Word: goals
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...goal: one seat to a passenger...
...hands are not clean, nor our own hearts without sin"), called on the U.S. to abandon isolationism forever and accept "her rightful share of the responsibility for building a world order," and declared that "our nation must be prepared . . . even at heavy sacrifice ... to enter a world society whose goal is a sovereign good which transcends national sovereignty...
...down the East and West and Gulf Coasts they plopped into the water. In Boston optimistic Jerry Land spouted facts that could bring no joy to the Nazis. The U.S., said he, had already reached one goal: delivery of two ships a day. By next fall, he promised three a day. Working overtime were 60 shipyards, two-thirds of them (with capacity of 295 ways) devoted to building oceangoing merchant vessels...
...major goal on this trip was the Chindwin River. We crossed it a few days ahead of the Japanese...
...keel was laid; early this week, another was delivered 74 days after keel-laying; by week's end his Oregon yard is due to deliver three at once, and the third will have been completed in only 60 days from keel-laying. For next month, Kaiser's goal is: 36 days from keel to launching, plus another twelve days for outfitting. With German submarines in the Gulf, such records are needed to keep the U.S. afloat. But their post-war implications are something else, for they mean a sharp reduction in traditional ship-building costs. The U.S. merchant...