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

...early summer of 1925, Colonel Percy Fawcett, his son Jack and another English explorer named Raleigh Rimell jumped off into the jungles of Brazil's Matto Grosso, to look for the ruins of a lost civilization. Somewhere beyond the Rio das Mortes (River of Deaths) the party vanished, never to be heard from again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Skull & Bones | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

...Harry Truman ever had a faithful Boswell, he was Jonathan Daniels, the even-voiced editor of the Raleigh, N.C. News & Observer (circ. 113,277). Daniels, briefly Truman's press secretary in 1945, was always welcomed at the White House as a friendly reporter. The President read, and edited in galley proof, large chunks of Daniels' The Man of Independence. And he raised no objection when Daniels used Truman quotes to polish off South Carolina's Jimmy Byrnes as a "miserable failure" as Secretary of State...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: A Blow for Boswell | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

Frank Mordecai, 29, of Raleigh, N.C., and Richard Pfeiffer, 25, of Los Angeles, both city boys, both ex-G.I.s, met in 1948 in Phoenix, Ariz., where they were students at the American Institute of Foreign Trade. Most of the other students planned to go into export-import trade, but Frank and Dick thought they might do better by producing some commodity. On a trip to Central America, they studied the possibilities of lumber in Honduras and cattle in El Salvador, finally decided on cotton in Nicaragua...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NICARAGUA: Yanqui Cotton Patch | 3/5/1951 | See Source »

...Raleigh. N.C., North Carolina State over Colgate, 85-76, for a successful defense of the Dixie basketball tournament title...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Who Won | 1/8/1951 | See Source »

Inhabited Garden. The New World smelled good from the beginning. Columbus noted that "there came so fair and sweet a smell of flowers or trees from the land, that it was the sweetest thing in the world." Almost a century later, Sir Walter Raleigh's colonists, aboard ship off the southeast coast, inhaled "so strong a smel, as if we had bene in the midst of some delicate garden abounding in all kinde of odoriferous flowers, by which we were assured, that the land could not be farre distant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: As the Voyagers Saw It | 11/27/1950 | See Source »

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