In St. Louis, Louise Reiss led a study of thousands of these objects, partly inspiring the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. For 10 points each:
[10m] What objects name that 1950s “survey”? Frederic McKay investigated “Colorado Brown Stain” on these objects, inspiring a policy whose reputation as a “communist plot” was lampooned in Dr. Strangelove.
ANSWER: teeth [accept baby teeth or deciduous teeth; prompt on bones]
[10h] Another leader of the Baby Tooth Survey was this biologist and founder of the Citizens Party. He included “There is no such thing as a free lunch” among “four laws of ecology” in his bestselling book The Closing Circle.
ANSWER: Barry Commoner
[10e] Commoner critiqued this “neo-Malthusian” book by Paul and Anne Ehrlich, which warned of worldwide famines caused by the title explosion in the number of living humans.
ANSWER: The Population Bomb
<JB, American History>