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Word: droughts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Langmuir laughs and says: "We'll have to wait and see." With his radars and pocket thermometer, his optimism and his energy, he hopes to make ducks & drakes, some day soon, of New Mexico's perennial drought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Weather or Not | 8/28/1950 | See Source »

Another way was supplied by Nature. The dust bowl of 1934-35 and the great drought of 1936 cut farm surpluses. But a fresh wave of poverty swept families westward from their deadlands to enact the saga of the Okies and tread the Grapes of Wrath...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FARMERS: Plague of Plenty | 6/19/1950 | See Source »

...Irving Langmuir, high priest of scientific rainmaking, sounded a solemn warning last week: those who sow too many rainstorms may reap nothing but droughts. Speaking at the School of Mines in drought-threatened New Mexico, Langmuir denounced the commercial rainmakers, many of them woefully ignorant of the art, who are seeding the atmosphere with silver iodide throughout the dry Southwest. "Some of them," he said, "are using hundreds of thousands of times too much. No more than one milligram [.000035 oz] of silver iodide should be used for every cubic mile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Too Much Rainmaking | 6/12/1950 | See Source »

While Jack's late brother, Charles L. Blanton, whip-tongued editor of a Scott County paper, was known as the "polecat editor," Jack always preferred a gentler and humbler approach. The most celebrated demonstration of its effectiveness was the 1942 Monroe County drought. In a 60-pt. streamer on Page One, Editor Blanton proclaimed: LORD, WE CONFESS OUR SINS, WE ASK FOR FORGIVENESS, WE PRAY FOR RAIN. An hour after the paper hit Main Street, the rains came. Recalls Blanton: "Trouble was, it rained so much the farmers couldn't harvest the crops. The farmers still come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: When I Was a Boy | 5/29/1950 | See Source »

Decontrol of restaurant prices was part of a general tendency to lift price control on food. Last month, when fish in retail stores was decontrolled and fish prices zoomed, housewives refused to buy until fishmongers stopped gouging. Grocers, pleading that last year's drought had made vegetables scarce, put their prices up, and housewives stuck to meat & potatoes, turned away from cauliflower at 2/6, cabbage at a shilling a pound...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Primrose Salad | 5/15/1950 | See Source »

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