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Word: corn (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...block such mergers. Despite their defeats, trustbusters had high hopes of winning a meticulously prepared suit against a Philadelphia bank merger. That merger would create the city's biggest bank, linking the Philadelphia National (now second largest with assets of $1.2 billion) and the third-ranking Girard Trust Corn Exchange (assets: $853 million). Together these two banks, said Justice, would be 50% larger than First Pennsylvania Banking & Trust Co., now in first place, and control 37% of Philadelphia's banking business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Public Policy: Up & Down with Antitrust | 1/26/1962 | See Source »

Hostility to the state's trade monopoly extends deep into the countryside. Theoretically, all farm produce should be marketed through the state, but huge amounts of rice, pork and corn are being diverted from official channels. A state inspector noticed a strange fragrance in the air as he entered the village of Me Tri. Following his nose, he discovered that almost every villager was engaged in baking com -a lightly toasted cooky made of unripe, glutinous rice. Me Tri had developed so flourishing an illegal cooky business that the villagers were even buying rice grain from other cooperatives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: North Viet Nam: How the Cooky Crumbles | 1/19/1962 | See Source »

...Oxford. Albert comes from the "Little Dixie" corner of southeastern Oklahoma-a corn, cotton, coal and cattle area bordering on Arkansas and Texas. Albert's father was a shot-firer in a McAlester coal mine, but when Carl, the oldest of five children, was a child, the family moved to a cotton farm near the hamlet of Bug Tussle. * Young Carl went to the two-room Bug Tussle school, then to high school in McAlester (he was the first Bug Tussle pupil ever to progress as far as a high school diploma). He showed an early instinct for politics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Carl Albert: Nose-Counter From Bug Tussle | 1/12/1962 | See Source »

...short of shoes. Butter, milk and meat were hard to find in many cities. The papers kept reporting arrests of "economic criminals"; one 69-year-old woman in Dresden drew 15 months for hoarding food, and in Frankfurt-on-Oder a man who burned down two barns full of corn was sentenced to death for what the court called "hatred against the state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: East Germany: Spitzbart in Trouble | 1/12/1962 | See Source »

...Cuban government also benefited from a purchase of the Adkins hybrid corn seed production, after Clement approached the government in hopes of getting an agency or company to take over the large production...

Author: By Robert E. Smith, | Title: Clement Tells of Cuban Research | 1/12/1962 | See Source »

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