Word: soarings
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...vegetable fats and oils-to make soap, linoleum, paint, varnish, oleomargarine, shortenings, for many a food and manufacturing process. Pearl Harbor threw all this fat in the fire. At once domestic oils-soybean, cottonseed, linseed-felt the surge of the shifted demand, began to soar in price. OPA clapped on a price ceiling; but last fortnight, to prevent hoarding, OPM had to freeze all U.S. stocks of some 1,800 different fats and oils, domestic and imported. No food, soap or paint manufacturer can now carry more than 90 days' supply. Tung-oil restrictions are even tighter...
...overtime mounts, as skilled labor and management are spread thin, as general-purpose tools are used for special-purpose tasks, and as subcontracting brings in more & more small, marginal and obsolete factories, it is likely that U.S. industrial efficiency will decline. But it is certain that output will soar to levels which, a year ago, would have been considered astronomical...
Though nearly $20,000,000 has been spent since its cornerstone was laid in 1892, St. John's is still far from finished. Some $10,000,000 must still be raised for the transepts, crossing dome (which will soar 241 ft. from floor to lantern), central and west towers. Not until then will the original Romanesque plan of the cathedral, changed to Gothic in 1911 by Ralph Adams Cram, be completely hidden. But for a cathedral 49-year-old St. John's has made rapid progress-most of it since Bishop William Thomas Manning assumed office...
Since store operating costs are relatively inflexible, net profits soar much faster than sales. For the average storekeeper, 1941 is the lushest year in a decade; for smart operators, the best ever. Some semiannual reports...
Britons wanted to know why, with seven months in which to do it, the Cretan airdromes had not been either fortified or dynamited against Nazi landings. They wanted to know why Nazi planes had been able to soar against Crete in hordes from Greek airdromes which British officials had called practically useless...