OCR Text |
Show 628. (490) "a rather wide range . . .": Sax, Mountains Without Handrails . . . , p. 100. (490) "people want illusions . . .": Sax, Mountains Without Handrails . . . , p. 99. (491) ". . . a great deal of blasting . . .": Sierra Club Bulletin, vol. 6, No. 4 (Jan. 1908) p. 262. (492) The mistake in perceiving National Parks as islands: F. Fraser Darling, "The Park Idea and Ecological Reality," National Parks Magazine (May 1969) pp. 21-24. (493) Mather's mountain trip: see Shankland, Steve Mather . . . , pp. 68-74; and Swain, Wilderness Defender . . . , pp. 46-52. (493) Muir's support of the Outings Program: Farquhar, A History of the Sierra Nevada, p. 226. (494) "An excursion of this sort . . .": Sierra Club Bulletin, vol. 3, No. 3 (Feb. 1901) p. 250. (494) "The first trip should combine . . .": Sierra Club Bulletin, vol. 3, No. 3 (Feb. 1901) p. 251. (495) A report on the first outing: E.T. Parsons, "The Sierra Club Outing to Tuolumne Meadows," Sierra Club Bulletin, vol. 4, No. 1 (Jan. 1902) p. 19. (497) "What I enjoy most . . .": Edward Henry Harriman, p. 36. (500) The Sierra Club as communal organization: see Starr, Americans and the California Dream, pp. 418, 249- I disagree with Starr's analysis. (503) Swett and George: Wolfe, p. 183. (50 3) Powell in Washington: Wallace Stegner, Beyond the |