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Word: smog (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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From Los Angeles' International Airport one morning last week, a Scandinavian Airlines DC-6B roared up through the smog and headed north. Its destination: Copenhagen, via the Arctic. To trim roughly 650 miles off the regular California-Europe flight distance, the four-engine plane, with 13 crewmen and 22 passengers aboard, was going to fly where no commercial carrier had ever flown. That afternoon the plane stopped at Edmonton, Alta. After touching down early next morning at the big U.S. Air Force base at Thule, Greenland-a scant 900 miles from the North Pole-the plane was soon airborne...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AVIATION: North to Europe | 12/1/1952 | See Source »

Less Smell. As for potential uses, Houdry thinks that his new catalytic process can clear the industrial smog from U.S. cities, enable notorious offenders (e.g., New York City's Consolidated Edison Co., which generates electricity from coal) to make immense savings in fuel. Moreover, the oil industry, which has to burn oil to generate the heat needed to refine petroleum, also can make big savings. Houdry estimates that a petroleum cat-cracking unit could save $320,000 a year in fuel by installing 12,000 of his units. Joseph N. Pew's Sun Oil Co., one of Houdry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDUSTRY: End of Smog? | 6/9/1952 | See Source »

...special journalism project at the University of New Mexico, a senior named Joe Aaron wrote a thesis on classified ads in newspapers. In a survey of 8,000 ads in eight major U.S. dailies,* he found no sectional differences in language, except for "smog free" California real estate. A house is "cute," "a cutie," "adorable," "exquisite," "elegant," "a dandy," "magnificent," "glamorous," "spic & span," "clean as a pin," "a rare find"-and inevitably near everything and a "real bargain." A farm is never a farm but "a rural hideaway," "rustic retreat," or "secluded estate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: You'll Simply Drool | 2/25/1952 | See Source »

When the Yorkshire Electricity Board was appointed in 1947, the colonel knew just the right spot for its headquarters. With a little remodeling, stately Scarcroft Lodge, a 120-year-old mansion overlooking 160 acres of rolling farmland, would be absolutely top-hole. It was situated well beyond the industrial smog of ugly, workaday Leeds (pop. 510,000). There was a little matter of building permits before Scarcroft could be remodeled, but the colonel soon fixed that. He had a word with the Ministry of Fuel and Power, got permission to spend $112,000 on scarce building materials...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: A Room with a View | 12/3/1951 | See Source »

Over the nation's largest city, a cloud of smog lay heavy last week, stinging eyes and hospitalizing 25 workers in nearby Elizabeth, N.J. Retired Rear Admiral William S. Maxwell, the deputy smoke commissioner whose mistake was to crack down too hard on smoke violators while his boss was away, bitterly told an audience: "I know I am going to be fired." In the uneasy air of 1951's autumn, a sense of wrong stained the air like smog...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Stain In the Air | 10/1/1951 | See Source »

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