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...America, drug routes cross more and more borders, bringing previously untainted countries into some phase of the business. Sixteen months ago, customs seized 667 kilos of cocaine, at that time the largest haul in history, at an airport near Caracas, Venezuela. In Paraguay last September, officials intercepted 49,000 gal. of ether, acetone and hydrochloric acid, enough to process eight tons of cocaine; DEA officials speculate that influential Paraguayans might be involved in drug trafficking. Cocaine arrests in Trinidad soared to 150 in 1983 from three in 1978. In the Bahamas, three Cabinet ministers in the government of Prime Minister...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fighting the Cocaine Wars | 2/25/1985 | See Source »

...Washington's instigation, Panamanian agents later swooped down on a warehouse in the Colon Free Trade Zone, a busy international transshipment center. There they found 17,000 55-gal. barrels of ether, worth about $1 million and enough to process around 200,000 kilos of cocaine. Both the chemicals and the building were apparently owned by Colombia's Ochoa clan. Shortly afterward, Julian Melo, the general secretary of the Panamanian National Defense Forces High Command, was arrested, accused of allowing the Colombians to transport the ether through the country in exchange for a $2 million bribe. Melo was never prosecuted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fighting the Cocaine Wars | 2/25/1985 | See Source »

...price of oil has declined more than 20% in the past three years, and is likely to go on falling. Even a relatively small 5% excise tax on energy could produce some $15 billion a year by the end of the decade. And an extra 10 cents-per-gal. tax on gasoline--which would offset only half of the 20 cents-per-gal. price decline that has occurred over the past four years--would raise $10 billion a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: How to Get the Deficit Under $100 Billion | 2/4/1985 | See Source »

...fatal leak. Throughout the detoxification process, which was to be undertaken only during daylight hours, a helicopter was to circle 200 ft. above the plant. At even the slightest sign of a gas escape, the pilot, protected by a special oxygen mask, would release up to 317 gal. of water to degrade the lethal chemical. If more water were needed, two more helicopters would come to the rescue. All around the facility, blinking lights were set up to help guide the pilots, and the army was to be kept on alert. To dramatize his confidence in the safety...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Clouds of Uncertainty | 12/24/1984 | See Source »

Every day in the U.S. the chemical and petroleum industries produce about 275 million gal. of gasoline, 2.5 million lbs. of pesticides and herbicides, and nearly 723,000 tons of dangerous wastes. Some 250,000 loads of hazardous materials, chiefly petrochemicals, are shipped across the country by rail or road. Considering the volume of this production and movement, fatal accidents are few, just eight deaths last year. One reason, contends the chemical industry, is its elaborate and expensive safety precautions. Says Bruce Karrh, a physician who is also vice president for safety, health and environmental affairs for Du Pont...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: An Unending Search for Safety | 12/17/1984 | See Source »

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