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

...help develop gold mines in Africa, they picked Arthur Storke, 54, a mining man with an African background. Storke had trotted the globe and risen to the presidency of Climax Molybdenum Corp. He was an operating director of South Africa's Roan Antelope Copper Mines, Ltd., and of Rhodesian Selection Trust, Ltd.; during World War II, as minerals adviser to Britain's Ministry of Supply, he expedited mining operations in South Africa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: Last Trip | 9/19/1949 | See Source »

...whites, 78,560) has not enough of the "right" (i.e., white, enterprising) people. In Britain's grimy, industrial Lancashire (pop. 5,039,455) an obscure district councilman named E. L. Leeming came up with a suggestion that 500,000 Lancastrians should be moved to the uncrowded Rhodesian spaces. Sir Godfrey embraced the idea, made in Plan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Rhodes's Man | 5/8/1944 | See Source »

...forthright aversion to walking drove Harris into the air. He was 22, spending a happy interlude on a family friend's tobacco farm in Southern Rhodesia, when World War I broke out. Arthur Harris enlisted in the First Rhodesian Regiment of Infantry, served first as a bugler, and (as he later told it) walked across Africa to fight the Germans. Swearing that he would never walk again if any other form of locomotion was available, he went back to England and joined the R.A.F.'s predecessor, the Royal Flying Corps, in 1915. He won the Air Force Cross...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF EUROPE: High Road to Hell | 6/7/1943 | See Source »

Contingents of Rhodesian and Indian troops, about 7,000 strong, sent belatedly to reinforce the 560-man Somaliland Camel Corps, failed to stem Italian columns pressing along the coast from the west and through the mountains from the south, in temperatures of 120° Fahrenheit. The British made two stands outside of Berbera and then departed. Great Britain, with only 120,000 troops in the Middle East and with a situation in India too delicate to permit heavy troop withdrawals from there, was in no position to pour in enough men for a real defense. The Italians viewed Berbera...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTHERN THEATRE: Little Dunkirk | 8/26/1940 | See Source »

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