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11 <br /> m <br /> xl <br /> 0 <br /> 0 <br /> c <br /> o <br /> m , <br /> 0 <br /> > <br /> --1 <br /> MR. KNAPP: Whether your courts will-- <br /> MR. VIDAL: You haven' t in mind the difference be- <br /> --I <br /> tween juvenile water and the other. It all comes from pre- 0 <br /> oipitation sometime or other, whether in past eons or recent- <br /> 0 <br /> ly. What you are trying to get at 1s the water that origina- <br /> m <br /> tee in the Arkansas River Basin. <br /> MR. LAPP: We are getting at that by engineering oom- <br /> putatione, but the purpose of this is to provide a defini. <br /> tion of that water that originates within the Arkansas Basin <br /> and a definition of that water that is imported. One is now <br /> palled native water and the other foreign. <br /> R. IRELAND: Do you remember, George, in the Republi- <br /> can River Compact we used the words "virgin water*? <br /> MR. KNAPP: That was as to the original water supply <br /> not affected by man. Now, we are not attempting in our en- <br /> gineering studies to get at the original or virgin water sup- <br /> ply here-- <br /> MR. IRELAND: But that was still the original water <br /> less importation, we didn' t take into consideration im- <br /> portation. <br /> MR. NNAPP: No, I didn't refer in any way to foreign <br /> water because there were no importations here. Our studies <br /> now relate to the water that we find in the stream, without <br /> attempting to go bank to the original, that is, to find the <br /> virgin water supply, out in this basin we are dealing with <br />