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...drought is also depleting rivers, lakes and canals, ruining recreation areas and threatening inland transportation. On the Great Lakes, ships are carrying 5% lighter loads. River gridlock has hit the mighty Mississippi. As spring water levels reached their lowest point on record, 1,200 barges were stranded after they ran aground at Greenville, Miss. According to Michael Logue, spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers, twice as many barges could become mired this week, creating the aquatic equivalent of a "traffic jam of semitrucks bumper to bumper from New Orleans to Philadelphia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Waiting, And Praying, for Rain | 6/27/1988 | See Source »

...them. They predict that the U.S.'s technological edge will prove temporary, while the geographical "asymmetries" between the superpowers are permanent -- and favor the Soviet Union. Key American cities and military installations are near the coasts, therefore easy marks for Soviet SLCMs, while comparable Soviet targets are deep inland and protected by the most extensive air defenses in the world. Paul Nitze, drawing on his experience as a Secretary of the Navy in the Johnson Administration, proposed simply banning nuclear-armed SLCMs altogether...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Superpowers: Inside Moves | 5/30/1988 | See Source »

Bureaucrats from the capital are more likely to recognize the threadbare inland province of Hunan, just across Guangdong's northern border. In Hunan, Mao Zedong's birthplace, most people still regard private enterprise with condescension. While the province once benefited heavily from investment in state enterprises, some of those facilities have become a drain on resources. With local officials abiding by the directives of central planners in Beijing, state-owned stores are consistently short of both agricultural and consumer goods...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China One for the Money, One Goes Slow | 4/11/1988 | See Source »

Thus began one of the nation's worst inland oil spills ever. Within 24 hours, 23,000 people in the Pittsburgh area found themselves without tap water. An additional 750,000 were forced to ration their drinking water, 1,200 families were temporarily evacuated, dozens of factories had to shut down, schools were closed and commercial traffic on the river was halted. The oil entered the Ohio River at Pittsburgh's Golden Triangle, and by week's end the scene had been replayed downriver as far as Steubenville, Ohio, where an ice jam slowed the oil's progress. Wheeling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Nightmare on The Monongahela | 1/18/1988 | See Source »

...than 40 miles from China. At the same moment, on the Bering Strait across from Alaska, the easternmost edge of the Soviet world is well on the way to an Arctic noon. And in Moscow, ten time zones to the west over an endless expanse of tundra, forests and inland seas, it is half past midnight, and yesterday has just ended. Not for eight hours will the commuters to the left head for their jobs in the capital from suburban Zagorsk. In the Soviet Union, more than anywhere else on earth, a day is here and there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Day in the Life . . . of the Soviet Union | 10/26/1987 | See Source »

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