Word: goals
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...year's goal of $65 billion in arms (already trimmed from earlier WPB promises of $75 billion) will probably...
...this stout staff that helped him on his road to Rome and the ultimate goal, Berlin. For the harmony that prevails throughout, Ike Eisenhower has his own tact and diplomacy to thank. On October 14, General Eisenhower will be 53. Since last February, when he was temporarily commissioned a full general, he has been the youngest of that rank in the U.S. Army. This does not surprise the officers with and under whom Eisenhower has served. Since graduating from West Point in 1915, he has always shown a marked capacity for getting ahead, always worked and studied more than...
...Many hypertensives . . . have not learned to accept and enjoy the good things of life without feelings of doubt and guilt. . . . The goal of the hypertensive [should be] a life of cultivated serenity...
Says Hoffman: to the extent that U.S. industry does not achieve this goal (which requires a 40% increase in gross output over 1940), the U.S. public will rightfully insist that the U.S. Government achieve it-"expansion is the one idea we have to sell America." He also says that "when you get a businessman in a tight enough corner, he reluctantly starts thinking his way out of it." Thus C.E.D. was set up with a Field Division to help each U.S. employer think about how to expand his own business...
...Field Division, under Marion Folsom, treasurer of Eastman Kodak, has a relatively short-term objective: to get more people more jobs fast when war ends. By last week it had twelve regional chairmen, 130 district chairmen and 667 community chairmen (v. a final goal of 1,000). Though autonomous, each chairman was supplied with a voluminous "package of know-how" from C.E.D.: to show individual companies how to "plan boldly...