich, A. J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel.
              Public Health Service Publication No. 1866. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969. 47
              p. (SeePB-217-913.)

    217     f National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 1. 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. (Available as PB-218-513.)

    218     t National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 2. Pennsylvania. A. J. Muhich,
              A.  J. Klee, and C. R. Hampel. Public Health Service Publication No. 1866. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing Office, 1969. 409 p. (Available as PB-218-514.)

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

    220     t Solid waste demonstration programs...can they help you? E. F. Spitzer. American City, 86(7):58-60,61,
              July 1971.

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

    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. (SeePB-214-031.)

    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. (Available
              as PB-214-028.)

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

    225     f Economic realities of reclaiming natural resources  in solid waste. T. D. Clark.  In Institute of
              Environmental Sciences 1971 Annual Technical Meeting Proceedings, Los Angeles, Apr. 26-30, 1971.
              Mt. Prospect, 111.,  Institute of Environmental Sciences, p. 39-43. Reprinted, [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency,  1971. 12 p. (Available as PB-228-596.)

    226     t The role of decision models in the evaluation of competing environmental health alternatives. A. J.
              Klee. Management Science, 18(2):B52-B67, Oct. 1971.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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

    228     J 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; American Society of Civil Engineers,
              97(SA5):563-568, Oct. 1971.

    229     f 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.  (Available as PB-213-537.)

    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. ( 5eePB-213-472.)

    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. ( See PB-215-920.)

    232     t 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. ( See  PB-214-558.)

    233     f New York solid waste management plan; status report, 1970. R. F. Weston [ Environmental Scientists
              and Engineers ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-5tsg. Washington,  U.S. Government
              Printing Office, 1971. [307 p.]  (Available as PB-213-557.)

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

    235       Methods of predicting solid waste characteristics. G. B. Boyd and M. B.  Hawkins. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-23c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. 28 p.( SeePB-
              214-760.)

    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. (Available as PB-213-547.)

    237     t An analysis  of institutional solid wastes.  S. A. Messman [ University of Illinois ]. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-2tg. [Washington], U.S. 'Environmental Protection Agency,  1971. 61 p.
              (See PB-213-939.)

    238       Clean and green solid waste system hi 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. ( See PB-214-039.)

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

    241     t Resource  recovery  in solid waste management. L. W. Lefke.  Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-67r. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    242     f 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.
              (Available as PB-215-282.)

    243       The role of packaging in solid waste management—1966 to 1976  [Condensation]. I. Kiefer.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-5c.2. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971.
              [28 p.]

    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. ( See PB-213-444.)

    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.] ( SeePB-209-000.)

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

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

    248       Solid  waste management in residential complexes. Greenleaf/Telesca. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-35c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. [419 p.] ( See PB-216-234.)

    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.]

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

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

    252     f 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. (Available  as PB-213-596.)

    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. ( See PB-214-092.)

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

    255       Creating a countywide solid waste management system; the case study of Humphreys County,
              Tennessee. M. A. Kruth, D. H. Booth, and D. L. Yates. Environmental Protection Publication SW-110.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 15 p.  ( See PB-214-073.)

    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. ( SeePB-214-133.)

    257     f 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. (Available as PB-227-595.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
J Available in public and university libraries.


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    258       Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1966. Franklin Institute Research Laboratories.
              Public Health Service Publication  No. 91-1966, Suppl. I. Washington, U.S. Government Printing
              Office, 1972.  197 p. (Available as PB-227-594.)

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

    260     f Initiating a national effort to improve solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-14. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 107 p. (Available as PB-213-305.)

    261       Design of consumer containers for re-use or disposal; Proceedings; 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. (Available as PB-214-012.)

    262       Satellite vehicle waste collection systems [Condensation]. J. E. Delaney. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-82ts.l. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. 14 p. ( SeePB-213-680.)

    263     f EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. [ R. J. Griffin, Jr. ] [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency,  [1972]. 15 p.

    264     f 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. ( See PB-256-494.)

    265     f Five-thousand (5000) dumps  [Film  narrative].  Stuart Finley, Inc. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-39c.4. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 7 p.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    274     f 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.  ( SeePB-213-718.)

    276     J Federal redirections in solid waste. Environmental Science &  Technology, 6(4):318-320, Apr. 1972.
              Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 4 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
f Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available  in public and university libraries.


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    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     J Industrial solid waste problems. T. J. Sorg. AJChE Symposium Series, 68(122):l-5, 1972.

    279     f 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. (Available as PB-259-501.)

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

    281       Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1967. Franklin Institute Research Laboratories.
              Public  Health Service Publication No. 91-1967,  Suppl. J. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
              Office,  1972. 404 p. (Available as PB-227-593.)

    282     f Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1968. Franklin Institute Research Laboratories.
              Public  Health Service Publication No. 91-1968, Suppl. K. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
              Office,  1972. 286 p. (Available as PB-227-592.)

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

    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. ( See
              PB-258-597.)

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

    286     f Recycling; assessment and prospects for success. A. Darnay.  Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-81. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.  14 p. ( See PB-213-961.)

    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. ( See PB-227-565.)

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

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

    290       Let's dump the dump; the ABC's of solid waste management. Greenfield, Mass., Charming 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. ( SeePB-214-152.)

    294     f 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. ( See order no. 636.) (Available as PB-256-456.)

    295     J 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.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.

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    296     f 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. ( See
              PB-230-386.)

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

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

    300       Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 1. Summary, conclusions,
              and recommendations. Esco/Greenleaf. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34d. 1. Washington,
              U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972. [263 p.] ( SeePB-213-132.)

    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.] (Available as  PB-213-134.)

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

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

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

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

    306     f The Federal role in  solid waste management-present and future. S. Hale, Jr., J. A. Hill, and H. L.
              Hickman, Jr. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 30 p.

    307     f Resource recovery, recycling, and reuse. In Annual report to the President and to the Council on
              Environmental Quality for the year ending May 1972. Citizen's 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     J Improving manual solid waste separation studies. P. W. Britton. Journal of the Sanitary Engineering
              Division, Proceedings; 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.  ( SeePB-230-171.)

    312     f 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 [Poster]. Washington, U.S.  Government Printing  Office, 1972. [9 by 13 in.].
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.

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    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, [Washington], 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.l. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1973. 18 p. ( SeePB-254-619.)

    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.]
              lip.

    319       Patent abstracts; international solid  waste management, 1945-1969. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-78c. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 437 p.

    320      f Solid waste management—closing the circle. S. Hale, Jr. Environmental Protection Publication SW-87.
              [Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972.] 21 p. Reprinted,  Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing  Office, [1973]. 19 p.

    321      f Resource recovery; the state of technology.  Midwest Research Institute. [Prepared for the Council on
              Environmental Quality.] Washington,  U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 67 p.

    322      f 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 [Condensation]. I. Kiefer. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-80.1. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 7 p.

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

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

    326      f The beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations.  T.  H. Bingham and P. F. Mulligan
              [ Research Triangle Institute ]. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1972. 190 p. ( See
              PB-213-341).

    327       The States' role 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. ( See PB-227-014.)

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

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

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

    331       Cities and the nation's disposal crisis. Washington, National League of Cities and U.S. Conference of
              Mayors, Mar. 1973. 46 p. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1973.
              ( See PB-257-309.)
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
|Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.

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    332      f Environmental impacts of packaging. E. L. Claussen. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency,  1973. 10 p. ( SeePB-257-961.)

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

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

    335      f There lived a wicked dragon [Coloring book]. M. Finan. 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.  (See PB-226-
              099.)

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

    338      J The utilization of expert opinion in decision-making. A. J. Klee. AIChE Journal, 18(6):1107-1115, Nov.
              1972.

    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. (Available as PB-227-056.)

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

    341      f Solid waste recycling projects;  a  national directory. P. Hansen, comp. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-45. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. 284 p. ( See PB-254-623.)

    342       Improving rural solid waste management practices. T. L.  Goldberg.  Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-107. Washington, U.S.  Government  Printing Office, 1973. 83 p. ( See PB-257-801.)

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

    344      f Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management. Environmental Protection Publication SW-117.
              [Washington], 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.  (Available as PB-257-637.)

    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-
              Sld.l. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  239 p. ( See PB-260-176.)

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

    350       Resource recovery; the Federal perspective. J.  H. Skinner. Waste Age, 5(1): 12,14,54, Jan.-Feb. 1974.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
•(•Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    72

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

    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. ( 5eePB-255-139.)

    353     | Resource recovery and source reduction; second report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-122.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974.  112 p. ( See PB-253-406.)

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

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

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

    360     t 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.
              [Washington,  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.] 6 p.

    364     f 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.  ( See
              PB-258-156.)

    369     t 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. 1. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-57c. Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1974. 99 p.

    371       User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information  system for solid waste management,
              v. 2. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-58c. Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1974. 49 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    372     f 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     f 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. ( See PB-255-129.)

    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  1, 1974.

    377     f State solid waste management and resource recovery incentives act [proposed]. 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. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1974. 39  p., app., update sheet (Sept.  1976).

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

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

    381     f Separating paper at the waste source for recycling. S. A. Lingle. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-128. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974.  16 p. ( See PB-260-254.)

    382       Incentives for tire recycling  and reuse.  I.  Kiefer. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-32c. 1.
              Washington, U.S.  Government Printing Office, 1974. 28 p.

    383     f Our effluent society; the States and solid waste management. 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. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 34 p.

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

    386     f 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.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 20 p.

    387     f 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     f 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, 20 p.
•See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
f Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.

                                                    74

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

     390       Decision-makers guide in solid waste management. 2d ed. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
               500. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1976. 158 p. ( See PB-258-266.)

     391       Disposal of sewage sludge into a sanitary  landfill. R. Stone, comp. Environmental Protection
               Publication SW-71d. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 418 p. (Available as
               PB-258-680.)

     392       Maigastar causa necesidad [Poster; Spanish  version  of "Waste not, want not"]. Washington, U.S.
               Environmental Protection  Agency, 1974. [9 by 13 in.].

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

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

     397       Trends in wastepaper exports and their effects on domestic  markets. F. L. Smith, Jr. Environmental
               Protection Publication SW-132. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,  1974. 17 p.
               CSfeePB-258-681.)

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

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

     400     f 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. (  SeePB-253-
               326.)

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

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

     404       Debris accumulation in  ancient and modern cities. C. G. Gunnerson. Journal of the Environmental
               Engineering Division, Proceedings; 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.
               (&ePB-253-486.)

     406       Hospital wastes. I.  Kiefer. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-129. Washington, U.S.
               Government Printing Office, 1974. 36 p.
 *See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
 tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
  (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
 {Available in public and university libraries.


288-289 O -1-3 - a

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    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.  ( See PB-253-330.)

    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 ah" pollution test report. L. J.  Shannon, M. P.
              Schrag, F. I. Honea, and D. Bendersky. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
              107 p.  ( See PB-237-630.)

    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.

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

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

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

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

    419     j- 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. ( See PB-258-272.)

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

    421     J 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.
              ( See PB-260-634.)

    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. ( See PB-259-456.)

    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.

    425       See order no. 431.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.

                                                   76

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 order nos.*


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

    427       Incineration in hazardous waste management. A. C. Scurlock, A. W. Lindsey, T. Fields, Jr., and D.
              R. Huber. Environmental Protection Publication SW-141. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1975. 104 p. ( See PB-261-049.)

    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. ( See PB-261-046.)
    429       Hazardous waste management facilities in  the United States. M. Straus. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-146.3. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.  1977. 60 p.

    436       Habia una vez un dragon malvadojSpanish 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     f 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. (Available as PB-261-045).

    432       Waste reduction and resource recovery activities; a nationwide survey. L. B. McEwen, Jr.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-142. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1977.
              78 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, 1974. 87 p. ( SsePB-261-
              044.)

    434     f Residential collection systems, v. 1. Report summary.  ACT Systems, Inc. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-97c.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 106 p.  (Available
              as PB-262-896.)

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

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

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

    438     f Recycled materials markets;  February 1975-a summary. S. A. Lingle. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-149. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  Apr. 1975.  8  p. ( See
              PB-259-138.)

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

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

    441       Report of the Solid Waste Management Advisory Group on opportunities for improving productivity
              in solid waste collection—1973. Washington, National  Commission on Productivity,  1974. 46 p.

    442       San Diego County demonstrates pyrolysis of solid waste to recover liquid fuel,  metals, and glass. S.
              J. Levy. Environmental Protection Publication SW-80d.2. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing
              Office, 1975. 27 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
|Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    77

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    443       Comparative estimates of post-consumer solid waste. F. A. Smith. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-148. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 18 p. ( See
              PB-256-491.)

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

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

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

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

    448       Resource recovery  and waste reduction;  third report  to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-161.
              Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 96 p. ( SeePB-255-141.)

    449       Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document  No. 1]. Office of Solid Waste Management
              Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-151. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, June 1975 [Reprinted September 1975]. [12 p.] ( SeePB-261-157.)

    450       Hazardous wastes.  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-138. Washington, U.S. Government
              Printing Office,  1975. 24 p. ( See PB-260-089.)

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

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

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

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

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

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

    457     f State activities in solid waste management, 1974. R. J.  Black. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-158. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, June 1975.  216 p. ( SeePB-261-076.)

    458       Anaerobic digestion of solid waste and sewage sludge to methane. S. J. Hitte. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-159. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1975. 13 p. ( See
              PB-261-091.)

    459       Statement of Honorable John R.  Quarles, Jr., Deputy Administrator, Environmental Protection
              Agency,  before  the Subcommittee on the Environment, Committee on Commerce, United States
              Senate, May 7,  1974. J. R. Quarles, Jr. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.
              14 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
•fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
JAvailable in public and university libraries.


                                                   78

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 order nos.*


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

    461       Proceedings; 1975 Conference on Waste Reduction, April 2-3, 1975, Washington, D.C. U.S.
              Environmental  Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-7p. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975. 152 p. (Available
              as PB-258-157.)

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

    463       Solid waste management guidelines for beverage containers. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              Federal Register, 41(184):41202-41205, Sept. 21, 1976.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    470       Resource  recovery plant implementation:  guides for municipal  officials—further assistance. D.
              Hawkins.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.8.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, [1975]. 29 p. ( See PB-256-460.)

    471       Resource  recovery plant implementation: guides for  municipal officials—financing. R. E. Randol.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.4. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, [1975]. 20 p. ( See PB-256-461.)

    472       A handbook  for initiating or improving commercial refuse collection. City of Scottsdale, Arizona.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-85d. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Aug. 1975. 68 p.

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

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

    475       Landfill disposal of hazardous wastes: a review of literature and known approaches. T. Fields, Jr., and
              A.  W.  Lindsey. Environmental Protection Publication SW-165.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
              Protection Agency, June 1975. 36 p.  ( See PB-261-079.)

    476       The uses and abuses of waste. R. E. Train. Compost Science, 16(3):11-13, May-June 1975.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
f Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
tAvailable  in public and university libraries.


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

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

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

    480       Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials-interim report. A. Shilepsky.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-152. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Oct. 1975. 38 p. ( See PB-259-139.)

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

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

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

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

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

    486       Residential paper recovery; a municipal implementation guide. P. Hansen. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-155. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 26 p. ( SeePB-259-
              454.)

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

    488       Composting at Johnson City; final report on joint USEPA-TVA composting project with operational
              data,  1967 to 1971. v. 1-2. G. E. Stone and C. C. Wiles. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
              31r.2. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 336 p. ( See PB-261-047.)

    489       A summary of hazardous substance classification systems. A. M. Kohan. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-171. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 55 p. ( SeePB-261-
              086.)

    490       Promulgation resource recovery facilities guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  Federal
              Register, 41(184):41208-41211, Sept. 21, 1976.

    491       Mineral recovery from the noncombustible fraction of municipal solid waste; a proposed project to
              demonstrate incinerator residue recovery. D.  G.  Arella and Y.  M. Garbe. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-82d.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1975. 14 p. ( See
              PB-261-048.)

    492       Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 2]. Office of Solid Waste  Management
              Programs.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-151.2. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency,  1975  [Reprinted, March  1976]. [16 p.] ( See PB-261-155.)

    493       Resource recovery plant  implementation: guides for municipal officials-accounting format. D. B.
              Sussman. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-157.6.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, [1976].  17 p. ( See PB-259-143.)
•See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.

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

    495       Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—procurement.  Mitre
              Corporation. Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.5. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency,  [1976]. 66 p. ( SeePB-259-140.)

    496     f Resource recovery plant  implementation: guides for municipal officials—risks and contracts. R. E.
              Randol. Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.7.  [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
              Protection Agency,  1976. 52 p.  ( SeePB-259-142.)

    497       Waste Management Technology and Resource and Energy Recovery: Proceedings; 4th National
              Congress, Atlanta,  Nov. 12-14, 1975.  National Solid Wastes Management Association and U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency. Environmental Protection Publication SW-8p. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing  Office, 1976. 382 p.

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

    499       Resource recovery plant  implementation: guides for municipal officials-markets. Y. M. Garbe and
              S. J. Levy.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-157.3. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency,  1976. 47 p.

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

    501       The resource recovery industry; a survey of the  industry and its capacity. Mitre Corporation.
              Environmental Protection Publication  SW-501c. [Washington], U.S. Government  Printing Office,
              1976. 92 p.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    508       Pharmaceutical industry;  hazardous waste generation, treatment, and disposal. [ Arthur D. Little, Inc. ].
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-508.  [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1976. 178 p.

    509       Leachate damage assessment; case study of the Say ville solid waste disposal site in Islip (Long Island),
              New York.  K. A. Shuster. Environmental Protection Publication SW-509. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, June 1976.  18 p.

    510     J Demonstrating multimaterial source separation in Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts. P.
              Hansen and J. Ramsey.  Waste Age, 7(2):26-27,48, Feb.  1976.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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

    512       State program implementation guide:  hazardous waste transportation control. C. H. Porter.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-512. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Mar.  1976. 35 p. ( See PB-261-088.)

    513     I Solid waste management; monthly abstracts bulletin for January, February, and March 1973. v. 1, no.
              1-3, abstract no. 73-3554-73-4451. J. A. Connolly,  comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
              513.1. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 89 p. (Reprinted, See order no.
              658.)

    514       Leachate damage assessment; case study of the Fox Valley solid waste disposal site hi Aurora, Illinois.
              K. A. Shuster.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-514. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
              Protection Agency, June 1976. 34 p.

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

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

    517       Leachate damage assessment; case study of the Peoples Avenue solid waste disposal site in Rockford,
              Illinois. K. A. Schuster. Environmental Protection Publication SW-517. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection  Agency,  June  1976. 25 p.

    518       Market locations for recovered materials. S. E. Howard. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
              518. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Aug. 1976. 81 p.

    519       Disposal of dilute  pesticide solutions. H. R.  Day. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-519.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, June 1976.  18 p.

    520       Don't walk away from  an open dump.  K. Anderson and M.  Cowart.  American City & County,
              91(2):37-38, Feb. 1976.

    521     | You make a difference; you contribute to a better environment when you return your soft drink and
              beer containers [Poster].  [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. ] 1 p. ( See order
              nos. 646 and 647.)

    523       Engineering a better environment. R. Strelow. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1976. 14 p.

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

    526       Status of solid waste management in the United  States. S. Meyers. Presented at 2d International
              Congress, International  Solid Wastes Association,  Padua, June  24, 1976. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-526. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 22 p.

    527       Review of pesticide disposal  research. D. Munnecke, H. R. Day, and H. W. Trask.  Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-527. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 76 p.

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

    529       Vinyl chloride; recommended procedures for disposal of aerosol cans. Federal Register, 41(112):23226-
              23227, June 9, 1976.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
f Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
JAvailable in public and university libraries.


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    530       State hazardous waste regulations and legislation; a synopsis of information on seven selected states.
              P. Waldrop. Environmental Protection Publication SW-530. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1976. 47 p.

    531     f Price comparison survey of beer and soft drinks in refillable and nonrefillable containers. C. Peterson.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-531 [Washington,] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1976.  [34 p.]

    532     f Yosemite test of beverage container refund; environmental news  [Press release]. U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, Washington, July 20, 1976. 2 p.

    533     f Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—planning and overview. A.
              Shilepsky and R. A. Lowe. Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.1. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 34 p.

    534       Pesticide container processing in commercial reconditioning  facilities. W. S. Staton and J. G.
              Lamperton [ Oregon State University, Environmental Sciences Center ]. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-88d.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nov. 1976. 21 p.

    535       Effective hazardous waste management (non-radioactive); position statement. U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 41(161):35050-35051, Aug. 18, 1976.

    536       Resource recovery and waste reduction; current reports. Office of Solid Waste, Resource Recovery
              Division. Environmental Protection Publication SW-536.2. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, Jan. 1978. [25 p.]

    537       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; Baltimore pyrolysis and waste-fired steam
              generator emissions. [ D. B. Sussman. ]  Waste Age, 7(7):6-9, 77, July 1976. Reprinted, [Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-537]. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. [4 p.]

    538       Solid  Waste Information Retrieval System; SWIRS [Brochure]. [Washington, U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1976.] 3 p.

    539       The resource  recovery industry. C. G. Ganotis and R. E. Hopper. Environmental Science &
              Technology, 10(5):425-429, May 1976.

    540       Hazardous waste guidelines: plans and prospects. W. W. Kovalick, Jr. Presented at Hazardous Waste
              Research Symposium, Residual Management Land Disposal, Tucson, Feb. 2,  1976. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. [7 p.]

    541       The national hazardous waste management program. J.  P. Lehman. Presented at 79th National
              Meeting, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, Houston, Mar. 17,  1975. Washington, U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 18 p.

    542       Federal direction for hazardous waste management. J. P. Lehman. Presented at National Solid Wastes
              Management Association International Waste Equipment and Technology Exposition, June 26, 1974.
              [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, [1976]. 16 p.

    543       Growth potential in the hazardous waste management service industry. J. P.  Lehman. Presented at
              National Solid Wastes Management Association  International Waste Equipment and Technology
              Exposition, Chicago, June 2, 1976. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 26
              P-

    544       Current  views on solid waste management; recommended reading. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-544.1. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. [16 p.]

    545       Federal surveys of industrial waste. J. P. Lehman. Presented at National Solid Wastes Management
              Association International Waste Equipment and Technology Exposition, Los Angeles, June 30, 1975.
              [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1976. 31  p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


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    546       Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 3]. Office of Solid Waste Management
              Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-151.3. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1976. [15 p.] ( See PB-261-156.)

    547       Environmental assessment of subsurface disposal of municipal wastewater treatment sludge; interim
              report. SCS Engineers. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-547. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 117 p.

    548       Wrapping up the solid waste management problem;  a model for regional solid waste management
              planning.  Mitre  Corporation. Environmental Protection Publication SW-137c. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 12 p.

    549     •(• Goals of the Federal solid waste management program. S. Meyers. Presented at International Public
              Works Congress  and Equipment Show, Las Vegas, Sept. 27, 1976. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1976. 10 p.

    550       Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—technologies. S. J. Levy and
              H. G.  Rigo. Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.2. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental
              Protection Agency, 1976. 81 p.

    551       Source separation; the community awareness program in Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts.
              Resource Planning Associates,  Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-551d. [Washington],
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nov. 1976. 81 p.

    552       Resource recovery projects;  requests for proposals/contracts—summaries.  D. F. Hawkins.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-552. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Oct. 1976. 54 p.

    553       Residential paper recovery; a community action program.  National Center for Resource Recovery.
              [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-553.  Washington, U.S.  Government Printing  Office,
              [1976]. [20 p.]

    554       Chemical waste swapping: promising, but no panacea. L. J. Ricci. Chemical Engineering, 83(14):44,46,-
              48, July 5, 1976.

    555     f Solid waste management; monthly abstracts bulletin for April, May, and June 1973. v.  1., no. 4-6,
              abstract no. 73-4452-73-5349. J. A. Connolly, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-513.2.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1976. 94 p. (Reprinted; See order no. 658.)

    556       Municipal sludge: what shall we do with it? H. McNulty and L. Sharpe. League of Women Voters
              Publication No. 627.  Washington, League of Women Voters of the United States, [1976]. 8  p.

    557       Resource recovery and you.  Greenfield, Mass., Channing L. Bete Co., Inc., 1975. 15 p.

    558       Color sorting waste glass at Franklin, Ohio. Y. M. Garbe. Waste Age, 7(9):70-71,78, Sept. 1976.

    559       Magnetic separation:  recovery of salable iron and steel from municipal solid waste. H. Alter and K.
              L. Woodruff [ National Center for Resource Recovery ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
              559. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 25 p.

    560       EPA and  municipal resource recovery. S. Meyers. NCRR [National Center for Resource Recovery]
              Bulletin, 6(3):62-65, Summer 1976.

    561       Management of  metal-finishing sludge. E. P. Grumpier, Jr. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-561. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 62 p.

    562       Disposing of small batches of hazardous wastes. M. Ghassemi et al. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-562c.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1976. 22 p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


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    563       The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a brief look at Public Law 94-580.
              [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-563. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, [1977]. 3 p.

    564       The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a summary of Public Law 94-580. [Washington,
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.] 14 p.

    565     f Solid waste control program expanded. EPA Journal, 2(10):4-5, Nov.-Dec. 1976.

    566       The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; everybody's business. S. Meyers. Presented
              at 5th National Congress on Waste Management Technology and Resource and Energy Recovery,
              Dallas, Dec. 8, 1976. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.] 13 p.

    567       Resource recovery planning...an overview of the implementation process.  National League of Cities
              and United States Conference of Mayors. Reprinted, [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental Protection
              Agency, [1977]. 21 p.

    568       Tokyo update; Japan makes rapid progress in developing strategy for solid wastes management. H.
              L. Hickman,  Jr. Solid Wastes Management, 19(8):40-41, 60, Aug. 1976.

    569       Landfills for pesticide waste disposal. M. Ghassemi, S. C. Quinlivan, and H. R. Day. Environmental
              Science & Technology, 10(13):1209-1214, Dec. 1976.

    570       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P. A.; a review of energy recovery technologies.
              S. J. Levy and S.  A. Lingle. Waste Age, 7(ll):26-27, 30-31, Nov. 1976. Reprinted, [Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-570. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 4 p.]

    571       Use it again,  Sam; a guide for Federal office paper recycling programs. C.M. Miller. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-571. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. (In press.)

    572       Untrashing Yosemite Park. EPA Journal, 2(9):12-13, Oct. 1976.

    573       WRAP; a model for regional solid  waste management planning; programmer's manual. V. Hensey
              [Mitre Corporation]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-573c. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency,  1977. 325 p.

    574       WRAP; a model for regional solid  waste management planning; user's guide. E. B. Herman [ Mitre
              Corporation ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-574c. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency,  1977. 124 p.

    575       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; resource recovery through multi-material
              source separation. P. M. Hansen. Waste Age, 7(10):30-31,34,44, Oct. 1976. Reprinted, [Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-575. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 4 p.]

    576     f The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580); issues for discussion. U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste. [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-
              576. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb. 1977. 10 p.

    577       Re-refining of waste lubrication oil: Federal perspective. L. B. McEwen, Jr. Resource Recovery &
              Energy Review, 3(6): 14-17, Nov./Dec. 1976.

    578       Transcript; 1st Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,  Washington,
              D.C., Dec. 16,  1976. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOp. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1977. 175 p.

    579       Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; intent to develop rulemaking. U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(33):9803, Feb.  17, 1977.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    580      f The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580); provisions for discussion.
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste. [Environmental Protection Publication]
              SW-580. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.  1977. [17 p.]

    581       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; EPA resource recovery demonstration:
              summary of air emission analyses. J. R. Holloway. Waste Age, 7(8):50-52, Aug.  1976. Reprinted,
              [Environmental Protection Publication SW-581. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1976.  3 p.]

    582       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P. A.; demonstration of pyrolysis and materials
              recovery in San Diego,  California. Y. M. Garbe. Waste Age, 7(12):82-85, Dec. 1976. Reprinted,
              [Environmental Protection Publication SW-582. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1976.  4 p.]

    583       Treatment  and utilization  of landfill gas;  Mountain View project feasibility study.  M. J.  Blanchet
              [Pacific Gas and  Electric  Company,  San Francisco].[Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1977. 115 p.

    584       Overview and objectives of  hazardous waste management. J. P. Lehman. Presented at  National
              Conference on Hazardous Waste Management, San Francisco, Feb. 1, 1977. [Washington],  U.S.
              Environmental Protection  Agency. 17 p.

    585      f Citizen participation and the  Resource Conservation and Recovery Act. T. F. Williams.  Presented at
              Citizen Involvement in Solid Waste Issues: Focus on Resource Conservation Meeting,  National
              Coalition on Solid Waste,  Washington,  Mar. 5,  1977.  [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency.] lip.

    586      } Solid  waste management. Environmental Comment, Feb. 1977. [Entire issue.]

    587       Recovery of landfill gas  at Mountain View; engineering site study. J. A. Carlson [ City of Mountain
              View, Calif. ]. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-587d. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
              Protection  Agency, 1977. 63  p.

    588       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 19m Kansas
              City,  Mo.,  Feb. 15-16,  1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waster-eas^:
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-llp.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency. 282 p.

    589       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
              Richmond, Feb. 17-18, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-12p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              122 p.

    590       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
              Pittsburgh, Feb. 28 and Mar.  1, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste,
              comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-13p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency. 251 p.

    591       Transcripts; Regional Public  Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 and
              an Appendix: Conference on the Management of Non-Nuclear Hazardous Wastes, New York City,
              Feb. 23, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-14p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [404 p.]

    592       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
              Atlanta, Feb. 23-24, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-15p.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency. 107 p., app.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
|Out of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
JAvailable  in public and university libraries.


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    593       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
              Worcester, Mass., and Concord, N. H., Feb. 25-26,  1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-16p.  [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency.  [90 p.]

    594       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Denver
              and Salt Lake City, Mar. 3-4, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste,
              comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-17p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency. 132 p., app.

    595       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Dallas,
              Mar. 8-9, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-18p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  138 p.

    596     f Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, San
              Francisco, Mar.  10-11,  1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-19p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              258 p., app.

    597       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Seattle,
              Mar. 17-18, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-20p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 201 p.

    598       Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976,
              Chicago, Mar. 21-22,  1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-21p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              156 p.

    599       Waste Management Technology and Resource and  Energy Recovery: Proceedings; 5th  National
              Congress, Dallas, Dec. 7-9, 1976. National Solid Wastes  Management Association and U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency: Environmental Protection Publication SW-22p. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing Office, 1977.  427 p.

    600       Resource recovery and waste reduction; fourth report to Congress. U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-600. Washington, U.S.
              Government Printing Office, 1977.  142 p.

    601       Recycling. Reprinted from Government and the Nation's Resources: Report  of the National
              Commission on Supplies and Shortages, Dec., 1976. Environmental Protection Publication SW-601.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency,  1977. p.  155-172.

    602     f The utilization of solid wastes for the generation of electric power. S. Meyers and D. B. Sussman. In
              IEEE Power Engineering Society Papers; energy development III. New York, Institute of Electrical
              and Electronics Engineers Inc., 1977. p. 30-33.

    603       Statement of Honorable Douglas M. Costle, Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency, before
              the Subcommittee on Transportation and Commerce, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
              House of Representatives, April 16,  1977. D. M. Costle. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency]. 14 p.

    604       Careful management: key to resource  recovery.  R. A. Lowe and E.  Sano. State & County
              Administrator, 1(5):29-30, Sept.-Oct. 1976.

    605       Can Nashville's story be placed in perspective? L. B. McEwen and S. J.  Levy. Solid Wastes
              Management, 19(8):24,  28-30,58,60, Aug.  1976.

    606       How communities can  overcome obstacles to resource recovery projects. R. Hopper. Solid  Wastes
              Management, 20(1):30,  54-55,92, Jan. 1977.

    607       The RCRA and  State government.  H. L. Hickman, Jr. Waste Age, 8(1):18-19, Jan. 1977.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    608       Waste clearinghouses and exchanges. R. C. Terry, Jr. et al. Chemical Engineering Progress, 72(12):58-
              62, Dec. 1976.

    609       Remarks by Barbara Blum, Deputy Administrator, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, at the
              65th Annual Meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Washington, May 3, 1977.
              B. Blum. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.] 3 p.

    610       Hazardous waste guidelines and regulations; advance notice of proposed rulemaking. U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(84):22332-22334, May 2, 1977.

    611       Procedures manual for ground water monitoring at solid waste disposal facilities. Wehran Engineering
              Corporation and Geraghty and Miller, Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-611.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [273 p.]

    612       State decision makers guide for hazardous waste management. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              Office of Solid Waste, Hazardous Waste Management Division. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-612. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1977.  103 p.

    613       Remarks by the Honorable Douglas M. Costle, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              D. M. Costle. Presented at the Resource Recovery Technology Seminar, Apr. 28,  1977. [Washington,
              U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency.] 13 p.

    614       Composting sewage sludge by high-rate suction aeration techniques; an interim report. R. K. Anderson.
              Environmental  Protection Publication SW-614d. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1977. [56 p.]

    615       Identification of regions  and  agencies  for solid waste management; interim guidelines. U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(94):24926-24930, May 16, 1977.

    616       Use it again, Sam; recycle; the Federal Government high-grade paper recovery program [Pamphlet].
              Office of  Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-616. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection, 1978. [4 p.]

    617       Successful sanitary landfill siting: County of San Bernardino, California. N. G. Dunne. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-617. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 31 p.

    618       Implementation plan for the Resource Conservation Committee; 1st report to the President and
              Congress of the United States mandated by  the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
              (Public Law 94-580). Washington, Resource  Conservation Committee, Apr. 1977. 89 p.

    619       Cost of landspreading and hauling sludge from municipal wastewater treatment plants; case studies.
              R. K.  Anderson et al. Environmental Protection Publication SW-619. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977.  156 p.

    620       Resource recovery implementations; a status  report. L. McEwen and S. Levy. Resource Recovery &
              Energy Review, 4(l):21-25, Jan.-Feb. 1977.

    621     f Keeping Public Law 94-580 public. T. F. Williams. Presented at Seminar "Occupational Safety and
              Health Implications of Solid Waste,"  Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union,
              Oakland, June 4, 1977.  [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency]. 17 p.

    622       Waste paper; a new look at recycling. Report on a Conference sponsored by the Citizens'  Advisory
              Committee on Environmental Quality, [Washington], May 11,  1976. Washington, U.S. Government
              Printing Office,  May 1977. 88 p.

    623       Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; the Resource Conservation and  Recovery
              Act of 1976: how will it impact on resource recovery and conservation? N. Humber and S. A. Lingle.
              Waste Age, 6(4):26-27, 30-31, Apr. 1977. Reprinted, [Environmental Protection Publication SW-623.
              Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection  Agency, 1977. 3 p.]
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    624       Metals in municipal landfill leachate and their health effects. S. C. James. American Journal of Public
              Health, 67(5):429-432, May 1977.

    625       President Ford signs new solid wastes bill. H. L. Hickman, Jr. Solid Wastes Management, 19(11):52,
              72,74, Nov. 1976.

    626       Transcript; Public  Meeting on the Draft Solid Waste Grant Regulations for Implementation of the
              Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Washington, June 30, 1977. U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-23p.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 66 p.

    627       Transcript; Public Meeting on the Public Participation Guidelines, Section  7004(b) of Resource
              Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Washington, July 1, 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-24p. [Washington],
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 66 p.

    628       Words into deeds;  implementing the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976. [S.Meyers.]
              Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, Aug. 1977.  7 p.

    629       Solid waste planning and disposal; advance notice of proposed rulemaking. U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(128):34446-34448, July 5, 1977.

    630       Safe storage and disposal of pesticides. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May,
              1977. 9 p.

    631       Industrial waste-problem or profit? D. Collins. EPA Journal, 3(3):15, Mar. 1977.

    632       The impact of source separation and waste reduction on the economics of resource recovery facilities.
              J. H. Skinner. Resource Recovery & Energy Review, 4(2):22-26, Mar./Apr. 1977.

    633       See order no. 668.

    634       The prevalence of subsurface migration of hazardous chemical substances at selected industrial waste
              land disposal sites. Office of Solid Waste.  [ Geraghty  and Miller, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-634. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Oct. 1977. [521 p.] ( See
              PB-275-103.)

    635       Model state hazardous waste management act (annotated). M. Newton. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-635. [Washington], U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1977. [56 p.]

    636       Solid waste management; worldwide solid waste literature collection/retrieval services available from
              EPA. 3d ed. J. A. Connolly. Environmental Protection Publication SW-636. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 8 p. [Supersedes SW-91.2 (order no.  294).]

    637       Implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; interim regulations. U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(201):5606-5608, Oct. 20, 1977.

    638       A New England recycling directory. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region I, Office of Public
              Affairs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-638. Boston, U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, 1977. 50 p.

    639       Solid  waste on  Federal lands in Alaska,  executive  summary report. Office of  Solid Waste.
              [Environmental Protection Publication SW-639. Washington, U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,
              1978]. 86  p.

    640       Prior notice of citizen suits. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Federal Register, 42(204):56114-
              56115, Part 254, Oct. 21, 1977.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.


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    641       A technical evaluation of the  Baltimore Landgard system.  A. J. Helmstetter and D. B. Sussman.
              [Environmental Protection Publication SW-641.] Presented at the AIChE Meeting on Resource
              Recovery in Solid Waste Processing, Nov. 13-17, 1977. [Washington] U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency.  [17 p.]

    642       The little town that could. M. Sullivan. In Conservation News, 4(2):4-7, Jan. 15, 1977. Reprinted,
              [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 6 p.]

    643       Balancing environment, economic, and resource conservation issues in the implementation of RCRA.
              T. C. Jorling. Presented at the meeting of the 6th National Congress on Waste Management Technology
              and Resource and Energy Recovery, of the National Solid Waste Management Association, Nov. 14,
              1977. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 15 p.

    644       Provisions for hazardous waste regulation and land disposal controls under the Resource Conservation
              and Recovery Act of 1976. Environmental Protection Publication SW-644. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, Mar. 1978. 10 p.

    645     f Strategy for the implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Draft). Office
              of Solid Waste. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 5, 1977. [101 p.]

    646       Return your soft drink and beer containers and get a $.05 refund too [Poster]. [ U.S. Department of
              Defense ]. [Washington],  U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [17 7/8 by 24 in.].

    647       Return your soft drink containers [Poster]. [ U.S. Department of Defense ]. [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [17 7/8 by 24 in.].

    648       You make a difference; please return your empties  to the barrel provided [Sticker]. U.S. Department
              of Defense. [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977.] [4 1/8 by 8 3/8 in.].

    649       Public participation in solid waste management; interim guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency.  Federal Register, 43(8): 1902-1906, January 12, 1978.

    650       Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976;  Subtitle C,
              Hazardous Waste Management, Arlington, Va., Oct. 11 and 12, 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-25p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1978. [440  p.]

    651       Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976;  Subtitle C,
              Hazardous Waste Management, St. Louis, Mo., Oct.  13-14,  1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-26p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1977. [588  p.]

    652       Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976;  Subtitle C,
              Hazardous Waste  Management,  Scottsdale, Ariz., Oct.  17-18,  1977. Office of Solid Waste,  comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-27p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1977. [436  p.]

    653       Transcript; Joint Public Meeting on the Development of Regulations for the Transportation of
              Hazardous Waste Under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; Des Plaines, 111., Oct.
              26, 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-28p. [Washington],
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. [441 p.]

    654       Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Beverage Container Deposit
              Legislation, Washington,  D.C., Oct. 19, 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-29p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. [577 p.]
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


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    655       Statement of Honorable H. Lanier Hickman, Jr., Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid
              Waste, Environmental Protection Agency, before the Subcommittee on Advanced Energy Technologies
              and Energy Conservation  Research, Development and  Demonstration Committee on Science and
              Technology, U.S. House of Representatives, Dec. 12, 1977. H. L. Hickman, Jr. [Washington, U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 13 p.]

    656       The report to Congress: waste disposal practices and their effects on ground water; executive summary,
              Jan. 1977. Office of Water Supply and Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. [Washington],
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, [Reprinted, 1978]. 44 p.

    657       Municipal sludge management, environmental factors; technical bulletin.  U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(211):57420-57427, Nov. 2, 1977.

    658       Solid waste management; monthly abstract bulletin for January through June 1973. v. 1 nos. 1-6,
              abstract nos. 73-3554-73-5349. J. A. Connolly, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-658.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 544 p.

    660       Research and demonstration  grants; interim regulations. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              Federal Register,  38(93): 12784-12790, May 15,  1973.

    661       Noise emission standards for new truck-mounted solid waste compactors.  U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 42(166):43226-43243, Aug. 26, 1977.

    662       Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Solid Waste Product Charge
              Issue, Washington, D.C.,  Nov.  17,  1977. Office of Solid Waste,  comp. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-30p.  Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. 413 p.

    663       EPA activities under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of  1976; annual report to the
              President and the Congress, fiscal year 1977. Office of Solid Waste,  comp. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-663.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978.  80 p.

    664       Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Solid Waste Product Charge
               Issue, Portland, Oreg., Nov. 21, 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental  Protection
               Publication SW-32p. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. [297 p.]

    665       State hazardous waste programs; proposed guidelines. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal
              Register, 43(22):4366-4373, Feb. 1, 1978.

    666       Paper profits; solid waste project. Environmental Action Foundation.  Garbage Guide,  No. 9, 1977.
              Reprinted, [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, [1978]. [4 p.]

    667     J Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; 'co-disposal'  for solid waste and sewage
              sludge. D.  Sussman.  Waste Age, 8(7):44,46,49,  July 1977. Reprinted,  [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [3 p.]

    668       Solid waste disposal facilities; proposed classification criteria. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              Federal Register,  43(25):4942-4955, Feb. 6, 1978.

    669       Municipal solid waste disposal...how cities site landfills. National League of Cities and United States
              Conference of Mayors. [Washington, 1978]. [77 p.]

    670       Toxic substances  control and  solid waste disposal. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal
              Register, 43(12): 2637-2644, Jan. 18, 1978.

    671       Curbing trash; community guide. [ S. J. Valdes-Cogliano ]. League of Women Voters Publication No.
               147. Washington, League of Women Voters Education Fund, 1977. 6  p.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available in public and university libraries.
                                                   91
288-289 O - 79 - 7

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    epa
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    672      Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Solid Waste Product Charge
              Issue, Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 18, 1977. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-31p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. [53 p.]

    673      Transcript; Public Meeting  [on] Strategy for the Implementation of the Resource Conservation and
              Recovery Act of 1976, Arlington, Va., Jan. 19, 1978. Office of Solid Waste,  comp. Environmental
              Protection Publication SW-33p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.  [246 p.]

    675      Save a paper, warm  a home. A. Awner. In Conservation News, 43(2): 8-11, Jan. 15, 1978. Reprinted,
              Washington, National Wildlife Federation, 1978.  [4 p.]

    676      Resource conservation:  how industry might help. S.W. Plehn. Presented to the Forest Industries
              Advisory Council,  Boca Raton, Feb.  10, 1978. Environmental Protection Publication SW-676.
              [Washington] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, lip.

    677      Upgrading hazardous waste disposal sites; remedial approaches. D.G. Farb. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-677. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Jan.  1978. [44 p.]

    678      Source separation, small scale pyrolysis work wonders for the town of Plymouth. R.J. Crowley. Solid
              Waste Systems, 6(3):14, 20,  22, May-June, 1977. Reprinted, [Washington, U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency,  1978]. 3p.

    679      Transcript; Public Hearing on the Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste  Disposal Facilities,
              San Diego, Mar. 1, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-34p.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency.  [94  p.]

    680      Transcript; Public Hearing  on the Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, New
              Orleans, Mar. 9, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-35p.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency.  [230 p.]

    681      Transcript; Public Hearing on the Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, Newton,
              Mass., Mar. 14, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-36p.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency.  [150 p.]

    682      The recovery of magnetic metals from municipal solid waste.' H. Alter et al. Publication No. RM77-1.
              Washington, National Center for Resource Recovery, Inc., Nov. 1977. [68 p.]

    683      Implementation plan for the PCB marking and disposal regulation: facility approval process. M. Straus.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  Feb. 22, 1978. [33 p.]

    684      Transcript; Public Hearing on the Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, Seattle,
              Mar.  16, 1978. Office  of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-37p.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. [130 p.]

    685      Save  energy: recycle solid  waste [Bumper sticker]. Washington,  U.S. Environmental Protection
              Agency, [1978]. [3 by 14 in.]

    686      Thermal methods for the codisposal of sludges and municipal residues. D.B. Sussman and H.W.
              Gershman. Presented at the Fifth National Conference on  Acceptable Sludge Disposal  Techniques,
              Jan.  31-Feb.  2, 1978.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-686.  [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency. 21 p.

    687      Co-disposal of sewage sludge and solid wastes-it works. D. B. Sussman. American City & County,
              92(10):55-58, Oct. 1977.

    688      Industrial waste exchanges; fact sheet.  R.P. Hill. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-688.
              [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency,  1978. [6 p.]

    689      Standards applicable to  transporters  of  hazardous wastes.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
              Federal Register, 43(83): 18506-18512, Apr. 28, 1978.
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
fOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    92

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    690       EPA Journal reprint: resource recovery. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Feb.
              1978. 7p.

    691       Preliminary notification of hazardous waste activities; proposed procedures.  U.S. Environmental
              Protection Agency. Federal Register, 43(133): 29908-29916, July 11, 1978.

    692       Draft environmental impact statement: proposed regulation; criteria for classification of solid waste
              disposal facilities (40 CFR Part 257). Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-692. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1978. [271 p.]

    693       Draft environmental impact statement: proposed regulations; criteria for classification of solid waste
              facilities (40 CFR Part 257). Appendices. Office of Solid Waste. [Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-693.]  Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1978. [232 p.]

    694       Solid waste facts. Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SW-694. [Washington],
              U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1978. 13 p.

    695       Waste clearing houses and exchanges: a summary; new ways for identifying and transferring reusable
              industrial process wastes. R.C. Terry, et al [  Arthur D. Little, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection
              Publication SW-130c.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 13 p. (Full
              document available as  PB-261-287.)

    696       Municipal sludge management; overview of EPA policy and programs [Pamphlet]. S.W.  Plehn.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1978. [8 p.]

    697       Garbage  guide: Citizens in  action; solid waste project. Citizen Guide No.  1. Washington,
              Environmental Action Foundation, 1978. [4 p.]

    698       Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed  Classification Criteria for  Solid Waste  Disposal Facilities,
              Washington, D.C., Apr. 21, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-38p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978. [406 p.]

    699       Transcript; Public Hearing on the Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities,
              Kansas City, Mo., Apr. 24, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-39p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [225 p.]

    700       Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed  Classification Criteria for  Solid Waste  Disposal Facilities,
              Portland,  Oreg.,  Apr. 26,  1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp. Environmental Protection Publication
              SW-40p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [276 p.]

    701       Keeping public  laws public. T.F.  Williams. [  Office of Solid Waste ]. Journal of Soil and Water
              Conservation,  33(l):4-5, Jan.-Feb.  1978.

    702       Transportation of hazardous waste materials; proposed provisions, hearing.  U.S. Department of
              Transportation.  Federal Register, 43(102):22626-22634, May 25, 1978.

    703       Transcript;  EPA/DOT Joint Public Hearing  on the Proposed Regulations for Transportation of
              Hazardous Wastes and Materials, Alexandria, Va., June 20, 1978. Office of Solid Waste, comp.
              Environmental Protection Publication SW-41p. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
              1978. [297 p.]

    705       Process design manual: municipal sludge landfills [Notebook]. Office of Solid Waste, and E. T. Conrad,
              and R. Stearns [  SCS Engineers ].- Environmental Protection Publication SW-705.  [Washington], U.S.
              Environmental Protection Agency, Oct. 1978. [314 p.]

    706       Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed  Classification Criteria for  Solid Waste  Disposal Facilities,
              Cincinnati, June 5, 1978. Office of Solid Waste,  comp. Environmental Protection Publication SW-42p.
              [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. [268 p.]
*See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
 (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
{Available  in public and university libraries.


                                                    93

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  order nos.*


     707       Technical assistance to state and local governments. Resource Conservation & Recovery Panels
               Program.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-707.  [Washington], U.S. Environmental
               Protection Agency, 1978. [4 p.]

     708       Status report on solid waste disposal charge analysis; 3d report to the President and Congress of the
               United States mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580).
               The Resource Conservation Committee. [Washington], Resource Conservation Committee, July 1978.
               [170 p.]

     710       Methane production, recovery, and utilization from landfills.  S.C.  James and C.W. Rhyne.
               Environmental Protection Publication SW-710. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
               [1978]. [14 p.]

     711       Ames: progress and problems continue. R. Holloway. American City & County, 93(5): 56-58, May
               1978. Reprinted, Despite higher costs than expected, this Iowa city's refuse-to- energy project is still
               going strong after 18 months of operation.  [Environmental  Protection Publication SW-711.]
               [Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Sept. 1978. 2 p.]

     712       Baltimore; a lesson in resource recovery. R.A.  Haverland • and D.B. Sussman. Presented at the
               American Society of Civil Engineers Environmental Engineering Division Specialty Conference, July
               10-12, 1978. Environmental Protection Publication  SW-712. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
               Protection Agency, 1978. 7 p.

     713       Federal environmental laws and you. In Current Focus. Publication no. 564. Washington, League of
               Women Voters Education fund, [1978]. 12 p.

     714       State  solid waste management plans; guidelines for development and implementation.  U.S.
               Environmental Protection  Agency.  Federal Register, 43(167): 38534-38546, Aug. 28, 1978.

     715       Resource recovery project development grants under the President's urban policy; notice of meeting
               and request for comments. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Federal Register, 43(147): 33670-
               33674, July 31, 1978.
 *See order form for EPA Solid Waste publications in back of catalog.
 tOut of print; may be available from EPA libraries, Government Printing Office depository libraries
'. (See List of Depository Libraries), or NTIS (if PB number is given ).
 ^Available in public and university libraries.


                                                    94

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   ntis
order nos.*
                                   NTIS   Reports
             Composting of organic wastes; an annotated bibliography; suppl. 1. J. S. Wiley. Technical Development
                 Laboratories. Savannah, Ga., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, June 1959.
                 65 p.

             Composting of organic wastes; an annotated bibliography; suppl. 2. J. S. Wiley. Communicable Disease
                 Center. Savannah, Ga., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1960. 66 p.

             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.

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

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

             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.

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

             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.]

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

             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.

             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.

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

             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.

             Construction of a chemical-microbial pilot plant for production of single-cell protein from cellulosic
                 wastes. C. D. Callihan and C.  E. Dunlap. Environmental Protection Publication SW-24c.
                 Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1971. 126 p.

             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.

             Sanitary landfill design, construction,  and evaluation. M. J. Wilcomb and H. L. Hickman, Jr, comps.
                 Environmental Protection Publication SW-88ts.  Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
                 1971. 11 p.
PB-147-220



PB-148-097


PB-187-286



PB-187-299


PB-187-301


PB-187-306



PB-187-311


PB-187-712



PB-196-148


PB-197-623


PB-197-931



PB-201-205


PB-202-202



PB-203-620



PB-203-622


PB-203-623



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                 95

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    ntis
 order nos.*


PB-204-403    Sanitary landfill facts. 2nd ed. T. J. Sorg and H. L. Hickman, Jr. Public Health Service Publication
                   No. 1792. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1970. 30 p.

PB-204-404    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.

PB-205-656    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.

PB-205-657    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.

PB-206-585    Solid wastes management in Germany; report of the U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit, June 25-July
                   8, 1967. S. A. Hart. Public Health Service Publication No. 1812. Washington, U.S. Government
                   Printing Office, 1968.  18 p.

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

PB-208-674    Evaluation, extraction,  and recycling of certain solid waste components. Great Lakes Research
                   Institute. Environmental Protection Publication SW-35d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                   1972.  110 p.

PB-209-000    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.]

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

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

PB-212-398    Rural storage and collection container systems [1972].  Humboldt County and Garretson-Elmendorf-
                   Zinov-Reibin. Environmental Protection Publication SW-41d.l. 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. U.S.
                   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. 1—general report. Battelle
                   Memorial Institute.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-40d.l. U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency, 1972. 178 p.

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

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

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   96

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

             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.]

             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.]

             A guide to the study of solid waste systems. H. R. Little. Office of Solid Waste Management.
                 [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, Dec. 1971. 49 p.

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

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

             Metropolitan housewives'  attitudes toward solid  waste disposal. National Analysts, Inc. U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, 1972.  114 p.

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

             Lower Rio Grande Valley regional plan for solid waste disposal utilizing rail haul. J. F. Malina, Jr.
                 and B. F. Martin. Office  of Solid  Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication
                 SW-5tg. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1971. 84 p.

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

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

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

             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.

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

             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.

             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.

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

             Landfill decomposition gases; an annotated bibliography. J. A. Geyer. U.S. Environmental Protection
                 Agency, 1972. 28 p.
PB-213-132



PB-213-133



PB-213-135



PB-213-304


PB-213-308


PB-213-311


PB-213-340


PB-213-341


PB-213-347



PB-213-376


PB-213-378


PB-213-394


PB-213-444



PB-213-472




PB-213-473



PB-213-478


PB-213-482


PB-213-487


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  97

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   ntis
order nos.*
             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.

             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.

             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.

             Energy recovery from waste; a municipal-utility joint venture. Homer and Shifrin, Inc. and City of
                 St.  Louis, Union  Electric Co. Environmental Protection Publication SW-36d/i. Washington,
                 Government Printing Office, 1972. 20 p.

             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.

             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.

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

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

             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.

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

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

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             Joint USPHA-TVA composting project, Johnson City, Tennessee; interim report, June 1967 through
                 Sept. 1969. Environmental Protection Publication SW-31r.l. Washington, U.S. Environmental
                 Protection Agency, 1972. 223 p.

             Toward a new environmental ethic [Pamphlet]. Environmental Protection  Agency. Washington,
                 Government Printing Office,  1971. 28 p.
PB-213-488


PB-213-492


PB-213-511


PB-213-534



PB-213-577



PB-213-646



PB-213-680


PB-213-697



PB-213-718



PB-213-939



PB-213-961


PB-214-031



PB-214-032


PB-214-039



PB-214-045


PB-214-056



PB-214-071


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  98

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   ntis
order nos.*
             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.

             Design of a  solid waste management  system for the Eastern Appalachia Health Region of North
                 Carolina. J. M. Sweeten. Office of Solid Waste Management.  Environmental Protection
                 Publication SW-80.  [Cincinnati],  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 94 p.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

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

             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.

             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.

             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.

             A review of industrial solid wastes. R. L. Cummins. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati],
                  U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 46 p.

             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.

             Composting of organic wastes; an annotated bibliography. J. S. Wiley. Public Health Service. Savannah,
                  Ga., U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  Public Health Service, Technical
                  Division Laboratories, 1958.  128 p.

             Solid  waste characteristics at the Atlanta State Farmer's Market. F. G. Pohland. Georgia Institute
                  of Technology. Environmental Protection Publication SW-3tg. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency,  1971.  29 p.

             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.
PB-214-073



PB-214-089



PB-214-092



PB-214-133



PB-214-152


PB-214-166



PB-214-440



PB-214-441



PB-214-448



PB-214-558



PB-214-760


PB-214-924


PB-214-960



PB-215-202



PB-215-289



PB-215-299


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  99

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

             Maricopa County; an interim report on a solid waste demonstration project. John Carollo Engineers.
                 [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1969. 329 p.

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

             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.

             Summaries; solid waste demonstration grant projects-1968. C. E. Sponagle. Environmental Control
                 Administration. Public Health Publication 1821.  Cincinnati, U.S. Department of Health,
                 Education, and Welfare,  1968. 102 p.

             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.

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

             Sanitary landfill; a bibliography.  R. L. Steiner and R. Kantz. Public Health Service Publication No.
                 1819. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1968. 37 p.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             Industrial Solid Wastes Management; Prospects in Technology for Resource Recovery; Proceedings;
                 National Industrial Solid Wastes Management Conference, University of Houston, Mar. 24
                 through 26,  1970. Houston, University of Houston,  Civil and Environmental Engineering
                 Department,  1970. 497 p.

             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.

             Summaries of solid waste research and training grants—1970 [Insert]. 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.

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

             Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1962-1963. R. J. Black, J.  B. Wheeler, and
                 W. G.  Henderson. Public  Health  Service Publication No. 91, Suppl. F. Washington,  U.S.
                 Government Printing Office,  1966.  134 p.
PB-215-328


PB-215-699


PB-215-722


PB-215-844


PB-215-867



PB-215-878



PB-215-903



PB-215-904


PB-215-907


PB-215-920



PB-215-934



PB-215-951



PB-216-100




PB-216-105


PB-216-106



PB-216-192


PB-216-196



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                 100

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    ntis
 order nos.*
PB-216-208
PB-216-234
PB-216-348
PB-216-369
PB-216-370
PB-216-460
PB-216-480
PB-216-584
PB-216-585
PB-216-586
PB-216-587
PB-216-588
PB-216-653
PB-216-654
PB-216-735
PB-216-840
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.

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

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.]

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.]

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.]

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

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

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

Solving the abandoned  vehicle problem in  small communities. W. T. Dehn. Bureau of Solid Waste
     Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 32 p.

Report on the DeKalb County incinerator study. L. E. Daniels. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-31ts. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Department of Health,
     Education, and Welfare, 1970.  74 p.

Solid waste management practices in a plastics production  plant. W. T. Dehn and D. E. Carruth.
     Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
     Welfare, 1970. 39  p.
Report on a study of the Alexandria, Virginia incinerator. T. A. Hegdahl. Bureau of Solid Waste
     Management. Environmental Protection Publication SW-12ts. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of
     Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 53 p.

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

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

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

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.]
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   101

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   ntis
order nos.*
             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.]

             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.

             Systems engineering applied to selection and replacement of solid waste collection vehicles for Lawrence,
                 Kansas. D. A. Degner. Kansas University. Environmental Protection Publication SW-4tg.
                 [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1971. 91 p.

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

             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.

             National survey (1968) 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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.

             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.]

             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.

             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.

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

             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.

             Investigation of corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades. L. R. Fleischer. U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. [44 p.]
PB-216-888


PB-217-061



PB-217-775



PB-217-821


PB-217-834


PB-217-913




PB-217-958



PB-218-252



PB-218-263



PB-218-265



PB-218-672




PB-219-019



PB-219-372



PB-220-316


PB-220-479


PB-221-095


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  102

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

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

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

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

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

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

            PB-221-467      v. 3. [460 p.]
              A recirculating waste system for swine units. J. R. Miner. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
                   [247 p.]

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

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

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

              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.

              Utilization of bark waste.  R. A. Currier and M. L. Laver. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                   1973. 185 p.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

              Wood waste reuse in controlled release pesticides. G. G. Allan et al.  U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency,  1973. [97  p.]
PB-221-621


PB-221-681


PB-221-684


PB-221-731


PB-221-851


PB-221-876


PB-221-877

PB-221-879


PB-222-000


PB-222-001


PB-222-015


PB-222-018


PB-222-029


PB-222-031


PB-222-051


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                    103

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

              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.

              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.]

              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.]

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

              Tentative procedure analyzing pesticide  residues in solid waste. R. A. Carnes.  U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency, 1972. [23 p.]

              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.]

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

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

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

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

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

              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.]

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

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

              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.

              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.]

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

              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.

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
PB-222-113
PB-222-115
PB-222-148
PB-222-160
PB-222-165
PB-222-337
PB-222-354
PB-222-396
PB-222-419
PB-222-422
PB-222-454
PB-222-458
PB-222-467
PB-222-468
PB-222-588
PB-222-694
PB-222-709
PB-222-710
                                                  104

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 order nos.*
PB-222-995
PB-223-034
PB-223-162
PB-223-343
PB-223-345
PB-223-430
PB-223-625
PB-223-626
PB-223-638
PB-223-651
PB-223-740
PB-223-873
Systems simulation and solid waste; a case study. R. M. Clark and J. I. Gillean. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1973. [40 p.]
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.]
Pneumo-slurry pipeline collection and removal of municipal solid waste. I. Zandi. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1973. [128 p.]
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.
A study of institutional solid wastes. J. C. Burchinal and L. P. Wallace. U.S.  Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1973. 245 p.
Poultry manure disposal by plow-furrow-cover. H. E. Besley. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
     1973. 202 p.
Utilization of fibrous wastes as sources of nutrients. J. M. Leatherwood. U.S.  Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1973. 16 p.
Design and control of incinerators, v. 1-2. A. F. Sarofim et al. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
     1973. 299 p.
Public attitudes towards hazardous waste disposal facilities. L. L. Lackey  et al. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1973.  181 p.
Incineration of plastics found in municipal wastes. R. W.  Heimberg et al.  U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1973. 246 p.
The metallurgical upgrading of automotive scrap  steel. O. N. Carlson  and  F. A. Schmidt. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 90 p.
Single-cell proteins from cellulosic wastes. C. D. Callihan and C. E. Dunlap. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1973. 89 p.
PB-224-579-Set   Recommended methods of reduction, neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste. R.
                      S. Ottinger et al. [ TRW Systems Group ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
                      16 v.
            PB-224-580
            PB-224-581
            PB-224-582
            PB-224-583
            PB-224-584
            PB-224-585
            PB-224-586
            PB-224-587
            PB-224-588
            PB-224-589
            PB-224-590
            PB-224-591
              v. 1. Summary report. 210 p.
              v. 2. Toxicologjc summary. 244 p.
              v. 3. Ultimate incineration. 251 p.
              v. 4. Miscellaneous waste treatment processes. 149 p.
              v. 5. Pesticides and cyanide compounds. 146 p.
              v. 6. Mercury, arsenic, chromium, and cadmium compounds. 207 p.
              v. 7. Propellants, explosives, and chemical warfare material. 266 p.
              v. 8. Miscellaneous inorganic and organic compounds. 79 p.
              v. 9. Radioactive materials. 168 p.
              v. 10. Organic compounds. 316 p.
              v. 11. Organic compounds (continued).  247  p.
              v. 12. Inorganic compounds. 330 p.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   105

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

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

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

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

PB-224-820    Reuse of solid waste from water-softening processes. R. D. Nelson and E. Vey [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.

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. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.
                   265 p.

PB-225-360-Set   Sewage sludge disposal in  a sanitary landfill. Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. Environmental
                      Protection Publication SW61-d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 2 v.

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

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

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

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   106

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PB-226-099
PB-226-420
PB-226-551
PB-226-960
PB-227-000
PB-227-005
PB-227-014
PB-227-075
PB-227-561
 PB-227-565
 PB-227-578
 PB-227-708
 PB-228-119
 PB-228-161
 PB-228-165
 PB-229-206
 PB-229-220
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.

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.

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

Braintree, Massachusetts, municipal incinerator. R. J. Brinkerhoff and W. C. Achinger. Office of Solid
     Waste Management.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-108. [Cincinnati], U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 96 p.

The automobile dismantling industry, a survey of solid waste management practices in four cities. U.S.
     Department of Commerce, Bureau of Domestic Commerce [Office of Solid Waste Management.]
     Environmental Protection  Publication SW-103of.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1973.  41 p.

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

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.

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.

Solid waste research needs. R. D. Bugher. Chicago, American Public Works Association Research
     Foundation, May 1962. 83 p.

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.

Solid Wastes; Proceedings of a Symposium at Lawrence, Kansas, Mar. 2, 1966. Kansas City, Mo., U.S.
     Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service, 1966.  70 p.

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

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.

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

Conservation  of resources in municipal waste. C. E. Scarsbrook et al. Auburn University.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-13rg. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1971. 149  p.

Effects of community-wide installation of household garbage-grinders  on environmental sanitation. G.
     K. Erganian, W. G. Belter, and R. C. Graber. Public Health Service. Public Health Publication
     No. 224. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1974.  47 p.

A case study and business analysis of the scrap industry.  Resource Planning Institute. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 129 p.
 *See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
28B-289 O - 79 - (
                                                    107

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

             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.

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

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

             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.

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

             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.

             Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study [1974]. EMCON Associates. Environmental Protection
                 Publication SW-65d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  224 p.

             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.

             Reclamation of energy from organic waste. J. T. Pfeffer. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
                 143 p.

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

             Optimization models for regional public systems. K. S. Vasan. National Science Foundation and U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 137 p.

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

             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.

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

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

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

             Program for the management  of hazardous wastes, v. 2. Battelle  Memorial Institute. U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 778  p.

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

             Transportation rates and costs  for selected virgin and secondary commodities. Moshman Associates,
                 Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.  234  p.
PB-229-246


PB-229-256


PB-229-727


PB-229-816


PB-229-817


PB-229-901


PB-230-171



PB-230-379


PB-230-386


PB-231-176


PB-231-203


PB-231-309


PB-232-559


PB-233-178


PB-233-360


PB-233-441


PB-233-630


PB-233-631


PB-233-641


PB-233-871


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                 108

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    ntis
 order nos.*
PB-233-873
PB-233-878
PB-234-068
PB-234-139
PB-234-140
PB-234-141
PB-234-496
PB-234-497
PB-234-498
PB-234-499
PB-234-544
PB-234-602
PB-234-605
PB-234-612
PB-234-713
PB-234-715
PB-234-716
The Des Moines story; a report on the implementation of the solid waste management plan for the
     Des Moines Metropolitan Area Solid Waste Agency. R. C. Porter and Henningson, Durham,
     and Richardson. Environmental Protection Publication SW-70d. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974. 272 p.

Wichita's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-73c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 89
     P-
Kansas City's municipal solid waste management system. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-72c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
     249 p.

Jacksonville's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
     Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 156 p.

Dallas' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-70c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
     103 p.

Fresno's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-71c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
     174 p.

A preliminary assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection. P. M.  Meier et al. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 179 p.

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.

Economic analysis of the processing and disposal of refuse sludges.  P. Kos et al. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1974. 85  p.

Wet systems for residential refuse collection; a case study for Springfield, Massachusetts. P. M. Meier.
     U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 220 p.

Solid waste management plan. Rhode Island Department of Health.  Rhode  Island State Planning
     Program, Governor's Environmental Task Force.  Providence,  Rhode Island Statewide Planning
     Program, Dec. 1973. 136 p.

Tire recycling and  reuse incentives.  International Research  and Technology Corporation.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-32c.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
     88 p. (See PB-252-602.)

The Atlanta  household  refuse compactor demonstration project. Bradbury  Associates, Inc. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 155 p.

Financial methods for solid waste facilities. Resource Planning Associates. Environmental Protection
     Publication SW-76c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974. 376 p.

Memphis' municipal solid waste management system;  a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
     Inc. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 137 p.

Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v.l. A. M.
     Kinney, Inc. Environmental  Protection Publication SW-47d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974.  [63 p.]

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.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   109

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  order nos.*
PB-234-808   Bay area solid waste management implementation project. Enviromental ilmpact Planning Corporation.
    Set       Berkeley, Association of Bay Area Governments, Dec. 1973. 3 v.


            PB-234-809      v.  1. Project report. 117 p.

            PB-234-810      v. 2. Environmental evaluation for the Bay delta recovery demonstration project.  134
                                 P-
            PB-234-811      v.  3. Technical report on levee stabilization and composting. 97 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, 1975. 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-235-319    State of Vermont Agency of Environmental Conservation solid waste  management and resource
                  recovery plan.Resource Planning Associates.'[Environmental Protection Publication SW-74.01.]
                  Montpelier, Vt., Agency of Environmental Conservation, Jan. 1973. 85 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.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973.  128 p.

PB-236-543    A study of pneumatic solid waste collection systems as employed in  hospitals. Ross Hofmann,
                  Associates. Environmental Protection Publication SW-75c. U.S.  Environmental Protection
                  Agency,  1974. 260 p., app.

PB-236-659    Columbus' municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences,
                  Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-82c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                   1974. 156 p.

PB-236-662    Detroit's municipal solid waste management system; a case study. Applied Management Sciences, Inc.
                  Environmental Protection Publication SW-81c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1973. 94
                  P-
PB-236-904    Demonstration of waste flow  reduction  from households. S. Cohen  and H. Wallman. U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 103 p.

*See order form for NTIS publications in back  of catalog.
                                                  110

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 order DOS.*
PB-237-264
PB-237-525
PB-237-618
PB-237-619
PB-237-620
PB-237-630
PB-238-145
PB-238-654
PB-238-674
PB-238-747
PB-238-819
PB-239-116
PB-239-117
PB-239-119
PB-239-195
PB-239-196
Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, v. 2. Appendices. Arthur
     D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-46c.l. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1973. 235 p.

Mine spoil potentials for soil and water quality. R. M. Smith et al. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974. 303 p.

A technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt.  1. Federal research on waste oil from
     automobiles. P. Cukor, M. J. Keaton, and G. Wilcox [ Teknekron, Inc., and the Institute of Public
     Administration ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-90c.l. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1974.  107 p.

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.

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.

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.]

Promising technologies for treatment of hazardous wastes.  R. Landreth and C.  Rogers. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 44 p.

An analysis of the current impact of plastic refuse disposal upon the environment. D. A. Vaughan,
     M. Y. Anastas, and H.  H. Krause. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 49 p.

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.

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.

Forecasts of the effects of air and water pollution controls on solid waste generation. R. Stone and
     D. E. Brown [ Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974.
     830 p.

Evaluation of the feasibility and economic implications of pricing mechanisms in solid waste
     management. E. Ulrich. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 88  p.

Analysis models for solid waste collection, v. 1. J. F. Hudson, D.  S. Grossman, and D. H. Marks. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 229 p.

Industrial solid waste classification systems. J. B. Berkowitz et al.  [ Arthur D. Little,  Inc. ]. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 413 p.

Mechanized residential solid waste collection. M. G. Stragier. Environmental Protection Publication
     SW-74d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974. 176 p.

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.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   Ill

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    ntis
 order nos.*
PB-239-357
PB-239-392
PB-239-494
PB-239-502
PB-239-509
PB-239-618
PB-239-631
PB-239-736
PB-239-775
PB-239-776
PB-239-778
PB-239-869
An evaluation of landfill gas migration and a prototype gas migration barrier. City of Winston-Salem,
     North Carolina and Enviro Engineers, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-79d. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 154 p.

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 [ Gordion Associates, Inc.  ]. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 329 p.

Analysis models for solid waste collection, v. 2. Appendices and documentation. J. F. Hudson, D. S.
     Grossman, and D. H. Marks. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1975. 225 p.

Fabrication of single cell protein from cellulosic wastes. W. H. Daly and L. P. Ruiz. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1975.  71  p.

Solid waste conversion: cellulose liquefaction. J. A. Kaufman and  A. H. Weiss. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, 1975. 216 p.

An experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; second annual  report. O. B. Andersland. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 230 p.

Criteria for regional solid waste management planning. B.  H. Stevens. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974. 338 p.

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.

Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; separate collection studies [v.  1]. SCS
     Engineers, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-95c.l. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974. 157 p.

Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid  waste; collection center studies [v. 2]. SCS
     Engineers, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-95c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1974. 72  p.

Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study [1975]. EMCON Associates. Environmental Protection
     Publication SW-65d.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 283 p.

An experimental high ash  papermill sludge landfill; first annual report. O. B. Andersland et al. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 200 p.
PB-239-895-Set   Routing of solid waste collection vehicles. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 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-239-917   Residential collection systems, v. 2.  Detailed study and analysis. ACT Systems, Inc. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-97c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 254 p.

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   112

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             Rural storage and collection container systems [1975]. Humboldt County, California. Environmental
                  Protection Publication  SW-81d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 126 p.

             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.

             High-temperature vortex incinerator. R. C. Thurnau and D. A. Oberacker. U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency, 1975. 32 p.

             An evaluation of the impact of discriminatory taxation on the use of primary and secondary raw
                  materials. Booz Allen and Hamilton, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-lOlc. U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. 148 p.

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—storage and primary batteries industries. Versar,
                  Incorporated. [Environmental Protection Publication] SW-102c. U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, Jan. 1975. [209 p.]

             Lee County, Mississippi, solid waste disposal project. Lee County Board of Supervisors. Environmental
                  Protection Publication  SW-83d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. [140 p.]

             Requiring  secondary materials in Federal construction; a feasibility study. J. M. Ramsey [ Resource
                  Planning Associates ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-130c. U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency, Jan. 1975.  [206 p.]

             Preliminary design  of a comprehensive waste oil processing facility. G. D.  Gumtz  and E. J. Martin
                  [ Maryland  Environmental Services ].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975.  142
                  P-

             Use of domestic  waste glass for urban paving; summary report. W. R. Malisch, D. E. Day, and B.
                  G. Wixson [ University of Missouri ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975. 60 p.

             Specifications for materials recovered from municipal refuse. H. Alter  and  W. R. Reeves [ National
                  Center for Resource Recovery, Inc. ].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1975.  120
                  P-

             A study of the feasibility  of requiring the Federal Government to use retreaded tires. W. A.  Rains
                  and D. E. Williams [ Smithers Scientific Service, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication
                  SW-105c. U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1975. 122 p.

             A model countywide collection and disposal system for Clark County, Arkansas. Clark County,
                  Arkansas. Environmental Protection Publication SW-84d. U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, 1975. [166 p.]

             Recycling of waste oils. S.  Maizus [ National Oil Recovery  Corporation ]. U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency, June 1975. 283 p.

             Environmental assessment of future disposal methods for plastics  in municipal solid waste. D. A.
                  Vaughan et  al. [ Battelle Columbus Laboratories ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June
                  1975.  86 p.

             Methods to treat, control and monitor spilled hazardous materials. R.  J. Pilie et  al. [ Calspan
                  Corporation ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 149 p.

             Measuring external effects of solid waste management. R. Schmalensee, R. Ramanathan, W. Ramm,
                  and D. Smallwood [ Institute for Policy Analysis ]. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, Office of Research and Development, Mar. 1975. 450 p.
PB-240-365


PB-240-395



PB-240-723


PB-240-988



PB-241-204



PB-241-468


PB-241-729



PB-242-461



PB-242-536


PB-242-540



PB-243-028



PB-243-029



PB-243-222


PB-243-366



PB-243-386


PB-243-407



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                 113

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    ntis
 order nos.*
PB-243-634
St. Louis refuse processing plant: equipment, facility, and environmental evaluations. L. J. Shannon,
     D. E. Fiscus, and P. G. Gorman [ Midwest Research Institute ]. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, May 1975. 122 p.
PB-244-309-Set   Characterization and utilization of municipal and utility sludges and ashes. U.S. Environmental
                      Protection Agency, May 1975. 3 v.

            PB-244-310      v. 1. Summary. N. L. Hecht and D. S. Duvall [University of Dayton Research Insti-
                                 tute]. 40 p.

            PB-244-311      v. 2. Municipal sludges. N. L. Hecht,  D. S. Duvall, and A. S. Rachidi [ University
                                 of Dayton Research Institute ]. 241 p.

            PB-244-312      v. 3. Utility coal ash. N. L. Hecht and  D. S. Duvall [ University of Dayton Research
                                 Institute ]. 74 p.

PB-244-557   Guidelines for the disposal of small quantities of unused pesticides. E. W. Lawless, T. L. Ferguson,
                   and A. F. Meiners [ Midwest Research Institute ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June
                   1975. 342 p.

PB-244-832   Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices- inorganic chemicals industry. R. G. Shaver et
                   al. [ Versar, Incorporated ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-104c. U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency, Mar. 1975. [505  p.]

PB-244-841   Handbook for initiating or improving commercial  refuse collection: appendices. City  of Scottsdale,
                   Arizona.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-85d.l. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency, June 1974.  186 p.

PB-245-271   Review of landspreading of liquid municipal sewage sludge. T. E. Carroll et al. [ Battelle Columbus
                   Laboratories ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975.  110 p.

PB-245-376   Solid Wastes Management; Proceedings; National Conference, University of California at Davis, Apr.
                   4-5,  1966. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr.  1966. 216 p.

PB-245-672   Evaluation of shredding facilities, Rock Cut Road Plant  No. 1; Onondaga County Solid Waste Disposal
                   Authority, Onondaga County, New  York. Onodaga County Solid Waste Disposal Authority.
                   Environmental Protection Publication SW-86d. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.
                   [147 p.]

PB-245-674   A technical, environmental and economic evaluation of the "wet processing system for the recovery
                   and  disposal of municipal  solid waste". Systems Technology  Corporation.  Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-109c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. [147 p.]

PB-245-924   Base line forecasts of resource recovery, 1972 to 1990: final report. G. R. Nuss et al. [ Midwest Research
                   Institute  ].  Environmental  Protection Publication SW-107c. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, 1975. 376 p.

PB-247-185   Evaluation of solid waste baling and balefills,  v. 1-2. Ralph Stone and Company, Inc. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-lllc.l. U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency, 1975. [375 p.]

PB-247-566   Injury reporting and information system  field test, v.  1. D.  M. J. Compton and K. King [ Safety
                   Sciences, WSA, Incorporated  ].  Environmental Protection Publication SW-110c.l. U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. [138 p.]

PB-247-567   Injury reporting and information system field test,  v. 2. Tabulation of data. D. M. J. Compton and
                   K. King  [ Safety  Sciences,  WSA,  Incorporated ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
                   HOc.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975. [66 p.]

*See order form for NTIS publications in  back of catalog.
                                                   114

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 order nos.*
PB-249-747
PB-250-717
PB-250-798
PB-250-802
PB-250-905
PB-251-291
PB-251-307
PB-251-669
PB-251-716
PB-252-602
PB-252-864
PB-252-865
PB-253-051
PB-253-304
PB-253-326
Chemical waste land disposal facility demonstration grant application. Ban Engineering Company for
     the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Environmental Protection Publication SW-87d. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.  183 p.

A study of selected landfills designed as pesticide disposal sites. TRW Systems Group. Environmental
     Protection Publication SW-114c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 143 p.

Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v. 1,
     sect. 1-8,10. Arthur D. Little, Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-115c.l. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.  383 p.

Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v. 3.
     Appendices. Arthur D. Little, Inc.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-115c.3. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.  422 p.

Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v. 2,
     sect.  9. Process economics. Arthur D. Little, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
     115c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 257 p.

Evaluation of small modular incinerators  in municipal plants. Ross Hofmann Associates.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-113c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.
     115 p.

Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—organic chemicals, pesticides, and explosives
     industries. G. E. Gruber [ TRW Systems Group ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
     118c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1975. [355 p.]

Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices-paint and allied products industry contract solvent
     reclaiming operations, and factory application of coatings. [ WAPORA, Inc. ]. Environmental
     Protection Publication SW-119c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. [310 p.]

A technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, [pts. 4-6]. pt. 4. Energy consumption in waste
     oil recovery, pt. 5. A field test of the quality of re-refined lube oils. pt. 6. A review of re-refining
     economics. P. M. Cukor and T. Hall [ Teknekron,  Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication
     SW-90c.4. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, Oct. 1975. [148 p.]

Tire recycling and reuse incentives. C. C. Humpstone et al. [ International Research and Technology
     Corporation ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-32c. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency,  1974. 97 p. (Supersedes PB-234-602. Reissued  1976 with an appendix  added.)

Handbook for pesticide disposal by common chemical methods. C. C. Shih and C. F. Dal Porto [ TRW
     Systems Group ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-112c. U.S. Environmental
     Protection Agency, Dec. 1975. 103 p.

Merced County's demonstration sanitary landfill and collection  project. Merced County Advisory
     Board for Solid Waste Management, Solid Waste Disposal Division. Environmental Protection
     Publication SW-121c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. [169 p.]

Survey of methods used to control wastes containing hexachlorobenzene. S. Quinlivan, M. Ghassemi,
     and M. Santy [ TRW Systems Group ].  Environmental Protection Publication SW-120c. U.S.
     Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.  [97 p.].

Comparing conventionally landfilled solid waste with processed landfilled solid waste; final report on
     a solid waste demonstration  grant report. R.  C. Jones. Marion, Ohio, Floyd G. Browne and
     Associates, 1973.  137 p.

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.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   115

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 order nos.*
PB-253-330
PB-253-406
PB-253-485
PB-253-486
PB-253-487
PB-254-550
PB-254-619
PB-254-623
PB-255-129
PB-255-133
PB-255-139
PB-255-141
PB-255-695
PB-256-348
PB-256-349
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.

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

A study of pesticide disposal in a sewage sludge incinerator. F. C. Whitmore [Versar, Incorporated].
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-116c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1975.
     193 p.

Resource and environmental profile analysis of nine beverage container alternatives; final report. R.
     G. Hunt et al.  [ Midwest Research Institute ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-91c.
     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 185 p.

Environmental impacts of virgin and recycled steel and aluminum. R. C. Ziegler et al. [ Calspan
     Corporation ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-117c. U.S. Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1976. 124 p.

Twelve-month extension Sonoma County solid  waste stabilization study. EMCON Associates.
     Environmental Protection Publication SW-120c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976.
     [54 p.]

Incentives for recycling and reuse  of plastics; a summary report. [ Arthur  D.  Little, Inc.  ]
     Environmental Protection Publication Sw-41c.l. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Environmental Protection
     Agency, 1973. 18 p.

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

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.

Establishing a regional sanitary landfill in the Kansas City metropolitan area. D. G. Fenn and N. Artz.
     Mid-American Regional Council. Environmental Protection Publication SW-43d. [Cincinnati],
     U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 17 p.

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.

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

Study of the feasibility of Federal procurement of fuels produced from solid waste. Arthur D. Little,
     Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-123c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
     July 1975. 256 p.

Improving state solid waste management programs; with addendum and  appendix. T.  Edgar and J.
     Roat. Office of Solid Waste Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
     74.of. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 143 p.

A preliminary evaluation  of the pit incinerator. L. E. Daniels. Office of Solid Waste Management.
     [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 78 p.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   116

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    ntis
 order nos.*


PB-256-355    Advanced techniques for incineration of municipal solid wastes. J. DeMarco. Office of Solid Waste
                   Management Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-38d.of. [Cincinnati], U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency,  1972. 18 p.

PB-256-356    Landfill temperature sampling interval analysis. J. A. Geyer and R. J. Wigh. Office of Solid Waste
                   Research. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-118.  [Cincinnati],  U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency,  1971. 23 p.

PB-256-357    Studies of small particles in solid waste operations. N. S. Ulmer. Office of Solid Waste Research.
                   Environmental Protection Publication SWR-102. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Environmental Protection
                   Agency,  1971. 38 p.

PB-256-358    Evaluation of a muffle furnace procedure  for determining percent ash and  percent weight loss on
                   heating of solid wastes. N. S. Ulmer. Office of Solid Waste Research. Environmental Protection
                   Publication SWR-101. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 78  p.

PB-256-359    Evaluation of the MC-300A soil moisture meter to determine in-place moisture content of refuse at
                   land disposal sites; progress  report. R. J. Wigh. Office of Solid Waste Management.
                   Environmental Protection Publication SWR-91. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency,  1971. 24 p.

PB-256-364    Extension of carbon-hydrogen method to include determination of volatiles or loss on ignition (L.O.I.)
                   at 950C. D.  L. Wilson. Office of Solid Waste Research. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SWR-156. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14  p.

PB-256-365    Mathematical determination of total oxygen in solid waste. D. L. Wilson. Office  of SoEd Waste
                   Research. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-155.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency,  1971. 17 p.

PB-256-366    Formulas (incorporating decomposition of carbonates at 600 C) for the determination of total oxygen
                   in solid  wastes.  D. L. Wilson. Office of Solid Waste Research. Environmental Protection
                   Publication SWR-149. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 28  p.

PB-256-367    Laboratory  procedure for the determination of selenium in solid waste. H. Johnson. Office of Solid
                   Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 12 p.

PB-256-368    Laboratory procedure for determining the total heat of combustion in solid wastes. D. L. Wilson. Office
                   of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  26 p.

PB-256-370    Laboratory  procedure for determining percent ash and percent weight loss of solid wastes on heating
                   at 600  C. N. S. Ulmer. Office of Solid Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SWR-128. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 19  p.

PB-256-371    Laboratory  procedure for the gravimetric determination of carbonate carbon in solid wastes. D. L.
                   Wilson. Office of Solid Waste. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-126. [Cincinnati], U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 37 p.

PB-256-372   Vacuum-acid hydrolysis of fungal protein and of other protein sources. W. E. Coleman. Office of Solid
                   Waste Management.  Environmental Protection Publication SWR-125. [Cincinnati], U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 14 p.

PB-256-373   Evaluation of a method for the determination of inorganic carbon (carbonates) in solid wastes. D. L.
                   Wilson. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-122.
                   [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 19 p.

PB-256-374   Methods for bacteriological examination of solid waste and waste effluents. M. L. Peterson. National
                   Environmental Research Center. Environmental Protection Publication SW-68r.of. Cincinnati,
                   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. 40 p.
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                    117

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             Determination of the phosphate in solid waste using the vanadomolybdophosphoric acid method. W.
                  H. Kaylor. Office of Solid Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-130.
                  Cincinnati, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 15  p.

             Laboratory procedure for the potential heat determination in solid wastes. D. L. Wilson. Office of Solid
                  Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-135. [Cincinnati], U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  13 p.

             Laboratory procedure for the gravimetric determination of carbon and hydrogen in solid wastes (for
                  methods manual). D. L. Wilson. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. Environmental Protection
                  Publication SWR-71. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970.
                  40 p.

             Procedure for the mathematical determination of total heat of combustion content of solid wastes. D.
                  L. Wilson. Office of Solid Waste Research.  Environmental Protection Publication SWR-162.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 15 p.

             Determination of heat of combustion of solid wastes from ultimate analysis. D. L. Wilson. Office of
                  Solid Waste Research. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-160.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  18 p.

             Bacteriological study of the New Orleans East incinerator. D. F. Spino. Office of Solid Waste Research.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 19 p.

             Laboratory procedure for the preparation of solid waste related materials for analysis. I. R. Cohen.
                  Office of Solid Waste Research. Environmental Protection Publication SWR-136. [Cincinnati],
                  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 17 p.

             Water quality/land disposed solid waste. T. V. DeGeare, R. J. Wigh, and R. A. Young. Office of Solid
                  Waste Management. Environmental Protection Publication SW-85ts.of.  [Cincinnati], U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1971.  17 p.

             Cost estimating handbook for transfer, shredding and sanitary landfill of solid waste. Booz Allen and
                  Hamilton, Inc. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-124c. U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, Aug. 1976.  82 p.

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

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

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

             Energy recovery from waste; solid waste as supplementary fuel in power plant boilers. R.  A. Lowe.
                  Environmental Protection Publication SW-63d.ii. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,
                  1973. 24 p.

             Occurrence  and significance  of  pesticides in solid wastes.  E. P. Floyd. Bureau of Solid Waste
                  Management.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 40 p.

             Laboratory procedures to determine the nitrogen  content of solid  wastes.  W. H. Kaylor and N. S.
                  Ulmer. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education,
                  and Welfare, 1970. 49 p.

             Grinder evaluation and development. T. G. Sanders. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati],
                  U.S. Department of Health,  Education, and Welfare,  1970. 48 p.
PB-256-377



PB-256-378



PB-256-379




PB-256-382



PB-256-383



PB-256-389


PB-256-390



PB-256-391



PB-256-444



PB-256-460



PB-256-461



PB-256-491


PB-256-494



PB-256-496


PB-256-505



PB-256-506


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  118

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   ntis
order nos.*
             Report on a study of the Weber County incinerator in Ogden, Utah. J. E. Ongerth and M. G. Tucker.
                  Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
                  Welfare, 1970. 50 p.

             Continental margin data collection pilot project. S. Schuyler and G. Heimerdinger. Bureau of Solid
                  Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 83
                  P-
             A report on the  Hartsfield incinerator  study. L. E. Daniels.  Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
                 Environmental Protection Publication SW-30ts.of. l, [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
                 Education, and Welfare, 1970. 64 p.
             Study of the Delaware County no. 3 incinerator in Broomall,  Pennsylvania. J. L. Hahn. Bureau of
                  Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education,  and Welfare,
                  1970. 81 p.

             The design of a  sanitary landfill in Floyd County, Georgia.  H. R. Little. Bureau of Solid Waste
                  Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 121 p.

             Applicability of existing methods for the determination of the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of
                  incinerator quench water. D. L. Wilson. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S.
                  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1970. 42 p.

             Laboratory procedures for determining the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of incinerator quench
                  water. D. L. Wilson. Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of
                  Health, Education,  and Welfare, 1970. 44 p.

             The explosive hazard of incinerator dust. R. C. Thurnau. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 37 p.

             Solid waste disposal in Yellowstone National Park. H. R. Little. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 86 p.

             The Alsterberg (AZID)  modification of the Winkler method  for the determination of the BOD of
                  incinerator quench water and the calibration of the Weston and Stack DO analyzer model 300-B.
                  D. L.  Wilson. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health,
                  Education, and Welfare,  1970. 44 p.

             Instructions for conducting state industrial-agricultural solid waste surveys. J. M. Sweeten. Bureau
                  of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
                  1970. 47 p.

             Solid waste management practices in a foundry. M. L. Senske. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 15 p.

             Lists of manufacturers of solid waste management equipment. K. A. Shuster. Office of Solid Waste
                  Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1971. 40 p.

             Physical and chemical parameters and methods for solid waste  characterization. N. S. Ulmer. Bureau
                  of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S.  Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,
                  1970. 28 p.

             A study of  the New Orleans East incinerator. J. L.  Hahn. Bureau of Solid Waste Management.
                  [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare,  1970. 78 p.

             Paper and plastic solid waste  sacks;  a summary of available information. B. L. Grupenhoff and K.
                  A. Shuster. Office  of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, 1971. 20 p.
PB-256-926



PB-256-928



PB-256-940


PB-256-943



PB-256-945


PB-256-946



PB-256-947



PB-256-948


PB-256-952


PB-256-953




PB-256-954



PB-256-955


PB-256-956


PB-256-958



PB-256-959


PB-256-960



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                  119

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 order nos.*


PB-257-187    Potential for capacity creation in the hazardous waste management service industry. Foster D. Snell,
                   Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-127c. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,
                   Aug. 1976. [137 p.]

PB-257-305    Use of abandoned strip mines for disposal of solid waste in Maryland. Maryland Department of Health
                   and Mental Hygiene. Baltimore,  Division of Solid Waste Control, 1973. 206 p.

PB-257-306    Development of a method for the determination of carbon and hydrogen in solid waste. D. L. Wilson.
                   Bureau of Solid Waste Management. [Cincinnati], U.S. Department of Health, Education, and
                   Welfare, 1970. 38 p.

PB-257-309    Cities and the nation's disposal crisis. National League of Cities and U.S. Conference of  Mayors.
                   Washington, Mar. 1973. 46 p. Reprinted, [Cincinnati], U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,
                   June 1973.

PB-257-311    Animal Waste Management; Proceedings; National Symposium on Animal Waste Management, the
                   Airlie House, Warrenton, Va., Sept. 28 through 30,  1971. Washington, Council  of State
                   Governments, 185 p.

PB-257-499    Forecasting the composition and weight of household solid wastes using input-output techniques, v.
                   1. S. B. Noble, C. C. Humpstone, and E. H.  Ayres  [ International Research and Technology
                   Corporation ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 200 p.

PB-257-500    Forecasting the composition and weight of household solid wastes using input-output techniques, v.
                   2. S. B. Noble, C. C. Humpstone, and E. H.  Ayres  [ International Research and Technology
                   Corporation ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1976. 185 p.

PB-257-801    Improving rural solid waste management practices. T.  L. Goldberg.  Environmental Protection
                   Publication SW-107. Washington, U.S. Government  Printing Office, 1973. 83 p.

PB-257-951    Hazardous wastes: a risk-benefit framework applied to cadmium and asbestos. K. Moll et al. [ Stanford
                   Research Institute ]. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency, Feb. 1977. 268 p.

PB-257-961    Environmental impacts of packaging.  E. L. Claussen. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, 1973. 10 p.

PB-257-969    Evaluation of a compartmentalized refuse collection vehicle for separate newspaper collection. SCS
                   Engineers. Environmental Protection Publication SW-126c. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, May  1976. 97 p.

PB-258-068    Implementing 'Best Management  Practices' for residuals:  the waste exchange. A. K. Vitberg, M. L.
                   Rucker, and C. H. Porter. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1976. 31 p.

PB-258-156    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.

PB-258-266    Decision-makers guide in solid waste management. 2d ed. Environmental Protection Publication SW-
                   500. Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office,  1976. 158 p.

PB-258-272    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.

PB-258-597    Design criteria for solid waste management in recreational areas. H. R. Little. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-91ts.  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1972. [68 p.]

PB-258-681    Trends in wastepaper exports and their effects on domestic markets. F. L. Smith, Jr. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-132. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  1974. 17
                   P-

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   120

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             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices-textiles industry. E. F. Abrams, D. K. Guinan,
                 and D. Derkics [ Versar, Incorporated ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-125c. U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, June 1976. 276 p.

             Assessment of hazardous waste practices in the petroleum refining industry. D. G. Rosenberg et al.
                 [ Jacobs Engineering Company ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-129c.  U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, June 1976. [367 p.]

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

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

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

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

             Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—accounting format. D.
                 Sussman. Environmental Protection Publication SW-157.6. [Washington], U.S. Environmental
                 Protection Agency, [1976]. 17 p.

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

             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.

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

             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.

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

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

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

             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-

             Assessment of industrial hazardous  waste practices-leather tanning  and finishing industry. T. E.
                 Conrad, G. L. Mitchell, and D. H. Bauer [ SCS Engineers, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection
                 Publication SW-131c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Nov. 1976. [247 p.].
PB-258-953



PB-259-097



PB-259-138


PB-259-139



PB-259-140



PB-259-142



PB-259-143



PB-259-454


PB-259-456



PB-260-089


PB-260-102



PB-260-176



PB-260-254


PB-260-262



PB-260-634



PB-261-018



•See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
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order nos.*
             Solid waste shredding and shredder selection. H. W. Rogers and S. J. Hitte. Environmental Protection
                 Publication SW-140. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1974. 87 p.

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

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

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

             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.

             A study of waste generation, treatment and disposal in  the metals mining industry. D. Bendersky et
                 al. [ Midwest Research Institute ]. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-132c. U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, Oct. 1976. 385 p.

             State activities in solid waste management, 1974. R. J. Black. Environmental Protection Publication
                 SW-158. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 216 p.

             Landfill disposal of hazardous wastes; a review of literature and known approaches. T. Fields, Jr. and
                 A. W. Lindsey. Environmental Protection  Publication SW-165.  [Washington], U.S.
                 Environmental Protection Agency, June 1975. 36  p.

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

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

             Anaerobic digestion of solid waste and sewage sludge to methane. S. J. Hitte. Environmental Protection
                 Publication SW-159. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, July 1975. 13 p.

             Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document  No. 2]. Office of Solid Waste Management
                 Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-151.2. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental
                 Protection Agency, Dec. 1975.  11  p. [Reprinted, March 1976].

             Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document  No. 3]. Office of Solid Waste Management
                 Programs. Environmental Protection Publication SW-151.3. [Washington],  U.S. Environmental
                 Protection Agency,  1976. [15 p.]

             Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No.  1]. Environmental Protection Publication
                 SW-151. [Washington], U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, 8 p.

             Waste clearinghouses and exchanges: new ways for identifying and transferring reusable industrial
                 process wastes. R. C. Terry et al. [ Arthur D. Little, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication
                 SW-130c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Oct. 1976. [152 p.].

             An evaluation of the status of hazardous waste management in Region X. M. W. Stradley,  G. W.
                 Dawson, and B. W. Cone [Battelle Memorial Institute, Richland Pacific Northwest Laboratories].
                 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1975. 194 p.
PB-261-044


PB-261-046


PB-261-047



PB-261-048




PB-261-049



PB-261-052



PB-261-076


PB-261-079



PB-261-086


PB-261-088



PB-261-091


PB-261-155



PB-261-156



PB-261-157


PB-261-287



PB-262-673



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
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 order nos.*
              Catalytic conversion of hazardous and toxic chemicals: catalytic hydrodechlorination of
                   polychlorinated pesticides and related substances; final report. R. B. LaPierre et al. [ Department
                   of Chemical Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute ]. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, Jan. 1977. 184 p.

              Economic assessment  of potential hazardous waste control guidelines for the inorganic chemicals
                   industry. R. Williams et al. [  Arthur D. Little, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-134c. U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency, 1976. 320 p.

              Municipal-scale thermal processing of solid wastes.  N. J. Weinstein [ RECON Systems, Inc. ].
                   Environmental Protection Publication SW-133c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977.
                   365 p.

              Design considerations for  pulp and paper-mill sludge landfills. R. H. Ledbetter  [ Army Engineer
                   Waterways Experiment Station ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1976.  154 p.

              Leather tannery waste management through process change, reuse and pretreatment. J. M. Constantin
                   and G. B. Stockman  [ Pfister  and Vogel Tanning Company ]. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, Jan. 1977. 183 p.

              Optimization of office paper recovery systems. SCS Engineers. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-135c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 82 p.

              Waste disposal. M. G. Gross [ New York Sea Grant Institute ]. U.S. Public Health Service and U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, July  1976. 37 p.

              Assessment of industrial hazardous  waste practices; electroplating and metal finishing industries-job
                   shops. J. B. Hallowell [ Battelle Columbus Laboratories ]. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-136c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 516 p.

              Impact of the Federal tax code on resource recovery.  R. C. Anderson and R. D. Spiegelman
                   [Environmental Law Institute  ].U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1976.  358 p.

              Equipment sharing and cost estimating for rural solid waste disposal systems. A. W. Martin Associates,
                   Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-584. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,
                   1977. 78 p.

              Energy potential from construction  and demolition wood wastes. JACA Corporation. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-138c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,  Apr. 1977. 65 p.

              Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices-electronic components manufacturing industry.
                   G. O. Peters, J. Levin, and P. Thomas [ WAPORA, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-140c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Jan. 1977. 207 p.

              Destroying  chemical wastes in  commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 3—systems
                   technology. D. G. Ackerman et al. [ TRW Defense and Space Systems Group ]. Environmental
                   Protection Publication SW-122c.3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977. 98 p.

              Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No.  I—the Marquardt
                   Company. J. F. Clausen, R. J. Johnson, and C. A. Zee [TRW Defense and Space Systems Group].
                   Environmental Protection Publication  SW-122c.l. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
                   Apr. 1977.  125 p.

              Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices- special machinery manufacturing industries. J.
                   Levin et al. [ WAPORA,  Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-141c. U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 328 p., app.

              A review of techniques for incineration of sewage sludge with solid wastes. W. Niessen [ Roy F. Weston,
                   Inc. ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1976. 238 p.
PB-262-804




PB-263-210



PB-263-396



PB-264-032


PB-264-204



PB-264-214


PB-264-264


PB-264-349



PB-264-886


PB-265-391



PB-265-392


PB-265-532



PB-265-540



PB-265-541




PB-265-981



PB-266-355


*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
288-289 O - 79 - 9
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 order nos.*
PB-266-684
PB-266-905
PB-267-987
PB-268-232
PB-268-327
PB-268-526
PB-266-562    Cattaraugus County, New York, solid waste disposal system. Barton, Brown, Clyde & Loguidice,
                   Engineers [ Cattaraugus County Refuse Department ].  Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-143c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. 108 p.

PB-266-649    Effect of land disposal applications of municipal wastes on crop yields and heavy metal uptake. P. M.
                   Giordano and D. A. Mays [National Fertilizer Development Center.Tennessee Valley Authority].
                   U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977. 83 p.

              Forecasting the composition and weight of household solid wastes using input-output techniques; an
                   executive summary. D. Kidder  [ Ebon Research Systems ]. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, Jan.  1977. 22 p.

              Movement of selected metals, asbestos, and cyanide in soil: application to waste disposal problems.
                   W. H. Fuller [ Department of Soils, Water and Engineering,  University of Arizona ]. U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977. 257 p.

              Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators;  Facility Report No. 4—Zimpro, Inc. J.
                   W. Adams et al. [ Arthur D. Little, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-122c.4. U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, Dec. 1976. 94 p.

              Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale  incinerators; Facility Report No. 2—Surface
                   Combustion Division, Midland-Ross Corporation. J. W. Adams et al. [Arthur D. Little, Inc.].
                   Environmental Protection Publication SW-122c.2. U.S. Environmental Protection  Agency,
                   1977. 162 p.

              Abandoned automobile removal. Kentucky Department for Natural Resources and Environmental
                   Protection.  Environmental Protection Publication SW-90d. U.S. Environmental Protection
                   Agency, 1977. 32 p.

              Development of microwave plasma detoxification process for hazardous wastes; phase  1. L.  J. Bailin
                   and B.  L. Hertzler [ Lockheed Palo Alto Research  Laboratory, Lockheed Missiles and Space
                   Company, Inc. ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr.  1977. 79 p.

PB-269-OOO-Set   Review and assessment of deep-well injection of hazardous waste. L. R. Reeder et  al. [ Louis R.
                      Reeder and Associates ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1977. 4 v.

            PB-269-001      v.  1. 215 p.

            PB-269-002      v. 2. Appendices A, B, and C. 316 p.

            PB-269-003      v. 3. Appendix D. 561 p.

            PB-269-004      v. 4. Appendices E, F, G, H, I, and  J. 413 p.

PB-269-352    Comprehensive summary of sludge disposal recycling history. J. C. Baxter et al. [ Metropolitan Denver
                   Sewage Disposal District No. 1 ]. U.S.  Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977.  95 p.

PB-269-502    Demonstration of a leachate treatment plant. R. L. Steiner, J. E. Keenan, and A. A. Fungaroli [ Applied
                   Technology Associates ]. Environmental Protection Publication SW-91d. U.S. Environmental
                   Protection Agency, 1977. 74 p.

PB-270-085    Single cell protein  and  other food recovery  technologies from waste. S. A. Ware [ Ebon Research
                   Systems ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1977. 143 p.

PB-270-219    European developments in the recovery of energy and materials froru municipal solid waste. W. D.
                   Conn [ University of California, Los Angeles ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 19V7.
                   53 p.

PB-270-266    Yosemite National Park beverage container deposit experiment; final report. T. H. Bingham, J. A. Olsen,
                   and J.  M.  Daber  [Research  Triangle  Institute].  Environmental  Protection Publication
                   SW-142c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [43  p.]

*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   124

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   ntis
order nos.*
             Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 6—Rollins
                  Environmental Service, Inc., Deer Park, Texas. D. Ackerman et al. [ TRW Defense and Space
                  Systems Group ].  Environmental Protection Publication  SW-122c5. U.S. Environmental
                  Protection Agency, 1977. 104 p.

             Pyrolysis of industrial wastes for oil and activated carbon recovery. F. B. Boucher et al. [ Occidental
                  Research Corporation ].  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, May 1977. 181  p.

             The feasibility of utilizing solid wastes for building materials: executive summary. G. Jackson and S.
                  Ware [ Ebon Research Systems ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1977.  96 p.

             Liner materials exposed  to hazardous and toxic sludges; first interim report. H. E. Haxo, Jr., R. S.
                  Haxo, and R. M. White  [ Matrecon, Inc. ]. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, June 1977.
                  73 p.

             A technical, environmental and economic evaluation of the glass  recovery plant at Franklin, Ohio.
                  Systems Technology Corporation. Environmental Protection Publication SW-146c. U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency,  1977. 104 p.

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste management petroleum  re-refining industry. J. W. Swain.
                  Environmental Protection Publication SW-144c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1977.
                  149 p.

             Alternatives for hazardous waste management in the inorganic chemicals industry. E. F. Abrams, G.
                  Contos, and M. Drablin. Versar, Inc. Environmental Protection Publication SW-149c. U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency,  1977. 311 p.

             Physical, chemical, and biological treatment techniques for industrial wastes, v.l. J. B. Berkowitz et
                  al. [Arthur D. Little, Inc.]. U.S. Environmental Protection Publication SW-148c. Washington,
                  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Hazardous Waste Management Division, 1977. [373 p.]

             The prevalence of subsurface migration of hazardous chemical substances at selected industrial waste
                  land disposal sites. Office of Solid Waste. [ Geraghty and Miller, Inc. ]. Environmental Protection
                  Publication SW-634. [Washington], U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Oct.  1977. [521 p.]

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the  metal smelting and refining industry,  v.l.
                  Executive summary.  R. P. Leonard et  al.  [Calspan Corporation]. Environmental Protection
                  Publication SW-145c. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977. [51 p.]

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the  metal smelting and refining industry,  v.2.
                  Primary and secondary nonferrous smelting and refining. R. P. Leonard et aL [Calspan Corporation].
                  Environmental Protection Publication SW-145c.2. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection
                  Agency, Apr. 1977. [309 p.]

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the  metal smelting and refining industry,  v.3.
                  Ferrous smelting and refining.  R. P.  Leonard et al. [Calspan Corporation]. Environmental
                  Protection Publication SW-145c.3. Washington, Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 1977.
                  [149 p.]

             Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the  metal smelting and refining industry,  v.4.
                  Appendices. R. P. Leonard et al. [Calspan Corporation]. Environmental Protection Publication
                  SW-145c.4. Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Apr.  1977. [58 p.]

             Systems analysis study of solid waste collection management: final report, v. 1. Dept. of Public Works,
                  Wichita Falls, Texas. Environmental Protection Publication SW-150c.l. [Washington], U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency. 1977. [129 p.]

             Systems analysis study of solid waste collection management: final report. City of Wichita Falls, Texas,
                  Dept. of Public Works.  Environmental Protection  Publication SW-150c.2. [Washington], U.S.
                  Environmental Protection Agency, 1977. [225 p.]
PB-270-897




PB-270-961


PB-271-007


PB-271-013



PB-272-051



PB-272-267



PB-274-565



PB-275-054



PB-275-103



PB 276-169



PB-276-170




PB-276-171




PB-276-172



PB-276-707



PB-276-708



*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                   125

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    ntis
  order nos.*


PB-278-059    Alternatives for hazardous waste management in the organic  chemical, pesticides and explosives
                   industries. J. M. Genser et al. [Process Research, Inc.]. Environmental Protection Publication
                   SW-151c. Washington, Office of Solid Waste, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Sept. 2,
                   1977. [258 p.]

PB-279-645    Economic impact analysis of anticipated hazardous waste regulations on the industrial organic
                   chemicals, pesticides, and explosives industries. J. Stollman et al. [Energy Resources Co., Inc.].
                   Environmental  Protection Publication SW-158c. Washington, Office of Solid Waste, U.S.
                   Environmental Protection Agency, Jan. 1978.

PB-280-117    Economic impact analysis of anticipated hazardous waste management regulation on the  batteries,
                   electronics, and special machinery industries. J. Levin and C. Saunders [ A. T. Kearney ].
                   Environmental  Protection Publication SW-160c. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1978.
                   90 p.

PB-280-118    Burning waste chlorinated hydrocarbons  in a cement kiln. L.  D. McDonald et  al. [Environmental
                   Protection Service, Montreal  (Quebec) ].  Environmental Protection Publication SW-147c.
                   Washington, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Jan. 1978. [240 p.]
*See order form for NTIS publications in back of catalog.
                                                    126

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                                         Title   Index
Numbers following entries are order numbers, by which the publications are listed in this catalog.


Abandoned automobile removal, PB-268-327
Abstracts; selected patents on refuse handling facilities for buildings, 1, PB-216-888
Accounting system for incinerator operations, 111, PB-217-821
Accounting system for sanitary landfill operations, 86, PB-215-907
Accounting system for solid waste collection,  153
Accounting system for solid waste management in small communities, 176, PB-213-492
Accounting system for solid waste shredders,  451
Accounting system for transfer station operations, 182
Acid hydrolysis of cellulose in refuse to sugar and its fermentation to alcohol, PB-221-239
Action on the solid wastes problem, 71
Activities in managing solid wastes, 197
Ad hoc conference on solid waste training, 72
Advanced techniques  for incineration of municipal solid wastes, PB-256-355
Aerial and automotive reconnaissance of solid waste disposal sites in a rural county, 277
Aerobic treatment of livestock wastes, 297, PB-230-386
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, 229
Agricultural benefits and environmental changes resulting from the use of digested sludge on field crops, PB-23 6-402
Air classification  for reclamation processing of solid wastes, 102
Air classification of solid wastes;  performance of experimental units and potential applications for solid waste
       reclamation, 256, PB-214-133
Alsterberg (AZID) modification of the Winkler method for the determination of the BOD of incinerator quench water
       and the calibration of the Weston and Stack DO analyzer model 300-B, PB-256-953
Alternatives for hazardous waste management in the inorganic chemicals industry, PB-274-565
Alternatives for hazardous waste management in the organic chemical, pesticides and explosives industries,
       PB-278-059
Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, v.  2. Appendices, PB-237-264
Alternatives to the management of hazardous wastes at national disposal sites, PB-225-164
Aluminum as a component of solid waste and a recoverable resource, PB-235-770
America the beautiful; a  collection of the nation's trashiest humor, 131
American composting concepts, 169,  PB-213-376
Ames: progress and problems continue, 711
Anaerobic digestion of solid waste and sewage sludge to methane, 458, PB-261-091
Analysis models for solid waste collection, v.  1, PB-239-117
Analysis models for solid waste collection, v.  2. Appendices and documentation, PB-239-494
Analysis of airport solid wastes and collection systems; San Francisco International Airport, PB-219-372
Analysis of Federal programs affecting solid waste generation  and recycling, PB-213-311
Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v.  1, sect. 1-8,10,
       PB-250-798
Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v. 2, sect. 9. Process
       economics, PB-250-905
Analysis of demand and supply for secondary fiber in the U.S. paper and paperboard industry, v.  3. Appendices,
       PB-250-802
Analysis of institutional solid wastes, 237, PB-213-939
Analysis of solid  waste composition; statistical technique to determine sample size, 97, PB-216-5 84
Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; collection center studies [v.  2], PB-239-776
Analysis of source separate collection of recyclable solid waste; separate collection studies [v.  1], PB-239-775
Analysis of the abandoned automobile problem, PB-221-879
Analysis of the current impact  of plastic refuse disposal upon the environment, PB-23 8-654
Animal Waste Management; Proceedings; National  Symposium on Animal Waste Management, the Airlie House,
       Warrenton, Va., Sept. 28 through 30,  1971, PB-257-311
Applicability of existing methods for the determination of the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of incinerator quench
       water, PB-256-946
Applying technology to  unmet  needs;  report on the  solid waste problem, 2
                                                    127

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Appraisal of marine disposal of solid wastes off the west coast: a preliminary review and results of a survey, 130
Assessment of hazardous waste practices in the petroleum refining industry, PB-259-097
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste management petroleum re-refining industry, PB-272-267
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—electronic components manufacturing industry, PB-265-532
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices;  electroplating and metal finishing industries—job shops,
       PB-264-349
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices-inorganic chemicals industry, PB-244-832
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the metal smelting and refining industry, v.l. Executive
       summary, PB-276-169
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the metal smelting and refining industry, v.2. Primary and
       secondary nonferrous smelting and refining, PB-276-170
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the metal smelting and refining industry, v.3. Ferrous smelting
       and refining, PB-276-171
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices in the metal smelting and refining industry, v.4. appendices,
       PB-276-172
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—leather tanning and finishing industry, PB-261-018
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—organic chemicals, pesticides, and explosives industries,
       PB-251-307
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—paint and allied products industry contract solvent reclaiming
       operations, and factory application of coatings, PB-251-669
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—special machinery manufacturing industries, PB-265-981
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—storage and primary batteries industries, PB-241-204
Assessment of industrial hazardous waste practices—textiles industry, PB-25 8-95 3
Assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection; summary report, PB-236-085
Atlanta household refuse compactor demonstration project,  PB-234-605
Automatic amino acid analyses for determining the amount and quality of protein in fungal protein and in other protein
       sources, 312
Automobile cycle; an environmental and resource reclamation problem, 275, PB-213-718
Automobile dismantling industry, a survey of solid waste  management practices in  four cities, PB-227-000
Automobile scrapping processes and needs for Maryland;  a  final report on a solid waste demonstration,  106
Available information materials; solid waste management, 203

Bacteriological study of the New Orleans East incinerator, PB-256-389
Balancing environment, economic, and resource conservation issues in the implementation of RCRA, 643
Baling solid waste to conserve sanitary landfill space; a feasibility study, PB-214-960
Baltimore demonstrates gas pyrolysis; resource recovery from solid waste, 431
Baltimore pyrolysis and waste-fired steam  generator emissions; Resource  recovery technology update from the
       U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age), 537
Baltimore's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-228-161
Baltimore; a lesson in resource recovery, 712
Base line forecasts of resource recovery, 1972 to 1990: final  report, PB-245-924
Basic issues on solid waste management affecting county government, 373
Bay area solid waste management  implementation project, PB-234-808-Set
              v. 1. Project report, PB-234-809
              v. 2. Environmental evaluation for the Bay delta recovery demonstration project, PB-234-810
              v. 3. Technical report on levee stabilization and composting,  PB-234-811
Beverage container problem; analysis and recommendations, 326, PB-213-341
Beverage containers: the Vermont  experience, 487
Beverage containers; proposed solid waste management guidelines. See Solid waste management; guidelines for
       beverage containers
Big pickup~a new publication from the Office of Solid Waste Management Programs [Flyer], 485
Biological consequences of plant residue decomposition in soil, PB-222-113
Biological conversion of animal wastes to nutrients, PB-221-171
Bird/aircraft hazards at airports near solid waste disposal sites, 355
Braintree, Massachusetts, municipal incinerator, PB-226-960
Buffalo's crusher facility for bulky solid waste, PB-225-159
Building an amphitheater and coasting ramp of municipal solid waste, PB-225-346
Bureau attacks nation's solid waste, 109
Burn, bury or what? [Film narrative], 271
Burning waste chlorinated hydrocarbons in a cement kiln, PB-280-118
                                                   128

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COLMIS. See also User's manual for COLMIS, 370, 371
COLMIS; a new solid waste management information system [Flyer], 389
California solid waste management study (1968) and plan (1970), 175
Can Federal procurement practices be used to reduce solid wastes? PB-229-727
Can Nashville's story be placed in perspective? 605
Can engineering cope with the debris of affluence? 3
Careful management: key to resource recovery, 604
Case study and business analysis of the scrap industry, PB-229-220
Catalytic conversion of hazardous and toxic chemicals: catalytic hydrodechlorination of polychlorinated pesticides and
       related substances; final report, PB-262-804
Cattaraugus County, New York, solid waste disposal system, PB-266-562
Cellulolytic activity in municipal solid waste composting, 126
Cellulose degradation in composting, PB-215-722
Characteristics of municipal  solid wastes, 4
Characterization and utilization of municipal and utility sludges and ashes, PB-244-309-Set
              v. 1. Summary, PB-244-310
              v. 2. Municipal sludges, PB-244-311
              v. 3. Utility  coal ash, PB-244-312
Chemical conversion of solid wastes to useful products, PB-233-178
Chemical conversion of wood and cellulosic wastes, PB-229-246
Chemical waste land disposal facility demonstration grant application, PB-249-747
Chemical waste swapping: promising, but no panacea, 554
Cities and the nation's  disposal crisis, 331, PB-257-309
Cities' rubbish woes grow as volume rises, dumping sites fill up, 5
Citizen participation and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 585
Citizen support for solid waste management, 138
Clean and green, 291
Clean and green solid waste system in Alabama is widely copied, 150,  238
Closing open dumps, 156
Codification of solid waste  management authority in Kentucky; appendix A, PB-201-205
'Co-disposal' for solid  wastes and sewage sludge; Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A. (In
       Waste Age),  667
Co-disposal of sewage  sludge and solid wastes—it works, 687
Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; a systems engineering approach to the
       overall problem of solid waste management; an interim report, 6
Collection and disposal of solid waste for the Des Moines metropolitan area; the planning phase, 249
Collection, reduction, and disposal of solid waste in high-rise multifamily dwellings, PB-197-62 3
Color sorting waste glass at  Franklin, Ohio, 558
Columbus' municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-236-659
Combustion power unit-400, CPU-400;  a technical abstract, 7, PB-187-299
Combustion products from the incineration of plastics, PB-222-001
Comparative estimates of post-consumer solid waste, 443, PB-2 5 6-491
Comparing conventionally landfilled solid waste with processed landfilled solid waste; final report on a solid waste
       demonstration grant  report, PB-253-304
Compost studies; part 1, 204
Compost studies; part 2, 205
Compost studies; part 3, 206
Composted municipal refuse as a soil amendment, PB-222-422
Composting at Johnson city; final report on joint USEPA-TVA composting project with operational data, 1967 to
       1971, 488, PB-261-047
Composting developments in the United States, 8, PB-215-299
Composting dewatered  sewage sludge, 115
Composting of municipal solid wastes in  the United States,  212, PB-213-478
Composting of organic  wastes; an annotated bibliography, PB-215-202
Composting of organic  wastes; an annotated bibliography; suppl.  1, PB-147-220
Composting of organic  wastes; an annotated bibliography; suppl. 2, PB-148-097
Composting sewage sludge by high-rate suction aeration  techniques; an interim report, 614
                                                   129

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Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; first and second annual reports, 128, PB-218-265
Comprehensive studies of solid waste management; third annual report, 178
Comprehensive study of solid waste disposal in Cascade County, Montana; final report on a solid waste demonstration
       118
Comprehensive summary of sludge disposal recycling history,  PB-269-352
Computer planning for efficient solid waste collection [Condensation], 283
Concept and design of the joint U.S. Public Health Service—Tennessee Valley Authority Composting Project, Johnson
       City, Tennessee,  9
Conservation and common sense, 515
Conservation of resources in  municipal waste, PB-228-165
Construction of a chemical-microbial pilot plant for production of single-cell protein from cellulosic wastes,  186,
       PB-203-620
Continental margin data collection pilot project, PB-256-928
Control of domestic rats and mice, 155
Conversion of organic solid wastes into yeast; an economic evaluation, 91, PB-217-834
Corrosion studies in municipal incinerators, PB-213-378
Cost estimating handbook for transfer, shredding and sanitary landfill of solid waste, PB-256-444
Cost of landspreading and hauling sludge from  municipal wastewater treatment plants; case studies, 619
Cost of residential solid waste collection, 228
Costs of hauling and land spreading  of domestic sewage treatment plant sludge, PB-227-005
Creating a county wide solid waste management system; the case study of Humphreys County, Tennessee, 255,
       PB-214-073
Criteria for regional solid waste management planning, PB-239-631
Curbing trash; community guide, 671
Current concepts in the disposal of solid wastes, 110
Current views on solid waste management; recommended reading, 544

DISCUS~a solid-waste management game, 137
Dairy manure management methods, PB-233-441
Dairy waste management, PB-225-160
Dallas' municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-234-140
Damage incidents from improper land disposal, 494
Debris accumulation in ancient and modern cities, 404
Decentralized solid waste collection facilities, 146
Decision trees in solid wastes planning,  10
Decision-makers guide in solid waste management, 390, PB-25 8-266
Deep-sea disposal of liquid and solid wastes, 162
Demonstrating  multimaterial source  separation  in Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, 510
Demonstrating resource recovery; Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age), 528
Demonstration of a leachate treatment plant, PB-269-502
Demonstration of pyrolysis and materials recovery in San Diego, California; Resource recovery technology update
       from the U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age), 582
Demonstration  of systems for recovering materials and energy from solid waste, 388
Demonstration  of waste  flow reduction from households, PB-236-904
Des Moines story; a report on the implementation of the solid waste management plan for the Des Moines Metropolitan
       Area Solid Waste Agency, PB-233-873
Design and control of incinerators, PB-223-626
Design and simulation of equalization basins, PB-222-000
Design considerations for pulp and paper-mill sludge landfills, PB-264-032
Design criteria for solid waste management in recreational areas, 284, PB-25 8-5 97
Design of a sanitary landfill in Floyd County, Georgia, PB-256-945
Design of a solid waste management system for the Eastern Appalachia Health Region of North Carolina, PB-214-089
Design of a water-disposable glass packaging container, 236
Design of consumer containers for re-use or disposal; Proceedings; Solid Waste Resources Conference, [Columbus],
       May 12-13, 1971, 261
Despite higher costs than expected, this Iowa city's refuse-to-energy project is still going strong after 18 months of
       operation, 711
Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. I—the Marquardt Company,
       PB-265-541
                                                   130

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Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 2-Surface Combustion Division,
       Midland-Ross Corporation, PB-268-232
Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 3~systems technology, PB-265-540
Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 4~Zimpro, Inc, PB-267-987
Destroying chemical wastes in commercial scale incinerators; Facility Report No. 6—Rollins Environmental Service,
       Inc., Deer Park, Texas, PB-270-897
Determination of heat of combustion of solid wastes from ultimate analysis,  PB-256-383
Determination of selenium in solid waste, 148
Determination of the phosphate in solid waste using the vanadomolybdophosphoric acid method, PB-256-377
Detroit's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-236-662
Developing a local and regional solid waste management plan, 336, PB-226-099
Developing a State solid waste management plan,  124, PB-215-844
Development of a method for the determination of carbon and hydrogen in solid waste, PB-257-306
Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills; an interim report, 11
Development of construction and use criteria for sanitary landfills;  final  report on  a solid waste management
       demonstration grant, PB-218-672
Development of microwave plasma detoxification process for hazardous wastes; phase 1, PB-268-526
Digest of selected local solid waste management ordinances, 253, PB-214-092
Dismantling railroad freight cars; a study of improved methods  with application to other demolition problems, 95,
       PB-204-404
Disposal of dilute pesticide solutions, 519
Disposal of hazardous wastes;  report to Congress, 345
Disposal of polymer solid wastes by primary polymer producers and plastics fabricators, 244, PB-213-444
Disposal of sewage sludge into a sanitary landfill,  391
Disposing of small batches of hazardous wastes, 562
District of Columbia solid waste management plan; status report, 1970, 191
Do you need a  sanitary landfill?  12
Don't leave it all to the experts; the citizen's role in environmental decision making, 314
Don't walk away from an open dump,  520
Draft environmental impact statement: proposed regulation; criteria for  classification of solid waste disposal facilities
       (40 CFR Part 257), 692
Draft environmental impact statement: proposed regulations; criteria for  classification of solid waste facilities (40 CFR
       Part 257). Appendices, 693
Dumps; a potential threat to our ground water supplies, 411

EPA activities under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of  1976;  annual report to the President and the
       Congress, fiscal year 1977, 663
EPA and municipal resource recovery,  560
EPA employees provide paper for recycling; environmental news [Press release], 507
EPA Journal reprint: resource recovery, 690
EPA press briefing  on solid  waste management and energy,  February 8, 1974, 359
EPA publishes  decision-makers guide for sanitation officials, 394
EPA resource recovery demonstration; summary of air emissions analyses; Resource recovery technology update from
       the U.S.E.P.A. (In  Waste Age), 581
EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 263
Ecology of compost; a public involvement project, 322
Economic analysis of the processing and disposal of refuse sludges, PB-234-498
Economic and technological impediments to recycling obsolete ferrous  solid  waste, PB-223-034
Economic assessment of potential hazardous waste control guidelines for  the inorganic chemicals industry, PB-263-2IO
Economic impact analysis of anticipated hazardous waste management regulation on the batteries, electronics, and
       special machinery industries, PB-280-117
Economic impact analysis of anticipated hazardous waste regulations on the industrial organic chemicals, pesticides,
       and explosives industries, PB-279-645
Economic realities of reclaiming natural resources in solid waste, 225
Economics of separate refuse collection, 400
Economics of solid  waste investment decisions, 103
Effect of land disposal applications of municipal wastes on crop yields  and heavy metal uptake, PB-266-649
Effect of processing poultry  manure on disease agents, PB-222-148
Effective hazardous waste management (non-radioactive); position statement, 535
Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v. 1, PB-236-462
Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; final report, v. 2, PB-236-463
                                                    131

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Effective use of high water table areas for sanitary landfill; second annual report, PB-224-996
Effects of community-wide installation of household garbage-grinders on environmental sanitation, PB-229-206
Effects of garbage grinding on sewage systems and environmental sanitation, 13
Effects of land disposal of solid wastes on water quality, 83
Eleven residential pickup systems compared for cost and productivity, 436
Empirical analysis of commercial solid waste generation, 240
Energy and the environment, 360
Energy conservation through improved solid waste management, 378
Energy potential from construction and demolition wood wastes, PB-265-392
Energy recovery from waste;  a municipal-utility joint venture, PB-213-534
Energy recovery from waste;  solid waste as supplementary fuel in power plant boilers,  264, PB-25 6-494
Engineer in solid waste management, 227
Engineering a better environment, 523
Environmental assessment of future disposal methods for plastics in municipal solid waste, PB-243-366
Environmental assessment of subsurface disposal of municipal wastewater treatment sludge; interim report, 547
Environmental impacts of packaging, 332, PB-257-961
Environmental impacts of virgin and recycled steel and aluminum,  PB-25 3-487
Environmental Protection Agency publishes guidelines on solid waste collection and storage for Federal Agencies.
       See Guidelines for the storage and collection of residential, commercial, and institutional solid waste
Environmental protection, residuals management,  and resources~the future is now, 364
Environmental protection-the people's choice, 379
Equipment sharing and cost  estimating for rural solid waste disposal systems, PB-265-391
Establishing a regional sanitary landfill in the Kansas  City metropolitan area, PB-255-133
European developments in the recovery of energy  and materials from municipal  solid waste, PB-270-219
Evaluation, extraction, and recycling of certain solid waste components, PB-208-674
Evaluation of a compartmentalized refuse collection  vehicle for separate newspaper collection, PB-257-969
Evaluation of a method for the determination of inorganic carbon (carbonates) in solid wastes, PB-256-373
Evaluation of a muffle furnace procedure for determining percent ash and percent weight loss on heating of solid wastes
       PB-256-358
Evaluation of a multi-functional machine for use in sanitary landfill operations in sparsely populated areas, PB-212-5 89
Evaluation of landfill gas migration and a prototype gas migration barrier, PB-239-357
Evaluation of shredding facilities, Rock Cut Road  Plant No. 1; Onondaga County Solid Waste Disposal Authority,
       Onondaga County, New York, PB-245-672
Evaluation of small modular incinerators  in municipal plants,  PB-251-291
Evaluation of solid waste baling and balefills,  v. 1-2, PB-247-185
Evaluation of the MC-300A soil moisture meter to determine in-place moisture content of refuse at land disposal sites;
       progress  report, PB-256-359
Evaluation of the Melt-Zit high-temperature incinerator; operation test report, August  1968, 14
Evaluation of the effectiveness and costs of regulatory and fiscal policy  instruments on product packaging, 437
Evaluation of the feasibility and economic implications of pricing mechanisms in solid waste management, PB-239-116
Evaluation of the impact of discriminatory taxation on the use of primary and secondary raw materials, PB-240-988
Evaluation of the status of hazardous waste management in Region X, PB-262-673
Excerpts relating to solid waste from The President's Message on Environment,  91st Cong., 2d sess., Feb.  10, 1970
       129
Experimental composting research and development; joint  U.S.  Public Health Service—Tennessee  Valley Authority
       Composting Project,  Johnson City, Tenn.  [Flyer], 15
Experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; first annual report, PB-239-869
Experimental high ash papermill sludge landfill; second annual report, PB-239-618
Explosive hazard of incinerator dust, PB-256-948
Extension of carbon-hydrogen method to include determination of volatiles or  loss on  ignition (L.O.I.) at 950C,
       PB-25 6-364

Fabrication of single cell protein from cellulosic wastes, PB-239-502
Feasibility of hydraulic transport and treatment of ground  household refuse through sewers, PB-229-256
Feasibility of hydraulic transport of ground household refuse through sewer appurtenances,-PB-239-915
Feasibility of utilizing solid wastes for building materials: executive summary, PB-271-007
Feasibility study of the disposal of polyethylene plastic waste,  199, PB-214-032
Feasibility study of use of molten salt technology  for pyrolysis of solid waste, PB-238-674
Federal direction for hazardous waste management,  542
Federal environmental laws and you, 713
Federal program for hazardous waste management, 399
                                                    132

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Federal redirections in solid waste, 276
Federal register: Effective hazardous waste management (non-radioactive); position statement, 535
Federal register: Grants for solid waste disposal projects, 19
Federal register: Guidelines for the storage and collection of residential, commercial, and institutional solid waste, 504
Federal register: Hazardous waste guidelines and regulations; advance notice of proposed rulemaking, 610
Federal register: Identification of regions and agencies for solid waste management; interim guidelines, 615
Federal register: Implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of  1976; interim regulations, 637
Federal register: Municipal sludge management; environmental factors;  technical bulletin, 657
Federal register: Noise emission standards for new truck-mounted solid waste compactors, 661
Federal register: PCB-containing wastes (industrial facilities); recommended procedures for disposal, 516
Federal register: Pesticides and containers; acceptance, disposal, and storage; proposed rulemaking and issuance of
       procedures, 328
Federal register: Pesticides and pesticide containers; proposed regulations for prohibition of certain acts regarding
       disposal and storage, 398
Federal register: Pesticides and pesticide containers; regulations for acceptance and  recommended procedures for
       disposal and storage, 376
Federal register: Preliminary notification of hazardous waste activities; proposed procedures, 691
Federal register: Prior notice of citizen suits, 640
Federal register: Promulgation resource  recovery facilities guidelines, 490
Federal register: Public participation in solid waste management; interim guidelines, 649
Federal register: Research and demonstration grants, interim regulation, 660
Federal register Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; intent to develop rulemaking, 579
Federal register: Resource recovery project development grants under the President's urban policy: notice of meeting
       and request for comments, 715
Federal register: Solid waste disposal and resource recovery grants, 221
Federal register: Solid waste disposal facilities; proposed classification criteria, 668
Federal register: Solid waste management guidelines for beverage containers, 463
Federal register: Solid waste planning and disposal; advance notice of proposed rulemaking, 629
Federal register: Source separation for materials  recovery, guidelines,  473
Federal register: Standards applicable to transporters of hazardous wastes,  689
Federal register: State hazardous waste  programs; proposed guidelines, 665
Federal register: State solid waste management plans; guidelines for development and implementation, 714
Federal register: Thermal processing and land disposal of solid waste; guidelines, 385
Federal register: Toxic substances control and solid waste disposal, 670
Federal register: Transportation of hazardous waste materials; proposed provisions, hearing, 702
Federal register: Vinyl chloride; recommended procedures for disposal of aerosol cans, 529
Federal resource recovery demonstration program, 334
Federal role in solid waste management-present and future, 306
Federal solid waste demonstration program, 16
Federal solid waste management programme; a review and prognosis, 395
Federal solid wastes program, 108
Federal surveys of industrial waste, 545
Films tell the solid waste management story [Film list], 349
Films tell the story.  [Flyer.], 207
Financial methods for solid waste facilities, PB-234-612
Financing municipal solid waste management systems, 132
Financing solid waste management in small communities, 188
First annual progress report on a study of corrosion in municipal incinerators, PB-221-851
Five-stage improvement process for solid waste collection systems, 409
Five-thousand (5000) dumps [Film narrative], 265
Five-thousand (5000) dumps [Flyer], 209
Fleet selection for solid waste collection  systems,  251
Forecasting the composition and weight of household solid wastes using input-output techniques; an executive summary
       PB-266-684
Forecasting the composition and weight  of household solid wastes using input-output techniques, v. 1,  PB-257-499
Forecasting the composition and weight  of household solid wastes using input-output techniques, v. 2,  PB-257-500
Forecasts of the effects of air and water  pollution controls on solid waste  generation, PB-238-819
                                                    133

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Formulas (incorporating decomposition of carbonates at 600 C) for the determination of total oxygen in solid wastes
       PB-256-366
Forsyth County's solid waste management system; a case study, PB-225-296
Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v.l, PB-234-715
Franklin, Ohio's solid waste disposal and fiber recovery demonstration plant; final report, v.2, PB-234-716
Fresno's municipal solid waste management system;  a case study, PB-234-141
Fuel conservation in solid waste management, 407

Gainesville compost plant; an interim report, 17, PB-187-311
Gainesville compost plant;  final report on a solid waste management demonstration, v.l-2, PB-222-710
Garbage  guide: Citizens in action; solid waste project, 697
Gaseous emissions from municipal incinerators,  368, PB-258-156
Generation of steam from solid wastes, PB-214-166
Glass and aluminum recovery in recycling operations, 308
Goals of the Federal solid waste management program, 549
Grant programs under the Solid Waste Disposal Act, 18
Grants encourage new waste disposal methods, 121
Grants for  solid waste disposal projects, 19
Green box  [Film narrative], 272
Grinder evaluation and development, PB-25 6-506
Growth potential in the hazardous waste management service industry, 543
Guide to the  study of solid  waste  systems,  PB-213-304
Guidelines  for local governments on solid waste management,  239, PB-214-039
Guidelines  for the disposal of small quantities of unused pesticides, PB-244-557
Guidelines  for the storage and collection of residential, commercial, and institutional solid waste, 504

Habia una  vez un dragon malvado [Spanish version of "Once there lived  a wicked dragon"], 430
Handbook for initiating or- improving commercial refuse collection, 472
Handbook for initiating or improving commercial refuse collection: appendices, PB-244-841
Handbook for pesticide disposal by common chemical methods, PB-252-864
Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 1], 449, PB-261-157
Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 2], 492, PB-261-155
Hazardous waste disposal damage reports [Document No. 3], 546, PB-261-156
Hazardous waste guidelines and regulations; advance notice of proposed rulemaking, 610
Hazardous waste guidelines: plans and prospects, 540
Hazardous waste management facilities in the United States, 429
Hazardous wastes, 450, PB-260-089
Hazardous wastes and their management; environmental information, 452
Hazardous wastes: a risk-benefit framework applied to  cadmium and asbestos, PB-257-951
Hazardous wastes, the gross national byproduct; a new publication from the Office of Solid Waste Management [Flyer]
       502
Health and safety in the solid waste industry,  426
Health aspects and vector control associated with animal wastes, 20
Heuristic routing for solid waste collection vehicles, 356
High-pressure compaction and baling of solid waste;  final report on a solid waste management demonstration grant
       252
High-temperature vortex incinerator, PB-240-723
Highway litter study, 1974; report to Congress,  455
Hospital  solid waste; an annotated bibliography, PB-227-708
Hospital  solid waste disposal in community facilities, PB-222-018
Hospital  wastes, 406
Houston's municipal solid waste management  system; a case study, PB-225-299
How communities can overcome obstacles  to resource recovery projects, 606
Hydrogeology of solid waste disposal sites in northeastern Illinois; a final report on a solid waste demonstration grant
       project, 223

IRIS: injury reporting and information system for solid waste management [Flyer], 477
IRIS; a new service for the solid waste management industry,  478
Identification of opportunities for increased recycling of ferrous solid waste,  PB-213-577
Identification of regions and agencies for solid waste management; interim guidelines, 615
Illinois report probes citizens' attitudes on refuse problems, 372
Impact of source separation and waste reduction on  the economics of resource recovery facilities, 632


                                                    134

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Impact of the Federal tax code on resource recovery, PB-264-886
Implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; interim regulations, 637
Implementation plan for the PCB marking and disposal regulation: facility approval process, 683
Implementation plan for the Resource Conservation Committee; 1st report to the President and Congress of the United
       States mandated  by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580), 618
Implementing 'Best  Management Practices' for residuals: the waste exchange, PB-258-068
Improving manual solid  waste separation studies,  310
Improving productivity in solid waste collection; a brief for elected officials, 440
Improving rural solid waste management practices, 342, PB-257-801
Improving state solid waste management programs; with addendum and appendix, PB-256-348
In the bag [Film narrative], 270
Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics, PB-214-045
Incentives for recycling and reuse of plastics; a summary report, 316, PB-254-619
Incentives for tire recycling and reuse, 382
Incineration in hazardous waste management, 427, PB-261-049
Incineration of bulky refuse without prior shredding, PB-221-731
Incineration of plastics found in municipal wastes, PB-223-651
Industrial and agricultural solid wastes and problems involved in their disposal, 104
Industrial solid  waste classification systems,  PB-239-119
Industrial solid  waste problems, 278
Industrial Solid Wastes Management; Prospects in Technology  for Resource Recovery; Proceedings; National
       Industrial Solid Wastes Management Conference, University of Houston, Mar. 24 through 26, 1970,
       PB-216-100
Industrial waste exchanges; fact sheet, 688
Industrial waste management; seven conference papers, 453
Industrial waste-problem or profit? 631
Information about hazardous waste management facilities,  468
Information retrieval services of EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management Programs, 294
Information system  for solid waste operation, 166
Infrared spectral sensor for refuse sorting, PB-229-901
Initiating a national effort to improve solid waste management, 260
Injury reporting and information system field test, v. 1, PB-247-566
Injury reporting and information system field test, v. 2. Tabulation of data, PB-247-567
Instructions for conducting state industrial-agricultural solid waste surveys, PB-256-954
Intergovernmental approaches to solid waste management, 164, PB-214-448
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 32, April 1968, 142,
       PB-216-369, PB-237-630
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 33, August 1968, 143,
       PB-216-348
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 34, December 1968,144
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin number 35, May 1969, 145,
       PB-216-370
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 1-12, November 1956 to
       September 1961, 21
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 13-20, December 1961
       to May 1964, 22
International Research Group on Refuse Disposal (IRGRD); information bulletin numbers 21-31, August 1964 to
       December 1967, 89, PB-216-840
Interview with  Sandy Hale; Waste  Age discusses new direction for Federal solid waste management program with
       its new  director, 250
Investigation of corrosion-deposition phenomena on gas turbine blades, PB-221-095
Investigation of the biodegradability of packaging plastics, PB-213-488
Investigation of the pH characteristics of compost, 158
Investment decision model for control technology, PB-213-482
Ion-exchange process for recovery of chromate from pigment manufacturing, PB-2 3 3-641

Jacksonville's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-234-139
Joint USPHA-TVA composting project, Johnson City, Tennessee; interim report, June 1967 through Sept. 1969,
       PB-214-056
                                                   135

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Kansas City's municipal solid waste management system, PB-234-068
Keeping a sanitary landfill sanitary, 23
Keeping Public Law 94-580 public, 621
Keeping public laws public, 701
Kenilworth model sanitary landfill; interim report on a solid waste demonstration project, December 1967-January
       1969, 105
Kentucky solid waste management plan; status report, 1970, 181, PB-215-903

Laboratory procedure for determining percent ash and percent weight loss of solid wastes on heating at  600 C,
       PB-256-370
Laboratory procedure for determining the total heat of combustion in solid wastes, PB-256-368
Laboratory procedure for the determination of selenium in solid waste, PB-256-367
Laboratory procedure for the gravimetric determination of carbonate carbon in solid wastes, PB-256-371
Laboratory procedure for the gravimetric determination of carbon and hydrogen in solid wastes (for methods manual)
       PB-256-379
Laboratory procedure for the potential heat determination in solid wastes, PB-256-378
Laboratory procedure for the preparation of solid waste related materials for analysis, PB-256-390
Laboratory procedures for determining the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of incinerator quench water,
       PB-256-947
Laboratory procedures to determine the  nitrogen content of solid wastes, PB-256-505
Land availability, crop production, and fertilizer requirements in the United States, 484
Land reclamation project;  an interim report, 24, PB-187-301
Land use planning and solid waste management, 247
Landfill decomposition gases; an annotated  bibliography, PB-213-487
Landfill disposal of hazardous wastes: a review of literature and known approaches, 475, PB-261-079
Landfill temperature sampling interval analysis, PB-256-356
Landfills for pesticide waste disposal, 569
Leachate damage assessment;  case study of the Fox Valley solid waste disposal site in Aurora, Illinois, 514
Leachate damage assessment;  case study of the Peoples Avenue solid waste disposal site in Rockford, Illinois, 517
Leachate damage assessment; case study of the Sayville solid waste disposal site in Islip (Long Island),  New York,
       509
Leachate effects of improper land disposal,  435
Leather tannery waste management through process change, reuse and pretreatment, PB-264-204
Lee County, Mississippi, solid waste disposal project, PB-241-468
Legislative history of the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended, together with a section-by-section index, 410
Let DARE make your solid-waste decisions, 101
Let's dump the dump; the ABC's of solid waste management, 290
Library holdings—nonperiodical; Federal solid waste management program, November 1972, 375
Liner materials exposed to hazardous and toxic sludges; first interim report, PB-271-013
Liners for land disposal sites;  an assessment, 428, PB-261-046
Lists of manufacturers of solid waste management equipment, PB-256-956
Litter bit is not enough, 318
Little town that could, 642
Locational models for solid waste management, 173
Louisville, Ky.-Ind. metropolitan region solid waste disposal study; interim report on a solid waste demonstration
       project v.l, 125, PB-217-958
Lower Rio Grande Valley regional plan  for solid waste disposal utilizing rail haul, PB-213-347

Magnetic separation: recovery of salable iron and steel from municipal solid waste, 559
Making polyethylene more disposable [Condensation], 324
Making refuse collection safer, 481
Malgastar causa necesidad [Poster; Spanish version of "Waste not, want not"], 392
Manage solid wastes as a utility, 160
Management information for solid waste collection, PB-213-308
Management of metal-finishing sludge, 561
Management of solid waste-the utility concept, 161
Management of solid wastes from hospitals: problems and technology, 73
Mapping the United States...a solid waste view, 149
                                                    136

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Maricopa County; an interim report on a solid waste demonstration project, PB-215-699
Marine disposal of solid wastes, 157
Market locations  for recovered materials, 518
Marketability of recovered and clarified incinerator residue in the New York metropolitan area, PB-222-588
Markets  and technology for recovering energy from solid waste, 401, PB-253-326
Mas alia de la lata de basura [Spanish version  of "Beyond the trash can"], 424
Master plan for solid waste collection and disposal~tri-parish metropolitan area of New Orleans; final report on a solid
       waste management demonstration, 94
Mathematical  analysis of solid waste collection, 147, PB-216-105
Mathematical  determination of total oxygen in solid waste, PB-256-365
Mathematical  model for aerobic digestion, PB-222-029
Mathematical  model for post aeration, PB-222-031
Mathematical  modeling and computer simulation for designing municipal refuse collection and haul services,
       PB-208-154
Mathematical  modeling of solid waste collection policies, 123
Measuring external effects of solid waste management, PB-243-407
Mechanics of style; a guide for Solid Waste Management authors, secretaries,  grantees, and  contractors, 386
Mechanized, non-stop residential solid waste collection, PB-239-196
Mechanized residential solid waste collection, PB-239-195
Memphis' municipal solid waste management system;  a case  study, PB-234-713
Merced County's  demonstration sanitary landfill and collection project, PB-252-865
Mess we're in, 159
Metallurgical upgrading of automotive scrap steel, PB-223-740
Metals in municipal landfill leachate and their health  effects, 624
Methane production,  recovery, and utilization from landfills, 710
Method for macrodetermination of carbon  and hydrogen in solid wastes,  193
Methods for bacteriological examination of solid waste and waste effluents, PB-256-374
Methods of predicting solid waste characteristics, 235, PB-214-760
Methods to treat, control and monitor spilled hazardous  materials, PB-243-386
Metropolitan housewives' attitudes toward  solid  waste disposal, PB-213-340
Microbial degradation of urban and agricultural wastes,  254
Microbiological evaluation of incinerator operations, 88
Microbological studies of compost plant dust, PB-222-160
Middletown's  municipal solid waste management system; a case study,  PB-234-945
Mine spoil potentials  for  soil and water quality,  PB-237-525
Mineral  recovery from the noncombustible fraction of municipal solid waste; a proposed  project to demonstrate
       incinerator residue recovery, 491, PB-261-048
Mission 5000.  [Flyer and button.], 202
Mission 5000; a citizens'  solid waste management project, 280
Mission 5000; let's find a better way!  [Poster], 201
Model county wide collection and disposal system for Clark County, Arkansas, PB-243-029
Model for optimal design and operation of solid waste transfer stations, PB-227-075
Model state hazardous waste management act (annotated), 635
Modifications to the executive computer program for steady-state simulation of wastewater treatment facilities,
       PB-234-497
Movement of selected metals, asbestos, and cyanide in soil: application to waste disposal problems, PB-266-905
Municipal composting research at Johnson City, Tennessee, 74
Municipal incineration, 75
Municipal sludge management, environmental factors; technical bulletin, 657
Municipal sludge management; overview of EPA policy  and  programs [Pamphlet], 696
Municipal sludge: what shall we do with it? 556
Municipal solid waste disposal...how cities  site landfills,  669
Municipal waste  disposal by shipborne incineration and sea disposal of residues, PB-221-684
Municipal-scale incinerator design and operation, 122
Municipal-scale thermal processing of solid wastes, PB-263-396

National buyer's  guide to recycled paper, 343
National hazardous waste management program, 541
National solid wastes program, 25
                                                    137

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National solid wastes survey; an interim report, 26, PB-260-102
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 1, 216, PB-217-913
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 1, 217
National survey (1968) of community solid waste practices; region 2, v. 2, 218
Needs for chemical research in solid waste management, 134
New chemical concepts for utilization of waste plastics, 222, PB-214-031
New England recycling directory, 638
New technologies in solid waste  management, 274
New York solid waste management plan; status report, 1970, 233
Nitrite-accelerated photochemical degradation of cellulose as a pretreatment for microbiological conversion to protein
       PB-222-115
Noise emission standards for new truck-mounted solid waste compactors, 661

Observations of continental European solid waste management practices, 93,  PB-205-657
Occurrence and significance of pesticides in solid wastes, PB-256-496
Ocean disposal of barge-delivered liquid and solid wastes from  U.S. coastal cities, 192, PB-213-473
Ocean dumping poses growing threat, 140
Omaha-Council Bluffs solid waste management plan; status report,  1969, 183
One private  plant treats oil, chemical residues in Denmark, 418
Optimal configuration of a  regional solid waste management system, PB-233-360
Optimization models for regional public systems, PB-231-309
Optimization of office paper recovery systems, PB-264-214
Oregon solid waste management plan; status report, 1969,  168
Oregon's bottle bill; the first six  months, 325
Organic pesticides and pesticide  containers; a study of their decontamination and combustion, PB-202-202
Our effluent society; the States and solid waste management, 383
Our environment [Flyer], 214
Overview and objectives of hazardous waste management, 584

PCB-containing wastes (industrial facilities); recommended procedures for disposal, 516
PERT; concepts and application to solid waste management, 135
Packaging and solid waste management, 27
Packaging industry and government, 246
Packaging source reduction; can industry and government cooperate? 422, PB-260-634
Paper and plastic solid waste sacks; a summary of available information, PB-256-960
Paper profits; solid waste project, 666
Paper recycling 1973: a dramatic year in perspective, 465
Paper recycling in the United States, 420
Parasitological examination of compost; a Solid Waste Research open-file report, 224
Partial oxidation of solid organic wastes, 154, PB-216-735
Patent abstracts; international solid waste management, 1945-1969,  319
Patent abstracts; United States solid waste management, 1945-1969,  317
Pathogens associated with solid waste processing; a progress report,  184
Pesticide container processing in commercial reconditioning facilities, 534
Pesticides and containers; acceptance, disposal, and storage; proposed rulemaking and issuance of procedures, 328
Pesticides and pesticide containers; proposed regulations for prohibition of certain acts regarding disposal and storage
       398
Pesticides and pesticide containers; regulations for acceptance and recommended procedures for disposal and storage
       376
Pesticides; EPA proposal on disposal and storage. See Pesticides and pesticide containers;; proposed regulations for
       prohibition of certain acts regarding disposal and storage
Pharmaceutical industry; hazardous waste generation, treatment, and disposal,  508
Photosynthetic reclamation of agricultural solid and liquid wastes, PB-222-454
Physical and chemical parameters and methods for solid waste characterization, PB-256-958
Physical, chemical, and biological treatment techniques for industrial wastes, v.l, PB-275-054
Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing, PB-220-479
Physical, chemical, and microbiological methods of solid waste testing; four additional methods, PB-231-203
Planning a comprehensive in-plant "solid waste survey, 139
Planning and the national solid waste survey, 113
                                                    138

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Plastic wastes in the coming decade, 179
Pneumo-slurry pipeline collection and removal of municipal solid waste, PB-223-162
Policies for solid waste management, 112, PB-216-654
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 1, 245, PB-209-000
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 2, PB-209-001
Pollution of subsurface water by sanitary landfills, v. 3, PB-209-002
Polychlorinated biphenyl-containing wastes; disposal procedures. See PCB-containing wastes (industrial facilities);
       recommended procedures for disposal
Portable sampler for microorganisms in incinerator stack emissions, 151
Potential for capacity creation in the hazardous waste management service industry, PB-257-187
Poultry manure disposal by plow-furrow-cover, PB-223-430
Preliminary assessment of wet systems for residential refuse collection, PB-234-496
Preliminary data analysis; 1968 national survey of community solid waste practices, 28
Preliminary design of a comprehensive waste oil processing facility, PB-242-461
Preliminary design of a household refuse grinder, PB-239-914
Preliminary estimate of the significance of pesticide residues in solid wastes and problems of reduction or elimination
       of these residues, 29
Preliminary evaluation of the pit incinerator, PB-256-349
Preliminary notification of hazardous waste activities; proposed procedures, 691
Preparation and evaluation of activated carbon produced from municipal refuse, PB-221-172
President Ford signs new solid wastes bill, 625
Prevalence of subsurface migration of hazardous chemical substances at selected industrial waste land disposal sites
       634, PB-275-103
Preventing landfill leachate contamination of water, PB-222-468
Price comparison survey of beer and soft drinks in refillable and nonrefillable containers, 531
Prior notice of citizen suits, 640
Private contractor opportunities in the solid wastes program,  76
Private sector in solid waste management; a profile of its resources and contribution to collection and disposal, v. 1 -2,
       346, PB-260-176
Problem-solving in solid waste management  through Federal-local  cooperation; eight  case studies,  423, PB-259-456
Problems and opportunities in management of combustible solid wastes, PB-222-467
Procedure for the mathematical  determination of total heat of combustion content of solid wastes, PB-256-382
Procedures manual for ground water monitoring at solid waste disposal facilities, 611
Proceedings; 1975 Conference on Waste Reduction, April 2-3, 1975, Washington,  D.C, 461
Proceedings; 1st National Conference on Packaging Wastes,  Sept. 22-24, 1969, 172, PB-215-328
Proceedings; the Surgeon General's Conference on Solid Waste Management for Metropolitan Washington, July 19-20,
        1967, 30, PB-215-878, PB-218-252
Process design manual: municipal sludge landfills [Notebook], 705
Processing and recovery of Jon Thomas—cool cat!, 299
Production of fungal protein from cellulose and waste cellulosics, 295
Program for the management of hazardous wastes, v. 1, PB-233-630
Program for the management of hazardous wastes, v. 2, PB-233-631
Progress in  solid waste management and needed developments, 116
Progress under the Federal solid wastes program, 31
Promising technologies for treatment of hazardous wastes, PB-238-145
Promulgation resource recovery facilities guidelines, 490
Proposals for a refuse disposal system in Oakland County, Michigan; final report on a solid waste demonstration grant
       project, 117
Provisions for hazardous waste regulation and land disposal controls under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
       Act of 1976, 644
Psychology of solid waste management, 87
Public attitudes towards hazardous waste disposal facilities, PB-223-638
Public health aspects of solid waste disposal, 32
Public participation in solid waste management; interim guidelines, 649
Public regulation concept in solid waste management; a feasibility  study, PB-225-332
Public-private partnership in solid waste management, 141
Pyrolysis of industrial wastes for oil and activated carbon recovery, PB-270-961
Pyrolysis of municipal solid waste, 417
 8-289 0-79-10
                                                    139

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Pyrolysis of solid municipal wastes, PB-222-015
Pyrolysis: a possible new approach to solid waste disposal and recycling, 329

Quad-City solid wastes project; an interim report, June 1, 1966 to May 31,  1967, 33
Quantity and composition of post-consumer solid waste: material flow estimates for 1973 and baseline future projections
       498
Questions and answers; returnable beverage containers for beer and soft drinks, 462

RCRA and State government, 607
Radiolytic hydrolysis of cellulose, PB-221-877.
Rail transport of solid wastes, PB-222-709
Rail transport of solid wastes, a feasibility study; interim report:  phase one, 34,  PB-187-306
Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron and steel, v.  1,
       PB-229-816
Raw materials transportation costs and their influence on the use of wastepaper and scrap iron and steel, v.  2,
       PB-229-817
Re-refining of waste lubrication oil: Federal perspective, 577
Recirculating waste system for swine  units, PB-221-621
Reclamation of energy from organic waste, PB-231-176
Recommended methods of reduction,  neutralization, recovery or disposal of hazardous waste, PB-224-579-Set
              v. 1. Summary report, PB-224-580
              v. 2. Toxicologic summary, PB-224-581
              v. 3. Ultimate incineration, PB-224-582
              v. 4. Miscellaneous waste treatment processes, PB-224-583
              v. 5. Pesticides and cyanide compounds, PB-224-584
              v. 6. Mercury, arsenic, chromium, and cadmium  compounds, PB-224-585
              v. 7. Propellants, explosives, and chemical warfare material, PB-224-586
              v. 8. Miscellaneous inorganic and organic compounds, PB-224-587
              v. 9. Radioactive materials, PB-224-588
              v. 10. Organic compounds, PB-224-589
              v. 11. Organic compounds (continued), PB-224-590
              v. 12. Inorganic compounds, PB-224-591
              v. 13. Inorganic compounds (continued), PB-224-592
              v. 14. Summary of waste origins, PB-224-593
              v. 15. Research and development plans, PB-224-594
              v. 16. References, PB-224-595
Recommended standards for sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation and model sanitary landfill operation
       agreement, 230,  PB-213-472
Recovering resources from solid waste using wet-processing; EPA's Franklin, Ohio, demonstration project, 408,
       PB-253-330
Recovery and utilization of municipal solid waste; a summary of available cost and performance characteristics of unit
       processes and systems,  177
Recovery  of landfill gas at Mountain  View; engineering site study, 587
Recovery  of magnetic metals from municipal solid waste, 682
Recycle; in search of new policies  for resource recovery, 296
Recycled materials markets; February 1975~a summary,  438, PB-259-138
Recycling, 601
Recycling and reuse of waste materials; an essential feature of solid waste control systems for the future,  96
Recycling and the consumer; solid waste management, 344, 403
Recycling; assessment and prospects  for success, 286, PB-213-961
Recycling [Film narrative], 268
Recycling [Flyer], 210
Recycling of waste oils, PB-243-222
Recycling our resources, 273
Reduce; targets, means  and impacts of source reduction, 456
Reduce the incentive to waste, 500
Refuse and litter control in recreation areas,  40
Refuse as a supplementary fuel for power plants—November 1973 through March 1974; interim progress report, 387
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1954-1955, 35
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated  bibliography, 1956-1957, 36, PB-215-951
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Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1958-1959, 37, PB-215-934, PB-217-061
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1960-1961, 38, PB-216-208
Refuse collection and disposal; an annotated bibliography, 1962-1963, 39, PB-216-196
Refuse shredders at EPA's Gainesville, Florida, experimental composting plant, 402
Regional management of solid wastes; a planning study [Condensation], 323
Regional solid waste management representatives,  439
Relationship of solid waste storage practices in the inner city to the incidence of rat infestation and fires, 444
Remarks by Barbara Blum, Deputy Administrator, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, at the 65th Annual
       Meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, Washington, May 3, 1977, 609
Remarks by the Honorable Douglas M. Costle, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 613
Report of the Solid Waste Management Advisory Group on opportunities for improving productivity in solid waste
       collection--1973, 441
Report on a study of the Alexandria, Virginia incinerator, PB-216-588
Report on a study of the Weber County incinerator in Ogden, Utah, PB-256-926
Report on the DeKalb County incinerator study, PB-216-586
Report on the Hartsfield incinerator study, PB-256-940
Report to Congress: waste disposal practices and their effects on ground water;  executive summary, Jan. 1977, 656
Requiring secondary materials in Federal construction; a feasibility study, PB-241-729
Research activities of the solid wastes program of the Public Health Service, 41
Research and demonstration grants; interim regulations, 660
Research and development for better solid waste management, 98
Residential collection systems, v. 1. Report summary, 434
Residential collection systems, v. 2. Detailed study and analysis, PB-239-917
Residential paper  recovery; a community action program, 553
Residential paper  recovery; a municipal implementation guide, 486, PB-259-454
Residential solid waste generated in low-income areas, 242
Resource and environmental profile analysis of nine beverage container alternatives; final report, 405, PB-253-486
Resource conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a brief look at Public Law 94-580, 563
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; a summary of Public Law  94-580, 564
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; everybody's business, 566
Resource conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; how will it impact on resource recovery and conservation?
       Resource recovery technology update from U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age), 623
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; intent to develop rulemaking, 579
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public  Law 94-580); issues for discussion, 576
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Public Law 94-5 80,94th Congress, s. 2150-Oct. 21,1976,171
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public  Law 94-580); provisions for discussion, 580
Resource conservation: how industry might help, 676
Resource Recovery Act; Public Law 91-512, 91st Cong., H.R. 11833, October 26, 1970, 152
Resource recovery and land protection; an environmental imperative, 413
Resource recovery and source reduction; first report to Congress. 3d ed, 352, PB-255-139
Resource recovery and source reduction; second report to Congress, 353, PB-253-406
Resource recovery and waste reduction; current reports, 536
Resource recovery and waste reduction; fourth report to Congress, 600
Resource recovery and waste reduction; third report to Congress, 448, PB-255-141
Resource recovery and you, 557
Resource recovery—a new solid  waste management philosophy and technology, 196
Resource recovery implementations; a status report, 620
Resource recovery in solid waste management, 241
Resource recovery industry, 539
Resource recovery industry; a survey of the industry and its capacity, 501
Resource recovery losing ground, 289
Resource recovery planning...an  overview of the implementation process, 567
Resource recovery plant cost estimates: a comparative evaluation of four recent dry-shredding designs, 482
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—accounting  format, 493, PB-259-143
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—financing, 471, PB-256-461
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—further assistance, 470, PB-256-460
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—interim  report, 480, PB-259-139
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials-markets, 499
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—planning and overview, 533
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials-procurement, 495, PB-259-140
                                                   141

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Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—risks and contracts, 496, PB-259-142
Resource recovery plant implementation: guides for municipal officials—technologies, 550
Resource recovery project development grants under the President's urban policy; notice of meeting and request for
       comments, 715
Resource recovery projects; requests for proposals/contracts—summaries, 552
Resource recovery, recycling, and reuse, 307
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; a review of energy recovery technologies, 570
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; Baltimore pyrolysis and waste-fired steam generator
       emissions, 537
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; 'co-disposal' for solid waste and sewage sludge, 667
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; demonstrating resource recovery, 528
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; demonstration of pyrolysis and materials recovery in San
       Diego, California, 582
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P. A.; EPA resource recovery demonstration: summary of air
       emission analyses, 581
Resource recovery technology  update  from the U.S.E.P.A.; resource recovery through multi-material source
       separation, 575
Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A.; the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976:
       how will it impact on resource recovery and conservation? 623
Resource recovery; the Federal perspective,  350
Resource recovery; the state of technology, 321
Resource recovery through multi-material source separation;  Resource recovery technology update from the
       U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age), 575
Return your soft drink and  beer containers and get a $.05 refund too [Poster], 646
Return your soft drink containers [Poster], 647
Reuse of solid waste from water-softening processes, PB-224-820
Reuse of solid wastes: a major solution to a major  national problem, 119
Review and assessment of deep-well injection of hazardous waste, PB-269-OOO-Set
              v. 1, PB-269-001
              v. 2. Appendices A, B, and C, PB-269-002
              v. 3. Appendix D, PB-269-003
              v. 4. Appendices E, F, G, H,  I, and J, PB-269-004
Review of energy recovery technologies; Resource recovery technology update from the U.S.E.P.A. (In Waste Age),
       570
Review of industrial solid wastes, PB-214-924
Review of landspreading of liquid municipal sewage sludge, PB-245-271
Review of pesticide  disposal research, 527
Review of sanitary landfilling practices in the United States, 43
Review of techniques for incineration of sewage sludge with solid wastes, PB-266-355
Review of the national solid wastes program, 42
Role of decision models in the evaluation of competing environmental health alternatives, 226
Role of nonpackaging paper in solid waste  management, 1966 to 1976, 170
Role of packaging in solid waste management-1966 to 1976 [Condensation], 243
Role of packaging in solid waste management, 1966 to 1976, 44, PB-204-405
Role of sanitary landfilling in solid waste management, 305
Routing of  solid waste collection vehicles,  PB-239-895-Set
       Final report and appendix A; manual for use of the computer codes, PB-239-898
       Final report and appendix B; a heuristic solution to the m-postman problem, PB-239-899
       First annual report and  appendix A;  a linear programming approach for the traveling salesman problem,
              PB-239-896
       First annual report and appendix B; optimal routing of solid waste collection vehicles, PB-2 3 9-8 97
Rubber reuse and solid waste management, pt.  1-2, 187
Rural storage and collection container systems [1972], PB-212-398
Rural storage and collection container systems [1975], PB-240-365
Safe and sanitary home refuse storage [Flyer], 45
Safe storage and disposal of pesticides, 630
Salvage industry; what it is-how it works [Condensation], 333
Salvage markets for materials  in solid wastes, 293,  PB-214-152
Sample weights in solid waste composition studies, 133
San Diego  County demonstrates pyrolysis of solid  waste to recover liquid fuel, metals, and glass, 442


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Sanitary landfill; a bibliography, 46, 384, PB-215-904
Sanitary landfill: alternative to the open dump, 285
Sanitary landfill...an answer to a community problem; a route to a community asset, 189
Sanitary landfill: Clark County, Arkansas, 479
Sanitary landfill design and operation, 287, PB-227-565
Sanitary landfill design, construction, and evaluation,  185, PB-203-623
Sanitary landfill facts, 47, PB-204-403
Sanitary landfill; one part earth to four parts refuse [Film narrative], 288
Sanitary landfill synopsizer [Pocket calculator], 351
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, 339
San Jose's municipal solid waste system; a case study, PB-240-395
Satellite vehicle systems for solid waste collection: evaluation and application, PB-197-931
Satellite vehicle waste collection systems [Condensation], 262, PB-213-680
Save a paper, warm a home, 675
Save energy: recycle solid waste [Bumper sticker], 685
Saving the energy in solid waste; environmental information, 503
Scrap rubber tire utilization in road dressings, PB-232-559
Scrap tires as artificial reefs, 348
Selecting solid waste disposal facilities, 219
Separating paper at the  waste source for recycling, 381, PB-260-254
Seven incinerators; evaluation, discussions, and authors' closure, 200
Sewage sludge disposal in a sanitary landfill, PB-225-360-Set
              v. 1.  Summary and conclusions, PB-225-361
              v. 2.  Description of study and technical data,  PB-225-362
Shaving solid waste collection costs, 347
Single cell protein and other food recovery technologies from waste, PB-270-085
Single-cell proteins from cellulosic  wastes, PB-223-873
Size reduction of solid waste; an overview, 369
Size-reduction equipment for municipal solid waste, PB-226-551
Ski mountain; a conceptual feasibility study in solid waste management, PB-213-697
Sludge conditioning using  sulfur dioxide and low pressure for production of organic feed concentrate, PB-223-343
Socio-economic factors affecting demand for municipal collection of household refuse, PB-225-020
Solid waste-a natural resource? 77
Solid waste and fiber recovery demonstration plant for the City of Franklin, Ohio; an interim report, PB-213-646
Solid waste as fuel for power plants, PB-220-316
Solid waste characteristics at the Atlanta State Farmer's Market, PB-215-289
Solid waste control program expanded, 565
Solid waste conversion: cellulose liquefaction, PB-239-509
Solid waste demonstration programs...can they help you? 220
Solid Waste Demonstration Projects; Proceedings of a Symposium, Cincinnati, May 4-6, 1971, 311, PB-230-171
Solid waste/disease  relationships;  a literature survey, 48, PB-216-480
Solid Waste Disposal Act Amendment of 1968; report of the Committee on Public Works, United States Senate, to
       accompany S. 3201, 90th Cong., 2d sess., Report No. 1447, 51
Solid Waste Disposal Act; Title II of Public Law 89-272, 89th Cong., S. 306, October 20, 1965, 50
Solid waste disposal and resource recovery grants, 221
Solid waste disposal; a new area of pollution, 49
Solid waste disposal facilities; proposed classification criteria, 668
Solid waste disposal in Yellowstone National Park, PB-256-952
Solid waste; disposal, reuse present major problems, 330
Solid waste disposal study; technical report; Genesee County, Michigan, June 1968, 52
Solid waste estimation procedure; material flows approach, 445
Solid waste facts, 694
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 1, 300, PB-213-132
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 2, PB-213-133
Solid waste handling and disposal hi multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 3, 301
Solid waste handling and disposal in multistory buildings and hospitals, v. 4, PB-213-135
Solid waste handling in metropolitan areas, 53
Solid Waste Information Retrieval System; SWIRS [Brochure], 538
Solid waste—it won't go away; current focus, 302
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Solid waste management, 234, 586
Solid waste management; abstracts and excerpts from the literature, v. 1-2,  127
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1964, 231, PB-215-920
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1965, 257
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1966, 258
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1967, 281
Solid waste management; abstracts from the literature-1968, 282
Solid waste management; an overview, 304
Solid waste management and the packaging industry, 107
Solid waste management-closing the circle, 320
Solid waste management/composting; European activity and American potential, 55, PB-205-656
Solid waste management demonstration grant projects—1971; for grants awarded during the period June 1, 1966-
       June 30, 1971, 232, PB-214-558
Solid waste management glossary, 279
Solid waste management guidelines for beverage containers, 463
Solid waste management: horizons unlimited, 525
Solid waste management in high-rise dwellings; a condensation, 292
Solid waste management in recreational forest areas, 167,  PB-203-622
Solid waste management in residential complexes, 248, PB-216-234
Solid waste management in the drug industry, PB-225-333
Solid waste management hi the food processing industry, 198, PB-219-019
Solid waste management hi the industrial chemical industry, PB-226-420
Solid waste management; monthly abstracts bulletin for April, May, and June 1973, 555
Solid waste management; monthly abstracts bulletin for January, February, and March 1973, 513
Solid waste management; monthly abstract bulletin for January through June 1973, 658
Solid waste management plan, PB-234-544
Solid waste management practices in a foundry, PB-256-955
Solid waste management practices in a plastics production plant, PB-216-587
Solid waste management: the Federal role, 56
Solid waste management, the national issues; community guide, 303
Solid waste management today...bringing about municipal change, 466
Solid waste management training bulletin of courses, July 1971-December 1972, 208
Solid waste management study for the Port of Tacoma, PB-226-042
Solid waste management; worldwide solid waste literature collection/retrieval services available from EPA, 636
Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v.l, PB-234-930
Solid waste milling and disposal on land without cover, v. 2 [Data condensations], PB-234-931
Solid waste on Federal lands in Alaska, executive summary report, 639
Solid waste planning and disposal; advance notice of proposed rulemaking, 629
Solid waste processing; a state-of-the-art report on unit operations and processes, 114, PB-216-65 3
Solid waste recycling projects; a national directory, 341, PB-254-623
Solid waste reduction/salvage plant, an interim report; City  of Madison  pilot plant demonstration project, June 14
       to December 31, 1967, 57, PB-260-262
Solid waste research needs, PB-227-561
Solid waste shredding  and shredder selection, 433, PB-261-044
Solid waste transfer and disposal for rural areas, 174
Solid waste transfer stations; a state-of-the-art report on systems incorporating highway transportation, 337,
       PB-213-511
Solid wastes and air pollution, 100
Solid wastes demonstration grant abstracts; grants awarded January 1-June 30, 1969,  78
Solid wastes: every day, another 800 million pounds, 58
Solid wastes handling, 79
Solid wastes landfill stabilization; an interim report, 54
Solid wastes management in Germany; report of the U.S. Solid Wastes Study Team visit, June 25-July 8,1967,59,
       (See PB-206-585.)
Solid Wastes Management; Proceedings; National Conference, University of California at Davis, Apr. 4-5, 1966,
       PB-245-376
Solid wastes problems and programs: a challenge to the professional sanitarian, 80
Solid Wastes; Proceedings of a Symposium at Lawrence, Kansas, Mar. 2, 1966, PB-227-578
Solid wastes program  of the U.S. Public Health Service, 81
Solid wastes; proposed guidelines for storage and collection,  454
Solving the abandoned car problem in small communities, 354
Solving the abandoned vehicle problem hi small communities, PB-216-585
Some effects of disposable plastic liners on refuse handling efficiency, 60
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Some specialized equipment used in European compost systems, 61
Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study [1974], PB-230-379
Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study [1975], PB-239-778
Source reduction fact sheet; Red Owl Stores program, 416
Source reduction fact sheet; reducing waste at its source, program of International Paper Company and Wells Dairy
       447
Source separation for materials recovery; guidelines, 473
Source separation, small scale pyrolysis work wonders for the town of Plymouth, 678
Source separation; the community awareness program in Somerville and Marblehead, Massachusetts, 551
Special studies for incinerators for the government of the District of Columbia, Department of Sanitary Engineering
       62, PB-187-286
Special studies of a sanitary landfill, PB-196-148
Specifications for materials recovered from municipal refuse, PB-242-540
St. Louis power plant to burn city refuse, 180
St. Louis refuse processing plant: equipment, facility, and environmental evaluations, PB-243-634
St. Louis/Union Electric refuse  firing demonstration air pollution test report, 412
Standards applicable to transporters of hazardous wastes, 689
State activities in solid waste management, 1974, 457, PB-261-076
State and interstate solid waste planning; a case study of Federal-State partnership, 215
State decision makers guide for  hazardous waste management, 612
State hazardous waste programs; proposed guidelines, 665
State hazardous waste regulations and legislation; a synopsis of information on seven selected states, 530
State/interstate solid waste planning grants and agencies-January 1969,  63
State/interstate solid waste planning grants; progress abstracts, January  1969, 64
State of Vermont Agency of Environmental Conservation solid waste management and resource recovery plan,
       PB-235-319
State program implementation guide: hazardous waste surveys, 464
State program implementation guide: hazardous waste jtransportation control,  512,  PB-261-088
State solid waste  management agencies, 393
State solid waste  management and resource recovery incentives act [proposed], 377
State solid waste  management plans; guidelines for development and  implementation, 714
State solid waste planning grants, agencies, and progress-1970; report of activities through June 30,  1970,  163,
       PB-214-441
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., Oct. 30, 1973,  358
Statement of Honorable Douglas  M. Costle, Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency, before the
       Subcommittee on Transportation and  Commerce, Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, House
       of Representatives, April 16, 1977, 603
Statement of Honorable H. Lanier Hickman, Jr., Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste,
       Environmental Protection Agency,  before the Subcommittee on Advanced Energy Technologies and Energy
       Conservation Research, Development and Demonstration Committee on  Science and Technology, U.S.
       House of Representatives, Dec. 12, 1977, 655
Statement  of Honorable John R. Quarles, Jr., Deputy Administrator, Environmental Protection Agency, before the
        Subcommittee on  the Environment, Committee on  Commerce, United States Senate, May 7, 1974, 459
Statement; Samuel Hale,  Jr., Deputy  Assistant Administrator for Solid Waste Management Programs, before the
        Subcommittee on the Environment, Committee on Commerce, United States Senate, June 11, 1973 [and] June
        22, 1973, 357
States' roles in solid waste management; a task force report, 327, PB-227-014
Status of solid waste management in the United States, 526
Status report on solid waste disposal charge analysis; 3d report to the President and Congress of the United States
       mandated by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-580), 708
Strategy for the  implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (Draft),  645
Studies of small  particles in solid  waste operations, PB-256-357
Studies on modifications of solid industrial wastes, PB-222-419
Study of corrosion in municipal incinerators versus refuse composition,  PB-23 8-747
Study of Federal subsidies to stimulate resource recovery, PB-239-736
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Study of hazardous waste materials, hazardous effects and disposal methods, PB-221-464-Set
                v. 1. Purpose, scope, approach and principal findings of study, PB-221-465
                v. 2, PB-221-466
                v. 3, PB-221-467
 Study of incinerator residue analysis of water soluble components, PB-222-458
 Study of institutional solid wastes, PB-223-345
 Study of pesticide disposal in a sewage sludge incinerator, PB-253-485
 Study of pneumatic solid waste collection systems as employed in hospitals, PB-236-543
 Study of residential solid waste generated in low-income areas, 242
 Study of selected landfills designed as pesticide disposal sites, PB-250-717
 Study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with  multi-man crews; a condensation, 298
 Study of solid waste collection systems comparing one-man with  multi-man crews; final report, 65
 Study of solid waste management practices  in the pulp and paper industry, PB-234-944
 Study of solid waste management; committee guide, 259
 Study of the Delaware County no.  3 incinerator in Broomall, Pennsylvania, PB-256-943
 Study of the economics of hospital solid waste systems, PB-221-681
 Study of the feasibility of Federal procurement of fuels produced from solid waste, PB-255-695
 Study of the feasibility of requiring the Federal Government to use retreaded tires, PB-243-028
 Study of the New Orleans East incinerator, PB-256-959
 Study of the technical and economic feasibility of a hydrogenation  process for utilization of waste rubber, PB-222-694
 Study of utilization and disposal of lime sludges containing phosphates, PB-222-354
 Study of waste generation, treatment and disposal in the metals mining industry, PB-261-052
 Study report on a pilot-plant conical incinerator,  213,  PB-216-192
 Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization; v.  1—general report, PB-212-729
 Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 2-7, PB-212-730
 Study to identify opportunities for increased solid waste utilization, v. 8-9, PB-212-731
 Stuff we throw away [Film narrative], 267
 Stuff we throw away [Flyer],  211
 Successful sanitary landfill siting: County of San  Bernardino, California,  617
 Suggested solid waste management ordinance for local government, 419,  PB-258-272
 Summaries of solid waste intramural  research and development projects,  165, PB-214-440
 Summaries of solid waste management contracts, July 1, 1965-June 30, 1970, 85
 Summaries of solid waste management contracts; July 1, 1970-March 31, 1975, 469
 Summaries of solid waste research and training grants-1970 [Insert], 190, PB-216-106
 Summaries of solid wastes research and training grants—1968 [with a supplement-insert], 67, PB-216-460
 Summaries; solid waste demonstration grant projects-1968, PB-215-867
 Summaries; solid wastes demonstration grant projects-1969, 66
 Summary of hazardous substance classification systems, 489, PB-261-086
 Survey of methods used to control  wastes containing hexachlorobenzene, PB-25 3-051
 Survival of pathogens in animal manure disposal, PB-222-337
 Symposium of State and Interstate Solid Waste Planning Agencies, Sept. 9-11, 1969, St. Louis, Mo, 194, PB-218-263
 Systems analysis of regional solid waste handling, 136
 Systems analysis study  of solid waste collection management: final report, PB-276-708
 Systems analysis study of solid waste collection management: final report, v.l, PB-276-707
 Systems engineering applied to selection and replacement of solid waste collection vehicles for Lawrence, Kansas,
        PB-217-775
 Systems simulation and solid waste; a case study, PB-222-995
 Systems study of solid waste management in the Fresno area; final report on a solid waste management demonstration
        84
 Tactics, strategy: the solid waste battle, 99
 Tampa's municipal solid waste management system; a case study, PB-225-291
 Technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt. 1. Federal research on waste oil from automobiles, PB-237-618
 Technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt. 2. An investigation of dispersed sources of used crankcase
        oils, PB-237-619
 Technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, pt. 3. Economic, technical, and institutional barriers to waste
        oil recovery, PB-237-620
 Technical and economic study of waste oil recovery, [pts. 4-6], PB-251-716
 Technical assistance activities of the solid wastes program, 68
 Technical assistance to state and local governments, 707
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Technical-economic study of solid waste disposal needs and practices, 92, PB-187-712
Technical, environmental and economic evaluation of the glass recovery plant at Franklin, Ohio, PB-272-051
Technical, environmental and economic evaluation of the "wet processing system for the recovery and disposal of
       municipal solid waste", PB-245-674
Technical evaluation of the Baltimore Landgard  system, 641
Tentative procedure analyzing pesticide residues in solid waste, PB-222-165
Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin: an accidental poisoning episode in horse arenas, 474
Tezuka refuse compression system; a preliminary  report, 69
There lived a wicked dragon [Coloring book], 335
There's gold in your garbage, 421
Thermal methods for the codisposal of sludges and municipal residues, 686
Thermal processing and land disposal of solid waste; guidelines, 385
Thermophilic aerobic digestion of  organic solid wastes, PB-222-396
Third pollution [Film narrative], 266
Third pollution [Flyer], 70
Tire recycling and reuse incentives, PB-234-602, PB-252-602
Tokyo update; Japan makes rapid  progress in developing strategy for solid wastes management, 568
Toward a new environmental ethic [Pamphlet], PB-214-071
Toxic substances control and solid waste disposal, 670
Transcript; 1st Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Washington, D.C., Dec. 16,
       1976, 578
Transcript; EPA/DOT Joint Public Hearing on the Proposed Regulations for Transportation of Hazardous Wastes
       and Materials, Alexandria, Va.,  June 20, 1978, 703
Transcript; Joint Public Meeting on the Development of Regulations for the Transportation of Hazardous Waste Under
       the Resource Conservation and Recovery  Act of 1976; Des Plaines, JJ1., Oct. 26, 1977, 653
Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities, Cincinnati, June
       5,  1978, 706
Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities, Portland, Oreg.,
       Apr. 26, 1978, 700
Transcript; Public Hearing on Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities, Washington, D.C.,
       Apr. 21, 1978, 698
Transcript; Public Hearing on the  Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities, Kansas City,
       Mo., Apr. 24, 1978, 699
Transcript; Public Hearing on the Proposed Classification Criteria for Solid Waste Disposal Facilities, San Diego, Mar.
       1, 1978, 679
Transcript; Public Hearing on the  Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, New Orleans, Mar. 9,
       1978, 680
Transcript; Public Hearing on the  Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, Newton, Mass., Mar.
       14, 1978,  681
Transcript; Public Hearing on the  Proposed Guidelines for State Hazardous Waste Programs, Seattle, Mar. 16, 1978
       684
Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Beverage  Container  Deposit Legislation,
       Washington, D.C., Oct. 19, 1977,  654
Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Solid Waste Product Charge Issue, Cincinnati,
       Ohio, Nov. 18, 1977, 672
Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on Solid Waste Product Charge Issue, Portland,
       Oreg., Nov. 21, 1977, 664
Transcript; Public Meeting of the Resource Conservation Committee on  Solid Waste Product Charge Issue,
       Washington, D.C., Nov. 17,  1977, 662
Transcript; Public Meeting [on] Strategy for the Implementation of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
       1976, Arlington, Va., Jan.  19, 1978, 673
Transcript; Public Meeting on the Draft Solid  Waste Grant  Regulations for Implementation of the Resource
       Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Washington, June 30, 1977, 626
Transcript; Public Meeting on the Public Participation Guidelines, Section 7004(b) of Resource Conservation and
       Recovery Act of 1976, Washington, July  1,  1977, 627
Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; Subtitle C, Hazardous Waste
       Management, Arlington, Va.,  Oct.  11 and 12, 1977, 650
Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; Subtitle C, Hazardous Waste
       Management, Scottsdale, Ariz.,  Oct. 17-18, 1977, 652
Transcript; Public Meeting on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976; Subtitle C, Hazardous Waste
       Management, St. Louis, Mo, Oct. 13-14, 1977, 651
                                                   147

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Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Atlanta, Feb. 23-24,
       1977, 592
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Chicago, Mar. 21-22,
       1977, 598
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Dallas, Mar. 8-9, 1977
       595
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Denver and Salt Lake
       City, Mar.  3-4, 1977, 594
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Kansas  City, Mo.,
       Feb. 15-16,  1977, 588
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Pittsburgh, Feb. 28
       and Mar. 1, 1977, 590
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Richmond, Feb. 17-18,
       1977, 589
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, San Francisco, Mar.
       10-11,  1977, 596
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, Seattle, Mar. 17-18,
       1977, 597
Transcript; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery  Act  of 1976, Worcester, Mass.,
       and Concord, N.  H., Feb.  25-26, 1977, 593
Transcripts; Regional Public Meetings on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 and an  Appendix:
       Conference on the Management of Non-Nuclear Hazardous Wastes, New York City, Feb. 23, 1977, 591
Transportation of hazardous waste materials; proposed provisions, hearings, 702
Transportation rates and  costs for selected virgin and  secondary commodities, PB-23 3-871
Treatment and utilization of landfill gas; Mountain View project feasibility study, 583
Trends in wastepaper exports and  their effects on domestic markets, 397,  PB-258-681
Twelve-month extension Sonoma County solid waste stabilization study, PB-254-550

U.S. finds a rich resource; the nation's trash pile, 396
Ultimate disposal of spilled hazardous materials, 506
Untrashing Yosemite Park, 572
Upgrading  hazardous waste disposal sites; remedial approaches, 677
Urban solid waste management; economic case study, PB-213-394
Urban street cleaning, PB-239-327
Use it again, Sam;  a guide for Federal office paper recycling programs, 571
Use it again, Sam;  recycle [Bumper sticker], 414
Use it again, Sam;  recycle; the Federal Government high-grade paper recovery program [Pamphlet], 616
Use of abandoned strip mines for disposal of solid waste in Maryland, PB-257-305
Use of bags for solid waste storage and collection, PB-212-590
Use of domestic waste glass for  urban paving,  PB-222-052
Use of domestic waste glass for  urban paving;  summary report, PB-242-536
Use of solid waste as a fuel by investor-owned electric utility companies: Proceedings; EPA/Edison Electric Institute
       Meeting, 467
Use of the  water balance method for predicting leachate generation from solid waste disposal sites, 483
User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste management, v. 1, 370
User's manual for COLMIS; a collection management information system for solid waste management, v. 2, 371
User's guide to the solid waste  information retrieval system thesaurus, 374, PB-255-129
Uses and abuses of waste, 476
Utilization and disposal of poultry manure, 82
Utilization  of bark waste, PB-221-876
Utilization of expert opinion in  decision-making, 338
Utilization of fibrous wastes as sources of nutrients, PB-223-625
Utilization of solid wastes for the  generation of electric power, 602

Vacuum-acid hydrolysis of fungal  protein and of other protein sources, PB-256-372
Vinyl chloride; recommended procedures for disposal  of aerosol cans,  529
                                                   148

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Waste clearinghouses and exchanges, 608
Waste clearing houses and exchanges: a summary; new ways for identifying and transferring reusable industrial
       process wastes, 695
Waste clearinghouses and exchanges: new ways for identifying and transferring reusable industrial process wastes,
       PB-261-287
Waste disposal, PB-264-264
Waste management—private and public perspectives, 380
Waste Management Technology and Resource and Energy Recovery: Proceedings; 4th National Congress, Atlanta,
       Nov. 12-14, 1975, 497
Waste Management Technology and Resource and Energy Recovery: Proceedings; 5th National Congress, Dallas, Dec.
       7-9, 1976, 599
Waste not, want not [Poster], 313
Waste oil recycling and disposal, PB-235-857
Waste paper; a new look at recycling, 622
Waste processing complex emphasizes recycling, 309
Waste reduction and resource recovery activities; a nationwide survey, 432
Waste reduction and resource recovery—there's room  for both, 505
Waste wood and bulky refuse disposal; St. Louis facilities, PB-228-119
Wastepaper recycling: review of recent market demand and  supply, 511
Water quality/land disposed solid waste, PB-256-391
Wet systems for residential refuse collection; a case study for Springfield, Massachusetts, PB-234-499
What the people want you to do with solid waste, 315
What you can do to recycle more paper, 446
What's new in solid waste management? [Film narrative], 269
Where have all the toxic chemicals gone? 415
Where the boilers are; a survey of electric utility boilers with potential capacity for burning solid waste as fuel,
       PB-239-392
Where will we put all that garbage? 120
Who's on the clean-up crew? 340
Wichita's municipal solid waste management system;  a case study, PB-233-878
Win the war on waste, 460
Wood waste reuse in controlled release pesticides, PB-222-051
Words into deeds; implementing the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, 628
WRAP; a model for regional solid waste management planning; programmer's manual, 573
WRAP; a model for regional solid waste management planning; user's  guide, 574
Wrapping up the solid waste management problem; a model for regional solid waste management planning, 548

Yosemite National Park beverage container deposit experiment; final report, PB-270-266
Yosemite test of beverage container refund; environmental news [Press release], 532
You make a difference; please return your empties to the barrel provided [Sticker], 648
You make a difference; you contribute to a better environment when you return your soft drink and beer containers
        [Poster], 521
                                                    149

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                                         Author   Index
A. M. Kinney, Inc., PB-213-646
    PB-234-715, PB-234-716
A. T. Kearney, PB-280-117
A. W. Martin Associates, Inc.
    PB-265-391
Abrams, E. F., PB-258-953
    PB-274-565
Achinger, W. C., 200, 213, PB-216-192
    PB-226-960
Ackart, W. B., PB-213-488
Ackerman, D., PB-270-897
Ackerman, D. G., PB-265-540
ACT Systems, Inc., 434, PB-239-917
Adams, J. W., PB-267-987, PB-268-232
Aerojet-General Corporation, 84
Albert  Switzer & Associates, Inc., 94
Albrecht, O. W., PB-223-034
Alexander, T.,  120
Allan, G. G., PB-222-051
Allison, G., 424, 456
Allred, E. R., PB-222-337
Alter, H., 559, 682, PB-242-540
American Public Works Association
    PB-222-709
American Public Works Association
    Research Foundation, 34, 69
    PB-187-306, PB-227-561
Anastas, M. Y., PB-238-654
Andersland, O. B., PB-239-618
    PB-239-869
Anderson, K., 520
Anderson, R. C., PB-264-886
Anderson, R. J., 32
Anderson, R. K., 614, 619
Anderson, T., 327, PB-227-014
Andres, D. R., 174
Andrews, J. F., PB-222-396
Antoni, C. M., PB-222-419
Applied Management Sciences, PB-234-945
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-234-140, PB-234-141
    PB-234-713, PB-236-659
    PB-236-662, PB-240-395
    PB-260-176
Applied Technology Associates, PB-269-502
Arella, D. G., 408, 491, PB-253-330
    PB-261-048
Armstrong, D. H., 151, PB-222-160
Army Engineer Waterways Experiment
    Station, PB-264-032
Arthur D. Little, Inc., 316, 508, 695
   PB-214-045, PB-225-164
   PB-237-264, PB-239-119
   PB-250-798, PB-250-802
   PB-250-905, PB-254-619
   PB-255-695, PB-261-287
   PB-263-210, PB-267-987
   PB-268-232, PB-275-054
Artz, N., PB-255-133
Auburn University, PB-228-165
Awner, A., 675
Ayres,  E. H., PB-257-499, PB-257-500
Bailin,  L. J., PB-268-526
Ball, G. L., PB-222-001
Bancroft, R. L., 466
Banks,  M. E., 222, PB-214-031
Barbour, J. F., PB-233-178
Barr Engineering Company
   PB-249-747
Barton, Brown, Clyde & Loguidice,
   Engineers, PB-266-562
Battelle Columbus Laboratories
   PB-213-378, PB-243-366
   PB-245-271, PB-264-349
Battelle Memorial Institute, Richland
   Pacific Northwest Labs.
   PB-212-729, PB-212-730
   PB-212-731, PB-233-630
   PB-233-631, PB-262-673
Battista, C. A., PB-222-694
Bauer,  D.  H., PB-261-018
Baxter, J. C., PB-269-352
Beck, Jr, W. M., PB-225-346
Belter,  W. G., PB-229-206
Bender, D. F., PB-220-479
Bendersky, D., 412, PB-261-052
Bendixen,  T. W., 42, 160,  161
Berkowitz, J. B., PB-239-119
   PB-275-054
Berman, E. B., 574
Besley, H. E., PB-223-430
Bingham, T.  H., 326, 437, PB-213-341
   PB-270-266
Bjornson, B. F., 23
Bjornson, B. J., 155
Black,  R. J., 12,  13, 26, 31,  37, 38, 39
   43,  45, 53, 71, 76, 79, 189, 288
   305, 340, 457, 469, PB-215-934
   PB-216-196, PB-216-208
   PB-217-061, PB-260-102
   PB-261-076
Blanchet, M. J., 583
Blum, B., 609
Boettcher, R. A., 102, 256, PB-214-133
Boettner, E. A., PB-222-001
Bogue,  D., 49
Bogue,  M. D., 23, 75, 150, 238
Bolly, M., 375
Bolton, R. E., PB-236-085
Bond, R. G., PB-221-681, PB-222-018
Booth, D. H., 255, PB-214-073
Booz Allen and Hamilton, Inc.
   PB-240-988, PB-256-444
Booz Allen Applied Research, Inc.
   PB-221-464, PB-221-879
Boston, R. J., 49
Boucher, F. B., PB-270-961
Boyd, G. B., 235, PB-214-760
Boyd, J.  L., 115
Boyd, W. K., PB-238-747
Bradbury Associates, Inc., PB-234-605
Braids, O. C., 229
Brand, B. G., PB-232-559
Breidenbach, A. W., 29, 41, 98, 134
   165, 212, PB-213-478, PB-214-440
Brinkahoff, R. J., PB-226-960
Britton, P. W., 28, 310
Brown, D. E., PB-238-819
Brown, R. P., 157, 162, 192
   PB-213-473
Brunner, D. R., 156, 287, PB-227-565
Buchanan, C. C.,  348
Bugher, R. D., PB-227-561
Burchinal, J. C., PB-223-345
Bureau of Solid Waste Management
   PB-214-924, PB-216-585
   PB-216-586, PB-216-587
   PB-216-588, PB-256-373
   PB-256-379, PB-256-496
   PB-256-505, PB-256-506
   PB-256-926.PB-256-928
   PB-256-940, PB-256-943
   PB-256-945, PB-256-946
   PB-256-947, PB-256-948
   PB-256-952, PB-256-953
   PB-256-954, PB-256-955
   PB-256-958, PB-256-959
   PB-257-306
Butler, D. M., 95, PB-204-404
California State Department of Public
   Health, 175
Callihan, C. D., 186, PB-203-620
   PB-223-873
Calspan Corporation,
   PB-243-386, PB-253-487
   PB 276-169, PB-276-170
   PB-276-171,PB-276-172
Carlson, J. A., 587
Carlson, O. N., PB-223-740
Carnes, R. A.,  158,  PB-222-165
Carotti, A. A., 368, PB-258-156
Carroll, T. E., PB-245-271
Carruth,  D., 97, 133
Carruth,  D. E., PB-216-584
   PB-216-587
Carter, C. D., 474
Cattaraugus County Refuse
   Department, PB-266-562
Channing L. Bete Co., Inc., 290,  557
Chapman, R. A., 190, PB-216-106
Corporate authors are listed under first corporate name (see Arthur D. Little, Inc. above)

                                                       150

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Charms, A., PB-208-154
Cimino, J. A., 426
Citizen's Advisory Committee on
   Environmental Quality, 307
City of Lynn, Massachusetts
   PB-214-166
City of Mountain View, Calif., 587
City of San Diego, PB-214-960
City of Scottsdale,  Arizona, 472
   PB-244-841
City of St. Louis, Missouri
   PB-228-119
City of St. Louis, Union Electric Co.
   PB-213-534
City of Tolleson, Arizona, PB-239-196
City of Wichita Falls, Texas, Dept. of
   Public Works,  PB-276-707,
   PB-276-708
City of Winston-Salem, North Carolina
   PB-239-357
Clark County, Arkansas, PB-243-029
Clark, L. B., 203
Clark, R. M., 103,  132, 146,  160, 161
    164, 173, 219, 228, 247, 251, 355
   PB-213-308, PB-213-394
   PB-213-482, PB-214-448
   PB-222-995
Clark, T. D.,  225
Clausen, J. F., PB-265-541
Claussen, E. L., 325, 332, 422
   PB-257-961, PB-260-634
Clendinning, R. A., PB-213-48 8
Cohen, I. R., PB-256-390
Cohen, S., PB-236-904
Coleman, E., 295
Coleman, W. E., 312, PB-256-372
Collins, D., 631
Colonna, R. A., 394
Combustion Engineering, Inc., 92
   PB-187-712
Combustion Power Company, Inc., 7
   PB-187-299
Communicable Disease Center
   PB-148-097
Compton, D. M. J., PB-247-566
   PB-247-567
Cone, B. W., PB-262-673
Conn, W. D., PB-270-219
Connolly, H. H., 85, 179
Connolly, J. A., 1,  231, 257, 294, 317
   374, 513, 555, 636,658
   PB-215-920, PB-216-888
   PB-255-129
Conrad, E. T., 705
Conrad, T. E., PB-261-018
Constantin, J. M.,  PB-264-204
Contos, G., PB-274-565
Converse, A. O., PB-221-239
Cope, F. W., 174
Costle, D. M., 603, 613
Council of State Governments, 383
County of Los Angeles, Department of
   County Engineer, 11, PB-218-672
Cowart, M., 520
Crane, L. E., 53
Cross, J. A., 405
Crowley, R.J., 678
Grumpier, Jr, E. P., 561
Cukor, P., PB-237-618, PB-237-619
    PB-237-620
Cukor, P. M., PB-251-716
Cummins, R. L., 83, 139, PB-214-924
Currier, R. A., PB-221-876
Da Vee, W., PB-239-196
Daber, J. M., PB-270-266
Dal Porto, C. F., PB-252-864
Dale, A.  C., 297, PB-230-386
Daly, W. H., PB-239-502
Dane, S.,  343
Daniels, L. E., 200, PB-216-586
    PB-256-349, PB-256-940
Darnay, A.,  44, 170, 286, 293, 358, 364
    380, 413, PB-213-961, PB-214-152
Davidson, G. R., 355
Davidson, Jr, G. R., 242
Davis, P. L., 13, 38, 53, PB-216-208
Davis, R. H., 400
Dawson,  G.  W., PB-262-673
Day, D. E.,  PB-222-052, PB-242-536
Day, D. L.,  297, PB-230-386
Day, H. R., 519, 527,  569
Day & Zimmerman, 62, PB-187-286
Decker, W.  M., 20
DeGeare, T. V., 240, 355, 483, PB-256-391
Degner, D. A., PB-217-775
Dehn, W. T., 139, 163, 354
    PB-214-441, PB-216-585
    PB-216-587
Delaney, J.  E., 262, 339, 351.PB-213-680
DeMarco, J., 122,  197, PB-256-355
Department  of Chemical Engineering,
    Worcester Polytechnic Inst.
    PB-262-804
Department  of Soils, Water and
    Engineering, University of Arizona
    PB-266-905
Derkics, D., PB-258-953
Dial, C. J, 274
Diesch, S. L., PB-222-337
Dindal, D. L., 322
District of Columbia. 191
District of Columbia, Department of
    Sanitary Engineering, 105
Drablin, M., PB-274-565
Drobny, N. L., 177
Dunlap, C. E., 186, PB-203-620
    PB-223-873
Dunne, N. G., 617
DuvalL, D. S., PB-244-310, PB-244-311
    PB-244-312
Ebon Research Systems, PB-266-684
    PB-270-085, PB-271-007
Edgar, T., PB-256-348
Edmund,  S., 159
Eilers, R. G., PB-222-000, PB-222-029
    PB-222-031
Eitel, M. J., 236
 Eldredge, R. W., 98
 Eliassen, R., PB-221-172
 Ellison, F., PB-202-202
 EMCON Associates, PB-230-379
    PB-239-778, PB-254-550
 Energy Resources Co., Inc.
    PB-279-645
 Engdahl, R. B.,  114, PB-216-653
 Engineering-Science, Inc., 11
    PB-218-672
 Enviro Engineers, Inc., PB-239-357
 Environmental Action Foundation, 666
    697
 Environmental Control Administration
    PB-215-867
 Environmental Engineering, Inc.
    PB-222-710
 Environmental Impact Planning
    Corporation, PB-234-808
 Environmental Law Institute
    PB-264-886
 Environmental Protection Service,
    Montreal (Quebec), PB-280-118
 Environmental Scientists and
    Engineers, 233
 Erganian, G. K., PB-229-206
 Esco/Greenleaf, 300, 301, PB-213-132
    PB-213-133,  PB-213-135
 Fain, C. C, 236
 Farb, D., 468
 Farb, D.G., 677
 Farvolden, R. N., 223
 Federal Solid Waste Management
    Program, 230, PB-213-472
 Fenn, D. G., 483, PB-255-133
 Ferguson, T. L., PB-244-557
 Fiedelman, B. P., 253, PB-214-092
 Fields, Jr., T., 427,  475, PB-261-049
    PB-261-079
 Finan, M.,  335, 430
 First, M. W., PB-221-684
 Fiscus, D. E., PB-243-634
 Fisette, G. R., PB-234-497
 Fisk, A. T., PB-239-914
 Fleischer, L. R., PB-221-095
 Flower, W. A., 308, 309
 Floyd, E. P., 29, 134, PB-256-496
 Fookson, A., PB-222-115
 Foran, J. F., PB-229-816,
    PB-229-817
Foster D. Snell, Inc., PB-257-187
Franklin Institute Research
    Laboratories. 258, 281, 282
Franklin, W. E., 44, 170, 293, 405
    PB-214-152
Freed,  V. H., PB-233-178
Frohnsdorff, G., PB-222-115
Fuller, W. H., PB-266-905
Fungaroli, A. A., 245, PB-209-000
    PB-209-001, PB-209-002
    PB-269-502
Fuschini, V. P., 374, PB-255-129
                                                       151

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Gainesville Municipal Waste
   Conversion Authority, Inc., 17
   PB-187-311, PB-222-710
Ganotis, C. G., 539
Garbe, Y. M., 491, 499, 558, 582
   PB-261-048
Garland,  G. A.,  10, 228, 347, 411, 435
Garretson-Elntendorf-Zinov-Reibin
   PB-212-398
Gartrell,  F. E., 9
Genser, J. M., PB-278-059
Georgia Institute of Technology
   PB-215-289
Geraghty and Miller, Inc., 611, 634
   PB-275-103
Gershman, H.W., 686
Geswein,  A. J., 428, PB-261-046
Geyer, J. A., PB-213-487, PB-256-356
Ghassemi, M., 562, 569, PB-253-051
Gilbertson, W. E., 53
Gill, R., 375
Gillean, J. I., PB-222-995
Giordano, P. M., PB-266-649
Gluckman, L. A., 194, PB-218-263
Goldberg, T. L., 342, PB-257-801
Golueke,  C. G.,  127, 128,  178
   PB-218-265, PB-222-454
Gordion Associates, Inc., PB-239-392
Gordon, M., 5
Gorham International, Inc.
   PB-234-944
Gorman,  P. G., PB-243-634
Graber, R. C., PB-229-206
Graham, W. M., 95, PB-204-404
Gransky, M. J., 187
Great Lakes Research Institute
   PB-208-674
Greenleaf/Telesca, 94, 248
   PB-216-234
Grethlein, H. E., PB-221-239
Griffin, Jr, R. J., 263
Groner, R. R., PB-233-178
Gross, M. G., PB-264-264
Grossman, D. S., PB-239-117
   PB-239-494
Grove, C. S., PB-222-419
Gruber, G. E., PB-251-307
Grupenhoff, B. L., 228, PB-256-960
Guillet, J., 340
Guinan, D. K., PB-258-953
Gumtz, G. D., PB-242-461
Gunnerson, C. G., 130, 157, 404
Gutfreund, K., 199, PB-214-032
Guzdar, A., PB-239-914,  PB-239-915
Guzdar, A. R., PB-229-256
Hahn, J. L., PB-256-943,
    PB-256-959
Hakki, A., PB-239-392
Hale, Jr, S., 289, 306, 320, 334, 357
Hall, C. F., PB-222-148
Hall, E. D., PB-222-000, PB-222-029
   PB-222-031
Hall, T.,  PB-251-716
Hallowell, J. B., PB-264-349
Ham, R.  K., PB-234-930, PB-234-931
Hamilton, A., 131
 Hammond, V. L., PB-212-589
    PB-238-674
 Hampel, C. R., 216, 217, 218
    PB-217-913
 Hanks, T. G., 48, PB-216-480
 Hanley, K. J., 483
 Hanseu, P., 341, 486, 510, PB-254-623
    PB-259-454
 Hansen, P. M., 575
 Hart, S. A., 55, 59, PB-205-656
    PB-206-585
 Harza Engineering Company, 24
    PB-187-301
 Haug, L. A., 288
 Haverland, R.A.,  712
 Hawkins, D., 470, PB-256-460
 Hawkins, D. F., 552
 Hawkins, M. B., 235, PB-214-760
 Haxo, Jr., H. E., PB-271-013
 Haxo, R. S., PB-271-013
 Hecht,  N. L., PB-244-310, PB-244-311
    PB-244-312
 Hegdahl, T. A., 337, PB-213-511
    PB-216-588
 Heimberg, R. W., PB-223-651
 Heimerdinger, G., PB-256-928
 Helms, B. P., 146, 173, 219, 251
 Helmstetter, A. J., 641
 Henderson, W. G., 39, PB-216-196
, Henningson, Durham, and Richardson,
    PB-233-873
 Henningson, Durham & Richardson,
    Inc., 6, 183, 249
 Henriksen, P., 418
 Hensey, V., 573
 Herbert, W., 308, 309
 Herson, E. M., 77
 Hertzler, B. L., PB-268-526
 Hickman, Jr, H. L., 4, 26, 47, 68, 113
    141, 185, 215, 227, 234, 246, 306
    395, 568, 607, 625, 655
    PB-203-623, PB-204-403
    PB-260-102
 Hill, J. A., 306
 Hill, R.P., 688
 Hilovsky, J., PB-202-202
 Hinesly, T. D., 229, PB-236-402
 Hitte, S.  J., 433,  451, 458, PB-261-044
    PB-261-091
 Hoffman, D. A., PB-222-015
 Holcombe, K., PB-226-420
 Holloway, J. R., 581
 Holloway, R., 711
 Honea, F. L, 412
 Hong, S., PB-239-896
 Hopper, R., 606
 Hopper, R. E., 539
 Homer and Shifrin, Inc., PB-213-534
 Homer & Shifrin, Inc., PB-220-316
 Hortenstine, C. C., PB-222-422
 Howard, S. E., 518
 Howes, J. R., PB-222-148
 Hubbard, S. J., 156
 Huber, D. R., 427, PB-261-049
 Hudson, H., 139
 Hudson, H. T., 198
Hudson, J. F., PB-239-117
   PB-239-494
Hughes, G. M., 223
Hulbert, S. F., 236
Hull, H. E., 177
Hultgren, L. F., 64
Humber, N., 505, 623
Humboldt County, California
   PB-212-398, PB-240-365
Humpstone, C. C., PB-252-602
   PB-257-499, PB-257-500
Hunt, R. G., 405, PB-253-486
Iglar, A. F., PB-222-018
IIT Research Institute, PB-224-820
Inglett, G. E., 312
Institute for Policy Analysis
   PB-243-407
Institute of Public Administration
   PB-237-618, PB-237-619
   PB-237-620
Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel, Inc.
   PB-213-577
International  Research and Technology
   Corporation, PB-222-467
   PB-234-602, PB-252-602
   PB-257-499, PB-257-500
JACA Corporation, PB-265-392
Jackson, G., PB-271-007
Jacobs Engineering Company
   PB-259-097
James, R. W., PB-213-577
James, S. C., 624, 710
Jefferson County, Kentucky,
   University of Louisville, 125
   PB-217-958
Jensen, M. E., 93, PB-205-657
John Carollo  Engineers
   PB-215-699
Johnson, H.,  148,  190, PB-216-106
   PB-256-367
Johnson, R. J., PB-265-541
Jones, D. D., 297, PB-230-386
Jones & Henry Engineers Ltd., 117
Jones, R. C.,  PB-253-304
Jorling, T. C., 643
Kaiser, E. R., 14, PB-221-731
Kaiser Engineers, PB-226-042
Kalika, P. W., PB-226-420
Kambhu, K.,  PB-222-396
Kansas University,  PB-217-775
Kantz, R., 46, 384, PB-215-904
Karandikar, S., PB-221-239
Kasner, D., PB-221-731
Katsuyama, A. M., PB-219-019
Kaufman, A.  J., 126
Kaufman, J. A., PB-239-509
Kaylor, W. H., PB-256-377
   PB-256-505
Keagy, D. M., 16
Keaton, M. J., PB-237-618
   PB-237-619, PB-237-620
Keenan, J. E., PB-269-502
Keene, A. G., 190, PB-216-106
Kehr, W. Q., 254
Keller, D. J., 122, 156, 287
   PB-227-565
                                                        152

-------
Kelly, J. A., PB-221-877
Kennedy, J. C., 110
Kentucky Department for Natural
   Resources and Environmental
   Protection, PB-268-327
Kentucky State Department of Health
   181, PB-201-205, PB-215-903
Kidder, D., PB-266-684
Kiefer, I.,  243, 283, 292, 298,  323, 324
   333, 382, 406
King, K., PB-247-566, PB-247-567
Klee, A. J.,  10, 26, 28, 87, 97, 99, 101
   133, 137, 149, 216, 217, 218, 226
   228, 338, PB-216-584, PB-217-913
   PB-260-102
Klumb, D. L., 180
Kochtitzky,  O. W., 8, 74, PB-215-299
Kohan, A. M., 489, PB-261-086
Kos, P., PB-234-498
KovaUck, Jr, W. W., 540
Krause, H. H., PB-238-654
   PB-23 8-747
Krause, K. W., PB-225-333
Kruse,  C. W., 123
Kruth,  M. A., 255, PB-214-073
Kuhner, J., PB-236-085
Kuhrtz, S., PB-221-239
Lackey, L. L., PB-223-638
Lamperton, J. G., 534
Landon, R. A., 223
Landreth, R., PB-238-145
LaPierre, R. B., PB-262-804
Laver,  M. L., PB-221-876
Lawless, E. W., PB-244-557
League of Women Voters of the
   United States,  259, 296, 302, 303
   456, 556
Leatherwood, J.  M., PB-223-625
Leckie, J. O., PB-221-172
Leckman, J., 122
Ledbetter, R. H., PB-264-032
Lee County  Board of Supervisors
   PB-241-468
Lefke,  L. W., 67, 116, 190, 241
   PB-216-106, PB-216-460
Lehman, J. P., 399, 541, 542,  543, 545
   584
Leonard, R. J., PB-239-392
Leonard, R. P., PB 276-169
   PB-276-170, PB-276-171
   PB-276-172
Leonard S. Wegman Co., Inc.
   PB-222-588, PB-225-159
Levin, J., PB-265-532, PB-265-981
   PB-280-117
Levis, A. H., PB-239-327
Levy, S., 620
Levy, S. J.,  401, 417, 442, 499, 550
   570, 605, PB-253-326
Liebman, J. C., 123,  147, PB-216-105
   PB-239-896, PB-239-897
   PB-239-898, PB-239-899
Lindsey, A. W., 427, 475, 506
   PB-261-049, PB-261-079
Lingle, S. A., 381, 420, 438, 465, 528
    570, 623, PB-259-138, PB-260-254
Littig, K. S., 155
Little, H. R., 284, PB-213-304
    PB-256-945, PB-256-952
    PB-258-597
Lockheed Palo Alto Research
    Laboratory, Lockheed Missiles and
    Space Company, Inc., PB-268-526
Lonergan, R. P., 77
Lossin, R. D.,  126, 158, 204, 205, 206
Loube, M.,  378, 487
Louis R. Reeder and Associates
    PB-269-000
Lowe, R. A., 264, 378, 467, 533, 604
    PB-256-494
Lusk, W. D., 222, PB-214-031
Madison, M., 423, PB-259-456
Maizus, S., PB-243-222
Male, J. W., PB-239-899
Malina, Jr, J.  F., PB-213-347
Malisch, W. R., PB-222-052
    PB-242-536
Management Technology, Inc.,  106
Mank, J. F., 369
Marceleno, T., 299
Markiewicz, W. J., 187
Marks, D. H., 147, PB-216-105
    PB-239-117, PB-239-494
Martin, B. F.,  PB-213-347
Martin, E. J.,  PB-242-461
Maryland Department of Health and
    Mental Hygiene, PB-257-305
Maryland Environmental Services
    PB-242-461
Marynowski, C. W., 244, PB-213-444
Matrecon, Inc., PB-271-013
Mays, D. A., PB-266-649
McDermott, R. G., PB-223-034
McDonald,  L.  D., PB-280-118
McElwee, W. C., 60
McEwen, Jr, L. B., 432, 577, 605
    620
McGauhey, P. H., 128, 169
    PB-213-376, PB-218-265
McGough, E.,  273
McLeer, T. J., PB-213-577
McMichael, W. F., PB-227-005
McNulty, H., 556
Meier, P. M.,  PB-234-496, PB-234-497
    PB-234-499, PB-236-085
Meiners, A. F., PB-244-557
Meller, F. H., 91, PB-217-834
Merced County Advisory Board for
    Solid Waste Management
    PB-252-865
Mercer, W. A., PB-219-019
Meresman, S. J., 135
Merz, R. C., PB-196-148
Messman, S. A., 237, PB-213-939
Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., PB-214-166
    PB-219-372
Metropolitan Denver Sewage Disposal
    District No. 1, PB-269-352
 Metropolitan Sanitary District of
    Greater Chicago, PB-213-697
 Meyers, S.,  526, 549,  560, 566,  602, 628
 Mid-American Regional Council
    PB-255-133
 Midwest Research Institute, 321
    PB-226-551, PB-243-634
    PB-244-557, PB-245-924
    PB-253-486, PB-261-052
 Milgrom, J., PB-214-045, PB-229-727
 Miller, B. F., PB-221-171
 Miller, C.M., 571
 Miller, P. D., PB-221-851
 Miner, J. R., PB-221-621
 Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
    PB-249-747
 Mitchell, G. L., PB-261-018
 Mitre Corporation, 495, 501, 548,  573
    574, PB-259-140
 Mix, S. A., 58
 Molina, J. E., 229
 Moll, K., PB-257-951
 Monaghan, D. A., PB-239-915
 Mooser, S., 424
 Morse, N.,  136
 Mosher, D. C., 435
 Moshman Associates, Inc., PB-233-871
 Mudge, L. K., PB-23 8-674
 Munich, A. J., 26, 28, 121,  216, 217
    218, PB-217-913, PB-260-102
 Mulligan, P. F., 326, PB-213-341
 Munnecke, D., 527
 National Academy of Engineering, 112
    PB-216-654
 National Academy of Sciences, 112
,   PB-216-654
 National Academy of Sciences--
    National Research Council
    PB-197-623
 National Analysts, Inc., PB-213-340
 National Association of Counties, 373
 National Association of Counties
    Research Foundation, 138, 239
    419, PB-214-039, PB-258-272
 National Canners  Association
    PB-219-019
 National Center for Resource
    Recovery, 553, 559
 National Center for Resource
    Recovery, Inc., PB-242-540
 National Commission on Technology,
    Automation, and Economic Progress, 2
 National Environmental Research
    Center, PB-256-374
 National Fertilizer Development
    Center, Tennessee Valley Authority
    PB-266-649
 National League of Cities, 331, 567
    669, PB-257-309
 National Oil Recovery Corporation
    PB-243-222
 National Solid Waste  Management
    Association, PB-213-472
 National Solid Wastes Management
    Association, 230, 497, 599
                                                       153

-------
Neff, N. T., PB-213-646
Nelson, H. D., PB-224-820
New York Sea Grant Institute
   PB-264-264
Newton, J. L., 122, 156
Newton, M., 635
Niessen, W., PB-266-355
Noble, S. B., PB-257-499, PB-257-500
Nuss, G. H., PB-245-924
Oberacker, D. A., PB-240-723
Occidental Research Corporation
   PB-270-961
Office  of Solid Waste, 616, 634, 639, 645
   650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 662, 663
   664, 672, 673, 679, 680, 681, 684
   692, 693, 694, 698, 699, 700, 701
   703, 705, 706, PB-256-371
   PB-275-103
Office  of Solid Waste Management
   PB-213-304, PB-213-347
   PB-214-089, PB-226-960
   PB-227-000, PB-256-349
   PB-256-359, PB-256-367
   PB-256-368, PB-256-370
   PB-256-372, PB-256-377
   PB-256-378, PB-256-391
   PB-256-956, PB-256-960
Office  of Solid Waste Management
   Programs, 386, 449,  492, 462, 546, 656
   PB-256-348, PB-256-355
   PB-261-155, PB-261-156
Office  of Solid Waste Research
   PB-256-356, PB-256-357
   PB-256-358, PB-256-364
   PB-256-365, PB-256-366
   PB-256-382, PB-256-383
   PB-256-389, PB-256-390
Office  of Solid Waste, Resource
   Recovery Division, 536
Office  of Water Supply, 656
Olson, J. A., PB-270-266
Olson, N. A., PB-219-019
Ongerth,  J. E., 240, PB-256-926
Ongerth,  R. H., PB-235-770
Onohdaga County Solid Waste Disposal
   Authority., PB-245-672
Opferkuch, R. E., PB-222-354
Oregon State Board of  Health, 168
Oregon State University,
   Environmental Sciences Center
   534
Ottinger, R. S., 222, PB-214-031
   PB-224-579
Pacific Gas and Electric Company,
   San Francisco, 583
Pathak, A. A., PB-233-360
Patrick, Z. A., PB-222-113
Perkins, R. A., PB-197-931
Peters, G. O., PB-265-532
Peterson, B., 421
Peterson, C., 531
Peterson, M. L., 88, 184,  224
   PB-220-479, PB-222-160
   PB-256-374
Pettigrew, R. J., 187
Pfeffer, J. T., PB-231-176
Pfister and Vogel Tanning Company
   PB-264-204
Pilie, R. J., PB-243-386
Plehn,  S.W., 676, 696
Pohland, F. G., PB-215-289
Pomeroy, B. S., PB-222-337
Porter, C. H., 464, 512, PB-258-068
   PB-261-088
Porter, R. C., PB-233-873
Potts, J. E., PB-213-488
Powell, M. D., 253, PB-214-092
Pratt, H. D., 155
Prior, L. A., 484
Process Research, Inc., PB-278-059
Protzmann, H., PB-202-202
Public  Health Service, PB-215-202
   PB-229-206
Purcell, T. C.,  295
Purdom, P. W., PB-222-458
Putnam, R. C., PB-202-202
Quarles, Jr, J. R.,  459
Quinlivan, S., PB-253-051
Quinlivan, S. C., 569
Quirk, R. L., PB-219-019
Quon, J., PB-208-154
Rachidi, A. S., PB-244-311
Radinsky, S. E., 317
Radinsky, S. S.,  374, PB-255-129
Rains,  W. A., PB-243-028
Ralph Stone and Company, Inc., 54, 65
   PB-212-590, PB-225-360
   PB-238-819, PB-247-185
Ramanathan, R., PB-243-407
Ramm, W., PB-243-407
Ramsey, J., 510, PB-241-729
Randol, R. E.,  471, 496, PB-256-461
   PB-259-142
RECON Systems, Inc., PB-263-396
Reeder, L. R.,  PB-269-000
Reeves, W. R., PB-242-540
Regan, R., PB-215-722
Regan, W. J., PB-213-577
Reinhardt, J. J., PB-234-930
   PB-234-931
Research Triangle Institute, 326
   PB-270-266
Resource Conservation Committee
   618, 708
Resource Conservation & Recovery
   Panels Program, 707
Resource Planning  Associates, Inc.
   551, PB-234-612, PB-235-319,
   PB-239-736, PB-241-729
Resource Planning Institute, PB-229-220
Rhee, S. S.,  PB-229-256
Rhode  Island Department of Health
   PB-234-544
Rhyne, C.W., 710
Ricci, L. J., 554
Rigo, H. G., 550
Roat, J., PB-256-348
Robert A. Taft Sanitary Engineering
   Center, 72
Robinson, D. J., PB-233-641
Roe, M. J., 253, PB-214-092
Rogers, C., PB-238-145
Rogers, C. J., 295
Rogers, H. W.,  433, PB-261-044
Roninger, F. H., 187
Rosenberg, D. G., PB-259-097
Ross Hofmann,  Associates
   PB-236-543, PB-251-291
Roth, E. W., 136
Rothwell,  D. F., PB-222-422
Roy F. Weston, Inc., PB-266-355
Ruckelshaus, W. D., 304
Rucker, M. L.,  PB-258-068
Ruf,  J. A., 402
Ruiz, L. P., PB-239-502
Sachsel, G. F., 261
Safety Sciences, WSA, Incorporated
   PB-247-566, PB-247-567
San Clemente, C. L., 254
Sanders, T. G.,  PB-256-506
Sano, E., 604
Santy, M., PB-253-051
Sarofim, A. F., PB-223-626
Saunders, C., PB-280-117
Scarpino,  P. V., 295
Scarsbrook, C. E., PB-228-165
Schmalensee, R., PB-243-407
Schmidt,  F. A.,  PB-223-740
Schoenberger, R. J., PB-222-458
Schrag, M. P., 412
Schur, D. A., 356
Schuster, K. A., 517
Schuyler,  S., PB-256-928
SCS  Engineers,, 547, 705,  PB-213-311
   PB-257-969, PB-264-214
SCS  Engineers, Inc., PB-239-775
   PB-239-776, PB-261-018
Scurlock,  A. C., 427, PB-261-049
Seaman, W. K., 74
Senn, C. L., PB-225-160
Senske, M. L., 139, PB-256-955
Shafizadeh, F., PB-229-246
Shannon, L. J.,  412, PB-243-634
Sharpe, L., 315, 556
Shaver, R. G., PB-244-832
Shell, G. L., 115
Shih, C. C., PB-252-864
Shilepsky, A., 480, 533, PB-259-139
Shilesky, D. M., PB-225-333
Shuster, K. A., 356,  407, 409, 436, 509
   514, PB-256-956,  PB-256-960
Shuster, W. W., 154, PB-216-735
Singer, R. D., PB-227-708
Skinner, J. H.,  350,  388, 500, 632
Smallwood, D.,  PB-243-407
Smith, D. D., 157, 162, 192
   PB-213-473
Smith, F.  A., 378, 443, 482, 498
   PB-256-491
Smith, H. G., 9
Smith, Jr, F. L., 397, 445, 511
   PB-258-681
Smith, R., PB-222-000, PB-222-029
   PB-222-031
                                                       154

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Smith, R. A., 368, PB-258-156
Smith, R. M., PB-237-525
Smithers Scientific Service, Inc.
   PB-243-028
Snyder, W. C., PB-222-113
Sorg, T. J., 47,  104, 277, 278, 355
   PB-204-403
Sosnovsky, C. H., 252
Spiegelman, R. D., PB-264-886
Spino, D. F.,  295, PB-256-389
Spitzer, E.  F., 220
Sponagle, C. E., 66, 78, 232
   PB-214-558, PB-215-867
Spooner, C. S.,  167, PB-203-622
Stainback, S. E., 231, 257, PB-215-920
Stanford Research Institute
   PB-257-951
Staton, W.  S., 534
Stearns, R., 705
Stearns, R. P., 400
Steele, J. H., 20
Steimle, Jr, F. W., 348
Steiner, R. L., 46, 384, PB-215-904
   PB-269-502
Stevens, B. H., PB-239-631
Stevenson, M. K., PB-221-172
Stierli, H., PB-220-479
Stockman, G. B., PB-264-204
Stollman, J.,  PB-279-645
Stone, G. E., 488, PB-261-047
Stone, R., 391, PB-196-148
   PB-238-819
Stone, R. B., 348
Stradley, M.  W., PB-262-673
Stragier, M. G., PB-239-195
   PB-239-196
Straus, M., 429, 683
Strelow, R., 523
Stuart Finley, Inc.,  70, 209, 210, 211
   214, 265,  266, 267, 268, 269, 270
   271, 272
Stump, P. L., 66, 232, 311, PB-214-558
   PB-230-171
Stutzenberger, F. J., 88, 126
Sullivan, M., 642
Sullivan, R. J., PB-225-333
Sussman, D., 667, PB-259-143
Sussman, D. B., 431, 493, 537, 602
   641, 686,  687, 712
Sutterfield, G. W., 180, 387
Swain, J. W., PB-272-267
Swavely, D. D., 64, 163, PB-214-441
Sweeney, B. L., 163, PB-214-441
Sweeten, J. M., 351, PB-214-089
   PB-256-954
Systems Technology Corporation.
   PB-245-674, PB-272-051
Talley, R. J., PB-235-770
Talty, J. T., 196
Taylor, P., 424
Technical Development Laboratories
   PB-147-220
Teknekron, Inc., PB-237-618
   PB-237-619, PB-237-620
   PB-251-716
Terry, Jr, R. C., 608
Terry, R.C., 69!
    PB-261-287
Testin, R. F., 177
Thomas, Dean & Hoskins, Inc., 118
Thomas, P., PB-265-532
Thurnau, R. C., PB-240-723
    PB-256-948
Toftner, R. O., 124, 132,  160, 161, 163
    164, 247, 336, PB-214-441
    PB-214-448, PB-215-844
    PB-226-099
Townley, D. A., 80
Train, R. E., 460, 476, 525
Trask, H. W., 527
Truitt, M. M., 123
TRW Defense and Space  Systems
    Group, PB-265-540, PB-265-541
    PB-270-897
TRW Systems Group, PB-224-579
    PB-250-717, PB-251-307
    PB-252-864, PB-253-051
Tucker, M. G., PB-256-926
Tunnah, B. G., PB-239-392
U.S. Conference of Mayors,  331
    567, 669, PB-257-309
U.S. Congress, 410
U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau
    of Domestic Commerce
    PB-227-000
U.S. Department of Defense, 646, 647
    648
U.S. Department of Transportation
    702
U.S. Department of Transportation,
    Federal Highway Administration
    455
U.S. Environmental Protection
    Agency,  260, 275, 279, 344, 345
    370, 371, 454, 463,  473, 477,  478
    485, 490, 497, 502,  504, 516,  535
    563, 564, 579, 599,  610, 615,  629
    637, 640, 644, 649,  657, 660,  661
    665, 668, 670, 689,  691, 714,  715
    PB-213-718, PB-214-071
    PB-234-602, PB-239-895
    PB-259-143
U.S. Environmental Protection
    Agency, Office of Solid Waste, 352
    353, 448, 461, 576,  578, 580,  588
    589, 590, 591, 592,  593, 594,  595
    596, 597, 598, 600, 612^ 626,  627
    PB-253-406, PB-255-139
    PB-255-141
U.S. Environmental Protection
    Agency, Region I,
    638
Ulmer, N., PB-231-203
Uhner, N. S., PB-256-357, PB-256-358
    PB-256-370, PB-256-505
    PB-256-958
Ulrich,E., PB-239-116
University of California, Los Angeles
   PB-270-219
University of Chicago, PB-225-020
University of Dayton Research
   Institute, PB-244-310, PB-244-311
   PB-244-312
University of Illinois, 237, PB-213-939
University of Missouri, PB-242-536
Valdes-Cogliano, S. J., 671
Vasan, K. S., PB-231-309
Vaughan, D. A, PB-221-851
   PB-238-654, PB-238-747
   PB-243-366
Vaughan, R. D., 26, 27, 56, 73, 81, 96
   100, 107, 108, 109, 119
   PB-260-102
Veenstra & Kimm, 249
Versar, Inc., PB-274-565
Versar, Incorporated, PB-241-204
   PB-244-832, PB-253-485
   PB-258-953
Vey, E., PB-224-820
Vincent, B. W., 444
Vitberg, A. K., PB-258-068
VTN, Inc.,  PB-224-996, PB-236-462
   PB-236463
Wahl, D., 456, 466
Waldrop, P., 530
Walker, W. H., 415
Wallace, L. P., PB-223-345
Wallman, H., PB-236-904
WAPORA, Inc., PB-251-669
   PB-265-532, PB-265-981
Ward,  S. D., 468
Ware,  S., PB-271-007
Ware,  S. A., PB-270-085
Washington State University
   PB-233-441
Wathne, M., PB-239-897
Weaver, L., 30,  35, 40, 71, PB-215-878
   PB-218-252
Weddle, B. R., 347, 411, 423'» PB-259^56
Wehran Engineering Corporation, 611
Weinberg, M. S., PB-223-343
Weinhold, A. R., PB-222-113
Weinstein,  N. J., PB-235-857
   PB-263-396
Weiss, A. H., PB-239-509
Weiss, B., PB-222-001
Welch, R. O., 405
Wener, S. D., 481
Wersan, S., PB-208-154
Weston, R. F., 233
Wheeler, J. B., 39, PB-216-196
White, R. M., PB-271-013
Whitmore,  F. C., PB-253-485
Wigh,  R. J., PB-256-356, PB-256-359
   PB-256-391
Wilcomb, M. J., 60, 185, PB-203-623
Wilcox, G., PB-237-618, PB-237-619
   PB-237-620
Wiles,  C. C., 488, PB-261-047
Wiley, J. S., 8, 9, 21, 22, 61, 74, 82
   PB-147-220, PB-148-097
   PB-215-202, PB-215-299
288-289 O - 79 - 11
                                                        155

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Williams, D. E., PB-243-028
Williams, E. R., 36, 37, PB-215-934
   PB-215-951.PB-217-061
Williams, R.,PB-263-210
Willams, T. P., 318, 360, 379, 515
   585,621,701
WUson, D. L.. 193, PB-256-364
   PB-256-365.PB-256-366
   PB-256-368.PB-256-371
   PB-256-373.PB-256-378
   PB-256-379, PB-256-382
   PB-256-383.PB-256-946
Wilson, D. L. (cont'd)
   PB-256-947, PB-256-953
   PB-25 7-306
Winkler, P. F., PB-229-901
Wisely, F. E., 180
Wixson, B. G., PB-222-052
   PB-242-536
Wolcott, R. M., 444
Wolf, K, W., 252
Wolk, R, H., PB-222-694
Woodall, A. E., 405
Woodruff, K, L., 559
Wren, E. J., PB-222-468
Vaffe, H. J., PB-227-075
Yates, D. L., 255, PB-214-073
Young, R. A., PB-256-391
Zandi, I., PB-223-162
Zausner, E. R., 86, 111, 153, 176, 182
   188, PB-213-492, PB-215-907
   PB-217-821
Zee, C. A., PB-265-541
Ziegler, R. C, PB-253-487
Zimmer, C, PB-221-731
                                                  156

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                    List of Depository Libraries as  of August 1,  1977

     Under provisions of Title  44 of the United States Code, certain libraries are designated depositories for
 Government publications. Through them Federal Government documents are made available to residents of
 every State, District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Distribution to the libraries is
 made by the Office.of the Superintendent of Documents.
     It  is sometimes impossible to obtain  desired publications by  purchase from the  Superintendent  of
 Documents. Stocks may have  been exhausted or the document may be permanently  out of print. In these
 instances the depositories render  an invaluable service by keeping such publications permanently available.
 Every  Government publication  cannot  be  consulted  at all  depository libraries.  Designated  Regional
 Depositories are required to receive and retain one copy of all Government publications made available to
 depository libraries either in printed  or microfacsimiie form. All other libraries are  allowed to select the
 classes of publications best suited to the interests of their particular clientele.
     The following list shows the  location, the name of the library, the year the library became a depository,
 and the administrative control number assigned to each.
                                                                                                        Deposi-
                                                 ALABAMA                                           wry No.
 Alexander City        Alexander City State Junior College, Thomas D. Russell Library (.1967)	     9A
 Auburn              Auburn University, Ralph Brown, Oraughon Library (1907)	       2
 Birmingham          Birmingham public Library (1895)	      13
                    Birmingham-Southern College Library (1932)	       6
                    Jefferson State Junior College, James B. Allen Library (1970)	„	     ISA
                    Samford University, Harwell G. Davis Library (1884)	       5
 Enterprise            Enterprise State Junior College Library (1967)	„	_	      9B
 Florence            University of North Alabama, Collier Library (1V32)	„	_	      14
 Gadsden            Gadsden Public Library (1963)			     7A
 Huntsville            University of Alabama, Huntsville Campus Library (1964)	„	     8A
 Jacksonville          Jacksonville State University, Romana Wood Library (1929)	      10
 Maxwell A.F. Base    Air University Library (1963)	_„	„	~	 DG1013
 Mobile              Mobile Public Library (1963)	     6A
                    Spring Hill College, Thomas Byrne Memorial Library (1937)			       7
                    University of South Alabama Library (1968)	.....		_	      7B
 Montgomery         Alabama State Department of Archives and History Library (1884)	       8
                    Alabama Supreme Court and State Law Library (1884)	       1
                    Auburn University at Montgomery Library (1971)—REGIONAL	      88
 Normal              Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College, Drake Memorial Library (1963)	       9
 St Bernard          St. Bernard College Library (1962)	„	      13
 Troy               Troy State University, Lurleen B. Wallace Educational  Resources Center (1963)	     5A
 Tuskegee Institute     Tuskegee Institute, Hollis Burke Frissell Library (1907)	       3
 University            University of Alabama, School of Law Library (1967)	    12A
                    University of Alabama Library (I860)—REGIONAL	,.	      12
                                                  ALASKA
 Anchorage           University of Alaska, Anchorage Library (1961)	.....		_...	      19
                    Supreme Court of Alaska Library (1973)	-			    16A
 College              University of Alaska, Elmer E. Rasmuson Library (1922)	~	      17
 Juneau             Alaska State Library (1964)		„			„		      16
 Ketchikan            Ketchikan Community College Library (1970)	„	„	      18
                                                  ARIZONA
Coolidge           Central Arizona College, Instructional Materials  Center (1973)	_	    22A
Flagstaff            Northern Arizona University Library (1937)	      24
Phoenix             Department of Library and Archives (unknown)—REGIONAL	      22
                   Phoenix Public Library (1917)	'.	      26
                                                     157

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                                          LIST  OF  DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                    Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
 Prescott              Yavapai College Library (1976)	     27B
 Tempe               Arizona State University, Matthews Library (1944)	       25
 Thatcher             Eastern Arizona College Library (1963)	~	       21
 Tucson               Tucson Public Library (1970)	     27A
                      University of Arizona Library (1907)—REGIONAL	       23
 Yuma                Yuma City-County Library (1963)	       27
                                                       ARKANSAS
 Arkadelphia           Ouachita Baptist University, Riley Library (1963)	     32A
 Batesviile             Arkansas College Library (1963)	     37A
 Clarksville            College of the Ozarks Library (1925)	       31
 Conway              Hendrix College, O. C Baiiey Library (1903)	       37
 Fayetteville           University of Arkansas Library (1907)	       29
 Little Rock           Arkansas Supreme Court Library (1962)	'..	       28
                      Little Rock Public Library (1953)	       35
                      University of Arkansas at Little Rock Library (1973)	     29A
 Magnolia             Southern Arkansas University, Mogale Library (1956)	       36
 Monticello            University of Arkansas at Monticello Library (1956)	       38
 Pine Bluff             University of Arkansas, Watson Memorial Library (1976)	     28A
 Russeilville           Arkansas Tech University, Tomlinson Library (1925)	       32
 Searcy                Harding College, Beaumont Memorial Library (1963)	     35A
 State College          Arkansas State University, Dean B. Ellis Library (1913)	       33
 Walnut Ridge         Southern Baptist College, Felix Goodson Library (1967)	     33A
                                                      CALIFORNIA
 Anaheim              Anaheim Public  Library (1963)	      65C
 Arcadia               Arcadia Public Library (1975)	-	-	~	      42B
 Arcata                Humboldt State  College Library (1963)	     44A
 Bakersfield            California State College, Bakersfield Library (1974)	_	     43 B
                      Kern Counry Library (1943)	,	,	       53
 Berkeley              University of California, General Library (1907)	       41
                      University of California, Law  Library, Earl Warren Legal Center (1963)	     50A
 Carson                Carson Regional Library (1973)	.-.	      48A
 Chico                 Chico State University Library (1962)	„	_	„	      45B
 Claremont             Pomona College Documents Collection, Honnold Library (1913)	       55
 Compton              Compton Library (1972)			.._	      43A
 Culver City           Culver City Library (1966)	_	_	      40A
 Davis                 University of California at Davis Library (1953)	_	      45A
                      University of California at Davis, School of Law Library (1972)	,_      47B
 Dominguez Hills       California State College, Dominguez Hills, Educational Resources Center (1973)	     48B
 Downey              Downey City Library (1963)	      41A
 Fresno                Fresno  County Free Library (1920)	       52
                      California State University Library (1962)	      52A
 Fullenon              California State University at Fullerton Library (1963)	      65A
 Garden Grove         Garden Grove Regional Library (1963)		      64B
 Gardena              Gardena Public Library (1966)	      52B
 Hayward              California State College at Hayward Library (1963)	      51B
 Huntington Park       Huntington Park Library, San Antonio Region (1970)	„	      41B
 Inglewood             Inglewood Public Library (1963)		      59B
 Irvine                 University of California at Irvine Library (1963)	,.	      65B
 La Jolla               University of California, San Diego, University Library (1963)	      66B
Lakewood             Angelo lacoboni Public Library (1970)	      64D
Lancaster             Lancaster Regional Library (1967)	      58B
Long Beach           California State College At Long Beach Library (1962)	„	      61A
                      Long Beach Public Library (1933)	       61
Los Angeles           California State College at Los Angeles, John F. Kennedy Memorial Library (1956)	       62
                      Los Angeles County Law Library (1963)	      57A
                      Los Angeles Public Library (1891)	       57
                      Loyola  University of Los Angeles Library (1933)	_	       59
                                                           158

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                                                      AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
                      Occidental College, Mary Norton Clapp Library (1941)	_	        56
                      Pepperdine University Library (1963)	      59A
                      Southwestern University, School of Law Library (1975)	      50B
                      University of California at Los Angeles Library (1932)	        43
                      University of California at Los Angeles, Law Library (1958)	      58A
                      University of Southern California Library (1933)	        58
Menlo Park           Department of the Interior, Geological Survey Library (1962)	  DG1006
Montebello           Montebello Library (1966)	      53B
Monterey             Naval Postgraduate School Library (1963)	  DG1011
Monterey Park        Bruggemeyer Memorial Library (1964)	      62A
Northridge           California State University at Northridge Library (1958)	      63A
Norwalk              Los Cenitos  Regional Library (1973)	      53D
Oakland              Mills College Library (1966)	      60A
                      Oakland Public Library (1923)	        50
Ontario               Ontario City Library (1974)	      55C
Pasadena              California Institute of Technology, Millikan Memorial Library (1933)	        63
                      Pasadena Public Library (1963)	      63B
Pleasant Hill           Contra Costa County Library (1964)	      49A
Redding              Shasta County Library (1956)	        45
Redlands              University of Redlands, Armacost Library (1933)	        64
Redwood City         Redwood City Public Library (1966)	,	      47A
Reseda               West Valley  Regional Branch Library  (1966)	      63C
Richmond            Richmond Public Library (1943)	        49
Riverside              Riverside Public Library (1947)	        65
                      University of California at Riverside Library (1963)	      65B
Sacramento           California State Library (1895)—REGIONAL	        40
                      Sacramento City-County Library (1880)	„	        42
                      Sacramento County Law Library (1963)	      55B
                      Sacramento State College Library (1963)	      55A
San Bernardino        San Bernardino County Free Library (1964)	—	      64C
San Diego            San Diego State University, Love Library (1962)	      66A
                      San Diego County Law Library (1973)	_	      63D
                      San Diego County Library (1966)	      66C
                      San Diego Public Library (1895)	_	        66
                      University of San Diego Law Library (1967)	„	      66D
San Francisco         Mechanics' Institute Library (1889)	        47
                      San Francisco Public Library (1889)	        48
                      San Francisco State College, Social Science and Business Library (1955)	        44
                      Supreme Court of California Library (1972)	      40B
                      U.S. Court of Appeals for Ninth Circuit Library (1971)	  DG1027
                      University of San Francisco, Richard A. Gleeson Library (1963)	_	      44C
San Jose              San Jose State College Library (1962)	      51A
San Leandro           San Leandro Community Library Center (1961)	        60
San Luis Obispo       California State Polytechnic University Library (1969)	      56D
San Rafael            Marin County Free Library (1975)	     44D
Santa Ana            Orange County Law Library (1975)	,	      42C
                      Santa Ana Public Library (1959)	     64A
Santa Barbara         University of California at Santa Barbara Library (1960)	      54A
Santa Clara           University of Santa Clara, Orradre Library (1963)	      51C
Santa Cruz            University of California at Santa Cruz Library (1963)	     56A
Santa Rosa            Santa Rosa-Sonoma County Public Library (1896)	      44B
Stanford              Stanford University Libraries (1895)	        51
Stockton              Public Library of Stockton and San Joaquin County  (1884)	        46
Thousand  Oaks        California Lutheran College Library (1964)	_		      54B
Torrance              Torrance Civic Center Library (1969)	      52C
Turlock               Stanislaus State College Library (1964)	„	     46A
Valencia              Valencia Regional Library (1972).	      58C
Van Nuys             Los Angeles  Valley College Library (1970)	     42A
Ventura               Ventura County Library Services Agency (1975)	      54C

                                                            159

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                                         LIST OF DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                  Deposi-
                                                                                                                tory No.
 Visalia               Tulare County Free Library (1967)	      53C
 Walnut               Mount San Antonio College Library (1966)	      56B
 West Covina          West Covina Library (1966)	      56C
 Whittier              Whittier College, Wardman Library (1963)	      53A
                                                    CANAL ZONE
 Balboa Heights        Canal Zone Library-Museum (1963)	  DG1004
                                                     COLORADO
 Alamosa              Adams State College Learning Resources Center (1963)	      73A
 Boulder               University of Colorado Libraries (1879)—REGIONAL	       69
 Colorado Springs      Colorado College, Charles Learning Tutt Library (1880).	       70
                      University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Library (1974)	„	      68B
 Denver               Colorado State Library (unknown)	       67
                      Denver Public Library (1884)—REGIONAL	       71
                      Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation Library (1962)	  DG1002
                      Regis College, Dayton Memorial Library (1915)	      71B
                      University of Denver, Penrose Library (1909)	     71A
                      U.S. Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit Library (1973)	     68A
 Fort Collins           Colorado State University Library (1907)	       68
 Golden               Colorado School of Mines, Arthur Lakes Library (1939)	„	       72
 Grand Junction        Mesa County Public Library (1975)	      70B
 Greeley               University of Northern Colorado Library (1966)	     70A
 Gunnison             Western State College, Leslie J. Savage Library (1932)	      74
 La Junta              Otero Junior College, Wheeler Library (1963)	_	„	     69A
 Lake-wood            Jefferson County Public Library, Lakewood Regional Library (1968)	     7ZA
 Pueblo                Pueblo Regional Library (1893)	_	„	      73
                      University Southern Colorado Library (1965)	     74A
 U.S. Air Force
  Academy          Academy Library (1956)	     67A
                                                   CONNECTICUT
 Bridgeport            Bridgeport Public Library (1884)	_	      83
 Danbury             Western Connecticut State College, Ruth A. Haas Library (1967)		     84B
 Danielson            Quinebaug Valley Community College (1975)	„	     79A
 Enfield              Enfield Public Library (1967)	       84
 Hartford             Connecticut State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	_	      75
                     Hartford Public Library (1945)	       85
                     Trinity College Library (1895)	_	       80
 Middletown          Wesleyan University Library (1906)	       78
 Mystic               Marine Historical Association, Inc., G. W. Blunt White Library (1964)	      81A
 New Britain          Central Connecticut State College, Elihu Burritt Library (1973)	     34A
 New Haven          Southern Connecticut State College Library (1968)	„	      32A
                     Yale University Library (1859)	       82
 New London         Connecticut College Library (1926)	       81
                     U.S. Coast Guard Academy Library (1939)	       76
 Stamford             Stamford Public Library (1973)	      83A
 Storrs                University of Connecticut, Wilbur Cross Library (1907)	       77
 Waterbury            Post College, Traurig Library (1977)	      85A
                     Silas Bronson Library (1869)...	~	_	       79
 West Haven          University of New Haven Library (1971)			      78A
                                                    DELAWARE
Dover               Delaware State College, William C. Jason Library (1962)		       88
                     State Department of Community Affairs and Economic Development, Division of Libraries (1972)	      87A
                     State Law Library in Kent County (unknown) —	-	       86
Georgetown          Delaware Technical and Community College, Southern Branch Library (1968)	      89A
                     Sussex County Law Library (1976)	_...	      86A
Newark              University of Delaware, Morris Library (1907)	       87
                                                        160

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                              Deposi-
                                                                                                                 tory No.
 Wilmington           Delaware Law School Library (1976)	      88A
                      New Castle County Law Library (1974)	        90
                      Wilmington Institute and New Castle County Library (1861)	        89
                                               DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
 Washington           Administrative Conference of U.S. Library (1977)	  DG1042
                      Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations Library (1972)	  DG1029
                      Civil Aeronautics Board Library (1975)	  DG1035
                      Civil Service Commission Library (1963)	  DG1005
                      Department of Commerce Library (1955)	     101A
                      Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Library (1954)	       101
                      Department of Housing and Urban Development Library (1969)	  DG1024
                      Department of the Interior  Central Library (1895)	        93
                      Department of Justice Main Library (1895)..	        94
                      Department of Labor Library (1976)	  DG1038
                      Department of State Library (1895)	        97
                      Department of State, Office of Legal Advisor, Law Library (1966)	  DG1016
                      Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (1968)..	  DG1019
                      District of Columbia Public Library (1943)	       100
                      Federal City College Library (1970)	     100B
                      Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Library (1972)	  DG1028
                      Federal Election Commission Library (1975)	  DG1037
                      Federal Reserve System Law Library (1976)	  DG1040
                      General Accounting Office Library (1975)	  DG1034
                      General Services Administration Library (1975)	  DG1036
                      Georgetown University Library (1969)	     100A
                      Indian Claims Commission Library (1968)	  DG1020
                      Library of Congress, Gift and Exchange Division (1977)	  DG1043
                      National Defense University Library (1895)	        99
                      Navy Department Library (1895)	        95
                      Navy Department, Office of Judge Advocate General Library (1963)	  DG1009
                      Office of Management and Budget Library (1965)	  DG1015
                      Office of The Adjutant General, Department of Army Library (1969)	  DG1023
                      Postal Service  Library (1895)	        96
                      Treasury Department Library (1895)	        98
                      U.S. Court of Appeals, Judge's Library (1975)	     100D
                      Veterans' Administration, Central Office Library (1976)	  DG1017
                                                      FLORIDA
 Boca Raton           Florida Atlantic University Library (1963)	     107B
 Clearwater            Clearwater Public Library (1972)	     102B
 Coral Gables          University of Miami Library (1939)		      110
 Daytona Beach        Volusia County Public Libraries (1963)	     104B
 De Land              Stetson University, duPont-BaU Library (1887)	      105
 Fort Lauderdale       Broward County Library (1976)	     107D
                      Nova University Law Library (1967)	     112B
 Fort Pierce            Indian River Community College Library (1975)	„	     112B
 Gainesville            University of Florida Libraries (1907)—REGIONAL	      103
 Jacksonville           Haydon Burns  Library (1914)	„	—..		      106
                     Jacksonville University, Swisher Library (1962)	     106A
                     University of North Florida Library (1972).	     10SD
 Lakeland              Lakeland Public Library (1928)	„	      107
 Leesburg             Lake-Sumter Community College Library (1963)	     104A
 Melbourne           Florida Institute of Technology Library (1963)	     111A
 Miami               Florida International University Library (1970)	     105B
                     Miami Public Library (1952)	      108
North Miami         Florida International University, North Miami Campus Library (1977)	     109B
Opa Locka           Biscayne College Library (1966)	     106B
Orlando              Florida Technological University Library (1966)	     105 A
                                                          161

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 Palatka
 Pensacola
 Port Charlotte
 St. Petersburg

 Sarasota
 Tallahassee
 Tampa
 Winter Park
 Albany
 Americus
 Athens
 Atlanta
Augusta
Bums wick
Carrollton
Columbus
Oahlonega
Decatur
Gainesville
Macon
Marietta
Milledgeville
Mount Berry
Savannah
Statesboro
Valdosta
Agana
Hilo
Honolulu
Laie
Uitue
Pearl City
Wailuku
Boise
                     LIST  OF  DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                    Deposi-
                                                                                              tory No.
 St. Johns River Junior College Library (1963)	.-.	       112
 University of West Florida, John C. Pace Library (1966)	     103A
 Charlotte County Library System (1973)	     112A
 St. Petersburg Public Library (1965)	     102A
 Stetson University College Law Library (1975)	     102C
 Sarasota Public Library (1970)	     109A
 Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, Coieman Memorial Library (1936)	       104
 State Library of Florida (1929)	       102
 Florida State University, R. M. Stozier Library (1941)	       109
 Florida Supreme Court Library (1974)	     1 IDA
 Tampa Public Library (1965)	     108C
 University of South Florida Library (1962)	     108B
 University of Tampa, Merle Kelce Library (1953)	     108A
 Rollins College, Mills Memorial Library (1909)	       111
                                  GEORGIA
 Albany Dougherty Public Library (1964)	       119
 Georgia Southwestern College, James Earl Carter Library (1966)	       120
 University of Georgia Libraries (1907)—REGIONAL...	       114
 Atlanta Public Library (1880)	       122
 Atlanta University, Trevor Amen Library (1962)	     122A
 Emory University, Robert W. Woodruff Library (1928).		       116
 Emory University, School of Law Library (1968)	„	„	     121A
 Georgia Institute of Technology, Price Gilbert Memorial Library (1963)	     122B
 Georgia State Library (unknown)					       113
 Georgia State University Library (1970)			„	     114A
 Augusta College Library (1962)		       127
 Brunswick Public Library (1965)	     125A
 West Georgia College, Sanford Library (1962)		       121
 Columbus College, Simon Schwob Memorial Library (1975)	     120A
 North Georgia College Library (1939)..		       126
 Dekalb Community  College-South Campus, Learning Resources Center (1973)—	     121B
 Chestatee Regional Library (1968)				     126A
 Mercer University Library (1964)	«.	     123A
 Kennesaw Junior College Library (1968)	_	_      124
 Georgia College at Milledgevilie, ma Dillard Russel Library (1950)		      123
 Berry College, Memorial Library (1970)	.				„	     124A
 Savannah Public and Chatham-Effingham Liberty Regional Library  (1857)	      113
 Georgia Southern College, Rosenwald Library (1939)		      117
 Valdosta State College, Richard Holmes Powell Library (1956)	      125
                                    GUAM
 Nieves M. Flores Memorial Library (1962)	      132
                                   HAWAII
 University of Hawaii, Hilo Campus Library (1962)	„	      130
 Chaminade College of Honolulu Library (1965)	     130A
 Hawaii Medical Library, Inc. (1968)				     128A
 Hawaii State Library (1929)			_	      128
 Municipal Reference Library of the City and County of Honolulu (1965)		     131A
 Supreme Court Law Library (1973)..........	.	..............................................		     129A
University of Hawaii Library (1907)—REGIONAL		      129
Church College of Hawaii, Woolley Library (1964)		      133
Kauai Public Library (1967)					      133A
Leeward Community College Library (1967)....	.....		     130B
Maui Public Library (1962)			       131
                                   IDAHO
 Boise State College Library (1966)	„			     136A
                                                          162

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                                                      AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
                      Boise Public Library and Information Center (1929)	       139
                      Idaho State Law Library (unknown)	       134
                      Idaho State Library-(1971)	     135A
 CaldweU             College of Idaho, Terteling Library (1930)	       138
 Moscow              University of Idaho Library (1907)—REGIONAL	       135
 Pocatello             Idaho State University Library (1908)	       137
 Rexburg              Ricks College, David O. McKay Library (1946)	       136
 Twin Falls            College of Southern Idaho Library (1970)	     137A
                                                        ILLINOIS
 Bloomington          Illinois Wesleyan University Libraries (1964)	     161A
 Carbondale           Southern Illinois University Library (1932)	       168
 CarlinviUe            Blackburn College Library (1954)	       164
 CartervUle            Shawnee Library System (1971)	     168A
 Champaign           University of Illinois Law Library, College of Law (1965)	     165A
 Charleston            Eastern Illinois University, Booth Library (1962)	       166
 Chicago              Chicago Public Library (1876)	       144
                      Chicago State University Library (1954)	       146
                      OePaul University, Lincoln Park Campus Library (1975)	     150A
                      Field Museum of Natural History Library (1963)	     142A
                      John Crerar Library (1909)	     144A
                      Loyola University of Chicago, E. M. Cudahy Memorial Library (1966)	     152A
                      Northeastern Illinois University Library (1961)	     163A
                      University of Chicago Law Library (1964)	     145A
                      University of Chicago Library (1897)	       145
                      University of Illinois,  Chicago Circle Campus Library (1957)	       150
 Decatur              Decatur Public Library (1954)	„	       165
 De Kalb              Northern Illinois University, Swen  Franklin Parson Library (1960)	     154A
 Edwardsville          Southern  Illinois University, Lqvejoy Memorial Library (1959)	       167
 Elsah                 Principia College, Marshall Brooks Library (1957)	     169A
 Evanston             Northwestern University Library (1876)	,	       153
 Freepon              Freepon Public Library (1905)	       156
 Galesburg             Galesburg Public Library (1896)	       158
 Jacksonville           MacMurry College, Henry Pfeiffer Library (1929)	       169
 Kankakee             Olivet Nazarene College, Benner Library and Resource Center (1946)	       161
 Lake Forest           Lake Forest College, Donnelley Library (1962)	_	     153A
 Lebanon              McKendree College, Holman Library (1968)	-	     167A
 Lisle                 Illinois Benedictine College, Theodore F. Lownik Library (1911)	       154
 Lockpon             Lewis University Library (1952)	„	       142
 Macomb              Western Illinois University Memorial Library (1962)	     169B
 Moline                Black Hawk College,  Learning Resources Center (1970)	       160
 Monraouth            Momnouth College Library (1860)	       157
 Morton Grove         Oakton Community College Library (1976)	     141A
 Mt Carmel            Wabash Valley College Library (1975)	     166A
 Normal               Illinois State University, Milner Library (187)	       143
 Oak Park             Oak Park Public Library (1963)....	       163
 Oglesby              Illinois Valley Community College Library (1976)	     143A
 Palos Hills             Moraine Valley Community College Library (1972)	      147
 Park Forest South      Governors State University Library (1974)	     161B
 Peoria                Bradley University, Cullom Davis Library (1963)	     159A
                      Peoria Public Library  (1883)	      159
 River Forest           Rosary College Library (1966)	     163B
 Rockford             Rockford Public Library (unknown)	      155
Springfield            Illinois State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	      140
Urbana                University of Illinois Library (1907)	      141
Wheaton              Wheaton College Library (1964)	     154B
Woodstock            Woodstock Public Library (1963)	     153B
                                                         163

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                                          LIST  OF  DEPOSITORY  LIBRARIES
                                                       INDIANA
 Deposi-
tory No.
 Anderson             Anderson College, Charles E. Wilson Library (1959)	       178
 Bloomington          Indiana University Library (1881)	-	       173
 Crawfordsville         Wabash College, Lilly Library (1906)	       179
 Evansvule            Evaosville and Vanderburgh County Public Library (1928)	       181
                      Indiana State University, Evansville Campus Library (1969)	     182A
 Fort Wayne           Indiana-Purdue Universities, Regional Campus Library (1965).	     177A
                      Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County (1896)	       177
 Franklin              Franklin College Library (1976)	     172B
 Gary                 Gary Public Library (1943)	       174
                      Indiana University, Northwest Campus Library (1966)	     172A
 Greencastle           De Pauw University, Roy O. West Library (1879)	       172
 Hammond            Hammond Public Library (1964)	     174A
 Hanover              Hanover College Library (1892)	       182
 Huntington            Hunrington College Library (1964)	     PSA
 Indianapolis           Butler University, Irwin Library (1965)	     184A
                      Indiana State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	       170
                      Indiana Supreme Court Law Library (1975)	     171A
                      Indiana University, Law Library (1967)	     184B
                      Indianapolis-Marion County Public Library (1906)	       184
 Kokomo              Indiana University, Kokomo Regional Campus library (1969)	,	     173A
 Lafayette             Purdue University Library (1907)	...	       171
 Muncie               Ball State University Library (1959)	       180
                      Muncie Public Library (1906)	     183A
 New Albany           Indiana University, Southeastern Campus Library (1965)	     181A
 Notre Dame           University of Notre Dame, Memorial Library (1883)	,	,	       176
 Rensselaer            St. Joseph's College Library (1964)	     175A
 Richmond             Earlham College, Lilly Library (1964)	     180A
                      Morrison-Reeves Library (1906)	       183
 South Bend            Indiana University at South Bend Library (1965)	     176A
 Terre Haute           Indiana State University, Cunningham Memorial Library (1906)	     179A
 Valparaiso            Valparaiso University, Moellering Memorial Library (1930)	       175
                                                        IOWA
 Ames                 Iowa State university of Science and Technology Library (1907)	       186
 Cedar Falls           University of Northern Iowa Library (1946)	       191
 Council Bluffs        Free Public Library (1885)....	       195
                     Iowa Western Community College, Hoover Media Library (1972)	     195A
 Davenport           Davenport Public Library (1973)	     192B
 Des Moines           Drake University, Cowles Library (1966)....	       194
                     Drake University Law Library (1972)	_	     193A
                     State Library Commission of Iowa (unknown).	       185
                     Public Library of Des Moines (1888)	_	       193
 Dubuque             Carnegie-Stout Public Library (unknown)	       188
                     Loras College, Wahlert Memorial Library (1967)	     194A
 Fayette              Upper Iowa College, Henderson-Wilder Library (1974)	     190A
Grinnell              Grinncll College, Burling Library (1874)	       192
 Iowa City            University of Iowa, Law Library (1968)	     188A
                     University of Iowa Library (1884)—REGIONAL	     189A
Lamoni              Graceland College, Frederick Madison Smith Library (1927)	     192A
Mason City           North Iowa Area Community College Library (1976)	_	     191A
Mount Vernon        Cornell College, Russell D. Cole Library (18%)	      190
Orange City          Northwestern College, Ramaker Library (1970)	„	     196A
Sioux City            Sioux City Public Library (1894)	      196
                                                       KANSAS
Atchison             Benedictine College Library (1965)	      201
Baldwin City         Baker University Library (1908)	      202
Colby                Colby Community Junior College Library (1968)	     199A
                                                         164

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                    tory No.
Emporia              Kansas State College, William Allen White Library (1909)	      204
Hays                 Fort Hays Kansas State College, Forsyth Library (1926)	     206A
Hutchinson            Hutchinson Public Library (1963)	     200A
Lawrence             University of Kansas, Watson Library (1869)—REGIONAL	      199
                      University of Kansas, School of Law Library (1971)	     202A
Manhattan            Kansas State University, Farreil Library (1907)	      198
Pittsburg              Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Porter Library (1952)	      203
Salina                Kansas Wesleyan University, Memorial Library (1930)	      206
Topeka               Kansas State Historical Society Library (1877)	      200
                      Kansas State Library (unknown)	      197
                      Kansas Supreme Court Law Library (197!)	     197A
                      Washbum University of Topeka, Law Library (1971)	     201A
Wichita               Wichita State University Library (1901)	     204A
                                                       KENTUCKY
Ashland               Ashland Public Library (1946)	      219
Barbourville           Union College, Abigail E. Weeks, Memorial Library (1958)	      220
Bowling Green        Western Kentucky University, Cravens Graduate Center and Library (1934)	      213
Covington            Thomas More College Library (1970)	      209
Danville               Centre College,  Grace Doherty Library (1884)	     217A
Frankfort             Kentucky Department of Libraries (1967)	     211A
                      Kentucky State University, Blazer Library (1972)	     207A
                      State Law Library (unknown)	„	,	      207
Highland Heights      Northern Kentucky University, W. Frank Steely Library (1973)	„	„	     217B
Hopkinsville           Hopkinsville Community College Library (1976)	     212A
Lexington             University of Kentucky, Law Library (1968)	     21QA
                      University of Kentucky, Margaret I. King Library (1907)—REGIONAL	      208
Louisville             Louisville Free Public  Library (1904)	„	      214
                      University of Louisville, Belknap Campus Library (1925)	„	      211
                      University of Louisville Law Library (1975)	     214A
Morehead             Morehead State University, Johnson Camden Library  (1955)		      210
Murray               Murray State University Library (1924)	~~			      212
Owensboro            Kentucky Wesleyan College Library (1966)	„	     213A
Richmond             Eastern Kentucky University, John Grant Crabbe Library (1966)	„	„      217
                                                       LOUISIANA
Baton Rouge          Louisiana State Library (1976)	.		_	„	_	     231B
                      Louisiana State University Law Library (1929)	„	      231
                      Louisiana State University Library (1907)—REGIONAL	      222
                      Southern University Library (1952)	~	      ??^
Eunice                Louisiana State University at Eunice, Le Doux Library (1969)		     232A
Hammond             Southeastern Louisiana University, Sims Memorial Library (1966)	     231A
Lafayette              University of Southwestern Louisiana Library (1938)	      228
Lakes Charles         McNeese State University, Frazar Memorial Library (1941)	      232
Monroe               Northeast Louisiana University, Sandel  Library (1963)	     230A
Natchitoches          Northwestern State University, Watson Memorial Library (1887)	      233
New Orleans          Isaac Delgado College, Moss Technical Library (1968)	     226A
                      Law Library of Louisiana (unknown) ......................	,	      221
                      University of New Orleans Library (1963)		„	     224A
                      Loyola University Library (1942)	..			....      227
                      New Orleans Public Library (1883)		      224
                      Southern University in New Orleans Library (1962)..	_		..........................      226
                      Tulane University, Howard-Tilton Memorial Library (1942)		      225
                      Tulane University Law Library (1976)			     227A
                      U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit Library (1973)			„	 DG1031
Pineville               Louisiana College, Richard W. Norton Memorial Library (1969)	     233A
Ruston                Louisiana Technical University Library (1896)—REGIONAL	      230
Shreveport            Louisiana State University at Shreveport Library (1967)	     229A
                      Shreve Memorial Library (1923)	„		      229
                                                           165

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                                         LIST OF DEPOSITORY  LIBRARIES                                   Deposi-
                                                                                                               tory No.
 Thibodaux           Francis T. Nicholls State University, Leonidas Polk Library (1962)	     228A
                                                       MAINE
 Augusta             Maine Law and Legislative Reference Library (1973)	     234A
                     Maine State Library (unknown)	      234
 Bangor              Bangor Public Library (1884)	      240
 Brunswick           Bowdoin College, Hawthorne-Longfellow Library  (1884)	._	      237
 Casrine              Maine Maritime Academy, Nutting Memorial Library (1969)	     236A
 Lewiston            Bates College Library (1882)	      239
 Orono               University of Maine, Raymond H. Fogler Library (1907)—REGIONAL	      235
 Portland             Portland Public Library (1884)	„	      238
                     University of Maine Law Library (1964)	_	     237A
 Springvale           Nasson College Library (1961)	      236
 Waterville           Colby College Library (1884)	     239A
                                                     MARYLAND
 Annapolis            Maryland State Library (unknown)	      241
                     U.S. Naval Academy, Nimitz Library (1895)	      244
 Baltimore            Enoch Pratt Free Library (1887)	      246
                     Johns Hopkins University, Milton S. Eisenhower Library (1882)	      245
                     Morgan State College, Soper Library (1940)	      249
                     University of Baltimore, Langsdaie Library. (1973)	     249A
                     University of Maryland, Baltimore County Library  (1971)	     246A
                     University of Maryland, School of Law Library (1969)	     241A
 Bel Air              Harford Community College Library (1967)	     248B
 Beltsville             Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library (1895)	       92
 Chestertown          Washington College, Chester M. Miller Library (1891)	      247
 College Park          University of Maryland, McKeldin Library (1925)—REGIONAL	      242
 Cumberland          AUegany Community College Library (1974)	     245A
 Frostburg            Frostburg State College Library (1967)	     248C
 Germantown          Energy Research & Development Adm. Library (1963)	  DG1014
 Patuxent River        Naval Air Station Library (1968)	  DG1021
 Rockville            Montgomery County Department of Public Libraries (1951)	      252
 Salisbury             Salisbury State College, Blackwell Library (1965)	     247A
 Towson              Goucher College, Julia Rogers Library (1966)	     248A
 Westminster          Western Maryland College Library (1896)	      248
                                                 MASSACHUSETTS
 Amherst             Amherst College Library (1884)	      260
                     University of Massachusetts, Godell Library (1907)	      254
 Belmont              Belmont Memorial  Library (1968)	      264
 Boston               Boston Athenaeum Library (unknown)	      269
                     Boston College, Bapst Library (1963)	    257A
                     Boston Public Library (1859)—REGIONAL	    268A
                     Northeastern University, Dodge Library (1962)	     268B
                     State Library of Massachusetts (unknown)	      253
 Brookline            Public Library of Brookline (1925)	      268
 Cambridge           Harvard College Library (1860)	      257
                     Massachusetts Institute of Technology Libraries (1946)	      255
 Chicopee             Our Lady of the Elms College  Library (1969)	      261
 Lowell               Lowell Technological Institute, Alumni Memorial Library (1952)	      263
 Lynn                Lynn Public Library (1953)	       265
 Marlborough          Marlborough Public Library (1971)	     263A
 Medford             Tufts University Library (1899)	,	       258
 Milton               Curry College Library (1972)	      270
New Bedford          New Bedford Free Public Library (1858)	       267
 North Dartmouth      Southeastern Massachusetts University Library (1965)	     267A
North Easton          Stonehill College, Gushing-Martin Library (1962)	    272A
Springfield           Springfield City Library (1966)	    258A
                                                        166

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                  tory No.
Waltham              Brandeis University, Goldfarb Library (1965)	     262A
Wellesley             Wellesley College Library (1943)	       272
Wenham              Gordon College, Wirin Library (1963)	     265 A
Williamstown          Williams College Library (unknown)	       259
Worcester             American Antiquarian Society Library (1814)	       256
                      University of Massachusetts, Medical Center Library (1972)	     262B
                      Worcester Public Library (1859)	       262
                                                      MICHIGAN
Albion                Albion College. Stockwel! Memorial Library (1966)	     279B
Allendale             Grand Valley State College Library (1963)	     281A
Alma                 Alma College, Monteith Library (1963)	,	     284A
Ann Arbor            Great Lakes Basin Commission Library (1971)	,	  DG1026
                      University of Michigan, Harlan Hatcher Library (1884)	       278
Benton Harbor         Benton Harbor Public Library (1907)	       280
Bloomfield Hills       Cranbrook Institute of Science Library (1940)	_	       293
Dearborn             Henry Ford Centennial Library (1969)	_	     292C
                      Henry Ford Community College Library (1957)	       292
Detroit                Detroit Public Library (1868)—REGIONAL	       275
                      Marygrove College Library (1965)	       277
                      Mercy College of Detroit Library (1965)	     277A
                      University of Detroit Library (1884)	       291
                      Wayne State University Law Library (1971)	     289A
                      Wayne State University, G. Flint Purdy  Library (1973)	       289
Dowagiac             Southwestern Michigan College Library (1971)	     2SOA
East Lansing           Michigan State University, Law Library (1971)	„	     273B
                      Michigan State University Library (1907)	       274
Escanaba             Michigan State Library, Upper Peninsula Branch (1964)...	     287A
Farmington           Martin Luther King Learning Resources Center, Oakland Community College (1968)	     283A
Flint                 Charles Stewart Mott Library (1959)	       282
                      Flint Public  Library (1967)	„	     282A
Grand Rapids          Grand Rapids Public Library (1876)	       281
                      Calvin College Library (1967)	     281B
Houghton             Michigan Technological University Library (1876)	       288
Jackson               Jackson Public Library (1965)	     273A
Kalamazoo            Kalamazoo Library System (1907)	       276
                      Western Michigan University, Dwight B. Waldo Library (1963)	     279A
Lansing               Michigan State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	-	       273
Livonia               Schoolcraft College Library (1962)	     292B
Marquette             Northern Michigan University, Olsen Library (1963)	     288A
Monroe               Monroe County Library System (1974)	„	„	     29 IB
Mt. Clemens           Macomb County Library (1968)	     274A
Mt. Pleasant           Central Michigan University Library (1958)	       286
Muskegon             Hackley Public Library (1894)	       285
Olivet                Olivet College Library (1974).	     279C
Petoskey              North Central Michigan College Library (1962)	       287
Port Huron            Saint Clair County Library System (1876)	      283
Rochester             Oakland University, Kresge Library (1964)	     293A
Saginaw               Hoyt Public Library (1890)	       284
Traverse City          Northwestern Michigan College, Mark Osterlin Library (1964)	     285A
University Center      Delta College Library (1963)	-	     286A
Warren                Warren Public Library, Arthur J. Miller Branch (1973)	„	     291A
Wayne                Wayne Oakland Federated Library System (1957)	     292A
Ypsilanti               Eastern Michigan University Library (1965)...	     278A
                                                     MINNESOTA
Bemidji                Bemidji State College, A. C Clark Library (1963)	     306A
Collegeville           SL John's University, Alcuin Library (1954)	_	      303
Duluth                Duluth Public Library (1909)	      305
                                                         167

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                                           LIST OF DEPOSITORY  LIBRARIES                                    Deposi-
                                                                                                                    tory No.
 Mankato              Mankato State College Memorial Library (1962)	     299A
 Minneapolis           Anoka County Library (1971)	     295A
                      Hennepin County Libraries (1971)	     300A
                      Minneapolis Public Library (1893)	       302
                      University of Minnesota, Wilson Library (1907)—REGIONAL	       295
 Moorhead            Moorhead State College Library (1956)	       306
 Morris                University of Minnesota at Morris Library (1963)	     304A
 Northfield            Carleton College Library (1930)	       296
                      St. Olaf College, Roivaag Memorial Library (1930)	       298
 St. Cloud             St Cloud State College Library (1962)	     303A
 St. Paul               Minnesota Historical Society Library (1867)	       301
                      Minnesota State Law Library (unknown)	       294
                      St. Paul Public Library (1914)	       297
                      University of Minnesota, St. Paul Campus Library (1974)	     301A
 Saint Peter            Gustavus Adolphus College Library (1941)	       299
 Stillwater             Stillwater Public Library (1893)	       300
 Willmar              Crow River Regional Library (1958)	_	       304
 Winona               Winona State University, Maxwell Library (1969)	     298A
                                                       MISSISSIPPI
 Cleveland             Delta State University, W. B. Roberts Library (1975)	     313A
 Clinton               Mississippi College School of Law Library (1977)	     314A
 Columbus             Mississippi State College for Women, J. C. Fant Memorial Library (1920)	      313
 Hattiesburg           University of Southern Mississippi Library (1935)	      318
 Jackson               Jackson State College Library (1968)	-	«	_	      314
                      Millsaps Coflege, Millsaps-Wilson Library (1963)	      310
                      Mississippi Library Commission (1947)	      311
                      Mississippi State Law Library (unknown)	„	      307
 Lorman               Aicorn Agricultural and Mechanical College Library (1970)	„.     308A
 State College          Mississippi State University,  Mitchell Memorial Library (1907)	      308
 University             University of Mississippi Library (1833)—REGIONAL	„	      312
                      University of Mississippi, School of Law Library (1967)	      309
                                                        MISSOURI
 Cape Gsrardeau        Southeast Missouri State College,  Kent Library (1916)	_	      334
 Columbia             University of Missouri Library (1862)	      321
 Fayette               Central Methodist College Library (1962)	.....	-	     334A
 Fulton                Westminster College, Reeves Library (1875)	      333
Jefferson City          Lincoln University, Inman E. Page Library (1944)	      322
                      Missouri State Library (1963)	     334B
                      Missouri Supreme  Court Library (unknown)	-	      320
Joplin                 Missouri Southern State College Library (1966)	     33CC
 Kansas City           Kansas City Public Library (1881)	      328
                      Rockhurst College Library (1917).....	      324
                      University of Missouri at Kansas City, General Library  (1938)	—	      329
Kirksville             Northeast Missouri State Teachers College, Pickler Memorial Library (1966)	    323A
Liberty                William Jewell College Library (1900)	      327
Rolla                 University of Missouri at Rolla Library (1907)		      332
St. Charles            Lindenwood College, Margaret Leggat Butler Library (1973)....	„	    333A
St Joseph             St. Joseph Public Library (1891)				    327A
                      Maryviile College  Library (1976)			     336B
St Louis              St Louis County Library (1970)	.						„	    336A
                      St Louis Public Library (1866)						       335
                      St. Louis University, Law Library (1967)	„	„	     335A
                      St. Louis University, Pius XII Memorial Library (1866)	       323
                      University of Missouri at St Louis, Thomas Jefferson Library (1966)—	       326
                      U.S. Court of Appeals,  Eighth Circuit Library (1972)	„			 DG1030
                      Washington University, John M. Ottn Library (1906)		       336
Springfield            Drury College, Walker Library (1874)	     330A
                                                          168

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                  tory No.
                      Southwest Missouri State College Library (1963)	     330B
 Warrensburg          Central Missouri State College, Ward Edwards Library (1914)	       330
                                                       MONTANA
 Billings               Eastern Montana College Library (1924)	       343
 Bozeman             Montana State University Library (1907)	       339
 Burte                 Montana College of Mineral Science and Technology Library (1901)	       340
 Helena               Carroll College Library (1974)	     342A
                      Montana Historical Society Library (unknown)	       338
                      Montana State Library (1966)	_	       342
                      State Law Library of Montana (1977)	     338A
 Missoula             University of Montana Library (1909)—REGIONAL	      341
                                                      NEBRASKA
 Blair                 Dana College, Dana-LIFE Library (1924)	      349
 Crete                 Doane College, Whitin Library (1944)	       348
 Fremont              Midland Lutheran  College Library (1924)	       350
 Kearney              Kearney State College, Calvin T. Ryan Library (1962)	     351A
 Lincoln               Nebraska  Publications Clearinghouse, Nebraska Library Commission (1972)—REGIONAL	     346A
                      Nebraska  State Library (unknown)	      344
                      University of Nebraska, Don L. Love Memorial Library (1907)	       345
 Omaha               Creighton University, Alumni Library (1964)	     349A
                      Omaha Public Library (1880)	      346
                      University of Nebraska at Omaha. University Library (1939)	      347
 Scottsbluff            Scottsbluff Public Library (1925)	      351
 Wayne               Wayne State College, U.S. Conn. Library (1970)	     347A
                                                       NEVADA
 Carson City           Nevada State Library (unknown)	      352
                      Nevada Supreme Court Library (1973)	     352A
 Las Vegas             Clark County Library, District Library (1974)	     353B
                      University of Nevada at Las Vegas, James R. Dickinson Library (1959)	      355
 Reno                 Nevada State Historical Society Library (1974)	     353A
                      University of Nevada Library (1907)—REGIONAL	      353
                                                   NEW  HAMPSHIRE
 Concord              Franklin Pierce Law  Center Library (1973)	     359B
                      New Hampshire State Library (unknown)	      357
 Durham               University of New  Hampshire Library (1907)	      358
 Franconia             Franconia College  Library (1972)	     359A
 Hanover              Dartmouth College, Baker Library (1884)	      362
 Henniker             New England College Library (1966)	     362A
 Manchester            Manchester City Library (1884)	      360
                      New Hampshire College, RA.B. Shapiro Memorial Library (1976)	     358A
                      St Anselm's College, Geise Library (1963)	      359
 Nashua               Nashua Public Library (197J)		     360A
                                                     NEW JERSEY
 Bayonne              Bayonne Free Public  Library (1909)	      379
 Bloomfield            Free Public Library of Bloomfield (1965)	    376A
 Bridgeton             Cumberland County Library (1966)	„	„	    368A
 Camden               Rutgers Universtty-Camden Library (1966)	      367
 Convent Station        College of SL Elizabeth, Mahoney Library (1938)	      365
 Dover                County College of Morris Library, Learning Resources Center (1975)	     363B
East Brunswick        East Brunswick Public Library (1977)....".	„	     366B
East Orange           East Orange Public Library (1966)			„	    377A
 Elizabeth             Free Public Library of Elizabeth (1895)	_	      372
Glassboro             Glassboro State College, Savitz Learning Resource Center (1963)			    367A
Hackensack           Johnson Free Public Library (1966)	      374
Irvington             Free Public Library of Irvington (1966)	      380
                                                          169

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                                         LIST OF DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                   Deposi-
                                                                                                                tory No.
 Jersey City           Free Public Library of Jersey City (1879)	     379A
                     Jersey City State College, Forrest A. Irwin Library (1963)	     365A
 Lawrenceville        Rider College Library (1975)	     370B
 Madison             Drew University, Rose Memorial Library (1939)	       371
 Mahwah             Ramapo College Library (1971)	     374A
 Mount Holly         Burlington County Library (1966)	     370A
 New Brunswick       Free Public Library (1908)....,	       369
                     Rutgers University Library (1907)	       364
 Newark              Newark Public Library (1906)—REGIONAL	       376
                     Rutgers-The State University, John Cotton Dana Library (1966)	     366A
 Passaic              Passaic Public Library (1964)..........—	„	     364A
 Phillipsburg          PhilUpsburg Free Public Library (1976)	„	     365B
 Plainfield             Plainfield Pubiic Library (1971)	     372A
 Pomona              Stockton State College Library (1972)	."	     367B
 Princeton             Princeton University Library (1884)	       370
 Rutherford           Fairleigh Dickinson University, Messier Library (1953)	       375
 Shrewsbury          Monmouth County Library (1968)	     363A
 South Orange         Seton Hall University Library (1947)	       377
 Teaneck              Fairleigh Dickinson University, Teaneck Campus Library (1963)	.-.	     373A
 Toms River          Ocean County College Learning Resources Center (1966)	     373A
 Trenton              New Jersey State Library, Law and Reference Bureau. Department of Education (unknown)	       363
                     Trenton Free Public Library (1902)	       366
 Union                Kean College of New Jersey, Nancy Thompson Library (1973)	     376B
 Upper Momclair       Montclak State College, Harry A. Sprague Library (1967)	     380A
 Wayne               Wayne Public Library (1972)	„	     364B
 West Long Branch     Monmouth College. Guggenheim Memorial Library (1963)	       373
 Woodbridge          Free Public Library of Woodbridge (1965)	„	     369A
                                                    NEW MEXICO
 Albuquerque          University of New Mexico, Medical Sciences Library (1973)	     381A
                     University of New Mexico, School of Law Library (1973)	k	     3 86A
                     University of New Mexico, Zimmerman Library (1896)—REGIONAL	_	      383
 Hobos               New Mexico Junior College, Pannell Library (1969)	      385
 Las Cruces           New Mexico State University Library (1907)	      382
 Las Vegas            New Mexico Highlands University, Donnelly Library (1913)	      384
 Portaies              Eastern New Mexico University Library (1962)		—	     383A
Sante Fe              New Mexico State Library (I960)—REGIONAL	«			      386
                     Supreme Court Law Library (unknown)			      381
Silver City           Western New Mexico University, Miller Library (1972)			     385A
                                                     NEW YORK
Albany               New York State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	      387
                     State University of New York at Albany Library (1964)	    421A
Auburn              Seymour Library (1972)	      431
Bayside              Queensborough Community College Library (1972)	      418
Binghamton          State University of New York at Binghamton Library (1962)	    425A
Brockport             State University of New York, Drake Memorial Library (1967)	    430A
Bronx                Herbert H. Lehman College Library (1967)	„	     390C
                     New York Public Library, Mott Haven Branch (1973)			      411
Bronxville            Sarah Lawrence College Library (1969)		    415A
Brooklyn             Brooklyn College Library (1936)	„	      397
                     Brooklyn Law School, Law Library (1974)					     396B
                     Brooklyn Public Library (1908)	      398
                     Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Spicer Library (1963)			„	    396A
                     Pratt Institute Library (1891)	      396
                     State University of New York, Downstate Medical  Center Library (1958)	      404
 Buffalo               Buffalo and Erie County Public Library (1895)	      432
                     State University of New York at Buffalo, Lockwood Memorial Library (1963)	      433
Canton               St. Lawrence University, Owen D. Young Library (1920)	      391
                                                         170

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                                                      AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
Coming              Coming Community College, Arthur A. Houghton, Jr. Library (1963)	    434A
Cortland              State University of New York, College at Conland, Memorial Library (1964)	      399
Delhi                 State University Agricultural and Technical College Library (1970)	    417A
Douglaston           Cathedral College Library (1971)	    395A
East Islip              East Islip Public Library (1974)	     394B
Elmira                Elmira College, Gannett-Tripp Learning Center (1956)	      425
Farmingdale          State University Agricultural and Technical Institute at Farmingdale Library (1917)	       392
Flushing              Queens College, Paul Klapper Library (1939)	-       435
Garden City          Adelphi University, Swirbul Library (1966)	     390A
                      Nassau Library System (1965)	     427A
Geneseo              State University College, Milne Library (1967)	-	       430
Greenvale             C. W. Post College, B. Davis Schwartz Memorial Library (1965)	      395
Hamilton              Colgate University Library (1902)	       423
Hempstead            Hofstra University Library (1964)	       427
Ithaca                Cornell University Library (1907)	       388
                      New York State Colleges of Agriculture and Home Economics. Albert R. Mann Library (1943)	       428
Jamaica              Queens Borough Public Library (1926)	       393
                      St. John's University Library (1956)	       401
Kings Point           U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Library (1962)	       400
Mount Vemon        Mount Vernon Public Library (1962)	       419
New Paltz             State University College Library (1965)	     436A
New York City        City University of New York, City College Library (1884)	      412
                      College of Insurance, Ecker Library (1965)..............,	     402A
                      Columbia University Libraries (1882)	       410
                      Cooper Union Library (1930)	       405
                      Fordham University Library (1937)	       414
                      Medical Library Center of New York (1976)	     412A
                      New York Law Institute Library (1909)	       402
                      New York Public Library (Astor Branch) (1907)	       408
                      New York Public Library (Lenox Branch) (1884)	„	     408A
                      New York University Libraries (1967)	     390B
                      New York University, Law Library (1973)	       390
                      State University of New York, Maritime College Library (1947)	_.	       416
                      U.S. Court of Appeals Library (1976)	  DG1041
Newburgh             Newburgh Free Library (1909)			       417
Niagara Falls          Niagara Falls Public Library (1976)	     430B
Oakdale              Dowiing College Library (1%5)	„	     394A
Oneonta              State University College, James M. Milne Library (1966)	     399A
Oswego              State University College, Penfield Library (1966)	     391A
Pittsburgh            State University College, Benjamin F. Feinberg Library (1967)	     420B
Potsdam              Clarkson College of Technology, .Harriet Call Burnap Memorial Library (1938)	      422
                      State University College, Frederick W. Crumb Memorial Library (1964).....	     421A
Poughkeepsie          Vassar College Library (1943)	       436
Purchase              State University of New York, College at Purchase Library (1969)...	     419A
Rochester             Rochester Public Library (1963)	     429A
                      University of Rochester Library (1880)	       429
St. Bonaventure        St. Bonaventure College, Friedsam Memorial Library (1938)	       434
Saratoga Springs       Sksdmore College Library (1964)			       420
Schenectady          Union College, Schaffer Library (1901)	       421
Southampton          Southampton College Library (1973)	„	.._..     395B
Staten Island          Wagner College, Homnann Library (1953)			       409
  (Grymes Hill)
Stony Brook          State University of New York at Stony Brook Library (1963)	       394
Syracuse              Syracuse University Library (1878)	       426
Troy                  Troy Public Library (1869)	     420A
Utica                 Utica Public Library (1885)	_	       424
                      Utica/Rome State University College Library (1977)	     424A
West Point            U.S. Military Academy Library (unknown)	„	       389
Yonkers              Yonkers Public Library (1910)	       415
     288-289 O - 79 - 12
                                                           171

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 Yorictown Heights
 Asheville
 Boiling Springs
 Boone
 Buies Creek
 Chapel Hill
 Charlotte
 Cullowhee
 Davidson
 Durham

 Elon College
 Fayetteville
 Greensboro

 Greenville
 Laurinburg
 Lexington
 Mount Olive
 Murfreesboro
 Pembroke
 Raleigh
Rocky Mount
Salisbury
Wilmington
Wflson
Winston-Salem
Bismarck
Dickinson
Fargo
Grand Forks
Minot
Vailey City


Ada
Akron

Alliance
Ashland
Athens
Batavia
Bluffton
Bowling Green
                     LIST OF  DEPOSITORY  LIBRARIES                                    Deposi-
                                                                                              tory No.
 Mercy College at Fox Meadow Library (1976)	     436B
                             NORTH CAROLINA
 University of North Carolina at Asheville, D. Hiden Ramsey Library (1965)	     453A
 Gardner-Webb College, Dover Memorial Library (1974)	     450B
 Appalachian State University Library (1963)	     450A
 Campbell College, Carrie Rich Memorial Library (1965)	      449>
 University of North Carolina Library (1884)—REGIONAL	      447
 Public Library of Charlotte and Mecklenburg County (1964)	     451A
 Queens College, Everette Library (1927)	      451
 University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Atkins Library (1964)	     451B
 Western Carolina University, Hunter Library (1953)	      453
 Davidson College, Hugh A. & Jane Grey Memorial Library (1893)'.	      441
 Duke Univesity, William R. Perkins Library (1890)	      440
 North Carolina Central University, James E. Shepard Memorial Library (1973)	     445B
 Elon College Library (1971)	     439A
 Fayetteville State University, Chesnutt Library (1971)	     441A
 North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University, F. D. Bluford Library (1937)	      439
 University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Walter Clinton Jackson Library (1963)	     447A
 East Carolina University, J. Y. Joyner Library (1951)	      442
 St Andrews Presbyterian College, DeTamble Library (1969)	      452
 Davidson County Public Library System (1971).....	     446A
 Mount Olive College, Moye Library (1971)	„	     449A
 Chowan College, Whitaker Library (1963)	    442A
 Pembroke State University, Mary Livermore Library (1963)		       448
 North Carolina State Library (unknown)	      437
 North Carolina State University, D. H. Hill Library (1923)	      438
 North Carolina Supreme Court Library (1972)	    437A
 Wake County Public Libraries (1969)	    445A
 North Carolina Wesleyan College Library (1969)	    443A
 Catawba College Library (1925)	      450
 University of North Carolina at Wilmington, William M. Randall Library (1965)	    448A
 Atlantic Christian College, Clarence L. Hardy Library (1930)	      443
 Forsyth County Public Library System (1954)	_	      446
 Wake Forest University, Z. Smith Reynolds Library (1902)	      445
                              NORTH DAKOTA
 State Historical Society of North Dakota (1907)	      457
 North Dakota State Law Library (unknown)	       454
 State Library Commission Library (1971)	    457A
 Veterans Memorial Public Library (1967)	     456A
 Dickinson State College Library (1968)	     459A
 Fi /go Public Library (1964)	     458 A
 North Dakota State University Library (1907)—REGIONAL, in cooperation with University of
   North Dakota, Chester Fritz Library at Grand Forks	       455
 University of North Dakota, Chester Fritz Library (1890)	       456
 Minot State College, Memorial Library (1923)	       459
 State College Library (1913)	       458
                                    OHIO
Ohio Northern University, J. P. Taggart Law Library (1965)	,	     485B
Akron Public Library (1952)	     477B
 University of Akron Library (1963)	„	     477C
Mount Union College Library (1888)	      479
Ashland College Library (1938)	      486
Ohio University Library (1886)	„	      473
Clermont General and Technical College Library (1973)	    464A
BlutTton College, Musselman Library (1951)	      467
Bowling Green State University Library (1933)	      476
                                                          172

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Canton
Chardon
Cincinnati

Cleveland
Columbus
Dayton
Delaware
Elyria
Findlay-
Gambier
Granville
Hiram
Kent
Marietta
Middletown
New Concord
pberlin
Oxford
Portsmouth
Rio Grande
Springfield
Steubenville

Tiffin
Toledo

Westerville
Woosier
Youngstown
Ada
Alva
Barries vilie
Bethany
Durant
Edmond
Enid
Langston
Muskogee
Norman
Okiahoma City
Shawnee
Stillwater
                                AUGUST  1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                             tory No.
Malone College. Everett L. Cattell Library (1970)	     479B
Geauga County Public Library (1971)	    465 A
Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (1884)	      464
University of Cincinnati Library (1929)	      465
Case Western Reserve University, Freiberger Library (1913)	    485A
Cleveland Heights-University Heights Public Library (1970)	    471A
Cleveland Public Library (1886)	      463
Cleveland State University Library (1966)	      471
John Carroll University, Grasselli Library (1963)	    460A
Municipal Reference Library (1970)	     471B
Capital University Library (1968)	    474A
The PubHc Library of Columbus and Franklin County (1885)	      475
Ohio State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	      460
Ohio State University Library (1907)	      461
Ohio Supreme Court Law Library (1973)	    460B
Dayton and Montgomery County Public Library (1909)	      466
University of Dayton, Albert Emanuel Library (1969)	    467A
Wright State University Library (1965)	    462A
Ohio Wesleyan University, L. A. Beeghly Library (1845).....	    480A
Elyria  Public Library (1966)	    476A
Findlay College, Shafer Library (1969)	    483A
Kenyon College  Library (1873)	      462
Denison University Library (1884)	      480
Hiram  College, Teachout-Price Memoriai Library (1874)	.\	    477A
Kent State University Library (1962)	      483
Marietta College, Dawes Memorial Library (1884)	„	      478
Miami  University at Middletown, Gardner-Harvey Library (1970)	    466B
Muaidngom  College Library (1966)	,    478A
Oberlin College Library (1858)	*	-	      477
Miami  University, Alumni Library (1909)	„	„.    466A
Portsmouth  Public Library (unknown)	      469
Rio Grande  College, Jeanerte Albiez Davis Library (1966)	    473A
Warder Public Library (1884)	_	      470
College of Steubenville, Starvaggi Memorial  Library (1971)	    481A
Public  Library of Steubenville and Jefferson County (1930)			      481
Heidelberg College, Beeghly Library (1964)	_	„	      485
Toledo-Lucas County Public Library (1884)	_	      472
University of Toledo Library (1963)	    472A
Otterbein College, Centennial Library (1967)	      474
College of Wooster, the Andrews Library (1966)	    479A
Public  Library of Youngstown and Mahoning County (1923)	     482
Youngstown State University, William F. Maag Library (1971) ..„	    482A
                                OKLAHOMA
East Central State College, Linscheid Library (1914)		      490
Northwestern State College Library (1907)	     499
United States ERDA-BERC Library (1962)	 DG1003
Bethany Nazarene College, R. T. Williams Library (1971)	„	    489A
Southeastern State College Library (1929)	„	     494
Central State University Library (1934)				.......    496A
Public  Library of Enid and Garfield County (1908)	    499A
Langston University, G. Lamar Harrison Library (1941)	     489
Muskogee Public Library (1971)			      493
University of Oklahoma Libraries (1893)	     496
Oklahoma County Libraries (1974)	_	    487A
Oklahoma City University Library (1963)	    496B
Oklahoma Department of Libraries (1893)—REGIONAL	„	~	     487
Oklahoma Baptist University Library (1933)	      495
Oklahoma State University Library (1907)	      488
                                                          173

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                                          LIST OF DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                   Deposi-
                                                                                                                  tory No.
 Tahlequah            Northeastern State College, John Vaughan Library (1923)	      491
 Tulsa                 Tulsa City-County Library Commission O963)	    491A
                      University of Tulsa, McFarlin Library (1929)	      492
 Weatheribrd          Southwestern Oklahoma State University, Al Harris Library (1958)	      497
                                                       OREGON
 Ashland              Southern Oregon College Library (1953)	      507
 Corvallis              Oregon State University Library (1907)	      501
 Eugene               University of Oregon Library (1883)	      502
 Forest Grove          Pacific University Library (1897)	      504
 La Grande            Eastern Oregon College, Walter M. Pierce Library (1954)	      505
 McMinnville          Linfield College, Northup Library (1965)	    502A
 Monmouth            Oregon College of Education Library (1967)	    503A
 Portland              Department of the Interior, BonnevilSe Power Administration Library (1962)	 DG1007
                      Lewis and Clark College, Aubrey R. Watzek Library (1967)	    5C4A
                      Library Association of Portland (1884)	      506
                      Portland State University Library (1963)— REGIONAL	    506A
                      Reed College Library (1912)	      503
 Salem                 Oregon State Library (unknown)	      500
                      Oregon Supreme Court Library (1974)	    500A
                      WUliamette University Library (1969)	    505A
                                                   PENNSYLVANIA
 Allentown            Muhlenberg College, Haas Library (1939)	      520
 Altoona               Altoona Public Library (1969)	      523
 Bethlehem            Lehigh University, Linderman Library (1876)	      532
 Blue Bell              Montgomery County Community College, Learning Resources Center Library (1975)	    519C
 Carlisle               Dickinson College, Boyd Lee Spahr Library (1947)	      530
 Cheyney              Cheyney State College, Leslie Pickney Hill Library (1947)	    521B
 Collegeville           Ursinus College, Myrin Library (1963)	    519A
 Doylestown           Bucks County Free Library, Center County Library (1970)	    518A
 East Stroudsburg       East Stroudsburg State College, Kemp Library (1966)	    532A
 Erie                  Erie Public Library (1897)	     540A
 Greenville            Thiel College, Langenheim Memorial Library (1963)	    510A
 Harrisburg            State Library of Pennsylvania (unknown)—REGIONAL	       508
 Haverford            Haverford College Library (1897)	      519
Hazleton              Hazleton Area Public Library (1964)	„	„	     522B
 Indiana               Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Rhodes R. Stabley Library (1962)	       533
Johnstown           Cambria Public Library (1965),	.			...    533A
 Lancaster              Franklin and Marshall College, Fackenthal Library (1895)	      521
Lewisburg            Bucknell University, Ellea Clarke Bertrand Library (1963)	     526A
Mansfield              Mansfield State College Library (1968)	     515A
 Meadville              Allegheny College, Reis Library (1907)	       540
 MiUersville            Millersville State College, Ganser Library (1966)	     521A
Monessen             Monewen Public Library (1969)....		_	—			       535
New Castle            New Castle Free Public Library (1963)	       534
Newtown              Bucks County Community College Library (1968)	      518
Norristown            Montgomery Couaty-Norristown Public Library (1969)	     519B
Philadelphia          Drexel University Library (1963)	     511A
                     Free Library of Philadelphia (1897)	       515
                     St. Joseph's College Library (1974)	     516A
                     Temple University, Samuel Paley Library (1947)	„	       516
                     U.S. Court of Appeals, Third Circuit (1973)	  DG1033
                     University of Pennsylvania, Biddle Law Library (1974)	     513C
                     University of Pennsylvania Library (1886)	     513B
Pittsburgh            Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh  Research Center Library (1962)	  DG1001
                     Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Allegheny Regional Branch (1924)	       527
                     Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh (1895)	       542
                     La Roche College, John J. Wright Library (1974).	     509A
                                                          174

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
                      University of Pittsburgh, Hillman Library (1910)	      511
 Pottsville             Ponsville Free Public Library (1967)	    525A
 Reading              Reading Public Library (1901)	      525
 Scranton              Scranton Public Library (1895)	      522
 Shippensburg          Shippensburg State College, Ezra Lehman Memorial Library (1973)	    523A
 Slippery Rock         Slippery Rock  State College, Maltby Library (1965)	    534A
 Swarthmore           Swarthmore College Library (1923)	      510
 University Park        Pennsylvania State University Library (1907)	      509
 Villanova             Villanova University, School of Law Library (1964)	      524
 Warren               Warren Library Association, Warren Public Library (1885)	    531A
 Washington           Washington and Jefferson College, Memorial Library (1884)	      536
 Waynesburg           Waynesburg College Library (1964)	    536A
 West Chester          West Chester State College, Francis Harvey Green Library (1967)	    521C
 Wilkes-Barre          King's College, D. Leonard Corgan Library (1949)	    522A
 Williamsport          Lycoming College Library (1970)	      526
 York                 York Junior College Library (1963)	    530A
 Youngwood           Westmoreland  County Community College, Learning Resource Center (1972)	    535A
                                                     PUERTO RICO
 Mayaguez            University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez Campus Library (1928)	      550
 Ponce                Catholic University of Puerto Rico Library (1966)	    550A
 Rio Piedras            University of Puerto Rico General Library (1928)	      549
                                                    RHODE ISLAND
 Kingston              University of Rhode Island Library (1907)	      554
 Newport              Navai War College Library (1963)	 DO 1010
 Providence            Brown University, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Library (unknown)	      555
                      Providence College, Phillips Memorial Library (1969)	    558A
                      Providence Public Library (1884)	      556
                      Rhode Island College Library (1965)	    555A
                      Rhode Island State Library (before 1895)	      553
 Warwick              Warwick Public Library (1966)	    556A
 Westerly              Westerly Public Library (1909)	_	      558
 Woonsocket           Woonsocket  Harris Public Library (1977)	      557
                                                   SOUTH CAROLINA
 Charleston            Baptist College at Charleston Library (1967)	    564A
                      College of Charleston Library (1869)	      564
                      The Citadel Memorial Library (1962)	    562A
 Clerason              Clemson University Library (1893)	      560
 Columbia              Benedict College, Learning Resources Center (1969)	    565 A
                      South Carolina State Library (before 1895)	      559
                      University  of South Carolina Undergraduate Library (1884)	„	      562
 Conway              University  of South Carolina, Coastal Carolina Regional Campus Library (1974)	    569A
 Due West             Erskine College, McCain Library (1968)	    566A
 Florence              Florence County Library (1967)	„	    563A
                      Francis Marion College, James A. Rogers Library (1970)	      569
 Greenville            Furman University Library (1962)			       567
                      Greenville  County Library (1966) —	    567A
 Greenwood            Lander College Library (1967)	„	      566
 Orangeburg            South Carolina State College, Whittaker Library (1953)	      561
 Rock Hill              Winthrop College Library (1896)	      568
 Spartanburg            Spartanburg County Public Library (1967)	       563
                                                   SOUTH DAKOTA
Aberdeen              Northern State  College Library (1963)	     574B
 Brookings             South Dakota State University, H. M. Briggs Library (1889)	       571
 Pierre                South Dakota State Library (1973)	       570
Rapid City            Rapid City Public Library (1963)	~	     575A
                                                          175

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                                          LIST OF DEPOSITORY  LIBRARIES                                    Deposi-
                                                                                                                  tory No.
                      South Dakota School of Mines and Technology Library (1963)	    572A
 Sioux Falls            Augustana College, Mikkelsen Library and Learning Resources Center (1969)	    573A
                      Sioux Falls Public Library (1903)	      573
 Spearfish             Black Hills State College Library (1942)	      575
 Vermillion            University of South Dakota, I. D. Weeks Library (1889)	    574A
 Yankton              Yankton College, Corliss Lay Library (1904)	      572
                                                      TENNESSEE
 Bristol                King College Library (1970)	    576A
 Chattanooga          Chattanooga-Hamilton County Bicentennial Library (1908)	      583
                      TV A Technical Library (1976)	 DG1039
 Clarksville            Austin Peay State University, Felix G. Woodward Library (1945)	„	      587
 Cleveland             Cleveland State Community College Library (1973)	,	    583A
 Columbia             Columbia State Community College Library (1973)	    579A
 Cookeville            Tennessee Technological University, Jere Whitson Memorial Library (1969)	      582
 Jackson               Lambuth College, Luther L. Gobbel Library (1967)	      584
 Jefferson City         Carson-Newman College Library (1964)	,	    581A
 Johnson City          East Tennessee State University, Sherrod Library (1942)	      581
 Knoxville             Public Library of Knoxville and Knox County, Lawson McGhee Library (1973)	    584A
                      University of Tennessee Law Library (1971)	    577A
                      University of Tennessee Library (1907)	     577
 Martin                University of Tennessee at Martin Library (1957)	     588
 Memphis              Memphis and Shelby County Public Library and Information Center (1896)	     590
                      Memphis State University, John W. Brister Library (1966)	    590A
 Murfreesboro          Middle Tennessee State University, Andrew L. Todd Library (1912)	     585
 Nashville             Fisk University Library (1965)	    586A
                      Joint University Libraries (1884)	     580
                      Public Library of Nashville and Davidson County (1884)	     586
                      Tennessee State Supreme Court Law Library (1976)	„	    585A
                      Tennessee State Library and Archives, State Library Division (unknown)	      576
                      Tennessee State University, Martha M. Brown Memorial Library (1972)	     587A
                      Vanderbilt University Law Library (1976)	,	     580A
 Sewanee              University of the South, Jesse Ball duPont Library (1873)	      579
                                                        TEXAS
 Abilene               Hardin-Simmons University Library (1940)		      612
 Arlington             Arlington Public Library (1970)	     607C
                      University of Texas at Arlington Library (1963)	„	     607B
 Austin                Texas State Law Library (1972)	     593A
                      Texas State Library (unknown))—REGIONAL	      591
                      University of Texas at Austin Library (1884)	      605
                      University of Texas, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs Library (1966)	      593
                      University of Texas, School of Law Library (1963)	     605 A
 Baytown              Lee College Library (1970)	     592A
 Beaumont             Lamar University Library (1957)	      597
 Brownwood           Howard Payne College, Walker Memorial Library (1964)	      616
Canyon               West Texas State University Library (1928)	      613
College Station        Texas Agricultural and Mechanical University Library (1907)	      592
Commerce             East Texas State University Library (1937)	„	      599
Corpus Christi         Texas A&I University at Corpus Christi Library (1976)	     591D
Coracana             Navarro Junior College Library (1965)	      601
Dallas                 Bishop College, Zale Library (1966)	     600A
                      Dallas Baptist College Library (1967)	     594A
                      Dallas Public Library (1900)	      594
                      Southern Methodist University, Fondren Library (1925)	      600
                      University of Texas Health Science Center Library at Dallas (1975)	     589A
Denton                North Texas State University Library (1948)	     608A
 Edinburg              Pan American University Library (1959)	_	'.	      610
 El Paso                El Paso Public Library (1906)	      611
                                                          176

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                                                      AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                   tory No.
                      University of Texas at El Paso Library (1966)	     611A
 Fort Worth           Fort Worth Public Library (1905)	       607
                      Texas Christian University, Mary Couts Burnett Library (1916)	  607A
 Galveston             Rosenberg Library (1909)	       604
 Houston              Houston Public Library (1884)	       603
                      North Harris County College, Learning Resource Center (1974)	     592B
                      Rice University, Fondren Library (1967)	     608C
                      University of Houston Library (1957)	       608
 HuntsvUle             Sam Houston State University, Estill Library (1949)	       602
 Irving                Irving Municipal Library (1974)	     594C
 Kingsville             Texas Arts and Industries University Library (1944)	       609
 Lake Jackson          Brazosport College Library (1969)	     591A
 Laredo               Laredo Junior College Library (1970)	     595A
 Longview             Nicholson Memorial Public Library (l:;ol)	       598
 Luboock              Texas Tech University Library (1935)—REGIONAL	       614
 Marshall              Wiiey College, Cole  Library (1962)	       59o
 Mesquite              Mesquite Public Library (1975)	       589
 Nacogdoches          Stephen F. Austin State University, Steen Library (1965)	     602A
 Plainview             Wayland Baptist College. Van Howeling Memorial Library (1963)	     6KA
 Richardson           University of Texas at Dallas Library (1972)	     594B
 San Angeio           Angelo State University, Porter Henderson Library (1964)	     616A
 San Antonio           San Antonio College Library (1972)	     591B
                      San Antonio Public Library, Business and Science Department (1899)	•       615
                      St. Mary's University Library (1964)	     615A
                      Trinity University Library (1964)	     615B
                      University of Texas at San Antonio Library (1973)	     616B
 San Marcos           Southwest Texas State University Library (1955)	       595
 Seguin                Texas Lutheran College, Blumberg Memorial Library (1970)	     595B
 Sherman              Austin College, Arthur Hopkins Library (1963)	     599A
 Texarkana             Texarkana Community College, Palmer Memorial Library (1963)	     596A
 Victoria              University of Houston, Victoria Campus Library (1973)	     591C
 Waco                 Baylor University Library (1905)	       606
 Wichita Falls          Midwestern University,  MofTett Library (1963)	     608B
                                                         UTAH
 Cedar City            Southern Utah State College Library (1964)	     620A
 Ephraim              Snow College, Lucy  A.  Phillips Library (1963)	,	       621
 Logan                Utah State University, Merrill Library and Learning Resources Center (1907)—REGIONAL	       618
 Ogden                Weber State College  Library (1962)	       620
 Provo                 Brigham Young University, Lee Library (1908)	       619
                      Brigham Young University Law Library (1972)	     621A
 Salt Lake City         Utah State Supreme Court Law Library (1975)	     617A
                      University of Utah, Spencer S. Eccles Medical Sciences Library (1970)	     619A
                      University of Utah, Law Library  (1966)	     622A
                      University of Utah, Marriott Library (1893)	      622
                      Utah State Library Commission, Documents Library (unknown)	      617
                                                       VERMONT
 Burlington             University of Vermont, Bailey Library  (1907)	„	      624
 Castleton              Castleton State College, Calvin Coolidge Library (1969)	     626A
Johnson               Johnson State College, John Dewey Library (1955)	      625
 Lyndonville           Lyndon State College, Samuel Reed Hall Library (1969)	     623A
Middlebury           Middlebury College Egbert Starr Library (1884)	      627
Monrpelier            Vermont Department Department of Libraries (before  1895)	      623
Northfield             Norwich University Library (1908)	_	     627A
Putney                Windham College, Dorothy Culbertson Marvin Memorial Library (1965)	      626
                                                   VIRGIN ISLANDS
Charlotte Amalie       College of the Virgin Islands, Ralph M. Paiewonsky Library (1973)	     627C
                                                          177

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                                          LIST OF DEPOSITORY LIBRARIES                                   Deposi-
                                                                                                                 tory No.
 (St. Thomas)          St. Thomas Public Library (1968)	     627B
 Christiansted          Christiansted Public Library (1974)	    627D
 (St. Croix)
                                                       VIRGINIA
 Blacksburg            Virginia Polytechnic Institue, Newman Library (1907)	      629
 Bridgewater          Bridgewater College, Alexander Mark Memorial Library (1902)	      639
 Charlottesville         University of Virginia, Alderman Library (1910)—REGIONAL	      640
                      University of Virginia Law Library (1964)	    632A
 Chesapeake           Chesapeake Public Library System (1970)	    636A
 Danville              Danville Community College Library (1969)	      637
 Emory               Emory and Henry College Library (1884)	      641
 Fairfax               George Mason College of the University of Virginia, Fenwick Library (1960)	    641A
 Fredericksburg        Mary Washington College, E. Lee Trinkle Library (1940)	      633
 Hampden-Sydney      Hampden-Sydney College, Eggleston Library (1891)	      636
 Hampton             Hampton Institute, Huntington Memorial Library (1977)	    631A
 Harrisonburg          James Madison University, Madison Memorial Library (1973)	    628B
 Hollins College        Hollins College, Fishbum Library (1967)	    628A
 Lexington             Virginia Military Institute, Preston Library (1874)	    639A
                      Washington and Lee University, Cyrus Hall McConnick Library (1910)	„	      632
 Martinsville           Patrick Henry Community College Library (1971)	    637A
 Norfolk               Armed Forces Staff College Library (1963)	 DG1012
                      Norfolk Public Library (1895)	      634
                      Old Dominion University Library (1963)	    634A
 Petersburg            Virginia State College, Johnston Memorial Library (1907)	      630
 Quanrico              Federal Bureau of Investigation Academy Library (1970)	 DG1025
                      Marine Corps Schools, James Carson Breckinridge Library (1967)	 DG1018
 Reston               Department of the Interior, Geological Survey Library (1962)	 DG 1008
 Richmond             State Law Library (1973)	    630A
                      University of Richmond, Boatwright Memorial Library (1900)	      633
                      U.S. Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit Library (1973)	 DG1032
                      Virginia Commonwealth University, James Branch Cabell Library (1971)	    635A
                      Virginia State Library (unknown)	      628
 Roanoke              Roanoke Public Library (1964)	    638A
 Salem                Roanoke College Library (1886)	      638
 Williamsburg          William and Mary College Library (1936)	      631
 Wise                  Clinch Valley College, John Cook Wyllie Library (1971)	    629A
                                                    WASHINGTON
 Bellingham            Western Washington State College, Wilson Library (1963)	    647A
 Cheney               Eastern Washington State College Library (1966)	„	     650A
 Ellensburg             Central Washington State College Library (1962)	    649 A
 Everett               Everett Public Library (1914)	_	       647
 Olympia               Evergreen State College (1972)	     648A
                      Washington State  Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	       642
 Port Angeles          North Olympic Library System (1965)	     647B
 Pullman               Washington State  University Library (1907)	       643
 Seattle                Seattle Public Library (1908)	      646
                      University of Washington Library (1890)	      644
                      University of Washington, School of Law Library (1969)	     645A
 Spokane               Spokane Public Library (1910)	      650
Tacoma               Tacoma Public Library (1894)	      651
                      University of Puget Sound, Collins Memorial Library (1938)	      645
Vancouver            Fort Vancouver Regional Library (1962)	      648
Walla Walla           Whitman College, Penrose Memorial Library (1890)	      649

                                                   WEST VIRGINIA
Athens               Concord College Library (1924)	      656
 Bluefield              Bluefield State College Library (1972)	    653A
Charleston            Kanawha County Public Library (1952)	      655
                                                          178

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                                                     AUGUST 1977                                               Deposi-
                                                                                                                    tory No.
                      West Virginia College Graduate Studies (1977).—	     657A
                      West Virginia Library Commission (unknown)	       652
Elkins                Davis and Elkins College Library (1913)	       658
Fairmont              Fairmont State College Library (1884)	       657
GlenvUle              Glenville State College, Robert F. Kidd Library (1966)	     656A
Huntington            Marshall University Library (1925)	       660
Institute               West Virginia State College Library (1907)	-	       654
Morgantown          West Virginia University Library (1907)—REGIONAL	       653
Salem                Salem College Library (1921)	       659
Shepherdstown        Shepherd College Library (1971)	„		     658A
Weirton               Mary H. Weir Public Library (1963)	     655A
                                                       WISCONSIN
Appleton              Lawrence University, Seeley G. Mudd Library (1869)	_	       674
Beioit                Beloit College Libraries (1888)	       666
Eau Claire            University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire, William D. Mclntyre Library (1951)	       675
Fond du Lac          Fond du Lac Public Library (1966)	,.     672A
Green Bay            University of Wisconsin at Green Bay Library (1968)	     674A
La Crosse             La Crosse Public Public Library (1883)	       669
                      University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, Murphy Library (1965)	     666A
Madison               Department of Public Instruction, Division for Library Services, Reference and Loan Library (1965).     665 A
                      Madison Public Library (1965)	„	     668A
                      State Historical Sociaty Library (1870)—REGIONAL, in cooperation with University of Wisconsin,
                         Memorial Library	.		       668
                      University of Wisconsin, Memorial Library (1939)			       664
                      Wisconsin State Library (unknown).......—.............			       663
Milwaukee            Alverno College Library (1971)	„		     66IA
                      Milwaukee County Law Library (1934)......,.................	       671
                      Milwaukee Public Library (1861)—REGIONAL.	       670
                      Mount Mary College Library (1964)		     67IB
                      University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Library (1960)	—     671A
Oshkosh               University of Wisconsia-Oshkosa, Forrest R. Polk Library (1956).....	.	,	....       672
Platteville             University of Wisconsin-Platteville, Elton S. Kamnann Library (1964)....	—..—     669A
Racine                Racine Public Library (1898)	„	       667
River Falls            University of Wisconsin-River Falls, Chaimer Davee Library (1962)	™	-.     675A
Stevens Point          University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point, Learning Resources Center (1951) —	—	       673
Superior               Superior Public Library (1908)			       676
                      University of Wisconsin-Superior, Jim Dan Hill Library (1935)		—	       665
Waukesha             Waukesha Public Library (1966)	^.			     670A
Wausau               Marathon County Public Library (1971)		„		     673A
Whitewater            University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, Harold Andersen Library (1963)		     667A
                                                       WYOMING
Casper                Natrons County Public Library (1929)		„„	„			       680
Cheyenne             Wyoming State Library (unknown)—REGIONAL	-	       677
Laramie               University of Wyoming, Coe Library (1907)			       678
Powell                Northwest Community College Library (1967)	.				—     681A
Riverton              Central Wyoming College Library (1969)......™		......................       679
Rock Springs          Western Wyoming College Library (1969)	.	.			.	     680A
Sheridan              Sheridan College, Mary Brown Kooi Library (1963),			.	.	,—.	       681
                                                           179

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