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Show 629 Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second Opening of the West (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1953), pp. 116-118. (503) "never for a moment thought . . .": Bade, II, p. 292. (504) "far from the right man . . .": Theodore Lukens Papers, L 14-6, Feb. 14, 1897, Huntington Library. (505) Bill Devall, "John Muir as Deep Ecologist," paper presented at The World of John Muir, a conference at the University of the Pacific, November 15, 1980. (505) "If the sage would guide . . .": Lao Tsu, Tao Te Ching, trans. Gia-Fu Feng (New York: Random-Vintage, 1972), #66. (506) "would not allow the rest . . .": John Burroughs, Harriman Alaska Expedition (New York: Doubleday, Page and Co., 1901) vol I, p. 18. (506) "some difficulty was encountered . . .": "Charlie Leidig's Report of President Roosevelt's Visit in May, 1903," Yosemite National Park Research Library, Box 921, mu. 2. (507) Muir as a good sport: Wolfe, pp. 194, 323. (507) The Sargent letter: William F. Kimes, "With Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir in Yosemite," Yosemite National Park Research Library, File #979.447Y-40. (508) George Dyson, see Kenneth Brower, The Starship and__the Canoe (New York: Holt-Rinehart, 1978), p. 30. (510) Pinchot and women's groups: see Hays, Conservation^nd the Gospel of Efficiency . . • , P- 142. |