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Show 627. pp. 342-48. (481) Muir and Pinchot: Pinchot, Breaking New Ground, pp. 100, 101. (481) "boyishness of killing things": Johnson, Remembered Yesterdays, p. 388. (481) "Few are altogether deaf . . .": "Proceedings," p. 282. (482) "the tendency nowadays . . .": ONP, p. 3. (482) "Even the scenery habit . . .": ONP, p. 4. (483) "Climb the mountains . . .": ONP, p. 63. (483) "If every citizen . . .": ONP, p. 38. (484) The interview with a bear: ONP, p. 190. (485) Discussion of toll roads: Shirley Sargent, Theodore Parker Lukens . . . , p. 28. (4 87) " . . . up the south fork . . .": "A Rival of the Yosemite . . . ," p. 97; Kimes #97. (4 87) "lead many a lover of wildness . . .": ONP, p. 15. (487) "in the presence of such stupendous scenery . . .": "The Grand Canon of the Colorado," Kimes #245; reprinted in Steep Trails, pp. 347-4 8. (489) The letter encouraging road-building was cited by Holway Jones in "John Muir and the Sierra Club," an address at The World of John Muir, a conference at the University of the Pacific, November 15, 1980. (489) On turning the Tioga Road into a high-speed turnpike: Conrad Wirth, "Working with the Conservationists: Reflections of a National Park Service Director," Journal of Forest History (July 1980), p. 155. |