Word: colorado
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Navy Secretary John Lehman defended the Administration's plan to build 110 new surface ships, including spending $7 billion for two 90,000-ton Nimitz-class nuclear aircraft carriers. The sinking of the Sheffield, said Lehman, showed that relying on smaller aircraft carriers, as proposed by Colorado Democrat Gary Hart and other military reformers, would be dangerous. Only large carriers can transport airborne defenses, including F-14 "Tomcat" fighters and surveillance planes, that will adequately protect fleets against modern missiles. The Argentine plane carrying Exocet missiles "would not have gotten anywhere near one of our battle groups," he claimed...
Hinckley's well-to-do family in Colorado tried to help him but without success. His mother Jo Ann testified to years of anguish, noting that her son's depressed condition had worsened dramatically in the fall of 1980. In October the family considered placing him in a mental hospital; a psychiatrist said no, urging the Hinckleys to persuade their son to accept responsibility for himself. John's parents gave him an ultimatum: by March 1, 1981, he was to have a job. Instead, he left home; a week later he called from New York, incoherent...
...program suffered its sharpest blow, one that could prove to be a major setback for large-scale attempts to develop energy alternatives to conventionally obtained oil. Exxon, the world's largest energy company, and the Tosco Corp. pulled out of their multibillion-dollar Colony Shale Oil Project in Colorado, effectively abandoning the most ambitious U.S. synthetic-fuel project...
...study just completed by Camp Dresser & McKee, a Boston engineering firm, 5.1 million acres of irrigated land (an area the size of Massachusetts) in six Great Plains states will dry up by the year 2020. If current trends continue, Kansas will lose 1.6 million irrigated acres, Texas 1.2 million, Colorado 260,000, New Mexico 224,000, Oklahoma 330,000. Yet this drastic estimate, declares Herbert Grubb of the Texas department of water resources, is "20% too optimistic...
...states' efforts have been as slow as Chinese water torture. The dimensions of the problem have been recognized, but no one is sure whether the shrinking aquifer is a federal, state or local issue, and no one wants the responsibility of deciding. Several states, including Oklahoma and Colorado, already have established policies limiting water use, but many say such efforts are too little too late. The Governors' group, due to meet again in late June, plans to recommend legislation to Congress by next fall, but thus far inaction is the order of the day. The afflicted states cannot...