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Word: dieselization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...mere 100,000 bbl. per day, to 6.2 million bbl., according to the Administration's own figures. Yet the cost of the plan will be substantial. White House officials acknowledge that deregulation would eventually kick up the price of gasoline, residual oil used by heavy industry, diesel fuel burned by trucks and other petroleum products by 5? to 6? per gal. The increased tariff will add another 1½?. Democratic Senator Henry Jackson of Washington claims that the tariff hike alone will boost consumer prices by $2.5 billion a year. The measures are particularly punishing for New England, which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ENERGY: Ford Goes It Alone on Oil | 6/9/1975 | See Source »

...professionalism has too often become the true refuge of the scoundrel. Yet Buchheim skillfully dodges these issues by casting his book as documentary, fly-on-the-wall fiction. Its amount of factual authenticity about the 220-ft. submarine and its innards is mesmerizing. Technical data about pressure hulls, diesel engines, electric motors, torpedoes and underwater navigation form a web of fascinating distraction. The incessant diving, ogling of manometers and Papenberg gauges, and the flooding and blowing of ballast tanks run like a litany throughout the book. Buchheim employs some tricky literary gimbals to keep himself balanced between feelings of revulsion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Plumbers of the Deep | 6/2/1975 | See Source »

Captain Raib Avers and eight ragged black and mulatto crewmen set out from Grand Cayman Island to hunt turtles in the southwest Caribbean. Their ship is the Lillias Eden, a once proud schooner now yoked to brand-new twin diesel engines in its converted cargo hold. Avers' legendary temper is even blacker than usual. Though it is late in the turtle season, he needs a good catch to pay for the overhaul of his ship. He rashly refuses to worry about Eden's lack of a chronometer, life jackets, fire extinguishers, or a radio that can send...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Sea Changes | 5/26/1975 | See Source »

...sunken submarine offered those opportunities. The diesel-driven ship of the G or Golf class (vintage 1958-62) had long since been made obsolescent by the Soviet nuclear-powered submarines of the Yankee and Delta classes. Nonetheless, in the superstructure behind its tall conning tower, the submarine typically carried three nuclear-tipped missiles of the Serb class, which has a 650-mile range and a 500 kiloton warhead. At the time the SALT I negotiations were about to start, and an examination of the Serb warheads would have given U.S. experts an invaluable insight into the state of Soviet nuclear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ESPIONAGE: The Great Submarine Snatch | 3/31/1975 | See Source »

...Emilio Remondi, 40, of Hyde Park, Mass., a diesel mechanic who has been laid off twice in the last year, prolonged unemployment has brought a sense of entrapment, a feeling that all the prosperity of the past ten years has been wiped away. "I really don't understand what this country is going through," he says. "The politicians aren't listening to the people. It's all going crazy." His $113 weekly unemployment check cannot carry his family of five; they have been living off his savings, which will run out by summer -unless he finds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNEMPLOYMENT: America's New Jobless: The Frustration of Idleness | 3/17/1975 | See Source »

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