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<br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br /> <br />BRUCE BABBITT (B.A. Geology, 160, University <br />of Notre Dame; M.S. Univ. of Newcastle, <br />England '63; L.L.B. Harvard Law '65) served as <br />Governor of Arizona from 1978-1987. Prior to <br />that he was Attorney General of Arizona ('75- <br />78); an attorney with Brown, Vlassis & Bain in <br />Phoenix (' 67-75); ana an attorney with the <br />U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity ('65-67). <br />Presently he is an attorney with Steptoe & <br />Johnson in Phoenix. Among his many activities <br />he is a founding member of the Democratic <br />Leadership Council and of the Grand Canyon <br />Trust. He served as chair of the National <br />Groundwater Policy Forum in 1985. <br />Publications include: "Future of the Colorado <br />River," in New Courses for the Colorado River, 1986; "Mexico Could <br />Use a Good Neighbor," Wall Street Journal, July 2, 1986; and <br />"Saving Habitat in the Desert: Arizona Bolstering Future of <br />Riparian wildlife in Imaginative Land Trades," for Defenders of <br />Wildlife, 1986. <br /> <br /> <br />MICHAEL C. BLUHM (B.S. '72, Williams College; <br />J. D. '76, LL. M. '79, George Washington) is <br />Professor of Law at Lewis & Clark Law School <br />in Portland, Oregon, teaching Property, <br />Environmental Law, and other natural resources <br />courses. He has edited the Anadromous Fish <br />Law Memo for the last ten years. He has <br />written extensively on fish and wildlife <br />protection in the Columbia Basin, federal and <br />regional hydroelectric policy making and <br />federal wetlands regulation, including a <br />forthcoming article in the Colorado Law <br />Review. His most recent article is "Public <br />Property and the Democratization of Western <br />Water Law: A Modern View of the Public Trust <br />boctrine,; 19 Environmental Law no. 3 (forthcoming, 1989). <br /> <br />JOHN U. CARLSON (University of Montana, B.A. <br />'62; Oxford University, B.A. '64; Yale Law <br />School, LL.B. '67) is a partner with the <br />Denver law firm Carlson, Hammond & Paddock <br />where he specializes in water rights matters. <br />Previously he was a partner with Carlson, <br />Elliott & Land and with Holland & Hart (1973- <br />85). He has taught as an adjunct professor at <br />the University of Colorado School of Law and <br />is a Fellow of the American College of Trial <br />Lawyers. He has had a long-standing interest <br />1n interstate and intrastate water problems on <br />the Colorado, Rio Grande and Arkansas Rivers <br />and was once Colorado Commissioner for the <br />negotiation of a compact with New Mexico <br />regarding the waters of the Vermijo River. <br /> <br />