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Word: boer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...first run-in with the white authorities. In 1990 he broke into air-force headquarters in Pretoria and stole a large cache of weapons. With the police on his tail, he disappeared underground for six months and tried to organize commando cells. To spark a Boer revolt, he went on a bombing spree, targeting the offices of two senior De Klerk aides and Melrose House, the historic site of the 1902 Afrikaner surrender in the Anglo-Boer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: Extremes in Black and White | 3/9/1992 | See Source »

...coincidence that Rudolph's exploits parallel those of his defiant forebears. Piet was named for a relative who commanded the cannons in the 1838 battle of Blood River, when the Boers defeated the Zulus and won control of considerable territory. As a boy, Rudolph spent hours listening to tales told by an old soldier who had been blinded by wounds received in the turn-of-the- century Anglo-Boer conflict...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa: Extremes in Black and White | 3/9/1992 | See Source »

Shyjan and Zimmerman defeated Hurricanes Patrice Baker and Tonny van de Pieterman, 8-5, to set up a nail-biter between Harvard's Wallooppillai and Marshall Burroughs and Miami's Larry Angus and Daniel de Boer...

Author: By Andrew J. Arends, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Netmen Finish 11th in Team Indoor Nationals | 2/24/1992 | See Source »

...Boer served for the entire match and had the Harvard duo at 7-6, but the Crimson broke his serve and pulled out the match in a one sided tiebreaker...

Author: By Andrew J. Arends, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Netmen Finish 11th in Team Indoor Nationals | 2/24/1992 | See Source »

...time line on gay life in the U.S. in his Dave Brandstetter series. No current mystery writer has better exploited this potential -- or better served readers with riveting storytelling and acutely observed human nature -- than James McClure in his eight novels about two South African policemen. The cheerily crass Boer, Tromp Kramer, and his wily "kaffir" partner, Mickey Zondi, were introduced in The Steam Pig, published in 1971. Their teamwork, affectionate but circumscribed, full of macho blarney and teasing but also tinged with racial irony, subtly evoked the quirky diplomacy of a society where whites insist on ruling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Apartheid, He Wrote | 8/5/1991 | See Source »

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