| 1969 - 1076 halaman
...of Pinchot's insight that all separate resources questions were merely parts of "... the one great central problem of the use of the earth for the good of man." By the tint* the New Deal came in, the bottom had fallen out of everything for farmer, city dweller... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1955 - 1266 halaman
...of the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans of the United States. Mr. RAIUCT. Off the record. (Discussion olF the. record.) Mr. DEMPSTER. The Tennessee Valley development...The power lobby campaign against TVA is paying off. Ptircell Smith stated in a speech in Nashville, Tenn., several months ago, when someone questioned... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1963 - 1112 halaman
...separate questions in connection with the use of natural resources "fitted into and, made up the one great central problem of the use of the earth for the good of man." Here was one question instead of many — I also then quoted Gifford Pinchot as writing : one gigantic... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1967 - 1346 halaman
...many parts. Seen in this new light, all these separate questions fitted into and made up the one great central problem of the use of the earth for the good of man." Today this flash of insight has assumed a name — the ecological approach — and the idea has filtered... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1967 - 1338 halaman
...many parts. Seen in this new light, all these separate questions fitted into and made up the one great central problem of the use of the earth for the good of man." Today this flash of Insight has assumed a name — the ecological approach — and the idea has filtered... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1967 - 396 halaman
...many parts. Seen in this new light, all these separate questions fitted into and made up the one great central problem of the use of the earth for the good of man." Today this flash of insight has assumed a name — the ecological approach — and the idea has filtered... | |
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