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...relief to the soldiers in the bar of the Grand Pacific Hotel at Suva when Secretary of War Stimson announced last week that there were U.S. troops in the Fiji Islands. They had begun to worry about being legally admitted to this war. Not long ago a lugubrious major, shaking his head over his first highball after several weeks in the jungle, had observed: "We might go all the way through the war and nobody would ever know we're here. Nobody but the Japs. The other day the Navy radio was checking its time with Greenwich, when Tokyo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: Yanks in the Cannibal Isles | 10/26/1942 | See Source »

Aside from their anonymity, the U.S. troops in the Fijis were getting along very well. The British, led by a popular new Governor, had been extremely hospitable. The climate (average 77°) is delightful. The Fiji native, one of the world's finest indolent characters, is happy, hospitable, courteous. He is an excellent singer and he sings almost all the time. He is also a superb sailor and navigator. The 19th-Century Chief Thakombau was the title character of Adolf Brewster's King of the Cannibal Isles, and there have been cases of Fijis eating each other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: Yanks in the Cannibal Isles | 10/26/1942 | See Source »

...Fiji native is as black as his New Guinea cousin and wears the same unsanitary mop of fuzzy black hair, but usually shorter. He was the last of the Melanesians in that race's eastward sweep across the Pacific. But the Fiji native is in danger of losing his majority on his islands. When the idle Fiji would not cultivate the sugar fields assiduously, the British went to India for recruits. That was about 65 years ago. So prodigiously do Indians breed that there are now 94,000 Indians to 102,000 Fijis, 2,000 Chinese, 5,000 Europeans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: Yanks in the Cannibal Isles | 10/26/1942 | See Source »

While Pitcairn won a constitution, it lost a relic. Fretted by constant surf, sand in the shallows of Bounty Bay finally bared the Bounty's battered rudder. Promptly the British Admiralty claimed it, had it transferred to Fiji. The Navy had not forgotten...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PITCAIRN ISLAND: Won: A Constitution | 8/17/1942 | See Source »

Important Asiatic collections received were 22,000 specimens from Indo-China, 4,500 from Yunnan, 2,000 from western China sent by the Lu-Shan Botanical Garden, 2,500 specimens from Szechuan, China, sent by Nanking University, and 12,000 specimens from Fiji. The Arboretum distributed 42,445 specimens. Many thousands of specimens for shipment to Europe were held...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Arnold Arboretum Makes Additions In Spite of War | 1/26/1942 | See Source »

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