| Title |
Utah Water Resources Council papers, 1980-1981 |
| Description |
From The Dorothy Harvey papers (1902-2005), a collection of materials focusing on the Central Utah Project (CUP), a water resource development program to use Utah's alloted share of the Colorado River. Includes correspondence, Harvey's writing drafts and notes for an unpublished book on the CUP, federal documents, project litigation materials, subject files, news clippings, newsletters, programs, brochures, and maps |
| Subject |
Central Utah Project; Water resources development --Environmental aspects--Utah; Water-supply--Utah--Salt Lake County; Water-power--Environmental aspects--Utah; Ute Indians--Claims; Water-supply--Utah--Salt Lake County; White River (Colo. and Utah) |
| Creator |
Harvey, Dorothy |
| Contributor |
Citizens for a Responsible Central Utah Project; Bryan, William L.; Kaeding, Beth; Osborne, Calvin; Utah Water Resources Council; Northern Rockies Action Group; Industrial Areas Foundation |
| Alternate Title |
Rock Eagle Conference: Notes from the Southeastern Leadership Development Conference; Organizing for family and congregation |
| Additional Information |
Includes: Dorothy Harvey statement for the draft EIS on Management of the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge in Montana (Nov. 14, 1980, 7 p.); Considerations for assisting Ute Indian Tribe in quantifying water for the Reservation and resolving means of allocating and storing water to and on their lands (meeting between D. Harvey and Ute Tribal Council, Jan. 22, 1981, 4 p.); Letters to D. Harvey by William L. Bryan, Executive director of the Northern Rockies Action Group, 1981 Letters by Dorothy Harvey on Utah Water Resources Council letterhead, 1981; Questions submitted by the Utah Water Resources Council Nov. 12, 1980, for the renegotiating Session between the Central Utah Water Conservancy District and the Water and Power Resources Service concerning the M&I Repayment Obligation for the Bonneville Unit of the Central Utah Project; The Rock Eagle Conference: Notes from the Southeastern Leadership Development Conference, Eatonton, Georgia, January 14-16, 1983 (28 p.); Organizing for family and congregation, by the Industrial Areas Foundation (1978, 33 p.); Utah Water Resources Council Press conference, Central Utah Project and related issues, June 29, 1981 (12 p.); Salt Lake Tribune article by Calvin Osborne, Dec. 7, 1980, "Water distribution creates queries of debts, supplies"; The utah Water Resources Council, dedicated to the balanced management of Utah's water resources... (15 p., 1981?); Other Dorothy Harvey correspondence, 1975-1983 |
| Spatial Coverage |
Colorado River Basin (Colo.-Mexico); Uinta Basin (Utah and Colo.); Uinta Mountains (Utah); Rock Creek (Duchesne County, Utah); Duchesne River (Utah); Uinta and Ouray Indian Reservation (Utah); Salt Lake County (Utah); Duchesne County (Utah); Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge (Mont.) |
| Collection Number and Name |
Accn2232 bx 58 fd 10; Dorothy Harvey papers |
| Rights Management |
Digital Image Copyright 2009, University of Utah. All Rights Reserved. |
| Holding Institution |
J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1975; 1979; 1980; 1981; 1983 |
| Digitization Specifications |
Original scanned on Epson Expression 10000 XL and saved as 400 ppi TIFF. Display image generated in CONTENTdm. |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Type |
Text |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s6qn65qb |
| Setname |
wwdl_neh |
| ID |
1149977 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6qn65qb |
| Title |
Page 70 |
| Setname |
wwdl_neh |
| ID |
1149884 |
| OCR Text |
Show 10 activities and the six relationship activities should be practiced until they are integral components of our behavior. Suggested Times: Introduction - 10 minutes; The Situation - 3 minutes; The Exercise - 10 minutes for individual ranking, 30 minutes for the group; Scoring - 5 minutes; Rationale - 10 minutes; Recording - 10 minutes; Explanation - 5 minutes; Practice - 2 minutes; Moving back and forth - 5 minutes; Total - 1 hour and 30 minutes. • NEW GAMES -)A~ v ,,-?iog ^3-.•'•-: Background - The New Games motto is "play hard, play fair, nobody hurt". The elements of New Games include challenge (knots, clocks, lions and water buffalo), trust (lap sit) safety (lap sit) fantasy and ritual (lions and water buffalo). What's new about New Games is their approach to recreation and play. The interests of the players are more important than the game itself. There are no first place winners or losers. But New Games can be competitive and tough. New Games help participants to understand the relationship between competition and cooperation. They also help in the recognition that games involve both psychological and physical risks. They can also function as icebreakers, exercise and name-learning reinforcement. The Games KNOTS - Groups of eight to twelve people gather together into a tight circle, shoulder to shoulder, facing each other. Each person is then asked to reach across the circle and hold one hand of one planer and another hand of another player. The challenge, then, is for the group to untie the giant knot they're in and form a simple circle. LIONS AND WATER BUFFALO - Each participant is asked to decide which animal they wish to be, either a lion or a water buffalo. After everyone has decided, everyone closes their eyes and starts to either roar like a lion or moo like a water buffalo. By sound alone, individuals are to get together into a herd of water buffalo or a pride of lions. CLOCKS - Have each group formed by the preceeding game get into a large circle. Everyone joins hands. A facilitator drops a marker (flag, frisbee, etc.) next to one person in the circle. The challenge is to see how fast the group can run clockwise around |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6qn65qb/1149884 |