Word: outlooks
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Many Britons think that if Britain had been invaded in World War II, its Government might have a different outlook on the practical business of the liberation of Europe. Last week, in the London Observer, earnest, imaginative Commander Stephen King-Hall, M.P., for the benefit of Britons (and Americans) pictured a passage in history as it might have been. The liberation of Britain, after King-Hall...
Second, some eight to nine billion lei worth of cattle, food and fuel have been requisitioned. Included in this is a large amount of agricultural machinery and grain. More worrisome is the fact that seed grain has also been taken. The outlook for next year's harvest is gloomy...
...straining for a glimpse of the topmasts of a relieving U.S. fleet. The Japanese had closed each eye for a few months in the past, but the Chinese had reopened them. Not until this year did the Japs decide to deprive China again of what was now its last outlook to the east. Early in September, they put out the northern eye, Wenchow, in Chekiang Province...
Thus wrote Publisher Robert E. Harlow of the Pinehurst, N.C. Outlook (circ. 1,250) in the weekly trade journal Publishers' Auxiliary (reprinted from Coronet). Up & down the land, country weekly reporter-editor-publishers took time off to search their souls and tell Pinehurst's Harlow where he got off, or on, as the case might...
Thus the U.S. was concerned over short-term prospects ; Japan was concerned over the long-term outlook. MacArthur's return to the Philippines had still not been jeopardized. But advances beyond that had been made immeasurably more difficult by Japan's powerhouse campaign to cut China through the middle...