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Word: sunkist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...some 500 fruit growers, packers and distributors gathered in the small town of Corona near Los Angeles to have lunch, dedicate a new building, and listen to some statistics. The building was an $800,000 freezing plant and warehouse built to store more than 1,250,000 cases of Sunkist Growers, Inc.'s newest product: Sunkist frozen lemonade concentrate. The statistics were even more impressive: since introducing its frozen lemonade concentrate in 1950, Sunkist has boosted sales 5,000% : 7.000,000 cases in fiscal 1953 and 10 million expected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Pyramid in the Sun | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

...growers at Corona, the success of Sunkist's new lemonade concentrate meant more vitamins for the growth of the world's largest food cooperative. Since 1893, when a few growers took the name "Southern California Fruit Exchange" and joined forces to market their crop, the co-op has blossomed into a huge pyramid with a base of 14,000 growers and an apex of hired managers who run the business. Not many of Sunkist's growers own more than 15 acres apiece. But together they market about 75% of all the citrus fruit in California and Arizona...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Pyramid in the Sun | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

Buddha & the Lemons. The man who carries most of the weight of the organization is a heavy-set grower named Paul S. Armstrong. 61, who looks like a benevolent Buddha. As general manager of Sunkist Growers, Inc. since 1931, Armstrong has the job of coordinating 175 little packing associations, each with its own packing plant, setting advertising and research policies, and devising new citrus products...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Pyramid in the Sun | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

Some of Armstrong's ideas have borne golden fruit. Sunkist was the first to can or bottle any kind of citrus product (orange juice) in 1933, and was the first to go into volume production for the retail market two years later. Today, Sunkist's processing business nets more than $36 million a year from juices and frozen concentrates. Even the waste is used to make such citrus byproducts as citrus pectins, citric acid and lemon oils. Florida grows more oranges, but California and Arizona have the lemon business practically to themselves. Sunkist grows 82% of the nation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Pyramid in the Sun | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

Suburbs & Smog. Nevertheless, the co-op has its troubles. Steadily growing industrial suburbs have cut some 30,000 acres off the California citrus growers' orchards since World War II, and California's oranges have been getting smaller over the past few years. Sunkist's researchers are at work on the orange mystery, trying to discover if it is the smog, the lack of rain, or some unnamed malady that stunts the oranges. But Sunkist's 14,000 fruit growers are sure that Armstrong and his researchers will lick these problems, as they have others...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Pyramid in the Sun | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

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