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

...British and French account for the rest of an Allied garrison of about 11,000 troops. To supply them, the U.S. runs two to three convoys per week-three to ten trucks in each convoy-over the 110-mile, four-lane Autobahn between the border check point of Helmstedt, and Berlin (see map). The British send in about one convoy a week, and the French about one a month. The West Germans, in a thriving trade with 2,300,000 West Berliners and West Berlin industries, send some 14,000 truckloads over the road monthly, plus some 600 barges through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE MILITARY: BERLIN: | 3/9/1959 | See Source »

...HELMSTEDT, Germany, Feb. 4--Under sharp attack by the United States, Soviet authorities yesterday turned loose a U.S. Army truck convoy they had held in East Germany for 53 hours...

Author: By The ASSOCIATED Press, | Title: Russians Release Army Trucks After Hindering Road to Berlin; Senate Kills Republican Measure | 2/5/1959 | See Source »

...Local agreements multiply. Example: at Helmstedt a coal mine split by the Iron Curtain is again being worked as one mine instead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: From the Bottom Up | 6/18/1956 | See Source »

When some Deputies arrived from Helmstedt, only a few officials were there to say welcome. Some crowds gaped as one $5,000 Mercedes-Benz after another whisked Deputies around the city, while their expensively furred wives went to eat cake and whipped cream in coffeehouses along the fashionable Kurfürstendamm. But a Berlin newspaper remarked tartly, when well-fed Deputies had difficulty squeezing into the student-size seats in the Technological Institute auditorium, temporary home for the Bundestag: "These benches weren't made to accommodate representatives of the West German economic miracle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BERLIN: Little Men, What Now? | 10/31/1955 | See Source »

...crisis rose when a detachment of Red soldiers and Volkspolizei rounded up a locomotive, its driver and 40 West German laborers on the British side of the border near Helmstedt and locked them up in a train shed, on the grounds that they were trespassing on Soviet territory. Three bewildered anglers fishing in a border pond were also caught in the net. Major Colin Ball of the British Frontier Inspection Service drove up briskly and demanded their release. "This is the British zone," he said. "No," answered the Russian officer who had stepped out of the woods to meet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Hill & the Hayfield | 7/7/1952 | See Source »

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