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...rises as a cold, clear mountain torrent in Colorado. It dwindles and almost dies while crossing the Kansas plains. Fed by tributaries, it meanders in great twists and turns through Oklahoma and Arkansas. It is one of America's muddiest rivers. Because of its sewage, silt and salt, the water is not fit for swimming, drinking or irrigation. In fact, the 1,450-mile Arkansas River is good only for the huge channel catfish, which have literally pulled fishermen into its muck...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rivers: Competition for the Catfish | 10/12/1962 | See Source »

Death & a Butterfly. Low Company is the most ambitious of the three novels, and has the muddiest sloughs and sheerest peaks. Here Author Fuchs moves deeper into the violence that ran through the first book. There it was business rivalry with an accidental killing; here it is war declared by a brothel syndicate on an independent operator named Shubunka. The war stumbles through the lives of innocent people, but the novel demonstrates that there is no "innocence": all lives are inevitably interwoven...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Trilogy Grows in Brooklyn | 9/1/1961 | See Source »

...nation that loves its coffee was treated last week to one of the muddiest cups yet brewed. The Federal Trade Commission filed a formal complaint against the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange and eight of its members. The charge: restraining coffee trading and thereby causing prices to rise out of all proportion to supply and demand. As it had before (TIME, Aug. 9), FTC hit hard at the exchange's "restrictive" contract, which permits trading only in "Santos 4" coffee, an average grade shipped from Brazil's port of Santos and accounting for 10% of U.S. consumption...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMODITIES: Old Coffee Grounds | 10/25/1954 | See Source »

...muddiest expanses in the ill-charted sea of international law is the question of territorial waters-the extent to which a coastal nation controls the sea around it. Some nations, e.g., Spain, Italy, Iran, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Brazil, claim a six-mile limit; others, e.g., the Scandinavians, claim four. Most countries accept the limit of three marine miles, a tradition that goes back to the 18th Century, when a good cannon on the shore could heave a ball three miles to sea.* But many governments have added qualifications which extend their claims beyond three miles, and they never have been able...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATIONS: Four Miles Out | 12/31/1951 | See Source »

When a girl has spent a lot of time and money fixing her face, it is tough to run slap into a wacky stranger who declares that he has fallen in love with her at first sight because she has the world's muddiest skin and largest pores. Should she decide that any compliment, no matter how disconcerting, is better than no compliment at all? Or should she tell the adoring stranger to mind his own damn business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The New Look | 7/4/1949 | See Source »

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