Word: burdens
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...will replace Disbursing for two hours a day, and Naval Aviation Supply will be on the docket for four hours a weeks, instead of the introductory supply course. Lt. Commander Collins and Lt. Anderson are expected to assist the regular NSCS faculty in the navy supply courses, while the burden of instruction in aviation supply will be shared by navy and Harvard faculty. Thus, at no time will we be carrying more than four courses, but those four courses promise to be humdingers...
...relegate our own losses to squeamish type or the back pages, it is no wonder that we are overoptimistic. When Washington luminaries drop intangible statements or "in-the-know" hints about our military successes, but on the other hand hush our defeats ... it can plainly be seen that the burden of guilt rests squarely on the politicians' and publishers' shoulders. That is the main cause of this subconscious letdown in war production...
Rinker sang and played the piano. Crosby sang with him and whacked a small cymbal. Their style could be described as modified vo-do-de-o-do. It was original enough to get them a job with Paul Whiteman, but seemed to burden many audiences. The Manhattan reception of their Red Hot Henry Brown prompted them to rename the song Lukewarm Henry Brown. It was not until Paul Whiteman put Harry Barris into the act that the Rhythm Boys really got to town...
...backbreaking burden of U.S. railroads is their mountain of fixed charges (bond interest, equipment rentals, taxes, sinking fund requirements), a load greater than that of any other U.S. industry. Last week, the ICC released startling 1943 figures: for the first time in U.S. history, along with dividends and other income the railroads earned enough ($596,228,149) in the first five months to pay fixed charges for the entire year...
...Senators' anger arose with the appearance of Pearson's Washington Merry-Go-Round column headlined: GILLETTE IS CHOSEN BY FARLEY TO BEAT ROOSEVELT IN 1944. The burden of Pearson's story was that James A. Farley had met with anti-Fourth Term Senators (including Missouri's Bennett Clark, Georgia's Walter George, Virginia's Harry F. Byrd, et al.) to choose a candidate to win the Democratic nomination from Franklin Roosevelt in 1944. The man they settled on, said Pearson, was Iowa's handsome, white-thatched Senator Guy M. Gillette...