FOREST MANAGEMENT--CONTINUED. 
1625. CULLINGS, E.S. Panther Mountain Reservoir. 
N. Y. State Ranger Sch. Alumni News 1950:9-12. 
99.9 N487 
Coordination with conservation and land economy. 
1626. FRANK, B. Opportunities of private forestry 
for watershed management. Washington,U. S. Forest 
Serv.,1950. 8p. 1.962 F5F85 
Address before annual meeting of Virginia Forests, Inc. 
Richmond, Nov. 28, 1950. 
1627. FRANK, B., and NETBOY, A. Water, land, and 
people. New York,Knopf,1950. 342 p. Ref. 292 F85 
1628. HALL, J. A. Forest products research in re- 
lation to soil and water conservation. Portland, Oreg., 
U. S. Forest Serv. Pacific Nowest. Forest & Range Expt. 
Sta.,1949. 8p. 1.9622 P2H14 
Address before Soil Conservation Society of America, 
Portland, Jan. 4, 1949. 
1629. HEILMAN, J. M. Forestry on reservoir lands. 
Amer. Water Works Assoc. J. 40:832-836. Aug.1948. 
292.9 Am32J 
Includes forest-management returns. 
1630. HURSH, C. R. Watershed aspects of the New 
York water supply problems. J. Forestry 49:442-444. 
June 1951. 99.8 F768 
1631. KING, W. W. Forest utilization potentialities on 
the Asheville municipal watershed under sustained yield 
management. Durham,1948. 72 p. 
Thesis (M.F.) - Duke University. 
Contents include: Inventory of watershed; Survey of 
forest products industries; Analysis of the possibilities 
for forest management and utilization of the watershed 
timber; The logging chance; Markets for products; 
Future outlook; Stability of the industries; The timber 
resource. 
1632. LINDH, A. G. Effect of [timber] sales on water 
runoff and what compromises are necessary or desirable 
in sales planning. Portland, Oreg.,U. S. Forest Serv. 
Pacific Nowest. Forest & Range Expt. Sta.,1949. 9 p. 
FS 
Paper given at the Western Timber Management Meet- 
ing, November, 1949. 
1633. MILLER, I. W. Aiding flood control through 
applied forestry practices. (Abs.) Assoc. South. Agr. 
Workers Proc. 47:165. 1950. 4 C82 
Yazoo-Little Tallahatchie watershed. 
1634. MUNNS, E.N. The next fifty years in watershed 
management. J. Forestry 49:419-424. June 1951. 
99.8 F768 
1635. MUNNS, E. N. The problems involved in water- 
shed management. In Forman, J., and Fink, O. E., comps. 
Water and man, p.164-181. Columbus, Ohio, Friends of 
the Land,1950. 292 F76 
1636. MUNNS, E. N. Yield and value of water from 
western National forests. J. Forestry 50:464-468. Ref. 
June 1952. 99.8 F768 
Value in terms of volume, timeliness of delivery, and 
quality. A table compares the annual value of National 
forest water with other forest products. 
1637. POTTER, R. E. Power and flood control in 
river basin developments. Forestry Chron. 27:281-288. 
99.8 F7623 
Includes the place of forestry in watershed land manage- 
ment. 
1638. REYNOLDS, H. A. Work of the New England 
Forestry Foundation on watersheds. New England Water- 
works Assoc. J. 62:133-140. June 1948. 292.9 N44 
1639. SCOTT, W. E., comp. Report to the people of 
Wisconsin on cover destruction, habitat improvement 
and watershed problems of the State in 1950. Wis. Con- 
serv. B. 16(2),78 p. Feb.1951. 279.8 W752 
1640. THOMPSON, A. E. Forest management on the 
Cedar River watershed. J. Forestry 49:201-205. Mar. 
1951. 99.8 F768 
Earlier treatment with title A City Guards Its Water, 
in Amer. Forests 54:248-251,287-288. June 1948. 
99.8 F762 
Cooperative management on the watershed supplying 
Seattle, Wash. 
1641. THOMPSON, A. E. Trees and water, a tree 
farm's twin crop. West. Forestry & Conserv. Assoc. 
Proc. 42:67-69. 1951. 99.9 W522 
History of the Cedar River watershed of the Seattle 
Water Department; the Cedar River logging agreement, _ 
involving public-private cooperation. 
1642. TURNER, D. B. Resource use in British 
Columbia—the Aluminum Project. Forestry Chron. 27: 
289-299. Dec.1951. 99.8 F7623 
47 
FOREST MANAGEMENT--CONTINUED. 
The fallacy of multiple use. Includes the place of forest 
management in Aluminum Company of Canada hydro de- 
velopments in the Tweedsmuir Park area. 
1643. U. S. FOREST SERV. Forest Service policy 
statements for consideration of President's Water Re- 
sources Policy Commission. Washington,1950. 4 p. 
1.962 A2F7642 
1644. U.S. FOREST SERV. Forests and water in the 
Alabama-Coosa River Basin. Washington,1950. 19 p. 
1.962 A2F7637 
1645. U. S. FOREST SERV. Watershed management, 
with particular reference to forest and range lands. Pre- 
pared for the President's Water Resources Policy Com- 
mission. Washington,1950. 22 p. Ref. 1.962 A2W31 
Includes specific instances of economic benefit derived 
from forest-watershed management. 
1646. U.S. PRESIDENT'S WATER RESOURCES 
POLICY COMMISSION. Report. Washington,1950. 3 v. 
173 P928W 
V. 1, A water policy for the American people; v. 2, Ten 
rivers in America's future; v. 3, Water resources law 
(including forest law). 
1647. WILM, H. G, Watershed management and flood 
control surveys. J. Forestry 49:511-513. Ref. July 
1951. 99.8 F768 
Wildlife 
1648. BRAMBLE, W. C., and ENGLISH, P. F. The 
forest grazing problem created by deer in eastern forests 
Soc. Amer. Foresters Proc. 1948:257-263. Ref. 1949. 
99.9 So13 
Chiefly the Pennsylvania Game Commission program. 
1649. CLARKE, C. H. D. Wildlife management in re- 
lation to multiple use in eastern Canada. Forestry Chron. 
28(1):57-61. Mar.1952. 99.8 F768 
1650. COWAN, I. M. The role of wildlife on forest 
land in western Canada. Forestry Chron. 28(1):42-49. 
Ref. Mar.1952. 99.8 F7623 
Wildlife economics in terms of wildland utilization,and 
damage to the forest. 
1651. FEARNOW, T. C., and QUINN, I. T. Action on 
the Blue Ridge. Trees, U.S.D.A. Ybk. 1949:586-592. 
1 Ag84Y 
Cooperative wildlife management in Virginia. 
1652. FEARNOW, T. Planning for progress. Va. i 
Wildlife 11(8):4-7; (9):10-11, 22. Aug.-Sept.1950. 410 V81 
Cooperative forest-wildlife program, known as the 
Virginia Plan, between the Virginia Commission of Game 
and Inland Fisheries and the U. S. Forest Service. 
1653. GABRIELSON, I. N. Wildlife and multiple-use 
forestry. Ames Forester 1951:6-16. 99.9 1094 
1654. GUTERMUTH, C. R. Forest-wildlife ideologies. 
J. Forestry 47:886-889. Nov.1949. 99.8 F768 
Emphasizes the place of public relations and intangible 
economic values in forest-wildlife management. 
1655. HERBERT, P. A. The place of wildlife manage- 
ment in forestry. Va. Wildlife 12(3):16-17,22. Mar.1951. 
410 V81 
A general discussion of wildlife values, especially in 
silviculture. 
1656. HILL, R. R. Forest wildlife management in the 
[U. S. Forest Service] Rocky Mountain Region. J. Forest- 
ry 48:419-422. Ref. June 1950. 99.8 F768 
1657. HOUGH, A. F. Deer and rabbit browsing and 
available winter forage in Allegheny hardwood forests. 
J. Wildlife Mangt. 13:135-141. Ref. Jan.1949. 410 J827 
Includes the effect of pulpwood and chemical-wood 
harvest on building up deer browse. Hence markets for 
forest products become a critical factor in wildlife 
management. 
1658. INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF GAME, 
FISH, AND CONSERVATION COMMISSIONERS. Our deer 
problem and its effect on the management of food and 
cover for wildlife. Internatl. Assoc. Game, Fish & Con- 
serv. Comnrs. Proc. 38:175-221. 1948. 412.9 In8 
A panel including R. L. Leffler, E. Swift, and I. H. Bart- 
lett discuss forest management's place in wildlife 
management, in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan; 
timber-harvest expenditures which result in improvement 
of habitat, and surveys of wildlife damage to forest repro- 
duction. 
1659. JOHNSON, F. M. Coordinated efforts put into 
farm game—forestry program. W.Va. Conserv. 15(4):4, 
7-8,32. July 1951. 279.8 W524 
1660. KING, R. T. The future of wildlife in forest 
land use. J. Forestry 46:282-289. Ref. Apr.1948. 
99.8 F768 
