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(1)

Warning

on water

roiced to critics

By DICK

Denver Post

A

FEW days ago about 1,000 men gathered to try to adjust to

a

way of life they've never known or will know.

From 18 Western states they con-vened in Spokane, Wash., to form the National Water Resources Assn. be-cause the problems of the people-pressed cities have reached into the essentially rural lives they've always known.

Their topic was one that every per-son on earth requires to live and re-quires management to live well—wa-ter.

Uncomfortable after years in the open, they sat in stuffy, smoky rooms, ate bland meals and for the most part stayed clear of the frivolities associated with conventions.

Their foremost concern was getting urban people, the big-city folks, the Eastern politicians, President Nixon's budget advisers to take a close look at what they believe is an Out-West, country solution to the woes of the nation's metropolitan areas polluted in air, water, congestion and spirit.

As they labored, the U.S. House of Representatives passed 433 to 9 a bill providing $4.9 billion for housing.

Promise to repay

They seek a fraction of that amount now and promise to pay 90 per cent of it back in cash and billions more in other benefits.

They want the money to develop water resources for the future of all America's people.

They see that five - letter word WATER, the simple molecule of two parts hydrogen and one of oxygen upon which life depends as providing a quality life, not just an existence.

How?

Catching the water nature provides from rain and snow and in streams and lakes makes it possible to grow crops on lands too dry to grow them to maturity.

Growing crops for food or fiber takes men; machines— that, in turn, take men to supply and service. Men have families and families require schools and hospitals, stores, doc-tors that are paid for with the money from selling the crops.

The food and fiber require process-ing and transportation and brokers and insurance and chemicals—all of this development following the control of water.

Water is turned into electricity, an ordinary thing to Americans today, but not when the conventioners were young.

Electricity supplies power for in-dustries that can then be established because the water has also brought labor and also provides recreation needs the workers demand.

The water is available all year long and the dam behind which it is saved provides flood protection, something which factories along the giant rivers of the water-rich East can't always count upon. Security is one of the side benefits of water development.

This is the sort of story the veterans of the Depression and the dust bowl are trying to tell.

The prosperity of eastern Colorado is from water development. California and Arizona are monuments to it. The glitter of Las Vegas would vanish without water.

So would the orange and almonyl and walnut groves, the lettuce and carrot fields from which more than $27 billion in food and fiber were har-vested from federally financed water development between 1902 and 1968.

Sale of power amounted to more than $145 million alone in 1967 with

PROUTY

Staff Writer

the money going to pay for the proj-ects. The irrigation water is also sold although boaters and fishermen use it free.

How does this affect the big cities? Besides simply providing the means for function — water for drinking, sanitary facilities, electric power, fire fighting, industrial cooling — water resource development is also the means for recreation.

It sustains golf courses, provides fishing, boating, swimming, upland game hunting, and water fowl hunt-ing for those who flee the urban con-fines in increasing numbers with in-creasing leisure time.

But with water development funds now cut back 29 per cent as other social programs have public favor, these facilities become inadequate and too over-crowded to cope with the hordes of people.

If they aren't planned and built now —and it can take 20 years for a major development to be completed—urban problems will be worse instead of being solved by massive injections of money.

Water development with the $5 bil-lion in projects already approved by Congress — but unfunded, and other works for which appropriation are being held back by the Bureau of the Budget — can provide new jobs, com-munities, tax base, recreation and places outside the metropolitan areas where people can find a good life. Opponents to development contend the nation doesn't need more crop-land, although commodity surpluses have dwindled in many cases. The cities, highways and huge airfields are gobbling up fertile fields in multi-thousand acre bites as there become more and more people to house, em-ploy, transport — and feed.

Power generation should be provid-ed by private investment, not govern-ment backed operations, it is argued. But the government backed opera-tions built by the Corps of Engineers and the Bureau of Reclamation are multiple use, not just power. They're also agricultural, recreational and municipal-industrial.

Conservation groups were damned at the sessions for allegedly wanting to maintain the "status quo" in areas potent for water development works. But even the old time reclamationists had to admit they now have the say in the halls of Congress, not them.

For them it's all so evident — the dynamic growth of the West proves it.

It's not "their story." It's America's story. It worked before, this water development, and everyone benefited, not just the developers who undertook the job and the obligations for repay-ment, some $2 billion worth so far.

So what's wrong with it now, now when water demands of the future must be met?

Nationally power demands were up 7.5 per cent this summer over 1968. But in the West, the demands were as high as 19.8 per cent greater in one season.

Water shortages, power shortages and power failures must be recognized as at hand, a correlation of past his-tory and current statistics reveals.

Some of the big money must be siphoned off — and it would amount to less than 1 per cent of the national budget — to get water development in gear again.

But the men who met in Spokane aren't part of the new, sophisticated fast-moving society.

Their wisdom and warning go un-heeded in the cities, in much of the Congress and the administration.

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and miscellaneous dead weight. The occupation of making music has ravaged the lives of the young performers while enriching those who preside over the electrified wires. The managers and corporations take gross advantage of the musicians who would,

ANSWERS TO QUIZ: 1-B, 2-C, 3-D, 4-A, 5-C, 6-B, 7-D, 8-A, 9-B, 10-A, 11-F, 12-C, 13-I, 14-G, 15-A, 16-D, 17-B, 18-TRUE, 19-TRUE, 20-FALSE.

rd puzzle

45. Orifice 46. Legal rights 47. Rank 48. - much: 2 words 49. Outside: comb. form 50. Nap 52. Uninvited guest: 2 words 54. Skillet 56. Daughter of Laban 58. Like Capt. Kidd 62. You: Ger. 64. Carry on 67. Hollywood name 69. Resin 71. Bind 72. Perpendicular Abbr. 73. Olive tree 74. Former secret police 76. Headed 78. Darwin, for one 80. Queenly 81. Sarcasm 82. Hearts 84. Everglades inhabitant 89. Aye 90. Late: Ger. 91. Fuss 92. Interrogation marks 95. Wardheeler, for short 96. Emigrant: Abbr. 99. Joyous songs 101. Harrison et al

largely by older people who do not share the revolutionary vision of the young, who apply their own standards to a new world. American youth has developed some very specific feelings about its environment. It expects its art to speak to these feelings without the simplistic immaturity of the beat of the early '60s. The impressarios must understand that art is change and vision and get out of the way, otherwise they will live and die amid dusty stacks of unsold albums in the dim and split light of empty amphi-theatres.

OVN1312.

Unscramble these six Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form six ordinary words.

RITHEH

LARREB

STELED

DEELMY

SWEFET

1961, by The Chicaro T4ibanl RIghts Re.rved

Print the SURPRISE ANSWER here

A

I. 3.

(/'

h41daeadikri

d9.asto

by HENFil ARNOLD and BOB LEE

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

( r (V V

\ A "\C

Answers on page 4.

103. Endeavors 107. Ogle 113. Verily 104. Sesame: Var. 108. Part of the 114. Presage

105. Eve's U.S.A. 115. English

downfall 109. European manor court

106. Plume: shoe 116. Those: Sp.

Comb. form 111. Affirm 119. Noted general Answers on page 4. 4 32 66 84 98 5 S. 6 39 52 75 28 44 111 20 24 53 67 106 7 61 76 99 8 9 45 46 68 95 90 112 10 29 11 21 33 34 40 62 69 77 86 91 58 63 107 108 113 128 12 30 D4 78 100 13 47 92 14 15 -41 31 35 59 93 101 121 125 129 22 26 71 97 109 16 17 48 49 65 102 114 115 -18 50 116

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From the Office of For rel3ase on Delivery SENATOR HENRY M. JACKSON (D. WASH.)

RECLAMATION AND A NATIONAL RURAL AND URBAN GROWTH POLICY

by

Senator Henry M. Jackson Chairman

Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee

An Address Before

THE NATIONAL RECLAMATION ASSOCIATION Spokane, Washington

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We live today in a decade of social upheaval. We are seeing the traditional fabric and the basic values of our society challenged on many fronts -- in our universities, in our cities, and in our governmental programs. No institution has been immune, and this includes Federal water resource programs and policies

As a lawyer and as a member of Congress, I welcome this challenge and the posing of new questions. Our democratic form of government and our legal system were designed to make change -- orderly, reasoned change -- possible.

Today's period of social upheaval, however, has been marked by conflict and controversy. Rather than orderly,

representative change we have too often seen tyranny by minoritie. We have seen leadership and institutions founder in the face of threats and illegal force.

The excess of emotion and the spontaneous idealism which directs the actions of many in America today has led to a dangerous preoccupation with our national shortcomings. Much of the loud criticism of recent years has been marked by a lack of historical prespective. Too few of the contemporary critics have bothered to read the record of achievement we have made and are continuing to make in this Nation.

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-2-Speaking for myself, I know of no success story

comparable to our country's 200-year history. We have built a small agrarian society into the world's greatest power. Since 1920, we have provided homes and opportunities for 45 million immigrants and their descendants. We have provided all of our people with constantly increasing standards of living. Every index, whether it be the f:juality or quantity of food, housing, education, recreation, leisure time, or material wealth has shown increase after increase.

The "poverty income levels" we recognize in 2Werica are above the average income of all families in the Soviet Union. They are above the income of over c.,0 per cent of the world's

population.

This is a story no American need :pe ashamed of.

Recognition of all that we have accomplished is not, however, to say that our society does not have its shortcomings. Recognition and appreciation of what we have achieved in the past is not an argument for preservation of the status quo or for "business as usual." Shortcomings must be corrected. Institutions must be revitalized. New legislation must be written.

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that we build upon -- and do not destroy or ignore

traditional policies and programs which have withstood the hard test of experience and have made possible the quality of life and the opportunities we enjoy today.

Many of you here in Spokane this week had an opportunit to see firsthand in Grand Coulee Dam and in the Columbia Basin Project a splendid example of the contributions which the Federal Reclamation Program has made to our national well-being. This picture of regional growth, vitality and new opportunity is

repeated many times throughout the entire West. Rural and urban communities have grown and prospered on the impetus provided by Reclamation projects and other Federal programs which assist

in the development and management of the Nation's water resources. It is my view that the Reclamation program provides

a body of successful experience and a basis on which to build in dealing with the forces of social change and in resolving many of the problems the country faces.

And make no mistake about it, we face some very critical domestic problems: Providing housing, schools and other public facilities for our burgeoning popillation: creating new job opportunities; maintaining the quality of our environment; and improving standards of living for all A:nericans are just

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-4-a few.

The list could be lengthened at will, but the central issue we face as we enter the decade of the 1970's involves our cities. It is generally agreed that our major cities are becoming ungovernable. The problems they face are overwhelming, and they grow worse with every passing day.

In 1790, when the first census was taken, 95 per cant of our population lived in rural areas. Today only 10.5 million

-- less than 5 per cent -- remain At the present time, 70 per

cent of our population is crowded onto 1 per cent of the land. And the rural to urban shift is still gaining momentum.

Today over two-thirds of the American people live in some 230 metropolitan areas. If past trends continue the next 100 million Americans will also live -- whether they want to or not -- in one of these already overburdened cities and coropov,nd the problems of crowding and congestion.

A look at the future indicates that unless some

fundamental changes are made, and made soon, these problems will grow even worse:

-- in the next 30 years our population will rise from slightly over 200 million to well in excess of 300 million;

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-5--- by 1985 we must provide for 20 million

more households, a full one-third more than we have now;

-- by the end of the century we must more than double the physical plant of all our cities; this means the construction of a new house, school, hospital, highway and university for every one that now exists.

We will be called upon to do in 30 years what our forebears did in 300 hundred years.

It is obvious that the most urgent domestic problem we face in the last one-third of the 20th century is preparing for and accommodating growth. This will require innovation because our existing cities simply cannot continue to absorb

more and more people. At the present time many are unable to

provide even the most basic public services and amenities that people desire and require.

It is clear that present trends must be reversed.

We can no longer continue to ignore growth patterns which

threaten to disrupt and cripple the ability of metropolitan areas to provide good government and a decent place to raise a family.

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-5-As some of you may he aware, I am having legislation drafted for introduction early nelct year which will declare that the establishment of new towns and the revitalization of existing communities is a major objective of our national domestic policy. This legislation will provide an alternative to continued, haphazard urban sprawl and growth.

The Reclamation program will have a key role to play

in the implementation of this legislation The basic

under-pinning and the catalyst in the development of any new town or community is water. The Reclamation program will be used to see that municipal and industrial water needs as well as the growing needs of irrigated agriculture are met in planning and developing new rural growth centers.

The goals of the Reclamation program are and always have been to upgrade the quality of rural life, and to create new opportunity in the form of new farms, new communities and new cities. Attainment of these goals is not measured by net

farm income alone, although this may serve as a partial indicator. Reclamation's goals are measured by consolidated schools, paved roads, new homes, rural community hospitals and libraries, and all of the amenities that a sound and stable economy brings.

This is a story which needs telling. The National Water Commission, the Water Resources Council, the present

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-7-Administration, and the American people must be shown that the objectives of the Reclamation program center on the accomplish-ment of important social purposes which are relevant to the resolution of today's most critical domestic problems.

flaking the Reclamation program relevant to the Nation's pressing domestic problems will not require massive changes in the program. It will require only minor adjustments coupled with a major job of making clear to the public, the Congress and the Administration what the Federal water resource programs have done in the development of tills country and what they can do in the future.

When this is done, I am confident that the Administra-tion's policy of "no new starts," the policy of "cut back and defer" will be reversed. lhen the Administration is made to see the direct relationship between the development of new towns and the resolution of the cascading social and financial problems of existing metropolitan areas, a new flow of manpower and

appropriations to the Reclamation program will take place.

New towns can be created on the public lands and small communities can be revitalized throughout the rural countryside. If properly planned and designed, they can provide the American people a wide choice of living styles. They can provide a

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variety of jobs and business op-3ortunities for our young people which are now only available in th major cities. They can ease the pressures of expansion while the older, larger cities find solutions to the unprecedented problems they already face.

We have the tools to create new towns. In the West, we have already done so. Phoenix, Arizona, and Grand Junction, Colorado, owe their existence to a great extent to the effect of Reclamation projects. Many other comunities have grown up

around Federal hydroelectric, irrigation, and floor:: control projects. But, in most cases, that e.fiect was not part of the project plan. It is my judgment that in the future it should be.

In the third civarter of this year the country's Gross

National Product reached an annual rate of $942 billion. In less than 13 months barring a recession, we will reach and cross the trillion dollar mark. It is projected that by 1973 -- in lass than 10 years -- we will have doubled our present Gross National Product to 1 trillion GOO billion dollars.

These figures point up the urgent need to act and to act now in implementing policies which will roov,3 new industrial capacity and output to rural yrowth centers and away from

megalopolis. This can be done if government has the foresiht and the wisdom to provide the water supply and other essential

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services necessary for rural growth centers.

The Bureau of Reclamation and other Federal water

resource agencies have unique planning, technical, and construc-tion management capabilities. These abilities can be used to make meaningful contributions to pressing social problems if an important aspect of the agencies legislative mandate includes providing an energy base, a water supply, and a recreational reservoir for new towns and rural communities.

Many of the programs which could be of assistance in developing rural growth centers and in making the Reclamation program a priority matter on the Nation's agenda are already in existence. For example, we already have Federal programs which offer assistance for local and rural development. Advice, loans, and grants are available for planning, housing, and nearly all utilities.

But these programs and the available expertise cannot be brought to bear without coordination and without direction. What is lacking is a coordinating force and a policy to bring these capabilities together and to give them direction. The legislation I propose will, I believe, provide this coordinating force.

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-10-been too limited. We have failed to se and to build upon its relevance for dealing with urgent national domestic problems. You and I, as supporters of Reclamation have spent too much time in recent years on the defensive.

We have been negative when a positive approach is

needed. We have spoken in terms of "crisis" rather than in terms of "opportunity". Too often we have been engaged with the

immediate and often superficial results of our water programs. The result has been a growing frustration in the face of severe budget reductions and proposals for major changes in project evaluation procedures.

I propose that we turn this around and take the

offen-sive; that we act instead of reacting.

Creation of a new and important role for Reclamation in the developluent of new rural growth opportunities could be an undertaking more exciting than the exploration of outer space. Planning for and developing our country's future growth is, I believe, an undertaking which will enlist the enthusiastic commitment and support of alienated young people.

I invite your participation and your assistance in the effort. I respect your experience with the problems of

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-11-others who are the planners end the ')uilderc of our society will lend your support, we can make a battar iverica.

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LORIN W. MARKHAM Chamber of Commerce

11-21-69

Dear Bob:

We thought you might like to have a copy of the registration list of the Spokane convention . so here it is. Sincerely yours, t) L. Markham President Elect NWR Association Mr. J. R. Barkley Director, NWRA Loveland, Colorado

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- NATIONAL REcLAMATJON ASSOCIATION CONVENTION - OCTOBER 1969 PERSONS REGISTERED

Moritz Aabel & Wife 1122 N. Hastings Ave. Hastings, Nebr. 68901

J. O. Ackerman & Wife Ralph Adkins & Wife Allen F. Agnew

Box 103, Downtown Sta. 3210 Quinton St.

1500 Upper Drive

Omaha, Nebr. 68101 Pueblo, Colo. 81005 Pullman, Wash. 99163 H. Maurice Ahlquist & Wife 335 General Admn, 31dg.Olympia, Wash. 98501 Harold Aldrich

H.E. Alexander & Wife Wm.A. Alexander & Wife Stephen Allred

Paul Amos

Harold Anderson

Calvert Anderson & Wife Ralph J. Anderson

Dick Anklam J. C. Arave

John Arfman & Wife Ed Armbruster

Ellis Armstrong & Wife Wm. E. Autry

•••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••

Congressman Wayne N. Aspinall House Off. Bldg. Robert Bacon & Wife

Thadd Baker & Wife Leroy Bahensky Rich Bakes & Wife Ralph Baisch & Wife Col. Robt.L.Bangert Howard Bare

John Barker & Wife

Bureau of fieclamation Billings, Mont. 59101

Rt 1 Granger, Wash. 98932

778 W. Bellewin Porterville, Ca1.93257

State Capital Annex 2 Boise, Idaho 83701

Rt. 6 Box 223 Yakima, Wa. 98901

P. O. Box 69 Montrose, Colo. 81401

P.O. 30x 1098 Walla Walla, Wa. 99362

Havre, Montana 59501

P.O. Box 1587 Stockton, Ca. 95201

Idaho Irrigation Dist. Idaho Falls, Id. 83401 515 1st Natl.Bank Bldg,W;Albuquerque, N.M.871C

P. O. Box J Manson, Wa, 98831

Bur. Reclamation Comm. Salt Lake City, UT.

84100

P. O. Box 1 Ephrata, Wa. 98823

Washington, DC 20515

921 N. Lincoln Jerome, Idaho 83338

Rt. 3, Box 32, Yuma, Ariz. 85364

Loup Public Power Lincoln, Nebr. 68500

PO Box 1445(WWPCo.) Spokane, Wa. 99210

921 N. Lincoln Jerome, Ida.83338

2850 SE 82nd Ave. Portland, Ore.97266

1114 Commerce St. Dallas, Texas 75202

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J. R. Barkley & Wife J. Floyd Barnett & Wife Fred Barrett

Clarence Base

Ivan L. aateman & Wife George Bauer & Wife Bruce Beaudoin Harold Beeman Leroy Bemis N. B. Bennett Oscar N. Berg Bill Berger

Herbert W. Berndt & Wife Fred Betts & Wife

Peter Bianco Alan S. Bible

Clark Bishop & Wife Floyd Bishop

John Blakemore Doyle Boen & Wife Ed Bogacz

Wm. Bohlender & Wife Howard B. Boswell & Wife S. L. Bowman & Wife

Roger Bracken

Leo L. Brady & Wife Rustin A. Brewer Dianne Bridgegum Jack Briggs Kenneth Broadhurst P. (2)

O. Box 679 Loveland, Colo. 80537

568 16th Chester, Montana 4.10immir 4421 Don Felipe Dr. 1095 22nd P.O.Box 1288 3005 St. Andrews Dr. P. O. Box 188 Bur. of Reclamation Tex.Uater Quality 8d. Rt. 1, Box 95 733 Security Bldg. US Senate 2245 Chandler State Capitol 127 S. Spring St. P.O. Box 858

Midvale Irrigation Dist P. O. Box 679 2513 W. 45th Box 338 224 Montana Ave. Duchesne, Utah P. O. Box 208 136 Shoshone St. E. 2102 W. 9th Place 144 W. Colfax Ave. Ogden, Utah 84404 59522 Geary, Okla. 73040 Los Angeles, CA.90008 Beaumont, Tex. 77706

Yakima, Wa. 98901 Soap Lake, Wa. 98851 Rialto, Calif. 92376 Washington, DC 2u24.1.) Minot, N. Dak. 58701 Austin, Tex. 78700

Terra Bella CA. 93270 Phoenix, Ariz. 85004 Washington,DC 20510 Selma, Calif. 63662 Cheyenne, Wyo. 82000 Blythe, Cal. 92225 Hemet, Calif. 92343 Pavillion, Wyo. 82523 Loveland, Colo. 80537 Austin, Tex. 78756 Mitchell, Nebr. 69357 Billings, Mont. 59101 84021 Hermiston, Ore. 97838 Twin Falls, ID. 83301 Kennewick, WA. 99336 Denver, Colo. 80200

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Carl Bronn & Wife H. L. Brooks

Donald J. arosz Allen Brown

Ralph Brownscombe Jerry Bryson & Wife J. W. Buchanan

v.Im. E. Buell

(3) 697 National Press Bldg. Washington, DC.20004

P. O. Box 4060 Modesto, CA. 95352

Box 3354 University Sta. Laramie, Wyo. 82070

P. O. Box 43 Delta, Colo. 61416

4733 N. Dittman Rd. Arlington, VA.22207

W. 221 1st Ave. NPRR Spokane Wa. 99204

Box 935 Dumas, Texas 79029

Times Bldg., 417 SW Washington,Ptld.,Ore.97201

Jerry Bernt Cedar Valley Reclamation Dist. Spalding, Nebr.

68665

W. L. Burnham •••••arb0=0.0.••• Boise, I aho 63700

J. O. Burns 733 Security Bldg. Phoenix, Ariz.85004

Ralph Bursch 3910 S. Skyview Dr. Spokane, Wa. 99204

Warren Butler 1111 Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA.9005L

Thomas E. Cahill 1725 Union Club Bldg. Salt Lake City, Utah

84114

G. W. Caldwell & Wife 806 E. Kansas Ave. Smith Center, Kansas

66967

Congressman John N. Camp House Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20515

3rig.Gen. C. Craig Cannon & Wife BOX 103 Downtown Sta. Omaha, Neb. 66101 pdlios Carlson

Art Carrier & Wife Richard Carstensen Harry Carstensen Alan Carter Florence Carter James H. Carter Robt. F. Carter Earnest C. Cheatham Tom Choules

O. E. Christensen & Wife Harold H. Christy

Bob Chuck

Rt 1 Scottsbluff, Nebr.

69361 Hansen Murtaugh Co-op Canal Co. Murtaugh, ID.

83344 Almira, Wa. 99103 ••••••Mai1/111... 2055 Logan Ave. 1568 N. Millbrook Almira, Wa. 99103 Salt Lake City, Utah

64100 Fresno, CA. 93703

101 Law Bldg. El Centro, CA.92243

101 Law Bldg. El Centro, CA.92243

Box 1980 Phoenix, Ariz.85001

190 Madison Ave. Yuma, Ariz. 85364

Rt. 1 Burley, Idaho 83318

511 Polk St. Pueblo, Colo. 81005

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Lt.Gen.Frederick J.Clarke Tempo 7 Gravelly Point Washington,DC 20315

Bill Clayton 1613 Avenue 2 Lubbock, Texas 79408

Wayne Cloward 50 - 7th St. NE Atlanta, GA. 30323

Charles A. Cocks & Wife Box 103 Downtown Sta. Omaha, Nebr. 68101

LeSelle Coles & Wife Box 6 Prineville, Ore.9775,

Harold Collin & Wife Box 715 Dinuba, CA. 93618

Robt. Colson & Wife 1005 13th St. Gering, Nebr. 69341

Kenneth L. Cook & Wife 176 - 5th St. Paul, Minn.55101

David Coombs Box 15 Unity, Oregon 978E34

Vernon Cooper & Wife Box 107 Carrington, No.Dak.

58421

Datson Corder & Wife 0111•1•111•1•MOMMO.M.• Burnet, Tex 78611

Tom Cotton & Wife Homedale, Ida. 83628

Remi Coussens Rt 3, Box 577 Hillsboro, OR. 97123

Ernest Cowell Eureka, Wash.99331

Earl Cowley W 232 23rd Spokane, ;,,Ja. 99204

David L. Crandall U.S.B.R.,Box 11568 SLC, Utah 84114

rtialcom Crawford Rt 6, Box 193 Yakima, Wa. 98902

Thomas Crawford & Wife 220 Pleasant Way Rupert, ID. 83350

Ronald I Cross & Wife AT&SE Railway Amarillo, Tex. 79101_

S. L. Cuskelly 324 25th St. Ogden, Utah 84401

Burdell Curtis & Wife 338 W. 13th St. Burley, ID. 83318

Major Robt. J. Dacey Office--Chief of Engineers Washington, DC.

20315

Richard M. Dailey 218 N. Columbus St. Arlington, VA. 2220:";

C. H. Darrington & Wife Rt. 1, Box 116 Declo, IDaho 83323

Harry Dawson & Wife Cardwell, Mont.59721

John E. DeVito & Wife 2020 Railroad Ave. Pittsburg, CA.94565

Wesley A. D'ewart Rt. 1 Wilsall, Mont.59086

Sam Dick & Wife Yuma County Water Users Assn. Yuma, AR.85364

Ted Diehl 921 N. Lincoln Jerome, ID. 83338

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Dick Dirmeyer

J. C. Dishman & Wife Paul Ditzler & Wife

Hans H. Doe & Wife Harry Dolphin

Floyd Dominy

E. F. Doncaster & Wife P. O. Box 132

Richard Donelson William Donnan Daniel Dreyfus William G. Dunn Robt. T. Durbrow Elmer Dutro & Wife

cordon Dyekman & Wife P. 0. Box 679

Covert A. Dyke & Wife

Central Nebraska PUblic Power & Irrigation Dist. 6540 Calder Road

P.O. Box 582 P. O. Box 682

P.O.Box 103 Downtown 3300 Fox Mill Road

Holdrege, Neb.68949(5)

Beaumont, Tex. 77706 Walnut Creek, CA.

94597 Walnut Creek, Ca.

94597 Sta. Omaha, Neb. 68101

LOakton, VA. 22124

P. O. Box 2326

New Senate Office Bldg. Kaiser Center

11th & L Bldg., RM.305 4895 Avenue 236

W. 416 Trent Ave. Ervin Easterday and Wife S.C.I.D.

E. W. Easterling & Wife 1130 San Jacinto Bldg.

Albert Eggen & Wife Brock Ellis

Homer Engelhorn

Joe Entzminger & Wife Roger Ernst & Wife Chester E. Evans Geo. Everett & Wife Kenneth Evers

Carl Fairchild & Wife Warren D. Fairchild Max Farra Box 248 733 Security Bldg. Locker Drawer E P. O. Box 220 Sunnyside, WA. 98944 Riverton, Wyo. 82501 Riverside, CA. 92506 Washington, DC 20013 Oakland, CA. 94604 Sacramento, CA 95814 Tulare, Calif. 93274 Loveland, Colo.80537 Spokane, WA. 99201 Mesa, WA. 99343 Beaumont, Tex, 77700 Hemet, CA. 92343 Phoenix, AR. 85004 Madison, S.D. 57042 Austin, Tex. 78767 Arizona Public Service Co.Phoenix, AR. 85004 P. 0, Box E 511 Polk St., Box 57 P. O. Box 94725 Ft.Collins, Colo. 80522 Pueblo, Colo. 81005 Almira, Wa. 99103 Chester, Tex. 75936 Lincoln, Nebr. 68509 East River Elec.Power Co-op. Madison, S.D.5704:

Wilfrid J. Farrell & Wife 214 Broadway Boise,ID. 83702

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Glen Fielder 335 Gen. Admn. Bldg. Olympia,WA.98501(6) George Feil

Eugene Fierke & Wife

Douglas Finkelnburg & Wife E. A. Finkelnburg Harold Mathew Robert Roland Fintus Fiscalini Fischer Fischer Adam Focht Bldg. 1-7 Room 2031

Office of Chief Engineer Washington, DC. 20315

3rd Ave. 5 & Washington Minneapolis, Minn.

54401 Quincy, WA. 98848 Jerome, ID. 83338 Gering,Nebr. 69341 Modesto,CA. 95352 Denver, Colo. 80202 Glenwood Springs, Colo. 81601 Nyssa, Ore. 97913 Washington, DC 20515 Terra Bella,CA.93270 Wash in 20003

Twin Falls, ID.83301 Dinuba, CA. 93618 Coachella, CA. 92236 Ephrata, WA. 98823 III•••••••••••••• 921 N. Lincoln 1930 S. St. P.O.Box 4060 144 W. Colfax P.O. Box 218 17 S. First St. •••11411mban ••••••n.00•10.•

Congressman Thos. S. FoleyHouse Office Bldg. W. D. Fowler Morley Fox Fay Frahm Clarence L. Fraser Jack Frost David Gallant Dernard Calleano

Thomas Galloway & Wife Jack Garber

Brad Gardner & Wife Robt. Gardner & Wife

Box 526

300 ;Aw Jersey Ave. SE Box 326

P. O. Box 715 P.O. Box 1058 P. O. Box 1980

Imperial Irrigation Dist. El Centro, CA.92243

P.O.Box 3007 Beaumont, Tex. 78701

70 W. 6th Ave. Denver, Colo 80200

SLC, Utah 84100 Denver Fed. Center Bldg. Denver, Colo. 80225 Col.Robt. J. Giesen & Wife Bldg.602 City-Co.Airport Walla Walla,WA.99362 Craig Giffen

Bill Gilbert Norman Gilchrist Lloyd Gillmor

George Glarborg & Wife Ed. Glassgow Brig.Gen.Wm.M.Slasgow U.S.Forest Service Box 406 E. 13016 Saltese Rd. P. O. Box 3623 11th & E St. P. O. Box 1692 630 Sansome St. Washington, DC. 20250 Stanfield, OR. 97875 Spokane, WA. 99216 Portland, OR. 97208 Rupert, ID. 83350 Rapid City, 5.D.57701 San Francisco,CA. 94111

(22)

T.. B. Glazebrook Victor Gleason Louis Glymph Roger G. Goff John T. Goodier Myron Goodson W. S. Goodkin Al Graham olerton Gray

Chris C. Green & Wife John Greenslit

E. M. Gregory & Wife J. Leon Grieve

Harold Griffiths & Wife Richard E. Griffin

Kenyon Gurr & Wife ililton Hackett Henry Hagg 1,131 Hagood Fred Hahn Henry D. Haley Bob Hamilton

John Hancock & Wife George Hannett & Wife Jack Hansell & Wife Hillman A. Hansen John Hansen

Col. Ernest L. Hardin C. J. Hargleroad & Wife Ralph Harmon and Wife

(7) 12th & Independonce Ave. Washington, DC 20250

P. O. Box 54153 Los Angeles,CA.90054

P. I. Station Beltsville, Maryland

20705

733 Security Bldg Phoenix, Ariz. 85004

210 J. 23rd

112 N. Central St.

Cheyenne, Wyo. 82001 Cheyenne, Wyo. 82001 Phoenix, Ariz. 85004 Tualatin Valley Irr.Dist. Hillsboro, Ore. 97123

Rt. 4, Box 30 Idaho Falls, 1D.83401

Courtland, Kan.66939 State Outdoor Recreation Bismarck,ND. 58501 State Capitol

2314 7th St. No. Fargo, N.D. 58100

Box 98 Shoshone, Idaho 83352

921 N. Lincoln Jerome, Idaho 83338

4446 N. 4th 'A Logan, Utah 84321

385 W. 500 South Bountiful, UT.84010

2908 N. Stafford Arlington, VA.22207

Courthouse Hillsboro, Ore.97123

Grandview, WA. 98930

335 Gen. Admn.Bldg. Olympia, WA.98501

3303 N. Central-Suite 613 Phoenix, Ariz. 85012

Box 698 Eloy, Arizona 85231

P. O. Box 220 Austin, Texas 78767

515 1st Natl.Bank Bldg.W Albuquerque, NM 87101 1345 Manzanita Drive 617 8 Ocean Ave. Box 348 P.O.Box 7002 P. O. Box 356 3ox 107 Salem, Ore. 97301 Seal Beach, CA.90740 Dallas, Ore. 97338 Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Holdrege, Nebr.68949 Carrington, N.D. -58421

(23)

Gordon Harmston & Wife 225 State Capitol SLC, Utah 84114 (8)

John S. Harnett & 'Aife Box 4616 Oakland, CA. 94623

Jerry Harrington & Wife 245 Market St. San Francisco, CA.

94106

Clinton Harris 7439 Florence Ave. Downey, CA. 90240

Earl Harris 323 Eccles Uldg. Ogden, Utah 84400

Leo Harvey ••••••••••• Pleasant Grove, Utah

84062

Leo Haueter Route 2 Roosevelt, UT. 84066

John A. Hayes 111 W. Second Ave. Pecos, Tex. 79772

Ivan P. Head & Wife Box 4427 Post Office Annex Las Vegas, NEV.

89101

Alex Heimbouch & Wife Route 1 Gering, Nebr. 69341

E. W. Heinrich & Wife Box 232, Route 1 Soap Lake,WA.98851

Dick Hendrick & Wife °mak, WA. 98841

H.A.Hendrickson & Wife 1345 N. 2nd Fargo, N.D. 58100

Verl Hendrix Truckee-Carson Irr.Dist. Fallon, Nev. 89406

Hal Henigson & Wife 106 i1ain S. Nyssa, Ore. 97913

Albert Henley 308 Bank America Bldg San Jose, CA. 95113

Chas. L. Heslop Keith Higginson

Herbert S. Hilburn & Wife Leon Hill

Plain City, UT. Boise, ID. 83701 Plainview, Tex.79072

Amarillo, Tex.79100 State Capitol Annex 2

801 W. 11th P.O. Box 1609

J. S. Hill Greenleaf, ID. 83626

Leo Hobdey Bliss, ID. 83314

Clair W. Hobkirk Rt. 1, Box 55 Pasco, WA. 99301

Jack Hoffbuhr Box 467 Talent, Ore. 97540

Walt Hoffbuhr & Wife Box 467 Talent, Ore. 97540

Nilo Hoisveen & Wife 900 Blvd-State Office Bldg.Bismarck, N.D.58501

Russell Holm Shelley, Idaho 83274

Helmer Holje & Wife Bozeman, Mont.59715

Joe Horrall N.P.Ry. Central Bldg. 3eattle, WA. 98104

Lyman B. Horton & Wife 289 Union Station Chicago, Ill. 60606

Paul House & Wife Quincy-Columbia Basin Irr.Dist. Quincy, WA.

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(9)

A. C. Hove & Wife A. L. Hoyt

Rose Hubert & Wife

Minden, Nebraska 68959

Bayard, Nebr, 69334

01.04.10.

YJma Mesa Irr.& Drainage District

Route 3, Box 32 Yuma, Ariz. 85364

Daisy Hudson 20712 Avenue 120

Morris Huffman and Wife Route 1

Earl Hull & Wife 1204 Sunset Place

Walter R. Humphrey P. 0. Box 7555

Lt.Col. Richard Hunt Bldg. 1-7 Room 1027

Charles Hunting & Wife Route 4

Robert E. Hurley & Wife Box 218

Harold Hursh Box 397

Dudley Hutchinson & Wife P. O. Box 679

Wendell F. Hutchinson & Wife At. i, Box 283 Richard Huth

James M. Ingles

Gerald Irvine & Wife

Jess Jackson & Wife Ford Jacobsen

Olaf Jacob3on & Wife Wm. W. Jacobus

Leonard F. Jansen & Wife Senator Henry M. Jackson

P. 0. Er,Y. 711 u.s.e.a. Region 7 1407 W. North Temple At 1 1723 Harney St. Mitchell, S. Dakota 330 West 42nd St. S. 4307 Madelia Senate Office Bldg.

Chas. E. Jarrett & Wife 404 Union St.

Joe W. Jarvis & Wife Elsie Jefferson

Wallace Jeffery & Wife E. Blaine Johnson

E. C. Johnson & Wife

Congressman H. T. Johnson J. R. Johnson c/o UPRR 520 Idaho Bldg. P.O.Box 192, 1615 E. Shadow Valley Box 477 House Office Bldg. SWC ARS USDA Porterville, CA.93257 Twin Falls, 10.83301 Sunnyside, WA. 98944 Waco, Texas 76710 Washington, D. C. 20315 Porterville, CA.93257 Collidge, AR.85228 Huntington, Ore.97907 Boulder, Colo. 80537 Salida, Colo. 81301 Porterville,CA.93257 Denver, Colo 80200 SLC, Utah 84100 Murtaugh, ID. 83344 Omaha, Neb. 68102 57301 NYC. N.Y., 10036 Spokane, Wa. 99203 Washington, DC 20516 Seattle, Wa. 98101 Omaha, Nebr. 68100 Boise, Delta, Dr. Ogden, Notus, ID. 83701 UT. 84624 UT. 84400 Ida. 83656 Washington, DC.20515 Oushland, Tex. 79012

(25)

Ilyron Johnson & Wife ••••••••••

Rich Johnson & Wife Arizona Title Bldg.,

Lois Johnston

Pollock, S.D. (10)

57649

Phoenix, Ariz. 85003

,‘OJS, Idaho 83656

A. Warren Jones 2-M Olarion County Courthouse Salem, OR. 97301

Bryant Jones P. O. Box 709 Yuma, AR. 85364

Dan Jones State Capitol Bldg. Lincoln, Neb. 68509

Sen. Len B. Jordan Senate Office Bldg. Washington DC 20510

Ed Kammeyer & Wife 1403 Wall Ave. Ogden, Utah 84404

John H. Kehmeier & Wife Box 41 Eckert, Colo. 81418

Brig.Gen.,ioy S.Kelley & Wife 210 Custom House Portland, Ore. 97209

Robt. L. Kent San Joaquin, Calif.

93660

Guy Keith & Wife Water Devel. Foundation Oklahoma City, Okla.

200 Skirvin Towers 73100

Webb Kennedy 1621 N. Kent St. Arlington, VA. 22209

Edward Ker & Wife Quincy, WA. 98848

Andrew Kershin Route 4 Hereford, Tex. 79045

Milton Kidd P.O.Box 4060 Modesto, CA. 95352

P.O.Box 1511 Wenatchee, WA. 98801

Box 3621 Portland, Ore. 97203

Box 107 Carrington, N.D.

58423

623 E. Jackson Riverton, Wyo. 82501

Rt. 1. Pasco, WA. 99301

Castleford, Idaho 83321

S & E Bldg. Spokane, Wa. 99201

245 Market St. San Francisco, CA.

94106

1845 Sherman 3t. Denver, Colo 80203

Box 715 Dinuba, CA. 93618

Box 869 Cody, Wyo. 82414

805 Midlands aank Bldg. Billings, Mont.59101 Tacoma,WA. 98400

P. O. Box 9 Garden Grove, Calif.

92642 Chester C. Kimm Del Klaus F. Ben Kludt Erich Knehans Maria Klug

Al Kramer & Wife Norm Krey

Herman Kruse & Wife C. J. Kuiper

Lloyd F. Kullman & Wife Marlin T. Kurtz

Sid Kurth Leslie Laird H. L. Lake

(26)

Hubert C. Lambert 422 St. Capitol Bldg. SLC, Utah 84114

John A. Lambert & Wife Karnes, Utah 84036

•••••••••

R. J. Lamborn P. D, Cox 079 Loveland, Colo. 80537

Ray Lambrecht & Wife

1568

N. Millbrook Fresno, CA. 93703

Donel J. Lane 500 Public Service Bldg. Salem, Ore. 97310

Henry Lange & Wife Ord, Nebr. 66862

Maurice N. Langley USBR, 18th Ave. & C Washington, 00.20240

John Lassen & Wife P. O. Box 1980 Phoenix, Ariz. 85001

Juhn Lauten Box 54153 Los Angeles, Calif.

90054

Dan Lawrence & Wife 435 State Capitol SLC, Utah 84114

Charles G. Lee & Wife P. O. Box 7555 Waco, Tex. 76710

Robert R. Lee Idaho tAater Resources Od.Boise, Idaho 83707

State House

W. G. Lefler & Wife Royal City, WA. 99344

Wm. Lehman P. O. Box "Y" Aberdeen, Ida.83210

Daryl B. Leonard, & Wife 5904 Scenic Dr. Yakima, WA. 98902

Merl Leonard Rt. 2 Filer, Idaho 83328

J. C. Lewis & Wife Bay City, Tex. 77411!

James Lewis 641 Kansas Ave. S.E. Huron, S. D. 85750

Cal Liebel P. O. Box 6900 Kennewick, WA. 99335

Clyde A. Lindquist & Wife 1403 Wall Ave. Ogden, Utah 84404

Roger D. Ling Rupert, Idaho 83350

[6ur1 Linke 801 Main Ave. Fargo, N.D. 58100

J. L. Lockhart Box 168 Higley, Ariz.34236

Cecil Long & Wife P. 0. Box 220 Austin, Tex. 78767

Don Long & Wife 4 th & Lincoln-Box 356 H,-,1drege, Nebr.68949

Tommy Long P. O. Box 708 Yuma, Ariz. 85364

John T. Loucks, & Wife 219 42nd St. Rapid City, 5.0.57701

Chas. F. Luce Consolidated Edison New York, N. Y.

R. A. Lucksinger & Wife P. O. Box 220 Austin, Tex. 78767

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*Raymond F. Ludd Wm. McAnlis & Wife Ralph Macdonald

J. R. McBride & Wife Daniel V. McCarthy

Virgil McClanahan

Col. Richard McConnell

412 Tyler 427 Cleveland St. 5386 E. Jensen Ave. (12) Pierre, S.D. 57501 Woodland, CA. 95695 Fresno, CA. 93725 Minden, Nebr.68950 U.S.B.R., 18th & C Sts. Washington, D.2240

P.O. Box 168 Higley, Ariz. 85236

& Wife 1519 Alaskan Way,S. Seattle, WA. 98134 Congressman James A. McClure House Office Bldg.

Donald H. McCrea Eimer G. McDaniels Alex D. McDermott

Lester McGregor & Wife

245 Market St. Box 239

1336 Helena Ave. Route 1

Lt.Col.Kenneth E. McIntyre Bldg. 17, Room 2334 Garner McKnight

Thad McLaughlin

Dennis McLeod & Wife Kenneth R. McSwain Justin Mace

Michael Madden & Wife John Mankin

Lorin W. Markham & Wife Lyle Martin & Wife

James Mason

Doyle Mathews & Wife W. Don Maughan

G. Arthur Mayer

Laurence Mellergaard Archie Mellon & Wife Ross Mellon & Wife Harold Menser & Wife

en....•••••••••••••• •••••••11.0...••• 175 E. 4th St. P.O.Box 2283 630 Sansome St. •••I•11 611 Majestic Bldg. 5524 S. Garfield 12950 S. Academy 127 So.Spring St. Route 1 P. O. Box 388

(Information Booth Only) 914 E. 3rd P. O. Box 708 601 6th St. Murtaugh, Idaho 83344 Washington, D. C. 20515 San Francisco, CA.

94106 Sunnyside, WA. 98944 Helena, Mont. 59601 Twin Falls, Ida.83301 Washington, DC. 20315 Delta, Colo. 81416 Denver, Colo. 80200 St. Paul, Minn.55100 Merced, CA. 95340 San Francisco, CA.

94111 Mount City, SD.57646 Denver, Colo. 80202 Spokane, 99203 Kingsbury, CA. 93631 Blythe, CA. 92225 Pasco, WA. 99301 Sacramento, CA. 95301 Spokane, Wa. Ellensburg, WA, 98926 Yuma, Ariz. 85364 Prosser, WA. 99350

(28)

(13)

Tad R. Meyer Rt. 3, Box 32

Raymond L. Michero 1114 Commerce St.

Herman H. Miller, Jr. & Wife 914 Executive Bldg. E. Glenn Miller & Wife

Roy L. Miller & Wife

Mesrob K. Mirigian & Wife 5645 E. Perlier

Verne Montgomery 220 Pleasant Way

John Moon & Wife

Harry Moore & Wife P. O. Box 7555

John Moore & Wife P. 0. Box 679

Joseph Moore Imperial Irr. District.

Saul Moore & Wife Twin Falls Canal Co.

Edgar W. Mooreman & Wife P. O. Box 906

Blaine Morse 308 N. 8th

J. Lane Morthland 10002 N. Halladay Dr.

H. F. Mosbaugh

Locke Mouton Bldg. 17, Room 1027

Dean Muckel & Wife Box 1187

E. H. Neal 60 "F" S. E.

Alan M. Nedry 888 17th St. N.W.

Rogers Neff & Wife P. O. Box 612

••••g

•••••••••••••••.•••••••om •••••••••••••••••••

Harold T. Nelson & Wife Box 8008

J. C. Nelson & Wife P. 0. Box 679

Milton Nelson & Wife P. O. Box 679

Victor Nelson & Wife Rt. 2

Reid J. Newby Box 98

Marvin Newman 525 Tulare Ave.,

John W. Newton & Wife P. O. Box 1111

James R. Nichols & Wife 508 Throckmorton

Lewis Nichols 824 SW 5th Ave.,

Yuma, Ariz. 85364 Dallas, Tex. 75202 Portland, Ore. 97204 Alpena, S.D. 57312 Notus, Ida. 83656 Fowler, CA. 93625 Rupert, ID. 83350 Prosser, WA. 99350 Waco, Tex. 76710 Loveland,Colo.80537 El Centro, CA.92243 Buhl, ID. 83316 Burley, Ida. 83318 Boise, ID. 83700 Portland, Ore. 97232 Billings, Mont. 59101 Washington, DC. 20315 Boise, Idaho 83701 Ephrata, WA. 98823 Washington, DC. 20006 Pasco, WA. 99301 Boise, Idaho 83700 Loveland, Colo. Loveland, Colo. Twin Falls, ID.

80537 80537 83301 Shoshone, ID. 83352 Shafter, CA. 93263 Beaumont, Tex. 77704 Ft.Worth, Tex. 76102 Portland, Ore. 97201

(29)

-A. H. Nelson & Wife 1918 Overland Ave.

George A.Neilson & Wife 155 No. 4th E.

Ralph A. Nissen & Wife 11-th & L Bldg.

J. Ben Nix & Wife P.O. Box 679

Irwin North 4115 Miraleste Dr.

Jack Nutley 302 N. 37th Ave.

Van E. Nutley & Wife P.O.Box E

Berl Oar

George O'Brien & Wife Bob O'Connor & Wife Tom Olmstead & Wife Chester Olson

Marion Olsen & Wife Delbert Olson & Wife Bob O'Rourke

L. W. Owen Bob Pafford Joe Patten Roy Pearson

George Pehl & Wife J. Roy Penix

Alfred Peters & Wife Carl Petersen

Dr. Arthur W. Peterson Lee Peterson

Phil Peterson

C. L. Phillips & Wife P. O. Box 1980

Earl F. Phipps

James Pickering & Wife lrs. S. M. Poarch Rt. 2, Box 146 Box 326 630 Sansome St. 435 State Capitol 210 Custom House -Box 1023 1629 W. 17th St. U.S.B.R. P. 0. Box 2088 1114 Commerce St. Box 326 S. Garfield W. S. U. 11th & D Box 1980 P. O. Box 679 Scottsbluff, Nebraska Star Route East

(14) Burley, ID. 83318 Brigham City, Utah

84302 Sacramento, CA. 95814 Loveland, Colo.80537 Miraleste, CA. 90731 Yakima, WA. 98902 Othello, WA. 99344 Roseburg, Ore. 97470 Prosser, WA. 99350 Boise, Idaho 83700 Twin Falls, ID.83301 San Francisco, CA.

94111 Salt Lake City, Utah 84114 Portland, Ore.97209 Pendleton, Ore. 97801

Santa Ana, CA.92706 Sacramento, CA. 95801 Redding, CA. 96001 Holdrege, Nebr. 68949 Whitehall, Mont.59759 Dallas, Tex. 75202 Twin Falls, ID 83301 Kennewick, WA. 99336 Pullman, WA. 99163 Rupert, ID. 83350 Ephrata, WA. 98623 Phoenix, Ariz.95001 Loveland, Colo.80537 69361 Othello, WA. 99344

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(15)

Joseph F. Poland Room '2,1 2528 Federal Bldg. Sacramento, CA.95825

2800 Cottage Way

J. George Pomeroy & Wife Rt. 2, Box 82 Fallon, Nev. 89406

A. W. Prenovost, Jr. 501 S. 3rd Av. Phoenix, Ariz. 85000

Howard A. Preston Corps of Engineers

60 W. Tieton Walla Walla, WA.99362

F. A. Preuss & Wife 1568 N. Millbrook Fresno, DA. 93703

Wm. P. Price, Jr. J. R. Pringle & Wife Carol Prochaska George H. Proctor Dick Prouty Joe Putman Gary L. Queale Roland L. Raetz P.O. Box 432 P.O. Box 307 P.O.Box 815, USBR 280 Main 650 15th St. 921 N. Lincoln

Santa Paula, CA.93060 Scottsbluff, Neb.69361

Ephrata, WA. 98823 Klamath Falls, Ore.

97601 Denver, Colo. 80201 Jerome, Ida. 83338 11th & L Bldg. Suite 305 Sacramento, CA. 95814 P.O.Box 11188 Federal Bldg. SLC, Utah 84111

Carl Raish Uncompahgre Valley Water Montrose, Colo.81401

District

Bill Raley Box 130 Norwood, Colo. 81423

W. E. Rawlings & Wife P.O.Box 815, USBR Ephrata, WA.98823

Wade Redford —_ —_____ Dove Creek, Colo.81324

Edward Reichert & Wife Filer, Idaho 83328

N. F. Renner & Wife 822 S. Evans Spearman, Tex. 79081

Carl Rempel Salem, Oregon 97301

C. W. Renz & Wife Herreid, S.D. 57632

Col. Irvin M. Rice 1114 Commerce St. Dallas, Tex. 75202

Thomas R. Rice P. O. Box 1748 Las Vegas, Nev. 89101

Ted Riggins 111 W. Monroe Phoenix, Ariz. 85003

William Risken Seattle, WA 98100

Clyde Ritchie & Wife R.F.D. Box 188 D Heber, Utah 84032

Wm. H. Robinson & Wife 388 Traverso Ave. Los Altos, CA. 94022

John A. Rosholt & Wife P.O. Box 525 Twin Falls, ID. 33301

George Roskie & Wife P. O. Box 1628 Juneau, Alaska 98801

(31)

Jimmy Ross 1628

Dan Ryan 1918

Robert A. Sandberg 300

Glenn G. Saunders & Wife 240

Lester Saunders & Wife 921

(16)

15th St. Lubbock, Tex. 79400

Minor Ave. Seattle, WA. 98101

Lakeland Drive Oakland, CA. 94604

S. Clermont St. Denver, Colo. 80222

N. Lincoln. Jerome, Ida. 83338

John M. Sayre & Wife P.O.Box 679 Loveland,Colo. 80537

John Scarbrough Route 3, Box 31 Yuma, Ariz. 85364

Frank V. Schaan Balta, N.D. 58313

Richard Schafer & Wife 128 N. Carmelita Porterville, CA.93257

Gordon Scheer 1200 Lincoln ,i530 Denver, Colo. 80203

Andrew R. Schmidt 633 W. Wisconsin Ave. Milwaukie, Wisc.53203

Dale Schulke Water Resources 31dg. Reno, Aevada

Blaine Schulz 2624 N. W. Overton Portland, Ore. 97210

Edward Scheidt & Wife 4123 S. Bethel Sanger, Calif. 93657

Max Schlottman & Wife Rt. 3 Parma, Idaho 83660

O. H. Scheuneman & Wife Franklin, Nebr. 68939

Lyle H. Schnitker & Wife Route 2 Twin Falls, Ida.83301

Al Schock 1501 W. 10th St. Sioux Falls, S.D.

57101

Armin Schroeder & Wife American Falls, Ida.

83211

Keith Schwenk & Wife 9304 Houston Ave. Hanford, Ca. 93230

Win Self E. 9317 Broadway Spokane, Wa. 99206

Wesley Sell & Wife Box 307 Scottsbluff, Nebr.

69361

Sam Seymour & Wife Colo. County Federal Svgs. & Loan Assn.

Columbus, Tex.78934 Cyril P. Shaughnessy & Wife St. Paul, Nebr.68873

Jack Shawver & Wife Box 637 Glendale, Ariz. 85301

Marvin Shearer 1435 N. 29th Corvallis, Ore.97331

Maurice Sherrill 4075 Main St.Suite 500 Riverside, CA.92501

H. Shipley P.O.Box 1980 Phoenix, Ariz.85001

Walter Shumway Bridgeport, Ore. 97819

John W. Simmons P.O.Box 579 Orange, Texas 77630

(32)

C. L. Skousen & Wife Curtis Smith & Wife Edward Smith & Wife Leo Smith & Wife Ned A. Smith James R. Smith Russell D. Smith

Wm. C. Smith Jr. & Wife Norris Soma & Wife

James Sorenson & Wife Edw. H. Southwick & Wife Ed Spalding & Wife

Felix L. Sparks Rupert B. Spearman Kermit V. Speeg & Wife A. C. Splattstoesser Carl T. Spliid & Wife Wesley Steiner

Cale Sterling

Claude Stitt & Wife Harry Stivers

Roy Stollings & Wife Gilbert G. Stamm

Melvin Stepon & Wife Maurice Strantz Fred Stremler Richard Stroud Grant F. Stucki Box 213 Rt. 1, 875 I.N.W. Rt. 5 P. O. Box 1980 P. O. Box 444 (17) Coolidge, Ariz.85228 Ephrata, WA. 98823 Rupert, Idaho 83350 Phoenix, Ariz. 85001 Hanford, CA. 93230

Asst. Secy. for Water & Power

Dept. of the Interior Washington, D. C.

521 Rd. 40 Pasco, Wash. 99301

631 E. 2nd Ainsworth, Nebr.69210

Box 218 Coolidge, Ariz. 85228

303 Bank America Bldg. Visalia, CA. 93277

1483 Wall Ave. Ogden, Utah 84404

Star Rt. 1 Royal City, WA. 99344

Room 102, 1845 Sherman St. Denver, Colo.80203 Box 5200 630 Sansome St. Box 512 ONB 34 West Monroe 2020 Railroad Ave. U.S.B.R. Rt. 2 U.S.3.R. 18th & C Sts Spokane, Wa. 99205 San Francisco, CA.

94111 Red Cloud, Nebr.68970 Spokane, Wa. 99201 Phoenix, Ariz. 85000 Ellensburg, WA. 98926 Pittsburg, CA. 94565 Boise, Ida. 83700 Booker, Texas 79005 Washington, DC.2U.515

Quincy

Columbia Basin Irr. Dist.

Quincy, WA. 98348 5050 N. Roosevelt, Apt.101 Fresno, CA.93704

921 N. Lincoln Jerome, Ida. 83338

719 13th St. N.W. Suite 503 Washington,DC. 20005

and

Wife

Rt. 1, Box 101 Idaho Falls, 10.83401

(33)

(18)

George Sullivan Rupert, Ida. 63350

I. J. Sunford W. C. Swearingen Perry Sweat & Wife Clifford C. Tabor Wadus Tate

Ernest Taylor & Wife Graydon Templin

Carl Thomas

Everett Thomas & Wife Claire S. Thompson & Wife Charles Thomson

Robt. V. Thurmond W. E. Tinsley & Wife

Ray Tocci John Toevs

B. Joseph Tofani Archie Toner & Wife Palmer Torvend

Jim Tozzi Dale Traylor Ray Trent & Wife Sherwood Trotter Leland Turner & Wife Ralph Tyrrell & Wife John Ulrich Hilbert Underwood John Vance Henry Royse Keith Vancik

Van Curen & Wife Vincent 823 S. Fruitland Rt. 1, 805 E. Kansas Ave. Route 1, Box 19, Rt. 1, Box 103 Box J 2810 Third Ave. N. P. 0. Box 338 P. 0. Box 440 110 E. 6th Texas Kennewick,WA. 99336 Point, Tex. 75472 Smith Center, Kan.

66967 Wellton, Ariz. 85356 Kennewick, WA. 99336 Terra Bella, CA.99270 Manson, WA. 98831 Morrill, Nebr. 69358 Great Falls, Mont.

59401 Bellflower, CA. 90706 Pueblo, Colo. 81002

Austin, Tex. 78701 State Bank Bldg. Suite C Austin, Tex.

76701 Three Forks, Mont. 57 D S.W. Bldg. T-7, Rm. 2333 P. O. Box 578 Bldg. 1-7, Rm. 2016 Fed. Bldg.,U.S.F.S. Santa Fe Station 9791 Road 272 210 Custom House Rt, 6, Box 193 1725 K. St. NW Rt. 1, Box 226 6616 Fairfield Ave. 6090 N. Harrison 59752 Ephrata, WA. 98823 Washington, DC. 20315 Pagosa Springs, Colo. 81147 Hillsboro, Ore, 97123 Washington DC. 20315 Bellevue, WA. 98004 Del City, Okla.73100 Missoula, Mont.59801 Fresno, CA. 93718 Porterville, CA.93257 Portland, Ore. 97209 Yakima, WA. 98901 Washington DC. 20006 Sunnyside, WA. 98944 Boise, Ida. 73702 Fresno, Calif. 93700

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(19)

Lee

Vohland Box 307 Scottsbluff, Netlr.69361

Bill J. Waddle 607 Littlefield Bldg. Austin, Texas 78701

Merwin Wagner & Wife 902 E. Yorba Linda Blvd. Placentia CA. 92670

Elliott Waits Rt. 3, Box 32 Yuma,Ariz. 85364

Carl W. Walker 917 S. 21st Ave. Yakima, WA. 98902

Frank Warner Ogden, Utah 84000

Fred Weakley P. O. Box 248 Mount Vernon, WA.

98273

Charles Weber P. O. Box 3, Houston, Tex. 77001

Jake A. Weber Rt. 1, Box 177 Quincy, WA. 98848

W. F. Weed & Wife P. O. Box 2390 Beaumont, Tex. 77704

Lowell O. Weeks P. O. Box 1058 Coachella, CA. 92236

William Weld 515 Jannoys Lane Alexandria, VA 22303

H. G. Wells & Wife P. O. Box 1498 Yakima, WA. 98901

Wm, E. Welsh & Wife 916 N. Cole Road Boise, Ida. 83704

Eric Wendt & Wife Box 1725 Sterling, Colo. 80751

Arleigh B. West & Wife 315 Utah St. Boulder City, Nev.

89005

Herbert K. West Box 849 Wenatchee, WA, 98801

Jerry Wester Fairfield, 11ont.59436

Chris L. Wheeler 516 Public Service Bldg. Salem, Ore. 97310

Hubert White Townsend, Montana 59644

Carl Wilder & Wife 5420 Old Orchard Road Skokie, Ill. 60076

Alan Williams 1111 Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA.90054

D. Keith Williams Box 2538 Billings, 1Y1ont.9103

Glynn A. Williams & Wife P.O.Box 7555 Waco, Texas 76710

Lew Williams Box 130 Norwood, Colo.81423

Paul H. Willison 1569 W. Scott Fresno, CA. 93703

Paul A. Wing & Wife P. O. Box 429 Baldwin Park, CA.

91709

Nyle Wise Box J Manson, WA. 98831

Dr. G. Burton Wood

Oregon

State University School of Agriculture

(35)

..

James Wood

(20)

1524 N. Maine St. Fallon, Nevada 89406

Lowell Woods Federal Bldg. 517 Gold Ave, SW.Albuquerque, N. M.

87101 Wilfred Woods

Frank Wright Roger Zimmerman Roland Westergard

Box 1511 Wenatchee, WA. 98801

•••••••••••

Turton, S.D. 57477

102 N. Riverside Rialto, California

P.O. Box 188 92376

President, Association of Western State

Engineers Carson City, Nevada

89701

Total Men this list = 567 Total Women this list = 245

(36)

PROGRAM

38th Annual Convention

NATIONAL RECLAMATION ASSOCIATION

"Water. . . People. . . and National Goals" DAVENPORT AND RIDPATH HOTELS

Spokane, Washington

OCTOBER 21-24, 1969

TOURS • DIRECTORY •

GENERAL INFORMATION

SCHEDULE OF CONVENTION EVENTS • LADIES' EVENTS

WEDNESDAY •

THURSDAY MORNING

THURSDAY NOON • FRIDAY

CONVENTION COMMITTEES

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TOURS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21

Buses load on First Avenue at the Ric!path and the Davenport Hotels

COLUMBIA BASIN TOUR:

First bus leaves at 7 a.m. Last bus leaves at 7:30 a.m. Grand Coulee Dam, and thc Third Power House under

construction. Lunch at the Dam area.

Dry land farms, the 27 mile equalizing reservoir. Dry Falls, and the Sun Lakes chain of lakes, irrigated lands of the Project, processing plants.

Buses return to the Ridpath and the Davenport at 5 p.m. NORTH IDAHO TOUR:

Buses load at 9.:20 and depart at 9:30 a.m.

The Spokane Valley. Potlatch Forest Inc. Lumber Mill, cruise on Lake Coeur d'Alene on the Dancewana or the See-weewana.

Lunch at the North Shore Lodge.

Hayden Lake, the Kaiser Rolling Mill, and Spokane Indus-trial Park areas, the Spokane Upriver Drive.

Buses return to the Ridpatli and the Davenport at 3:30 p.m.

The Hanford Project: No organized tours have been ar-ranged. However, visitors to the project are welcome, al-though advance clearance eliminates delay. Delegates wish-ing to visit the Project should check with NRA information desks, so clearance can be arranged.

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CONVENTION DIRECTORY AND

GENERAL INFORMATION

Registration Ridpath Motor Inn, Lower Lobby Information Davenport Hotel, First Avenue Entrance Ridpath Motor Inn, Lower Lobby NRA Office Riclpath Motor Inn. Room 260 Press Room Ridpath Hotel, Colony Room Duplicating & Steno Room Ridpath Hotel, Arcade Room Board of Directors Ridpath Hotel, Terrace Room B Resolutions Committee Ridpath Hotel. Terrace Room A Committee Meeting Room Ridpath Hotel, Vance Room 321 Bureau of Reclamation Office Ridpath Hotel, Room 342 For appointments call Extension 336 Corps of Engineers Office Ridpath Motor Inn, Room 279 Forest Service Office Davenport Hotel, Room 730 Soil Conservation Service Ridpath Motor Inn, Room 375 Exhibits Ridpath Motor Inn. Upper Lobby Duplicating Station Ridpath Motor Inn, Lower Lobby

Courtesy A. B. Dick Co.

Message Station Ridpath Motor Inn, Lower Lobby Courtesy Pacific Northwest Bell RI 7-2628 Hospitality Centers Davenport Hotel; Mezzanine North Ridpath Hotel, Upper Terrace Wednesday Evening Cocktail Hour Davenport Hotel Isabella Room Thursday Evening Cocktail Hour Ridpath Hotel, Terrace Rooms

• Registration desks are located in the Lower Lobby of the Rid-path Motor Inn. They will be open for registration and ticket sales beginning 1 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 19, until 11 a.m. Friday, Oct. 24.

• Tickets for Tours and Events: Tickets requested by pre

-regis-tration should be claimed on arrival at the regis-regis-tration desk. Individual tickets and registration for convention functions will be available at the registration desks during the entire conven-tion. No refunds will be made for unused tickets during or after the convention.

Hospitality Centers, courtesy of the Washington State Recla-mation Association, are to be open

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday, October 21

8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday, October 24

Men as well as ladies are invited to rendezvous at the Hos-pitality Centers.

TOURS • DIRECTORY •

GENERAL INFORMATION

SCHEDULE OF CONVENTION EVENTS • LADIES' EVENTS

WEDNESDAY • THURSDAY MORNING

THURSDAY NOON • FRIDAY

CONVENTION COMMITTEES

(39)

SCHEDULE OF CONVENTION EVENTS

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19

1:00 p.m. —NRA Office opens Ridpath Motor Inn 1:30 p.m.,—Board of Directors meets Ridpath Hotel 1:30 p.m.--Resolutions Committee meets Ridpath Hotel 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.—Registration Ridpath Motor Inn

MONDAY, OCTOBER 20

9 am.,—Registration Desk opens Ridpath Motor Inn Board of Directors and

Resolutions Committee meet Ridpath Hotel 10 am—Hospitality Centers open Davenport Hotel Ridpath Hotel

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21

7 : 00-7 : 30 a.ni,—Columbia Basin Tour Buses Depart Ridpath and Davenport 7:00 am.—Registration Desk opens Ridpath Motor Inn 9:30 a.m.,—North Idaho Tour Buses Depart Ridpath and Davenport

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22

8 : 00 to 9:45 a.m. State Caucuses Rooms Designated 10 to 12 Noon.—General Sessions Ridpath Motor Inn 10 : 30 a.m.—Ladies. Tour Buses Depart Ridpath

and and Davenport

Luncheon The Spokane Club 12:15 p.m.—Interior Luncheon Davenport Hotel 2 : 00 p.m.—,General Sessions Ridpath Motor Inn 5:45 p.m—No Host Cocktails Davenport Hotel 7:00 p.m.,—Las Vegas Night Banquet Davenport Hotel

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23

8 : 00 to 9: 15 a.ni.—State Caucuses Rooms Designated 9:30 a.m.—General Sessions Ridpath Motor Inn 10:30 a.m.—Ladies Tour Buses Depart Ridpath

and and Davenport

Luncheon The Spokane Country Club 12: 15 p.m.—,Interior and Insular Affairs

Committee Luncheon Ridpath Motor Inn 2: 15 p.m.--General Sessions Davenport Hotel 5:45 p.m.—No Host Cocktails Ridpath Hotel 7:00 p.m.—All States Banquet Ridpath Motor Inn

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24

7:30 to 9:30 a.m.—State Caucuses Rooms Designated 9:45 a.m.—Reclamation Brunch Ridpath Motor Inn 12:45 p.m.,—Business Session Ridpath Motor Inn

(40)

LADIES' EVENTS

MONDAY, OCTOBER 20

10 a.m. to 4 p.m.—Hospitality Centers Mezzanine North Davenport Hotel Upper Terrace Ridpath Hotel

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21

7 - 7:30 a.m.—Columbia Basin Tour Depart Ridpath and Davenport 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.—Hospitality Centers Mezzanine North Davenport Hotel Upper Terrace Ridpath Hotel 9:30 a.m.—North Idaho Tour Depart Ridpath and Davenport

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22

8 a.m. to 4 p.m.—Hospitality Centers Mezzanine North Davenport Hotel Upper Terrace Ridpath Hotel 10:30 a.m. to 2:15 p.m.—Ladies' Tour Buses Depart Ridpath

and and Davenport

Luncheon _Spokane Club Program: -We Never Regret

It-Dorothy R. Powers

Feature Writer.l'he Spokesman-Review

7 p.m.—Las Vegas Night Banquet Davenport Hotel

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23

8 a.m. to 4 p.m.—Hospitality Centers Mezzanine North Davenport Hotel Upper Terrace Ridpath Hotel 10:30 a.m. to 2:45 p.m.—Ladies' Tour Buses Depart

and Ridpath and Davenport

Luncheon Spokane Country Club 7 p.m.—All States Banquet Ridpath Motor Inn

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24

8 a.m. to 1 p.m.—Hospitality Centers Mezzanine North Davenport Hotel Upper Terrace Ridpath Hotel Tole Buses Load on First Avenue at the Ridpath and

Davenport Hotels

LUNCHEON FAVORS PRESENTED BY: Carnation Company

Fidelity Mutual Savings Bank Lincoln First Federal Savings & Loan Old National Bank of Washington Seattle First National Bank The Crescent

SCHEDULE OF CONVENTION EVENTS • LADIES' EVENTS

WEDNESDAY •

THURSDAY MORNING

THURSDAY NOON • FRIDAY

CONVENTION COMMITTEES

(41)

PROGRAM

NATIONAL RECLAMATION ASSOCIATION

38th Annual Convention

WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 22

8:00 a.m.-9:45 a.m.—State Caucuses in room designated 10:00 am.,—GENERAL SESSION . . . Ridpath Motor Inn

Empire Ball Room CALL TO ORDER

VAN E. NUTLEY, President. Washington State Reclamation Association

WELCOME TO SPOKANE

WILLIAM E. BURCH. President, Spokane Chamber of Commerce

10:15 am—MESSAGE BY NATIONAL RECLAMATION ASSOCIATION PRESIDENT

JAMES F. SORENSEN. NRA Director, Cali-fornia

10:40 a.m.-12 Noon—JAMES F. SORENSON, Presiding GOVERNOR DANIEL J. EVANS, State of

Washington "The State's Views"

SENATOR ALAN S. BIBLE, U.S. Senator of Nevada; Member Appropriations, Interior & Insu-lar Affairs and other committees

"The Federal View"

CHARLES F. LUCE, Chairman of the Board. Consolidated Edison Company of New York "The National Water Commission'

WEDNESDAY NOON LUNCHEON

12:15 p.m.—Davenport Hotel . . . Banquet Hall Toastmaster . . . J. A. RIGGINS, JR.

NRA Director, Arizona

Invocation . . . The Rev. James T. Duvall Executive Director, Spokane Council of Churches Introduction of Special Guests . . .

Address . . . JAMES R. SMITH, ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR WATER AND POWER, DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR

"The Views of the Department of the Interior" •

(42)

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

2:00 p.m.,—GENERAL SESSION . . . Ridpath Motor Inn, Empire Ball Room MILO W. HOISVEEN. Presiding

2nd Vice President and NRA Director North Dakota

DR. G. BURTON WOOD, Oregon State Uni-versity

"Progress Through Water Projects"

SENATOR LEN B. JORDAN, Interior and Insu-lar Affairs, Joint Economic, and other committees, and U.S. Senator of Idaho

Bids for the Convention City for 1971 and 1972 Committee Reports

WEDNESDAY EVENING

5:45 p.m.—NO HOST COCKTAILS . . . Davenport Hotel, Isabella Room 7:00 p.m.—LAS VEGAS NIGHT BANQUET. . . Davenport Hotel, Banquet Hall Toastmaster. . . ROBERT T. CHUCK

NRA Director, Hawaii

Invocation. . . REV. DANIEL E. WE'TZLER Chaplain-Instructor, Marycliff High School Introduction of Special Guests

Las Vegas Program . . . Introduced by IVAN P. HEAD, NRA Director Nevada

THURSDAY MORNING

8:00 a.m.-9:15 am.,—State Caucuses in rooms designated 9:30 a.m.—GENERAL SESSION . . . RiG-Ipatli Motor Inn,

Empire Ball Room EDWARD H. SOUTHWICK, Presiding

NRA Director, Utah

DR. ARTHUR W. PETERSON, Washington State University

"New Towns from Irrigation"

RICHARD H. STROUD, Sport Fishing Institute "Effects of Impoundment on Sport Fishing

Poten-tial"

LT. GENERAL FREDERICK J. CLARKE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS, U.S. ARMY

WEDNESDAY •

THURSDAY MORNING

THURSDAY NOON • FRIDAY

CONVENTION COMMITTEES

(43)

1

THURSDAY NOON LUNCHEON

12:15 p.m.—RicIpath Motor Inn . . . Empire Ball Room Toastmaster . . . J. R. BARKLEY

NRA Director, Colorado

Invocation. . . DERALD P. ROMNEY Spokane Stake President

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Introduction of Speakers . . . HONORABLE

THOMAS S. FOLEY, 5th District, State of Washington

HONORABLE WAYNE N. ASPINALL, Colorado; Chairman, House Interior and In-sular Affairs Committee

HONORABLE HAROLD 1'. "BIZ" JOHN-SON. California; Chairman of the Sub-Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation HONORABLE JAMES A. McCLURE, Idaho HONORABLE JOHN M. "HAPPY" CAMP,

Oklahoma

HONORABLE DON H. CLAUSEN. California

THURSDAY AFTERNOON

2:15 p.m.—GENERAL SESSION . . . Davenport Hotel, Marie Antoinette Room MARLIN T. KURTZ, Presiding

NRA Director, Wyoming

T. B. GLAZEBROOK, U.S. Forest Service. Divi-sion of Water Shed Management

-National Forests for People.'

JOSEPH F. POLAND, U.S. Geological Survey Water Resources Division

-Land Subsidence in tlie Western States due to Ground-Water

Overdraft-ROLAND WESTERGARD, Nevada

President, Association of Western State Engineers -State Engineers

(44)

THURSDAY EVENING

5:45 p.m.—NO HOST COCKTAILS . Ridpath Hotel, Terrace Rooms 7:00 p.m.—ALL STATES BANQUET. . . Ridpath Motor Inn, Empire Ball Room Toastmaster . . . PRESIDENT JAMES F.

SOR-ENSEN

Invocation . . . Rev. William R. Lindsay, First Presbyterian Church

Introduction of Special Guests AWARDS

Address: ROBERT A. SANDBERG

Vice President of Advertising and Public Affairs Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corporation -Dimensions of Change"

FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 24

7:30 a.m.-9:30 am.—State Caucuses in rooms designated BRUNCH . . . Ridpath Motor Inn, Empire Ball

Room 9: ‘13 a.m.— JOHN A. ROSHOLT, Presiding

NRA Director, Idaho

Invocation . . . THE REV. ARTHUR E. OS-MUNDSON, St. Mark's Lutheran Church BUREAU OF RECLAMATION PROGRAM

Featuring Top Bureau Officials

SENATOR HENRY M. JACKSON, U.S. Senator of Washington: Chairman of the Senate Interior & Insular Affairs Committee

STATE WATER PLANNING:

WARREN D. FAIRCHILD, Soil Water Con-servation Commission, Nebraska

WILLIAM R. GIANELLI, Department of Wa-ter Resources, California

GUY N. KEITH, Water Users Association, Okla-homa

DONEL J. LANE, Water Resources Board, Oregon

JOHN W. SIMMONS, Water Conservation As-sociation, Texas

H. MAURICE AHLQUIST, Department of Wa-ter Resources, Washington

12:45 p.m.—Business Session . . . JAMES F. SORENSEN, NRA President, Presiding

Committee Reports Action on Resolutions

Ballot on Association Name Change

Selection of Convention Cities for 1971 and 1972 2: 15 p.m.,—Adjournment

THURSDAY NOON • FRIDAY

CONVENTION COMMITTEES

References

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