Footnotes:
- Located in Giant Forest.
- Later called Albright Training Center.
- The Field Operations Study Team, in existence from 1966 to 1968.
- The park naturalist series (GS-452) was abolished in 1969 and resumed wit ha new classification system that included park management or rangers (GS-025) and technicians (GS-26).
- Park divisions called Interpretation and Resource Management were generally headed by Chief Rangers.
- This problems led to the rebirth of interpretative divisions in many parks by the late 1970’s.
- Office of Resource Planning under Peetz’s direction from 1966 to 1969.
- The Pacific Northwest Region started as a “district” of the Western Region in 1968, and achieved full regional status in 1969.
- Authorized in 1965, established in 1970. Fritz was superintendent at Craters of the Moon National Monument from 1966 to 1974.
- Superintendent at Sequoia and Kings Canyon when Rouse worked there.
- Then a national monument.
- They published a multi-volume report with recommendations in 1962.
- Zoning appeared in master plans of the time, and later (in modified) as part of general management plans.
- North Cascade National Park, along with two national recreation areas, was established in October of 1968.
- The U.S. Forest Service conducted its Road less Area Review and Evaluation twice, first in the late 1960’s and then in the mid 1970’s.
- It would have meant driving on the present route of the Pacific Crest Trail from Highway 62 to the PCT junction with the Pumice Flat Trail.
- Hartzog was director from 1964 to 1972. The facility may have been the Red Blanket Patrol Cabin.
- All but one of the backcountry patrol cabins built in 1933 and 1934 were demolished.
- Animal Unit Months, used in calculating grazing fees.
- Rudolph was chief ranger from 1981 to 1983.
- Restricting it to the road connecting Diamond Lake with the North Junction, in line with the regional director’s decision in 1974.
- The most closely associated with the Crater Lake projects were regional office staff members, T. Allen Comp [Chief of Cultural Resources], Stephanie Toothman [Regional Historian], Laurin Huffman [Historical Architect] and Dan Babbitt [Chief of Design in Maintenance Division].
- Peting’s historic preservation class developed a number of design scenarios for preservation and use of the Munson Valley Historic District, and completed their report in 1984.
- This was John Davis, who assisted Jim Wiggins and then Dan Sholly until 1978.
- Sholly went from being chief of I&RM to chief ranger in 1978, when Pat Smith was hired as the chief of interpretation.
- The first position is resource management belonged to Mark Forbes, who was hired in 1978. A resource management training program was authorized by Congress in 1981.
- This took place in 1974.
- Jack V. Houston.
- Borgman was the group superintendent and retired in March 1980.
- Rouse’s predecessor, Frank Betts, largely refused to work with the group office.
- Jim Rouse concluded his career at North Cascades as assistant superintendent. John Reynolds was superintendent at that time and is presently regional director in San Francisco.
- The current superintendent at North Cascades.
- Dickenson was regional director in Seattle from 1977 to 1981.
- 34)
- Raymond C. Smith, et al.,Optical Properties and Color of Lake Tahoe and Crater Lake, Limnology and Oceanography 18:2 (March 1973) pp.189-199
- This took place in 1982.
- Regional Chief Scientist in Seattle.
- That took place in 1979.
- Susan Seyer’s thesis on the area, reformatted into a CPSU report with assistance from Jerry Franklin.
- Park Landscape Achitect from 1934 to 1939.
- A number of recognition ceremonies were held in 1983 at Crater Lake and elsewhere because of the 50th anniversary of the Civilian Conservation Corps.
- The park’s first computers were made by Wang.
- Crater Lake has been served with outside power since 1929, but with overhead lines until 1983.
- Building #227.
- The record was set officially on April 1, 1983.
- Prior to 1991 all the roofs in Steel Circle were flat with the exception of Building #17.
- Where his wife most often resided while their two daughters attended Oregon State University.
- The first meetings took place in 1982.
- The American Federation of Government Employees, Local 1042.
- This took effect in 1984.
- The John Day Fossil Beds required extensive National Park Service planning efforts prior to its establishment and during the first few years after authorization. Rouse played a key role from the regional office in facilitating the monument’s planning process.
- Federal Emergency Management Agency.
- This took place on a “trail basis” In 1983, and was finalized for the life of the concession contract in 1986.
- The so-called summer dump. This area excluded from wilderness recommendations until 1993.
- This took place in July 1995.
- Sims was superintendent of the monument from 1971 to 1973, while Miele served in that capacity from 1974 to 1985.
- Oregon Caves was officially independent from 1982 to 1985.
- The master plan of 1975.
- Until 1984 all the monument had was a radio phone through a toll station.
- Annual visitation peaked in the 1970s at roughly 200,000.
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