CALIFORNIA

If Arnold Schwarzenegger has his way, gas-powered cars will be terminated in 10-15 years. The media-savvy governor recently drove a hydrogen-powered Toyota to a press conference in Davis, where he championed hydrogen as a replacement for gasoline, reports the San Francisco Chronicle. Schwarzenegger, who has played an unstoppable robot from the future, predicted the building of as many as 200 hydrogen-fueling stations — costing a half-million dollars each — along California freeways. Hydrogen is used to power a fuel cell that makes electricity. But there’s a catch: It takes energy to produce hydrogen. Schwarzenegger is putting some money where his mouth is: Sierra magazine says he’ll spend $35,000 to convert one of his five, gas-guzzling Hummers to run on hydrogen. That’s unlikely, reports The Associated Press. David Caldwell, a spokesman for the Hummer division of General Motors Corp., says, “We would never do a Hummer on any energy source that would not perform like a Hummer is supposed to perform.”

THE WEST

Political correctness can sometimes get out of hand. The Tucson Weekly reports that a perfect example occurred at The Los Angeles Times, when a reviewer described a 19th century opera by Richard Strauss as “pro-life.” The reviewer meant that it celebrated and affirmed life. An over-zealous editor followed the newspaper stylebook’s recommendation, and changed “pro-life” to “anti-abortion,” giving the opera a whole new theme.

COLORADO

Dog walkers in Telluride, a high-altitude resort town, have been advised to get a leash and hang on tight. In April, coyotes attacked an 80-pound dog that wandered away from its owner and into a wetlands. The dog emerged with “a three-to-four-inch gash on its side and several puncture wounds,” reports The Telluride Watch.

COLORADO

Does height matter? Sen. Doug Lamborn, a Republican from Colorado Springs, wants to change 14,148-foot-tall Mount Democrat — named over a century ago — to Republican Mountain, renaming the current Republican Mountain — a mere 12,386-footer — Mount Democrat. “I think it’s appropriate that the higher mountain be named for the Republicans,” he says. Senate Democratic leader Joan Fitz-Gerald says she won’t ask the U.S. Board on Geographic Names to make a switch: “We’re not going to give any ground,” she told the Rocky Mountain News.

NEW MEXICO

Republican Sen. Pete Domenici was shocked that salespeople didn’t realize that a thief had been using his credit card to buy hundreds of dollars’ worth of clothes and groceries. “Geez,” he complained to a business group, “you thought everyone knew me.” New Mexico’s senior senator lost his identity after he lost his wallet, reports the Albuquerque Journal.

This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Heard around the West.

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