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...mines close eventually, of course, but until recently the Potomac Complex in West Virginia's Grant County seemed protected by its solid marriage to Virginia Power's Mount Storm generating station. It was built on a tortured, windswept plateau in the mid-1960s only because abundant coal was nearby. The coal was worth mining, in turn, only because Mount Storm would burn it. Tipple and boiler were linked by a two-mile covered conveyor belt that carried coal from the east portal of the mine straight to the storage silos of the power plant. The miners still marvel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MOUNT STORM, WEST VIRGINIA: COAL WAR | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

...that tidy conveyor has been idle since January in favor of a more invasive coal-delivery system: a fleet of bottom-dumping trucks making more than 200 trips a day, at 80,000 lbs. per trip, to the Mount Storm plant from the nonunion Mettiki mine, 17 miles away and across the state line in Maryland. Some of the old miners claim that the switch is an old-fashioned union-busting effort, but it's both more and less than that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MOUNT STORM, WEST VIRGINIA: COAL WAR | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

...dirty and archaic as it may seem in an age of microchips and gene maps, coal has a curiously upbeat future. Not so the union men who mine it. Deregulation in the electric-utilities industry generally favors the cheapest means of making power, and on average, that is still coal. But deregulation also means the arrival of cost cutting as religion, the stern faith that has propelled the U.S. economy to its current world-beating performance. The strongest economy in the world is as strong as it has ever been. But as the brutal tale of the Potomac mines illustrates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MOUNT STORM, WEST VIRGINIA: COAL WAR | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

...property owners as we fulfill our responsibility to protect Yellowstone. The Administration insisted that the agreement expressly take Reeb's interests into account. Also, it is incorrect to say the Administration has not found any properties for a swap. In March we announced a proposal to exchange federal coal, oil and gas royalties for the mine property. We believe the exchange is a good deal for everyone--the holders of the mine property, the American taxpayers and people who care about Yellowstone. KATHLEEN A. MCGINTY, Chair White House Council on Environmental Quality Washington

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jun. 2, 1997 | 6/2/1997 | See Source »

...turned up in Chicago. Lee Miglin, 72, was one of that city's more respected and better-known developers. A coal miner's son turned real estate baron, he had been a major player in Chicago's late-1980s building boom and was a generous philanthropist. His wife Marilyn, 58, was a successful and well-known cosmetics executive. On the morning of May 4, she returned from a business trip to find Miglin missing from their three-story brick row house in Chicago's Gold Coast district. Police searched the couple's garage across an alleyway, and found a grisly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEATH AT EVERY STOP | 5/19/1997 | See Source »

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