II
9. The principles of conservation. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 359-362.)
10. Relation of population to conservation. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 375-380.)
11. The use of our forests. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 218-260.)
12. Water power. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 106-185; Huntington and Gushing, Principles of Human Geography, chapter ix.)
13. Irrigation. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 185-202; Huntington and Gushing, Principles of Human Geography, chapter xvii.)
14. Inland waterways. (Huntington and Gushing, Principles of Human Geography, chapter vi.)
15. Federal control of water in Switzerland: (Annals, vol. xxxiii, No. 3, pages 113-121.)
16. Land laws of the United States. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, pages 279-297.)
17. Legal problems of reclamation. (Annals, vol. xxxiii, No. 3, pages 180-192.)
18. The work of Gifford Pinchot. (Consult an encyclopedia.)
19. The Congress of Governors, 1908. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, appendix i.)
20. The North American Conservation Conference. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, appendix ii.)
21. The National Conservation Association. (Van Hise, Conservation of Natural Resources, appendix iii.)
FOR CLASSROOM DISCUSSION
22. To what extent should state governments regulate private forests? (Consult Annals, vol. xxxiii, No. 3, pages 26-37.)
23. Should all mineral lands be leased rather than sold?
24. Is the adoption of a program of scientific forest culture at this time economically justified?
25. Under our present laws is it possible effectively to co÷rdinate the conservation work of state and Federal governments?
26. Are higher prices an effective check to the excessive use of forest and mineral products?
27. State versus Federal administration of conservation. (Consult the Debaters Handbook Series.)