Record low Colorado mountain snow won't bode well for water in the drought-stricken US West

WALDEN, Colo. (AP) — Hydrologist Maureen Gutsch trudged through the mud and slush to confirm a grim picture: Colorado just had its worst snowpack since statewide record keeping began in 1941.

Associated Press Clinton Whitten and hydrologist Maureen Gutsch, back, measure snow, Monday, March 30, 2026, in Kremmling, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany Peterson) Snow surveyors, hydrologist, Maureen Gutsch, left, and Clinton Whitten weigh a snow sample, Monday, March 30, 2026, in Kremmling, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany Peterson) Philip Anderson looks at a dry ditch that usually transports water for stock and irrigation, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Walden, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany Peterson) Domestic well water fills a stock tank, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Walden, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany Peterson) Philip Anderson pulls plastic off a bale of hay, Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Walden, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany Peterson)

US Western Drought

Even more troubling, mountain snow accumulations peaked a month early and contained just half the average moisture.

As a warm winter withpoor skiing conditionsgave way to early springtimerecord heat, snow is vanishing from all but the highest elevations in the West. It's a clear sign that water shortages could worsen the ongoingsignificant drought, barring an unexpected deluge.

Gutsch struggled to match the mood of the sunny, 56-degree (13.3 degrees Celsius) weather as she stood in a section of the Rocky Mountains that's considered the headwaters of the Colorado River.

"We love being out here. We love being in the snow, taking these measurements. This year, it's kind of hard to enjoy it because it's slightly depressing with the conditions that we've seen," said Gutsch, who is with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Natural Resources Conservation Service.

Department hydrologists told The Associated Press of the dismal, record-low snowpack after concluding their field assessments late Tuesday.

Cities in the region are imposing water-use restrictions, and ranchers are wondering how they will feed and water their cattle. Meanwhile, the threat of devastating wildfires looms.

High (country) and dry

Ranchers in Colorado's scenic mountain valleys near the Continental Divide are, in a sense, among the first in the region affected by drought, being nearest to the melting mountain snowpack.They hardly need Gutsch to tell them how parched this winter and spring have been. They remember past droughts — bad ones in 2002, 1981, 1977 — and wonder just what this dry winter will mean for their operations."I've never seen it so warm so early and no snow all winter long," said Philip Anderson, a retired teacher who also has ranched most of his life in Colorado's North Park valley.The heaviest snows in the Rockies fall in late winter and early spring, including now. Snowfall isn't unusual in the highest regions even into June.Anderson's place is at about 8,100 feet (2,500 meters) in elevation. There, in a typical year, a foot (30 centimeters) or more of snow will linger on his pastures until springtime, helping the grass to green up and stock water ponds to refill.But without snow on the land, his cows are grazing his grass before it can grow high, and several of his ponds are dry. The ditch that would usually move water from the nearby Illinois River to his property is also dry — tapped already by neighbors with more senior water rights than his."A lot of the people which are closer to the mountains have to let the water go by and let those folks with the senior water rights have it," Anderson said.The last time Anderson had to haul water in his truck from a nearby wildlife refuge was in 2002. That same year, he had to sell off his herd.North Park — about 100 miles (161 kilometers) from the South Park valley that inspired the cartoon TV show — is a headwaters of the eastward-flowing Platte River system. Thirty-five miles (56 kilometers) to the west of Anderson's place, across the Continental Divide, is the Stanko Ranch on the Yampa River.Jo Stanko dreads low flows because they allow her cattle to wade across the Colorado River tributary. Then they need to be rounded up and brought back home.This year, Stanko has been watering her parched meadow earlier than ever in her 50 years of ranching. She plans to cut hay before June and is considering buying hay soon to feed her 70 cows afterward."Hay's always a good investment, you know, because it might be really expensive," she said.Go with the flow? Not when low

Ranchers in Colorado's scenic mountain valleys near the Continental Divide are, in a sense, among the first in the region affected by drought, being nearest to the melting mountain snowpack.

They hardly need Gutsch to tell them how parched this winter and spring have been. They remember past droughts — bad ones in 2002, 1981, 1977 — and wonder just what this dry winter will mean for their operations.

"I've never seen it so warm so early and no snow all winter long," said Philip Anderson, a retired teacher who also has ranched most of his life in Colorado's North Park valley.

The heaviest snows in the Rockies fall in late winter and early spring, including now. Snowfall isn't unusual in the highest regions even into June.

Anderson's place is at about 8,100 feet (2,500 meters) in elevation. There, in a typical year, a foot (30 centimeters) or more of snow will linger on his pastures until springtime, helping the grass to green up and stock water ponds to refill.

But without snow on the land, his cows are grazing his grass before it can grow high, and several of his ponds are dry. The ditch that would usually move water from the nearby Illinois River to his property is also dry — tapped already by neighbors with more senior water rights than his.

"A lot of the people which are closer to the mountains have to let the water go by and let those folks with the senior water rights have it," Anderson said.

The last time Anderson had to haul water in his truck from a nearby wildlife refuge was in 2002. That same year, he had to sell off his herd.

North Park — about 100 miles (161 kilometers) from the South Park valley that inspired the cartoon TV show — is a headwaters of the eastward-flowing Platte River system. Thirty-five miles (56 kilometers) to the west of Anderson's place, across the Continental Divide, is the Stanko Ranch on the Yampa River.

Jo Stanko dreads low flows because they allow her cattle to wade across the Colorado River tributary. Then they need to be rounded up and brought back home.

This year, Stanko has been watering her parched meadow earlier than ever in her 50 years of ranching. She plans to cut hay before June and is considering buying hay soon to feed her 70 cows afterward.

"Hay's always a good investment, you know, because it might be really expensive," she said.

An old saying in the West is that whiskey's for drinking and water's for fighting over. It applies all the more when water becomes scarce amid a decades-long drought driven in part by human-caused climate change.

Meanwhile, the river's Upper Basin states of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming remain at an impasse in negotiations with the Lower Basin states of Arizona, California and Nevada to create new rules for managing the water during shortages.

Like the water itself, time is running short — the current rules expire in September.

A recent federal plan would conserve river water "completely on Arizona's back," Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs told a U.S. Chamber of Commerce meeting in March.

Upper Basin states say their cities, farmers and ranchers already use far less water than they are entitled to under the existing agreements. That's because they honor senior water rights — some of which date to the 1880s — before those who own newer rights during droughts, Becky Mitchell, the Colorado River negotiator for Colorado, recently told other Upper Basin representatives.

"When there is less, we use less. This is not voluntary and no one gets paid as a result," Mitchell said.

After missing multiple deadlines set by federal officials in recent months to, at least, create outlines of an agreement, the two sides are hiring more lawyers in case the dispute goes to court.

Cities cut back

After the driest and warmest winter on record, Salt Lake City announced a 10% daily cut in water use.

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Reductions will be voluntary for residents, but the biggest nonresidential water users will have to consume no more than 200,000 gallons (2.6 million liters) per day.

On the other side of the Rockies, Denver Water approved limits to watering lawns and other restrictions, with hopes of achieving a 20% cut.

Water officials urged even less watering. Lawns in the Front Range region are just beginning to green up and don't need watering twice a week until at least mid-May, they pointed out.

The city gets much of its water from mountain snow that accumulates east of the Continental Divide and on the western side. Tunnels under the mountains divert half the city's water from snow-fed streams on the western side.

"We're 7 to 8 feet (2 to 2.4 meters) of snow short of where we need to be," Nathan Elder, water supply manager for Denver Water, said in a statement. "It would take a tremendous amount of snow to recover at this point, so it's time to turn our attention to preserving what we have."

Wildfire risk looms large

On the same day Denver approved the water restrictions, the city set a new high temperature record for March: 87 degrees (30 Celsius).

The previous record of 85 degrees (29 Celsius) was set just a week earlier.

Drought was bearing down west of the Rockies, too. In California, snowpack in the Sierra Nevada measured only 18% of the average for this time of year,state data showed.

Hot, dry weather is a recipe for wildfires. While other parts of the U.S., including the South and Southwest, face higher fire risk this spring, forecasters expect the threat in the Rockies to rise as above-average temperatures and below-normal precipitation persist into summer.

This week, the region is getting a reprieve of cooler, damper weather, with snow back in the forecast by the end of the week in North Park. But Anderson said he needs a lot more — half an inch (1 centimeter) of rain every other day for several days — to get out of the drought.

Until then, he suggested that North Park senior and junior water-rights holders work together to ensure everybody has enough.

"It's pretty serious," Anderson said. "If we just talk and communicate together and cooperate, we might be able to make it through this. But we'll see."

Amy Taxin in Santa Ana, California, contributed.

The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Record low Colorado mountain snow won't bode well for water in the drought-stricken US West

WALDEN, Colo. (AP) — Hydrologist Maureen Gutsch trudged through the mud and slush to confirm a grim picture: Colorado jus...
California woman returns home after the Trump administration deported her to Mexico

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A California woman who had been living in the U.S. for 27 years before the Trump administration deported her to Mexico in February reunited with her daughter this week after a judge ordered her return.

Associated Press Maria de Jesús Estrada Juárez, a Sacramento resident who was deported to Mexico by President Donald Trump's administration before returning home, speaks at a news conference, in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Sophie Austin) Vice Mayor of Sacramento Karina Talamantes speaks at a news conference, in Sacramento, Calif., Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (AP Photo/Sophie Austin)

US Deported Woman Returns

Mexican citizen Maria de Jesús Estrada Juárez was among the hundreds of thousands of people shielded from deportation underan Obama-era programallowing people brought to the U.S. as children to stay in the country if they generally stay out of trouble.

But that changed Feb. 18 when she showed up for an immigration hearing and was arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and deported the next day.

"I didn't get to say goodbye," the 42-year-old mother said at a news conference Tuesday in Sacramento. "It all happened so fast. This has been one of the most painful experiences of my life."

Estrada Juárez held hands with her daughter and began to choke up as she recounted those experiences.

"It's hard to describe what it feels like to lose your mother so suddenly, especially when you believed she was safe," said Damaris Bello, Estrada Juárez's 22-year-old daughter. "It was like grieving someone who was still alive."

The federal government has arrestedseveral other recipientsof the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, also known as DACA, during President Donald Trump's second term. The events come amid the Trump administration's reshaping of immigration policy more broadly.

Immigration advocates say Estrada Juárez's removal highlights the need to offer more permanent protections for DACA recipients, often referred to as "Dreamers."

The case is a rare example of a judge ordering a person's return to the United States after being deported, said Talia Inlender, deputy director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy at the UCLA School of Law.

"But, perhaps unsurprisingly, it feels like this is happening with more frequency under the current administration which is prioritizing speed and quotas, rather than fairness and process, in facilitating removals," Inlender said in a statement.

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The federal administration said Estrada Juárez was deported because of a 1998 removal order when Estrada Juárez was a teenager, shortly after she arrived in the U.S. She was sent to Mexico at the time but returned to the U.S. weeks later and has had DACA status since 2013. Federal officials reinstated the 1998 order in February after arresting her.

Estrada Juárez spent the next few weeks after being deported with relatives, stressed about being separated from her daughter.

"You can't enjoy life when the most important part of your life is not there," she said.

U.S. District Judge Dena Coggins, who was appointed by then-President Joe Biden, issued a temporary restraining order on March 23, giving the federal government seven days to facilitate Estrada Juárez's return to the U.S. Her deportation was a "flagrant violation" of her DACA protections and infringed upon her due process rights, Coggins wrote.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has defended the deportation.

"ICE follows all court orders," a department spokesperson said in a statement. "This is yet another ruling from a Biden-appointed activist judge."

But Estrada Juárez wasn't aware of the 1998 order, which her lawyer argues wasn't final.

"DACA gives you a vested right to not be deported once it's granted," said Stacy Tolchin, an immigration attorney based in Pasadena, California. "I really don't understand what they're doing."

Bello, who was reunited with her mother Monday night, said she is recovering from the events and hopes other families don't have to endure the same thing.

"Having her back home means everything to me," she said. "It means we can begin to heal, to rebuild and to move forward together as a family."

California woman returns home after the Trump administration deported her to Mexico

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A California woman who had been living in the U.S. for 27 years before the Trump administration...
South Korea, Indonesia sign agreements on minerals, tech and finance during Prabowo visit

SEOUL, April 1 (Reuters) - South Korean President Lee Jae Myung held talks in Seoul on Wednesday with Indonesian leader Prabowo ‌Subianto, where they agreed to expand cooperation on critical minerals, ‌technology, and clean energy, Seoul's presidential Blue House said.

Reuters

The leaders met after an official welcome ​ceremony at the Blue House, followed by a summit, and oversaw the signing of multiple memoranda of understanding before a luncheon, according to the presidential schedule.

The Indonesian president is also due to attend a business forum ‌in Seoul later on ⁠Wednesday as part of his state visit, it said.

The agreements also include support for projects in renewable energy ⁠and data centres as the two countries elevate their relationship into a strategic partnership.

No deals were announced on defence cooperation, including on the joint project ​between ​the countries to develop South Korea's ​homegrown KF-21 fighter jet.

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Korea Aerospace ‌Industries last month said it was in talks with Indonesia on a potential sale of KF-21 fighter jets, but said no decisions had been made. Media reports said that Jakarta was considering purchasing an initial batch of 16 aircraft.

South Korea expects Indonesia to complete a payment related ‌to the joint development programme by the ​end of this year, an official ​told Reuters.

The two countries were ​also expected to advance defence ties, as well as ‌strengthen cooperation in new growth areas ​such as artificial ​intelligence, infrastructure, shipbuilding, nuclear power, energy conversion, and cultural industries, the Blue House said in an earlier statement.

Lee is also set ​to award Prabowo South ‌Korea's highest civilian honour, the Grand Order of Mugunghwa, during ​the state visit, it said.

(Reporting by Joyce Lee, Kyu-seok Shim ​and Heejin KimEditing by Ed Davies)

South Korea, Indonesia sign agreements on minerals, tech and finance during Prabowo visit

SEOUL, April 1 (Reuters) - South Korean President Lee Jae Myung held talks in Seoul on Wednesday with Indonesian leader P...
23 PR Disasters That Became Absolute Nightmares For Everyone Involved

When you become well-known, whether as a company or a celebrity, sooner or later you're going to end upin the public eye. And with that comes opinions, both good and bad. Naturally, nobody wants the bad ones, because adamaged reputationcan cost money, opportunities, and sometimes even everything you've worked for.

Bored Panda

Redditorsacross different threads asked people to share what they think are theworst PR disastersof all time, and there wasno shortage of answers. We've rounded up some of the most interesting ones below, so scroll down to read them, and if you think any other cases deserve a mention, drop them in the comments.

The Segway. They played it coy, dropped hints about this revolutionary new technology and how blown away we'd be, and how future cities would be redesigned from the ground up around this incredible breakthrough - an innovation touched by god.It was a scooter. We could all see it was a scooter. It doesn't hover, or make your teeth whiter while you sleep. Just a scooter.

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The one that irritated me the most was when Bank of America had one of their customers arrested for inquiring about a questionable check. The guy had made a transaction with someone on craigslist and was a little suspicious about the check he got, so he took it into his local branch to ask if it was legit. The teller held it for a bit, then said, "yeah, go ahead and sign it." Once he signed it they told him he was guilty of passing a bad check and arrested him.

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Sarah Palin being named as the Republican Vice Presidential Nominee for the year 2008. I said this last time this came up and I posted.For those who were to young to be in tune to the political situation of the day. Senator's John McCain and Barak Obama were the nominee's, Obama picked BIden as his running mate and McCain decided to pick the (then unknown) Former Governor of Alaska, Mrs Palin. The News cycle tried to get to know her, tried to introduce her to the people who would be voting her, but it was just constant "wait, wut?" reactions as her "Foreign Policy Experiance" came off sounding like "I can see Russia from my house (Thank you Tina Fey/SNL).Then there was a rather lengthy interview (or series) with Katie Couric, where Palin said "I love to read! It's Great!" and got stumped by the question "So what's the last thing you've read?"And things just kept spiraling out of control until the Election day feed from McCain HQ looked like eight guys in suits quietly hiding from reality while Ted Nugent tried to get some energy in the room.

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VWs emissions scandal. CEO resignation, huge drop in market value and sales, court cases, compensation claims....

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Anybody else remember the olean/olestra "Wow" potato chips back in the 90s? The idea was that the olean in the chips would prevent your body from absorbing some of the fat and calories, so you could eat the chips and not put on weight as fast. They eventually had to put a little disclaimer on the bag that mentioned they could cause "oily discharge". They gave a lot of people diarrhea and ruined a lot underwear.

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Jesy Nelson's solo debut.was so disasterous all the goodwill she had from Little Mix and her mental health work disappeared in basically 3 days.GrumpyPancake:I'm still so upset about her and how her whole solo thing started and immediately derailed. Especially bc I enjoyed the debut single, despite all the criticisms of it, and was looking forward to new music in that direction. The black girl cosplay tho, the blackfishing, girl why

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The disaster recovery official that spend a huge amount of time and emails worrying about what to wear on camera while hoards of people were losing their lives, trapped or living in squalor immediately after Hurricane Katrina.

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2006, then Senator George Allen referred to one of his assistants a certain name. He tried to play it off that he really didn't know what that name meant, or that it wasn't really meant to be racist, but no one bought it, and he lost reelection.

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The Chevy Nova. For some reason it just didn't sell well in Latin America. ("No va" means "doesn't go" in Spanish).

© Photo:GooberMcNutly

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DaBaby randomly being homophobic at the peak of his carreer, then having the worst response ever to a controversy like this where he said something like "my gay fans arent like that"and then on top of the controversy his carreer was already kinda imploding because he was releasing the worst singles ever i think its pretty much impossible for him to recover he lost the opportunity to be the new ludacris the pop-rap feature guy.

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Ashlee Simpson's SNL debacle. She was not well and couldn't sing, as was depicted in her reality show. Nevertheless, she chose to show up and lip sync, the wrong track played, and humiliation ensued.She kept going though. Her next album debuted at #1. She returned to SNL to sing for real, and did well, but people didn't talk about it much because it went well. She phased out of her commercial peak for unrelated reasons...I think she was just never poised to be a very big star for long. People still remember the incident and it does come up in interviews sometimes. Things turned out fine for her because she didn't blow the money she made and she's busy being a mom.

© Photo:anon

Adele cancelling her Vegas residency a day before. So like all these fans flew in from wherever and were literally staying at the hotel when the announcement was made. And then there were all the people who had made accomodations for the next three months afterward.

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ARTPOP was pretty wack to live through. If she wasn't screaming at Perez Hilton to stop stalking her outside her apartment, she was melting down on Twitter about Katy and Madonna to promote a song with R Kelly.

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Hilaria Baldwin being exposed for faking she is Spanish and from Spain. Neither true.

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New Balance announcing support of the Trump administration for its pro domestic manufacturing policies.The left started to boycott them and burn their shoes.Meanwhile, the far right attempted to coopt them as the "official shoes of the alt right.".

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Barcelona's stupid hashtag when Messi got busted avoiding taxes. Even their own fans weren't defending him. #WeAreAllMessi

Paramore, when the Farro brothers left the band after the third album, Josh posted a rant online that personally attacked Hayley Williams as a diva, and more detrimentally, said the band was a fraud since Hayley was the only one signed to a label, and the rest of the group were just her employees.While the initial damage control was pretty effective, especially an hour long MTV interview where Hayley and the remaining members explained the intricacies of the situation, the image of the band, especially among those who already saw them as "the ones with the Twilight song", was pretty bad.Over time this has lessened, both albums released after the departure were met with great reviews, and Zach Farro rejoining the band indicated that maybe Josh' claims weren't as substantial as he claimed.

Story time, this is a blast from that past. Guns N' Roses, biggest band in the world dissappears around 1993. Axl Rose returns having fired the entire old band, Slash etc, after being in hiding for 8 years. Has a guy looking like the Alien from Alien on rhythm and a dude with a KFC bucket on his head playing lead guitar. Same guy does a numchuck dance before his guitar solo slot. First North American show in 8 years, band no shows in Vancouver, riot, Axl's private jet still parked on the tarmac at LAX. show cancelled, police have to tear gas the downtown.Tour goes on a few weeks, disaster VMA slot, Axl refuses to elaborate on whether a long awaited album will come out all, looks terrible and sounds out of breath. Axl then refused entry to nightclub in NYC because he was wearing animal fur. Sulks in his hotel room, no shows at Philly, second massive riot, millions in damages. Tour cancelled by Live Nation, Axl doesn't emerge for another 4 years.

Lee Ryan from the British boy band Blue ruining their US debut by saying that 9/11 terrorist attacks were "blown out of proportion" and asking people to be more concerned about the animals.

The Slap has turned out to be much bigger than I thought it would when it happened.xandrenia:This is truly one of the most bizarre things I've ever seen on live TV. Here we have a grown man getting up and slapping someone over an arguably offensive joke, screaming and cursing in his face, and nobody knew for a couple minutes whether it was real or not. It's still so shocking to watch.

Ariana Granda licking doughnuts and saying she hates America…..

Katy Perry's lead up and promo for WitnessJust the entire thing, the music videos, the 24 hour live stream, the performance at SNL, dressing up as Hilary Clinton for Halloween, hosting the VMAsAll of those had multiple people working on it and going yasss this is a great idea.

Taylor Swift and her private jet usage. She says she rents it out to others. As if that makes it better.

23 PR Disasters That Became Absolute Nightmares For Everyone Involved

When you become well-known, whether as a company or a celebrity, sooner or later you're going to end upin the public ...
Ambrosia's Christopher North, keyboardist with soft-rock hitmakers, dies at 75

Christopher North, who played keyboards as a founding member of the soft-rock group Ambrosia, died Monday in a hospice in Los Angeles. He was 75.

LA Times Christopher North performs with Ambrosia at The Funky Biscuit in Boca Raton, Fla., in 2021.

His death was confirmed by Ambrosia's Joe Puerta, who said the cause was throat cancer. According to Puerta, North was seriously injured late last year when he was hit by a car as he walked into Fromin's deli in Santa Monica.

In a post on Ambrosia's Facebook account, the banddescribedNorth as "the Hammond B3 King" after his preferred instrument and said his "sonic architecture defined a generation of progressive and soft rock." North "was a keyboard wizard," the group added, "who brought an unmatched intensity and emotional depth to every performance" and whose work "created 'aural landscapes' that balanced virtuosity with soulful, radio-friendly hooks."

Purveyors of the breezy, lightly soulful sound that also brought success in the mid-1970s to acts like America and Seals & Crofts (whoseDash Crofts diedlast week), Ambrosia scored a string of top 40 hits in the second half of that decade, including two that went to No. 3 on Billboard's Hot 100: "How Much I Feel" and "Biggest Part of Me," the latter of which was nominated for a Grammy Award for pop performance by a duo or group with vocals.

Today both songs are regarded as key examples of the style that became known retroactively as yacht rock; on Spotify, each has more than 120 million streams.

North was born Jan. 26, 1951, and grew up in San Pedro. He formed Ambrosia in 1970 with Puerta on bass, singer and guitarist David Pack and drummer Burleigh Drummond. The group's self-titled debut album came out in 1975; at the time, the band had a more ornate sound à la Genesis. Yet it had smoothed out by 1978's "Life Beyond L.A.," its first LP for the Warner Bros. label.

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Read more:At this point, Paul McCartney might play your birthday party

"What we didn't like about progressive rock was that it was too flamboyant without substance," PacktoldThe Times in 1999. "Those bands dated themselves by making the arrangements more of the central focus than the quality of songwriting. I think that we were different in that respect."

The album "One Eighty" came out in 1980 and yielded a second hit after "Biggest Part of Me" in "You're the Only Woman (You & I)," which peaked at No. 13 on the Hot 100. The next year, Ambrosia's song "Poor Rich Boy" appeared on the soundtrack of the movie "Arthur" alongside Christopher Cross' chart-topping "Arthur's Theme (Best That You Can Do)."

Ambrosia broke up in 1982 but reunited in 1989; Pack later left, though the band's other three founders continued to perform. North's survivors include a brother and two children.

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This story originally appeared inLos Angeles Times.

Ambrosia's Christopher North, keyboardist with soft-rock hitmakers, dies at 75

Christopher North, who played keyboards as a founding member of the soft-rock group Ambrosia, died Monday in a hospice in...
King Charles Will Not Be Able to Meet Epstein Victims During U.S. Visit amid Ongoing Investigations

Ahead of King Charles' visit to the U.S. next month, some lawmakers have called for the monarch to meet with Jeffrey Epstein victims

People King Charles; Jeffrey EpsteinCredit: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty; Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • PEOPLE understands that the King will not be able to meet with survivors during the trip because of concerns that it will prejudice ongoing police investigations in the U.K.

  • King Charles and Queen Camilla have both affirmed their continued support for Epstein survivors in past statements about the former Prince Andrew's ties to Epstein

Despite calls from some lawmakers forKing Charlesto meet with Jeffrey Epstein victims during his upcoming visit to the United States, such a meeting will not be possible.

Due to ongoing U.K. investigations into matters related to Epstein, King Charles and Queen Camilla will not be able to meet with survivors during the state visit in late April, PEOPLE understands.

Sources indicate that the concern is that anything emerging from such a meeting could potentially affect or prejudice the work of British law enforcement or any legal action that may or may not follow.

Over the last year, the King has been navigating the fallout from Epstein's ties to his brother, the formerPrince Andrew, and Andrew's ex-wife,Sarah Ferguson. Andrew, 66, has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.

Apalace statement released in October 2025, when King Charlesmoved to strip his younger brother of his royal titles and honorsover his connections to Epstein, said that the monarch and Queen Camilla "wish to make clear that their thoughts and utmost sympathies have been, and will remain with, the victims and survivors of any and all forms of abuse."

Following Andrew's arrest in February, the King and Queenreleased another statement, which contained their first direct reference to Andrew's "conduct" as well as a renewed statement of support for Epstein's victims.

"The King has made clear, in words and through unprecedented actions, his profound concern at allegations which continue to come to light in respect of Mr. Mountbatten-Windsor's conduct," the palace said in the statement on Feb. 9.

"While the specific claims in question are for Mr. Mountbatten-Windsor to address, if we are approached by Thames Valley Police, we stand ready to support them as you would expect," the statement continued.

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"As was previously stated, Their Majesties' thoughts and sympathies have been, and remain with, the victims of any and all forms of abuse," they concluded.

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and King Charles at the state funeral of Queen Elizabeth on Sept. 19, 2022Credit: Patrick van Katwijk/Getty

The King and Queen's state visit to the U.S. was confirmed on March 31. Though exact dates and events have yet to be announced, it is expected that the King will address a joint session of Congress.

Can't get enough of PEOPLE's Royals coverage? Sign up forour free Royals newsletterto get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!

Rep. Ro Khanna, one of the most vocal members of Congress calling for justice and transparency regarding the full Epstein files, was the one whopenned an open letterto the King calling for him to meet with the victims.

"As author of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, I respectfully ask that you privately meet with survivors of Jeffrey Epstein's and Ghislaine Maxwell's abuse, so they may speak to you directly about the ways powerful individuals and institutions failed them. Survivors want this meeting," Khanna wrote in his missive to the King.

"I make this request in light of recent developments in the United Kingdom, including renewed scrutiny of individuals and institutions with ties to Epstein and his network," he continued. "These developments have raised serious questions about conduct, access, and whether positions of public trust were misused or whether public institutions helped shield wrongdoing. Your call for a 'full, fair and proper' investigation, and for the law to take its course, recognizes the seriousness of these concerns."

Rep. Ro Khanna, Rep. Thomas Massie, and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene hold a news conference on the Epstein Files Transparency Act on Nov. 18, 2025Credit: Heather Diehl/Getty

"As you are aware, this is not solely an American matter. Epstein's network had significant ties to the United Kingdom through Ghislaine Maxwell, through Epstein's relationships with British public figures, and through the social and political circles in which he operated...A meeting with survivors would provide an opportunity to identify any additional information British institutions and individuals may be able to share and open a dialogue about whether there will be a full accounting of how Epstein's and Maxwell's network operated in the United Kingdom. It would also ensure that survivors are heard directly and that these matters are addressed with transparency, seriousness and accountability."

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King Charles Will Not Be Able to Meet Epstein Victims During U.S. Visit amid Ongoing Investigations

Ahead of King Charles' visit to the U.S. next month, some lawmakers have called for the monarch to meet with Jeffrey ...
He walked on the moon in 1972. This is his advice for the Artemis II astronauts.

If anyone can offer advice to the four NASA astronauts slated to launch Wednesday on a trip around the moon, it's Harrison Schmitt.

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Schmitt, 90, left his bootprints on the lunar surface in 1972, as part of Apollo 17 — the final mission in the program, which was the last time humans traveled to the moon.

NASA's Artemis II mission, which is scheduled to lift off as early as 6:24 p.m. Wednesday, aims to kick-start a new era of lunar exploration. The crew plans to circle the moon as a step toward a lunar landing in 2028 (similar to the way Apollo 8's flight around the moon paved the way for Apollo 11).

Schmitt expects the Artemis II astronauts to see some of the same otherworldly sights he did more than a half century ago.

"Every day, every hour, every minute, is a new experience," Schmitt said in an interview with NBC News.

Harrison Schmitt (NBC News)

As for what he'd tell the Artemis II crew: "Make sure that you've got your training down pat. Be ready for anything unexpected, but have a great time. Enjoy it."

Much has changed since Apollo 17. Schmitt and his fellow crew members were part of a space race against the Soviet Union. Today, NASA is competing with China, which hopes to land its own astronauts on the moon in 2030.

The Apollo 17 astronauts spent nearly 13 days in space — more than three of those on the lunar surface. They notched the highest total distance traveled on the moon, driving a lunar rover a total of about 19 miles. They also gathered more geology samples than any other moon mission, bringing243 poundsback to Earth.

Harrison H. Schmitt aboard the Lunar Module LM (Eugene A. Cernan / NASA)

Schmitt said he won't forget entering lunar orbit in the dark, on the far side of the moon that faces away from Earth.

"We were landing on the east side of the moon, and the sun was just barely coming up," Schmitt said. "Going into the dark of the moon was really something, because one of the things that you notice right away is the moon is illuminated by Earth light. There's a bluish tint to the light."

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Harrison Schmitt stands on the  surface of the moon in a spacesuit, with an American flag posted in the ground on his right, and a lunar module pilot on his left (JSC / NASA)

The Artemis II astronauts will get better glimpses of the moon's far side than Apollo crews did.

"It turns out there's about 60% of the far side, I think, that has never been seen by human eyes because of the lighting conditions," Reid Wiseman, commander of the Artemis II mission, said in a media briefing on Friday. "Apollo always wanted that light on the front side of the moon for their landing and launch capability … We've seen it in satellite photos, but humans have never, ever seen that before. That's cool."

Apollo 17's conclusion represented, for decades, the end of U.S. ambitions to maintain a human presence on the moon. NASA's budget shrank in the 1970s, additional Apollo missions were canceled and the U.S. prioritized work on space stations.

A view of Earth in space (JSC / NASA)

Unlike the Apollo program, NASA's long-term goal with Artemis goes beyond brief visits to the moon. The space agency hopes to build a lunar base to facilitate long-term stays, then eventually use that base as a stepping stone to Mars.

"It wouldn't surprise me in somebody else's lifetime to see people there for months and years and actually have an actual settlement on the moon," Schmitt said. "Mars is attainable, and I think we will keep going."

Why is he so sure? "We're humans, that's what we've always done," Schmitt said.

"From the time that the human race began in Africa to the present, it's always expanded. It's part of our being, our psychology," he said.

Harrison Schmitt holds documents while standing inside of a lunar module simulator (NASA)

When the Apollo 17 crew departed the moon, commanderGene Cernan said: "We leave as we came, and, God willing, we shall return, with peace and hope for all mankind."

If all goes to plan, Artemis II will be a major milestone in the effort to make that return. On the sixth day of their mission, the crew is expected to come within about 6,000 miles of the lunar surface. Their path around the moon could take them a greater distance from Earth than anyone has gone before.

"These kinds of flights for the country are extraordinarily important," Schmitt said. "China is clearly interested in dominating space as they're interested in dominating terrestrial activities. And so it's a national effort, and needs to be done well and right."

He walked on the moon in 1972. This is his advice for the Artemis II astronauts.

If anyone can offer advice to the four NASA astronauts slated to launch Wednesday on a trip around the moon, it's Har...

 

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