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July 1982 RAIN Page 21 [' f I . fworld. From China's one-child family program to U.S. tax credits for solar installations, Brown cites answers which already exist and are working: Already, shifts in public policies, investment patterns, and life-styles are signaling that the transition has begun. Governments, businesses and individuals are using resources more efficiently and less wastefully. Around the world at least some elements of simple living are being embraced by the affluent. Each new hydroelectric generator, each new decline in the birth rate, each new community garden brings humanity closer to a sustainable society. Collectively, millions of small initiatives will bring forth a society that can endure. Atfirst the changes are slow, but they are cumulative and they are accelerating. Mutually reinforcing trends may move us toward a sustainable society more quickly than now seems likely. Those who wish a distilled version of this book can obtain a 63-page summary entitled Six Steps to a Sustainable Society for $2 from Worldwatch Institute, 1776 Massachusetts Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. — Patrick Mazza %/j nd T^owePx NorrACLM ?! 6/v^Hh, pQMCK.'', Auxx> 6J^ B ibtf CL ! jddiL Pmh T>eryv AiadiMa dWtcfcypAitJtj AlCrtL A/MJ±sL- Jcb^ juuxJVVL^ AAu ^ Kids Wind Power is available for $6.99 from Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, Inc., 200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY10016. Darcy’s mom, RAIN staffer Nancy Cosper, says she's not sure about the book being too hard for kids under 11. "It's pretty clearly written and could reach kids as young as nine years." iii- 0/yL /vvuij^ IDaftc^ Co6pe.K A<b& -tujeXvc.

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