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BIBLIOGRAPHY

(1) Petroleum Week, Vol. 2, No. 11, March 16, 1956, page 9. (2) Papers presented at 1956 meeting Production Division, American Petroleum Institute, Southern District.

(3) Address before Houston Geologists, 1956.

(4) Papers presented at 1956 meeting Society of Exploration Geophysicists.

(5) Ibid.

(6) "Future World Demand for Oil," Paper presented before the Texas Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association, Dallas, Oct. 4, 1955.

(7) "Energy Resources for the Future," Paper presented before the Interstate Oil Compact Commission, 1955 mid-year meeting, Denver, June 17, 1955.

(8) "The Fuel Situation," Scientific American, Vol. 195, No. 4, Oct. 1956, Page 43.

(9) "Our Future Petroleum Supply: Let's Face the Facts," Statement to Office of Defense Mobilization regarding public hearings on Trade Agreements Act of 1955, Oct. 15, 1956.

(10) "Future Growth and Financial Requirements of the World Petroleum Industry," Paper prepared for presentation at the Annual Meeting of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, Petroleum Branch, Feb. 21, 1956.

(11) The Oil Daily, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 1957, Report of an address at National Credit Conference of American Bankers' Association, Chicago, Ill.

(12) Petroleum Week, Vol. 3, No. 2, July 13, 1956, page 25.

(13) World Oil, Vol. 157, No. 7, June 1956, page 96.

(14) "Economic Impact of New Energy Resources," Paper presented at Energy Resources Conference, Denver, Oct. 29, 1956.

(15) "Oil and Gas as Energy Resources in the U. S.," Paper presented at Energy Resources Conference, Denver, Oct. 29, 1956.

(16) "Middle East Oil Problem," Chemical and Engineering News, Vol. 34, page 5236. Report of the Oil Committee of Organization for European Economic Cooperation, "The Outlook for Europe," the Organization, Paris, France, Sept. 1956.

(17) "Worldwide Oil-Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean," The Oil and Gas Journal, Vol. 53, No. 34, Dec. 27, 1954, page 121 et seq.

"Petroleum Comments," Petroleum Week, Vol. 4, No. 8, Feb. 22, 1957, page 22.

"Stalemate in Lebanon," Petroleum Press Service, Vol. XXIII, No. 11, Nov. 1956, page 410.

"Annual Report," Getty Oil Company, 1956, page 17.

(18) Statement of Captain S. A. Miller, U.S.N., Director of Naval and Oil Shale Reserves, at Hearings before the Committee on Armed Services of the U. S. House of Representatives, March 19, 1957.

Statement of Brig. Gen. Alfred H. Johnson, U.S.A.F., Staff Director, Petroleum Logistics Division, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Supply and Logistics, before Interior and Insular Affairs Committee, U. S. Senate, 83rd Congress, Part 6, pages 553-558.

(19) Captain S. A. Miller, ibid Vol. I, page 40.

(20) Statement of the Hon. Joseph O'Mahoney, U. S. Senator from the State of Wyoming, before the Committee on Armed Services, U. S. House of Representatives, March 19, 1957, Vol. 1, page 87.

(21) Captain S. A. Miller, supra note (18), Vol. 1, page 56.

(22) Address before Texas Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association, Dallas, Texas, Oct. 4, 1955.

(23) "Not Suez but Oil is Crucial Issue," New York Times, 11/11/56, page 1F.

(24) H.R. 4684 by Representative Heselton, introduced in the House of Representatives, Feb. 11, 1957.

(25) Captain S. A. Miller, supra note (18), Vol. 1, pages 48 and 62.

(26) "Oil Shale and Bituminous Sand" by Fred L. Hartley and Claude

S. Brinegar. Paper presented at Energy Resources Conference, Denver, Colo., Oct. 30, 1956.

(27) "Coal Resources of the U. S.," Geological Survey Circular 293 (Progress Report, Oct. 1, 1953) by Paul Averitt, Louise R. Berryhill, Dorothy A. Taylor, U. S. Dept. of Interior.

(28) Fuel Reserves of the U. S.," Statement of the U. S. Geological Survey before the Special Subcommittee on Mining, Materials, and Fuels Economics of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, U. S. Senate, 83rd Congress, November and December 1953 and January and February 1954, page 95 et seq.

(29) “Preliminary Report on Oil-Shale Resources of Piceance Creek Basin Northwestern Colorado," Geological Survey Bulletin 1042-H by J. R. Donnell, U. S. Department of the Interior, Feb. 1957.

(30) Hartley and Brinegar, supra note (26), page 5.

(31) Captain S. A. Miller, supra note (18), Vol. 1, page 33.

(32) U. S. Bureau of Mines, Report of Investigation 5236, July 1956. (33) Subcommittee Report to National Petroleum Council Committee on Synthetic Fuels Production Costs, Oct. 15, 1951.

(34) Hartley and Brinegar, supra note (26), page 42.

(35) "Union Oil's Shale Program-Progress Report" by Fred L. Hartley, Vice President for Research, Union Oil Company of California. Paper presented at Colorado Mining Association meeting in Denver, Feb. 7, 1957.

(36) Captain S. A. Miller supra note (18) page 76.

(37) Report of the President's Materials Policy Commission, June 1952, Resources for Freedom Vol. I, page 110, Washington; Government Printing office.

(38) "Economic Significance of a Shale Oil Industry in Northwestern Colorado," Industrial Economics Division, Denver Research Institute, May 15, 1957, page 5.

(39) Ibid, pages 2-5.

(40) Subcommittee Report to National Petroleum Council Committee on Synthetic Fuels Production Costs, Oct. 15, 1951, page 143.

(41) "Products from Oil Shale," Dr. Tell Ertl, Sept. 17, 1953.

(42) Letter of Chairman Cole to the President dated Oct. 22, 1942 as quoted in statement of Warwick M. Downing, Esq. at meeting of National Conference of Petroleum Regulatory Authorities in session in the Conference Room of the Hon. Secretary of the Interior, Apr. 21, 1943.

(43) Statement of Petroleum Coordinator for War Ickes as quoted by Warwick M. Downing, Esq. ibid.

(44) Resolution of National Conference of Petroleum Regulatory Authorities, April 14, 1942, ibid.

(45) Research Institute, supra note (38) pages 7, 8.

(46) Hartley, supra note (35) page 23.

(47) Captain S. A. Miller, supra note (18) Vol. I, page 57.

(48) Chase Report, supra note (10) page 38.

(49( "Distinctive Tax Treatment of Income from Mineral Extraction," Henry B. Fernald statement reproduced from the volume "Federal Tax Policy for Economic Growth and Stability," printed for use of the Joint Congressional Committee on the Economic Report, Nov. 9, 1955, Washington; American Mining Congress.

(50) President's Materials Policy Commission, supra (37) Vol. IV, pages 173-174.

(51) Ibid, Vol. I, pages 110-11.

(52) Hartley and Brinegar, supra note (26) page 18.

85th Congress

1st Session

APPENDIX I

H. J. R.......

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE

Mr.

UNITED STATES

introduced the following Resolution, which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

RESOLUTION

WHEREAS, oil is rapidly approaching a production crisis in the United States; and

WHEREAS, the domestic petroleum industry should reach its maximum production within the next decade or two and thereafter decline, resulting in the United States becoming increasingly dependent upon foreign imports to meet its rapidly growing oil requirements; and

WHEREAS, in the United States the consumption of petroleum has doubled in the last fifteen years with indications for the future of steadily increasing consumption; and

WHEREAS, consumers and processors of petroleum products are gravely concerned by the fact that discoveries of new domestic oil fields of significant size are dwindling while at the same time the percentage of dry holes drilled, the average depth of new wells, and the cost of completing wells are increasing at an alarming rate; and

WHEREAS, the United States and all other industrial nations today are utterly dependent upon petroleum for the energy to drive their industrial machines and to furnish light, heat, transportation and many of the other necessities and comforts of modern living; and

WHEREAS, the United States now imports approximately one and a half million barrels of petroleum per day to meet consumptive demand; and

WHEREAS, recent events have demonstrated the United States and the Free World must have an adequate and independent reserve of oil readily available to give them freedom from economic coercion; and

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