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Word: pulp (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...nation's keenest judges of buying trends, reported that for the fifth consecutive month business has trimmed its inventories; they counted twice as many production declines as increases. Department store sales were still below last year's, and commodity prices kept on falling (e.g., meat, cotton, wheat, pulp and paper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: Back to Normal | 5/5/1952 | See Source »

Harmony on the Moon. Today, this gelatinous brain stuff, served up in pulp form, is selling at a rate never approached by Robinson Crusoe. In the Galaxy Reader, which presents 33 versions of the shape-of-things-to-come by 24 science-fiction writers, newcomers will have a chance to sample one of a half dozen such anthologies that have appeared so far this year. To help them over the bumps, Editor H. L. Gold supplies a commentary. Gold is mighty proud of his nest of singing birds, whose average age, he says, is 32 and whose work is distinguished...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Horrors in Space | 4/7/1952 | See Source »

Sing to the Longhorns. But except for end-of-the-trail benders, cowboy life on the drives was incredibly hard. Indians, choking dust, unbearable heat and bad food were normal features of the job. Night stampedes, sometimes started by Indians, often left cowboys and ponies smashed to pulp on the prairies by thousands of hooves. When cowhands sang sad songs through the night watch, it was not only because they were lonely: experience had taught them that teary ballads seemed to keep their shorthorns and longhorns from milling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Old West Panorama | 2/18/1952 | See Source »

...turned them out at the other as finished traitors, ready to be driven away to Siberia. They sat him on a plain stool while relays of examiners interrogated him day & night until his head was splitting and his splayed buttocks a mass of burning pulp. After a week of this, Weissberg "confessed"-a ticklish job, because his "crimes" had to dovetail exactly both into the "confessions" of his "accomplices" (i.e., his arrested friends who had incriminated him) and the overall plot requirements laid down by G.P.U. planners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Survivor of the Purge | 1/14/1952 | See Source »

...Canadians needed statistics to remind them that 1951 was a banner year. Evidence of the boom ran clear across the country, from the $9 million mining development to get more iron ore from under the Atlantic off Newfoundland, to the $27 million pulp mill built by Columbia Cellulose Co. (an affiliate of Celanese Corp. of America) near Prince Rupert in the Pacific Northwest. Other developments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CANADA: Expanding Neighbor | 1/7/1952 | See Source »

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