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- <text id=90TT0740>
- <title>
- Mar. 26, 1990: The Presidency
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 26, 1990 The Germans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- THE PRESIDENCY
- The Issue That Won't Wash Away
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Hugh Sidey
- </p>
- <p> George Bush's helicopter lifted high in Washington's 86
- degrees winter heat last Wednesday and churned down the Potomac
- River valley as the President studied the water for signs of
- bass running in the shallows. Within minutes he was at his
- destination, the Potomac Electric Power Co.'s Chalk Point
- generating station, a plant that produces electricity for the
- White House. Under Bush's proposed clean-air program, the
- facility would have to cut half its sulfur dioxide emissions
- within ten years, a $400 million undertaking. "Megabucks,"
- acknowledged Bush. "But I am determined to clean up the air."
- </p>
- <p> Storm rising--political and natural. Bush can smell it and
- view it on every horizon. The old planet is sagging more than
- ever from its burdens of people and pollution, and it no longer
- takes a hydrologist or climatologist to detect it. Every
- American can see it in the air. You can stand with Nancy Reagan
- on the lawn of her sun-drenched Bel Air home above Beverly
- Hills and see a sinister tongue of smog lick out and engulf the
- office where her husband works just three miles below. Or you
- can walk along the low hills of North Dakota and scuff through
- the shifting soil that still blows against the stubble in the
- dry fields. Same message.
- </p>
- <p> Les Brown, head of Worldwatch Institute, warns again this
- year of the globe's diminishing ability to produce enough food
- to keep up with population growth because of erosion,
- deforestation and air pollution. His annual State of the World
- report has sold out--100,000 copies--and the presses are
- being readied for a new run. There are scoffers, principally
- in the U.S. Department of Agriculture, who say we can release
- millions of acres of cropland from the soil banks, pour on the
- fertilizer and meet any food demand. But Brown, with his soft
- voice and his inevitable bow tie, holds firm. Grain stocks are
- low; air pollution has reduced U.S. crop production 5% or 10%.
- Major weather aberrations around the globe could easily produce
- food scarcities and political unrest.
- </p>
- <p> Statistical arguments aside, the U.S. tells its own story
- of concern on the front pages of papers and on local newscasts.
- Solid wastes, pesticides, oil spills, chemical fertilizers. Ask
- editors from Kalamazoo, Mich., to Boulder, and they will tell
- you no story plays so steadily as the devastations of the
- natural world. And almost anyone who wanders through the
- country hears it, from coffee shop to filling station.
- </p>
- <p> Bill Kastner of the U.S. Geological Survey office in Denver
- monitors the monstrous Ogallala Aquifer, that famous
- underground sponge that reaches from South Dakota to the high
- plains of Texas, touches eight states and embraces 174,000 sq.
- mi. In some places the water level has fallen 200 ft., leaving
- the balance between use and recharge from rainfall in
- precarious condition. Given a little hot dry weather and good
- farm prices that encourage increased grain planting, the
- irrigation pumps will begin to whir, in all likelihood sucking
- up more water than will be replaced.
- </p>
- <p> In southern Iowa, where they don't need irrigation water and
- where the black loam used to stretch like a carpet from horizon
- to horizon, you top a hill and find the brown claw marks of a
- monster that has scoured off the land's precious mantle,
- leaving the gummy, less productive clay showing in streaks. The
- monster is erosion, brought on by poor farming.
- </p>
- <p> Five hundred miles south, you can stand on the banks of the
- Mississippi and watch that topsoil roll by, going down to the
- Gulf of Mexico. The 34 million acres of fragile cropland taken
- out of production over the past few years have helped stem this
- wash, but farmers are still losing to erosion four tons of
- topsoil for every ton of grain produced.
- </p>
- <p> In Florida, just 200 miles below man's imaginative creation,
- Disney World, nature's great act, the Everglades, is on the
- edge of collapse because of dry weather and the demands for
- water. The National Park Service is seeking money so that the
- Army Corps of Engineers can uproot some of their canals and
- dams that have routed water to commercial use. It is a new
- experience for the Army engineers, who rarely undo their
- majestic alterations of Mother Nature. But suddenly the thirsty
- residents of Miami realize that if the Everglades aquifers
- languish, so does the city. Here again, some good wet weather
- would help. With more than half the U.S. population jammed into
- strips 50 miles wide on the coasts and around the Great Lakes,
- even small changes in weather produce noticeable stress.
- </p>
- <p> With the Berlin Wall down, the cold war over, the drug
- battle stuck in stalemate, almost everybody in the political
- world is waking up to the fact that the preservation and care
- of the land, air and water may rise and dominate all other
- issues. It links hearts and minds across continents,
- obliterates old barriers that kept people apart, banishes
- ideology. Eighty-seven-year-old Senator Strom Thurmond of South
- Carolina turned a deaf ear for years, but now he has listed the
- improvement of the environment as one of his top goals before
- he is called up yonder. The environmental political flood is
- about to break over us all.
- </p>
- <p> On April 22, Earth Day 1990 may produce a demonstration of
- 100 million people in 133 countries, united in a plea to the
- globe's leaders to get on with the great cleanup. Already there
- are 1,500 separate programs and demonstrations planned in the
- U.S., and the harried staff of Earth Day, encamped in a small
- office in Palo Alto, Calif., receives notification of at least
- 100 new events each day. They expect crowds of hundreds of
- thousands of people in New York City and Washington, and out
- in Tennessee the good green thumbs are expecting to plant 4
- million tulip poplar seedlings. The quiet celebrations of kids
- and oldsters in backyards and nursing homes will be as dense
- as the stars in the heavens--the ones we used to see.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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