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Show Reclamation In Utah's Future Is IVIagazine Feature The future of reclamation in Utah, including1 the part that power can play as an aid to irrigation, is discussed in the all-reclamation June 1948 issue of Utah Magazine just off the press. Expanded to 52 pages, the issue is-sue contains 36 photo illustrations, illustra-tions, including an aerial panorama pano-rama of Deer Creek reservoir on the cover and a center "spread" devoted to aerial views of potential po-tential multiple-purpose storage sites on tne Colorado river ' mam stem" being investigated or considered con-sidered for investigation by the Bureau of Reclamation, "Beehive State Boasts Lion's Share of Multiple-Purpose Dam-sites Dam-sites and Biggest Power Market in: the Upper Colorado River Basin" is the thesis of the double page feature. William R. Wallace, chairman of the Utah Water and Power Board, authors an article showing show-ing how the traditional pioneer traits of self-help and coopera-tiveness coopera-tiveness are carried on by creation crea-tion of Utah's "little reclama- tion bureau." Parley R. Nceley, of Spanish Fork, area engineer, and F. M. Warnick, office engineer, both of the Bureau of Reclamation, analyze an-alyze Utah's biggest potential reclamation projects in signed articles entitled: "The Central Utah Project . . . With It the Green River Can Be Put to Work Building a Greener Utah" and "Thirsting Communities Look With Hope to The Weber Basin Project." Also discussed in the issue, 1,000 copies of which are to be distributed by the Water and Power Board, is the new economic eco-nomic report, "Water for Utah," to be published shortly as a justification of Utah's claims to waters of the Colorado river. |