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- All Subjects: Water rights -- Arizona
- All Subjects: Regional economics
- Creators: Archives and Special Collections, Arizona State University Libraries
- Creators: Hoffman, Dennis L.
- Creators: Rex, Tom R.
Universities contribute to the local community in three distinct ways: 1) Traditional Economic Impact; 2) Benefits to Individuals and Society; 3) Creation of Knowledge. Among the results are higher incomes of individuals and the community as a whole, higher-quality jobs, enhanced economic development, and improvements in prosperity and quality of life.
Why I oppose the approval of the Colorado River Compact, by Geo. W.P. Hunt, Governor of Arizona, 1923?
Ernest McFarland to John J. Rhodes re: Bridge Canyon and Upper Basin Project bill, March 8, 1956.
C.C. Tillotson to Carl T. Hayden, 2/19/1945 re: Colorado-Verde Project, water allocations and Mexican water.
John R. Murdock to Carl T. Hayden, February 21, 1944 re: Mexican water treaty.
"Arizona's Benefits From the Colorado River," by the Colorado Verde River Association, January 29, 1945.
This is the truth about the Central Arizona Project, 1950.
"Let the Supreme Court Decide," issued by the Colorado River Association, Los Angeles, California, 1948.
This project, as part of Arizona State University's Community Outreach Partnership Center grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, examines the location of industry clusters in the Phoenix Metropolitan Area. The objective is to find out if there are identifiable concentrations of industry in Phoenix's inner city areas.