REFERENCES 



Blue Print tor Industriat Security. — An 8-page illustrated book- 

 let describing the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey 

 alternate headquarters, management succession plans, record 

 preservation, and other aspects of planning for continuing 

 emergency operation.* 



Continuity of Corporate Management in Event of Nuclear 

 Attack. — OCD, Department of Defense. An 89-page special 

 report by the American Society of Corporate Secretaries. 

 Describes continuity of management measures, legal prob- 

 lems, suggested bylaws and board resolutions and a suggested 

 model Business Corporation Art. Includes a section describ- 

 ing procedures for overall industrial civil defense planning.* 



The Economy Can Survive Nuclear Attack. — Fortune, Vol. LXIV, 

 No. 5, November 1961, 540 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago 

 11, 111. Comprehensive illustrated article on United States 

 economy and civil defense. Industrial aspects include Kansas 

 plan of local businessmen to shelter people and machines in 

 128-acre leased salt mine, 650 feet underground. Argues for 

 more fire and blast resistant as well as fallout shelters. 



Effects of Nuclear Weapons. — Department of the Army Pam- 

 phlet 39-3, April 1962. Description of nuclear explosions 

 and their effects. Presented for the technically trained and 

 non-technical reader. Superintendent of Documents, Wash- 

 ington, D.C., 20402. 



Emergency and Disaster Planning for Chemical Industries. — A 

 50-page manual published by the U.S. Department of Com- 

 merce which covers organization of both plant and company- 

 wide emergency operations planning. It includes a building 

 survey report form, emergency shutdown procedures and the 

 effects, protective measures and estimated damage from 

 nuclear attacks. 



Fallout Protection: If hat to Know and Do About Nuclear 

 Attack. — Office of Civil Defense, Department of Defense, 

 December 1961 (H-6) , 46 pages. Describes the national civil 

 defense program, and provides information important to every 

 citizen regarding methods of developing shelter and other civil 

 defense techniques. Introduction by the Honorable Robert S. 

 McNamara, Secretary of Defense.* 



Family Shelter Designs. — Office of Civil Defense, Department of 

 Defense. January 1962 ( H-7 ) . Publication of 30 pages. 

 Contains instructions for building eight types of family fallout 

 shelters; for use by families not having access to community 

 shelters, or who prefer shelters in their basements or back- 

 yards.* 



Food Management in a National Emergency. A Guide for Food 

 Processors and Wholesalers (PA-572). Agricultural Market- 

 ing Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, April 1963. .\ 

 6-page summarj- of industr\'-Governmenl post-attack responsi- 

 bilities for transporting, handling, processing, storing and 

 distributing food. 



Forty-five Rules for Making Your Plant Fire-safe During Shut- 

 downs. — Factory Management and Maintenance, September 



1954. McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, Inc., 330 West 42d 

 Street, New York, N.Y. Outlines measures that should be 

 taken to prevent fire during emergency shutdowns. 



Guide to Developing an Industriat Disaster Medical Service. — 

 Reprinted from April 1961 issue of Archives of Environmental 

 Health published by' An^erican Medical Association. A 

 20-page booklet, illustrated with forms and sketches primarily 

 developed as a questionnaire to enable industrial medical 

 departments to evaluate their own organization and readiness 

 status and to devise plans where inadequacies are disclosed. 

 It covers such elements as supplies, records, personnel, com- 

 munications and casualty rare.* 



Industrial Defense Planning Manual. — 1954, 43 pages. American 

 Iron and Steel Institute, 350 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y.. 

 50 cents. Methods of pre-attack planning for industrial pro- 

 tection against the hazards of modern warfare. 



Industrial Security — I. — Combating Subversion and Sabotage. 

 Studies in Business Policy, No. 60, and Industrial Security II. 

 Plant Guard Handbook, Studies in Business Policy, No. 64. 

 National Industrial Conference Board, Inc., New York, N.Y. 



Industrial Security Magazine. — This special issue for July 1962 

 is the official publication of the American Society for Indus- 

 trial Security and is devoted exclusively to 39 articles on all 

 aspects of industrial civil defense. Each article by an in- 

 dustrial executive covers a different aspect of such activities 

 in the company in which the author is«mployed. A 40-point 

 check list is printed on the inside back cover. This publication 

 can serve as a guide, handbook or manual for all aspects of 

 industrial civil defense planning.* 



Legal Aspects of Industrial Mutual Aid. — Directorate for In- 

 dustrial Participation. Office of Civil Defense, Department of 

 Defense. A 27-page publication giving legal citations, a 

 guide to organization and operation, and sample articles of 

 association for such a group in an industrial neighborhood.* 



Live. — Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, California. A 

 69-page handbook for employees of this organization describ- 

 ing plans for protection of employees and families in the SRI 

 facilities. Also contains excellent instruction for survival in 

 the home including emergency shelter, supplies, sanitation, 

 first aid and decontamination.* 



Medical Self-Help Training. — An administrative guide to the 

 civil defense medical self-help training program for profes- 

 sional, civil defense, and educational personnel. Training for 

 the layman in the application of proper procedures to save 

 lives in the absence of a physician and gives guidance on 

 nursing care.* 



Nuclear Attack and Industrial Survival. — A 16-page, well- 

 illustrated report published by the McGraw-Hill Publishing 

 Company as an insert in 39 of their business and professional 

 magazines. Describes effects of nuclear attack, why and how 

 industry should plan, organize, provide shelter facilities and 

 what is included in the recovery plan.' 



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