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What little real cleanup has already taken place has proved astronomically expensive. Moving 10.5 million gal. of toxic liquids and 500,000 cu. yds. of contaminated soil from one site at the Army's Rocky Mountain Arsenal in Colorado cost $32 million; cleaning up the whole base is likely to top $1.5 billion. Digging out a single landfill the size of a tennis court at Norfolk cost $18 million, and there are 21 other identified sites. Removing 600 drums of buried toxic wastes at Pease Air Force Base in New Hampshire cost $22 million. "We are only on the threshold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Thousand Points of Blight | 11/9/1992 | See Source »

Wolf Vision, which is based in Silver Cliff, Colorado, gave two successive presentations, which included an educational video and closed with the introduction of the four captive wolves...

Author: By David P. Bardeen, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Timber Wolves Sighted in Harvard Hall | 11/5/1992 | See Source »

ELEC. VOTES CLINTON BUSH PEROT Alabama 9 41 48 11 Alaska* 3 39 36 25 Arizona* 8 41 37 21 Arkansas 6 53 36 11 California 54 46 35 19 Colorado 8 41 36 23 Connecticut 8 42 36 22 Delaware 3 44 36 21 District of Columbia 3 86 9 4 Florida 25 40 41 20 Georgia 13 43 43 14 Hawaii 4 50 36 14 Idaho 4 29 44 28 Illinois 22 49 34 17 Indiana 12 37 43 20 Iowa 7 43 38 19 Kansas 6 34 39 27 Kentucky 8 45 42 14 Louisiana...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: State-by-State Results | 11/4/1992 | See Source »

...Colorado voters chose the first Native American senator in American history: Ben Nighthorse Campbell, currently a U.S. representative. And five Southern states elected their first Black representatives since reconstruction...

Author: By Joe Mathews, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Voters Return Many to Congress | 11/4/1992 | See Source »

...inclined to sit on his lead, Clinton last week combined offensive and defensive campaign strategies. He revisited states like Wisconsin and Iowa, which had appeared safe for him initially but which have become shaky. He went ; west to Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and Nevada -- all traditional Republican bastions -- continuing his in-your-face challenge to Bush. The West, with its independent-minded electorate, was a good setting for Clinton to counter the Bush claim that he is an old-fashioned liberal in disguise -- a charge that is having some resonance in the polls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Fat Lady Hasn't Quite Sung | 11/2/1992 | See Source »

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