LJJC. 
 
The real th at to the future of outdoor Amer'*a lies not in the 
agencies which destroy t, butti the multiplicat n of people who think 
they can live without it. 
W~f~ecenurie 
Twenty-f oe centuries o      gress" have endowed the average 
citizen with a vote, a natio    anth     a Ford, a bank account, and a 
high opinion of himself,    t not with th   oral perception to ask like.

Ezekiel:/ha                                        f 
"Seemeth it   small- thi  unto  ou to       fed u on good pastures,

"but ye must read/down with your feet the residue    f Your pasture?
And 
to have drunk of/the clear waters, but Ye must foul\the residue with. our

feet?" 
..                                                         "-      
  4 
 
Mx' 
 
-V. 
 
12- 
c  ital inves  ents; that   e often prohi tive cost of "re    ration"'

is usually    alibi for p eious incompe ent use. He must    e ble to 
erstand   yrestricti n   f use does   t a  ays restor produ tivity; 
t  t the   iden e on a  iol  ical ques ion is never co lete; t   V them 
 t 
e -ert o inion i liab e to b   wrong, and the aver    opinion eien mo   so.

certain  ol  ical co     n   must ac amp    it; the ave age 
ci ze must see no    only what      iven polic  w  1 accomplish, 
whe e it is heade  for. He mu' a ove all unde     and why self-pr agating

mec   isms are th most effective ones in the lo    run. 
Lastly, and most important of-all, a certain mor  and esthetic 
4 
competence~mft  eoa- it.      There must be born in the public mind a 
certain fundamental respect for living things, and for the epic grandeur

of the processes which created them.       st see       f not as the 
-result  but as the custodian of  Ac-re4a   '    A                ,