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- LETTERS, Page 10Endangered Earth
-
-
- We have lost respect for our environment and have grown lazy
- (PLANET OF THE YEAR, Jan. 2). It amazes me that people can carry
- a full six-pack down to the beach but are incapable of carrying the
- empties back up.
-
- Kathryn McCullough
- Paoli, Pa.
-
- In two words, Endangered Earth, TIME captured the essence of
- the human experience in the year 1988. Not only did you outline
- the grievous problems we face in our environment, you offered
- practical solutions to them. You have succeeded in setting the
- standards for concern, hope and good citizenship that thinking men
- and women all over the world should embrace.
-
- Peter V. Ueberroth
- New York City
-
- Ueberroth was TIME's Man of the Year for 1984. Man has
- willfully chosen the "play now, pay later" attitude toward life.
- The time to pay is rapidly approaching.
-
- Philip Korn
- Miami Beach
-
- That must be the most ghoulish, frightening and depressing
- issue of TIME I've ever read. And the sad thing is, we've known
- about this mess for a long time.
-
- Arjun Basu
- Montreal
-
- It seems inappropriate that you commissioned artist Christo to
- create the cover for your Planet of the Year edition. He has draped
- large sections of the earth in plastic, and he burned up 350 miles'
- worth of gas to get the perfect background for your cover
- photograph. It is also incongruous that the issue came with a
- throwaway poster. The planet's bad health can give anyone a
- headache, but your issue was sickening.
-
- Trever C. Nightingale
- St. Paul
-
- Your report stated that "photovoltaic cells, which produce
- electric current when bathed in sunlight, were briefly in vogue
- during the energy crises of the 1970s." In fact, worldwide
- production of photovoltaic modules in 1988 reached an all-time high
- of 31 1/2 megawatts -- up from 25 megawatts in 1987 and from the
- 1970s' production, which never rose above three megawatts a year.
-
- Steve Baer
- Corrales, N. Mex.
-
- You described me as someone who does not believe in the
- greenhouse effect. This is my theory: increased atmospheric
- carbon-dioxide concentration heats tropical ocean surfaces. The
- additional evaporation ultimately appears as denser, more
- widespread clouds at high latitudes, which decrease the penetration
- by sunlight. This results in surface cooling, except in cities. The
- cooler weather decreases the photosynthetic rate of forests, and
- the trees then draw less carbon out of the air. If there is a
- long-term cooling trend, there will be less evaporation of water
- off lake surfaces and more precipitation into them. This
- interpretation explains the elevated level of the Great Salt Lake,
- a sign of a cooling, not a warming, climate.
-
- Kenneth E.F. Watt, Professor
- Environmental Studies
- University of California
- Davis
-
- In reading your voluminous statistics, I must have overlooked
- how many trees were felled to print your findings.
-
- Ann Walker
- San Jose
-
- The paper for the 5.2 million copies of Planet of the Year
- issue printed in the U.S. came from about 16,000 trees. Endangered
- Earth? Hardly. This planet has survived far worse catastrophes than
- this one. A better choice would have been "Endangered Humankind."
- Earth will scarcely notice our passing.
-
- Eric M. Windus Jr.
- Woodford, Australia