Search Details

Word: highlander (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...reported in Washington. He need not have been in such a hurry. The Board's plan for mobilizing the U.S. in a defense program was later submitted to the President, never saw the light of day. The Board was dissolved, and Wood went back to his Highland Park home outside Chicago, with good cause to frown over New Deal mismanagement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WAR & PEACE: Follow What Leader? | 10/6/1941 | See Source »

Guns. Last stop of the inspection was the Highland Park Gun Barrel Arsenal where the company is tooling up to make barrels, water jackets and sights for a 40-mm. Bofors anti-aircraft gun. Eight other Chrysler plants are also working on the 500 parts it requires. A Navy officer on hand for last week's show called the gun "the finest thing of its type in the world." Chrysler's President K. T. Keller said the guns should be in production by February, didn't say in what amount...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chrysler's Sideshow | 9/8/1941 | See Source »

...remaining on the American continents. The 50,000 square miles of territory in dispute between Peru and Ecuador lie mostly between the Marañón and Napo Rivers, tributaries of the Amazon (plus a picayune area along the Pacific coast). They are made up of a little fertile highland, a little more barren mountainside and much more tangled jungle, from which come a bit of rubber and some desiccated human heads for the tourist trade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Shooting Scrape | 7/14/1941 | See Source »

...apart, their trunks paralleled a trail's direction. Rows of such trees still survive here & there. Today a silent brave, threading his way past filling stations, could still follow a good existing tree-trail from the shore of Lake Michigan north of Chicago, inland through the center of Highland Park (pop. 14,476) to the site of an old Indian village in the Skokie Valley five miles away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Indian Signs | 7/7/1941 | See Source »

...British still had not got their Hess story straight last week. From somewhere in Scotland a U.S. newsman cabled that he could watch Rudolf Hess as the No. 1 Nazi Abroad gazed from his hospital window across the highland heather. Parachutist Hess, he heard, was a cheery fellow, ready at talk with the nurses, quick in praise of the mountain scenery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Hess on the Heather | 6/2/1941 | See Source »

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