Word: eastward
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...last decade of the nineteenth century, Southerners in significant numbers were again cautiously proceeding eastward, particularly to Princeton. Harvard was definitely in the hinterlands, and as late as 1929 only 24 students entered the college from the thirteen Southern states...
...Johannsen. About an hour later Captain H. G. Nordenson went below, leaving him in command to maintain a course of 87°. The speed was 18 or 19 knots, and the night, he testified, was clear, with good visibility and a full view of the moon. As Stockholm sliced eastward from New York Harbor toward Nantucket lightship, he was bothered only by ocean currents that pulled the ship two or three miles northward off course, and by the need to keep a weather eye on the duty helmsman, who was sometimes "more interested in sur rounding things than...
...stop engines after hearing Andrea Doria's fog signal forward of her beam, altered course to starboard without ascertaining the course and position of Andrea Doria, failed to sound proper whistle signals, failed to stop and reverse engines when the danger of collision became apparent, and was proceeding eastward in the path of westbound vessels...
...figures underscored a dramatic eastward shift of U.S. economic attention. In 1953 Europe got 66% of the nonmilitary aid and Far Eastern nations only 12%. In fiscal 1956, Asians received a whopping 58%. Non-Communist Europe, with its technical and economic houses clearly more in order, was down...
Three Reefs. In August of 1950, Major Hayter weighed anchor at Lymington and beat his way by easy stages eastward across the Mediterranean, past Suez and down to Aden. He was in no hurry, and he was happy to pick up some spare change by ferrying Moslems across the Red Sea. In India he spent six months working ashore and saving money. Then he sailed on, past Singapore and Surabaya...