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Show 631. (518) "capitalists, engineers . . .": Bade, II, p. 417. (518) "not the real Roosevelt": Wolfe, p. 329. (519) "The broader significance . . .": Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency . . . , p. 265. (519) Hamiltonian means: Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency . . . , pp. 130, 270. (519) Hetch Hetchy as political struggle: Elmo Richardson, "The Struggle for the Valley: California's Hetch Hetchy Controversy, 1905-1913," California Historical Society Quarterly, vol. 38, No. 3 (Sept. 1959) pp. 249-58. (520) "This was one of the main turning points . . .": William Everson, Archetype West: The Pacific Coast as a Literary Region (Berkeley: Oyez Press, 1976), p. 53. (521) "relegate all such archaic questions . . .": Charles McDonald, quoted in Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency . . . , p. 127. (522) National Parks as symbols: Sax, Mountains Without Handrails . . . , p. 12. (524) "Dam Hetch Hetchy! . . .": The Yosemite, p. 282. (525) "To the farmers of Owens Valley . . .": Richard Coke Wood, The Owens Valley and the Los Angeles Water Controversy: Owens Valley as I Knew It, Pacific Center for Western Studies, Monograph Number One (Stockton, California: U. of the Pacific, 1973) p. 3; see also Page Stegner, "Los Angeles Water Wars: Bleeding the Owens Valley Dry," Harper's (March, 1981). Stegner points out that Muir's ally, E.H. Harriman, was among |