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Word: droughts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Lyndon Johnson of the Texas hills knows water's value and drought's pain. "In my country," he said as he signed the Water Resources Planning Act last week, "sometimes you can't get a glass of water even out of the rivers-much less out of the restaurants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: Salt Water & Sympathy | 7/30/1965 | See Source »

Lost Atlantis. The drought that afflicted the big city was plaguing a widespread area of the Northeast U.S. and parts of Canada. Anglers on New Brunswick's Kedgwick and Restigouche rivers went home salmonless because the rivers were so low that the fish could not make it upstream to spawn. At the Quabbin Reservoir, near Springfield, Mass., the water level dropped so far that a long-submerged race track came into view like a relic of some lost Atlantis. In Maine the 30 million-lb. blueberry crop was nearing its critical growth period in need of moisture...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weather: The Downhill Winds | 7/16/1965 | See Source »

Although it is surrounded by water, Manhattan Island has always had water problems. In 1664 Peter Stuyvesant surrendered New York (then called Nieuw Amsterdam) to the British partly because of a shortage of potable water. In 1881 a drought forced New York firemen to learn how to extinguish blazes with dynamite instead of water. In 1949 the city declared a Dry Friday, when residents were asked to stay out of their bathtubs and showers and go unshaven to ease a water shortage. Last week, in the midst of the worst drought they have faced in this century, New Yorkers could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Weather: The Downhill Winds | 7/16/1965 | See Source »

...AUSTRALIA. Boomy prosperity is being marred-but not seriously threatened -by a drought, rising imports and a shortage of capital that has helped to depress its stock market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: International Economy: Beyond the Dollar | 6/25/1965 | See Source »

...bare, beaten region more than twice the size of Texas, 26 million Brazilians live in misery, almost 80% of them illiterate, disease and hunger holding the average life span to an appalling 35 years. Most nordestinos wring a grudging subsistence from the land, which is alternately scorched by drought and ravaged by flood and yields one-fourth as much corn, one-fifth as much cotton as the average acre of U.S. farmland. "Our agriculture," said Ceará State Governor Virgílio Távora, "is just a bit more advanced than that of the Pharaohs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Hemisphere: Hope in the Northeast | 4/30/1965 | See Source »

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