Word: raider
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...just after World War II began, three cruisers of the Royal Navy (Ajax, Achilles, Exeter) sighted a dangerous German raider, the pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee, off the coast of Uruguay, and attacked. They had their nerve. The German was one of the most formidable ships afloat-a fact soon demonstrated. In little more than an hour the Exeter was wallowing out of action. But the other two cruisers, harrying the enemy like sharks at a whale, managed to hit where it hurt. The German commander (Peter Finch) withdrew into the River Plate, and docked at Montevideo. Prodded...
...James) Russell Duncan, 40, vice president of Chicago's Consolidated Foundries & Mfg. Corp. since 1954, was elected president of Minneapolis-Moline, farm implement company founded in 1929, succeeding Henry S. Reddig, 50, who resigned. The move followed a shareholder revolt in which Raider J. Patrick Lannan (TIME, July 25, 1955) and two associates won places on Minneapolis-Moline's board of directors two months ago. Lannan's H. M. Byllesby & Co. bought into Minneapolis-Moline two years ago with Henry Reddig and his brother Edward when the company's prospects looked good and its stock...
From somewhere southeast of Greenland came the crackle of an urgent radio message: "Being fired on by Orange surface raider. Inchcliffe Castle." With that alert from a famed but fictitious merchant vessel,* simulated hell broke loose in the North Atlantic. Out to punish the "aggressors," a six-nation Blue fleet totaling nearly 160 fighting ships began steaming toward Norway. In the Iceland-Faeroes gap, 36 Orange submarines, including the atom-powered 'Nautilus, lay in wait. The U.S. destroyer Charles R. Ware was "sunk"; a "torpedo" slowed down the carrier U.S.S. Intrepid, and H.M.S. Ark Royal had a hot time...
Died. Edward Ratcliffe Garth Russell Evans, Admiral Lord Mountevans, 75, British Royal Navy hero, whose exploits dot the high seas from England to China, author of sea-adventure stories (Pirate's Doom); in Golaa, Norway. Evans commanded the famed destroyer Broke (in 1917), which torpedoed one German raider, rammed a second and vanquished its cutlass-armed boarding party in old-fashioned hand-to-hand combat...
...fight to control Fairbanks, Morse & Co., Raider Leopold Silberstein ran up the white flag. He seemed to have little choice, even though he claimed to have bought enough stock (50.4%) to control the company. The trouble was that he had overextended himself to do so. He had tied up nearly 30% of the assets of his Penn-Texas Corp. in Fairbanks, Morse stock, and still owed $12 million, much of it payable in the next few months. So Fairbanks, Morse President Robert H. Morse Jr. played a delaying game. He won a court injunction barring Silberstein from voting his stock...