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...average of $6,300,000 each. They will be paid for out of authorizations already made for the two-ocean programs. After previous contracts were awarded, there was still some tonnage left over. Navy men passed the word that the new building would slow up the two-ocean fleet program, scheduled for completion in 1946-47, little...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NAVY: 40 More Tin Cans | 12/30/1940 | See Source »

Navy men are still making no public promise that the two-ocean fleet, in its overwhelming entirety, will be in the water before 1947. But last week, the rambling, white-walled Navy Building on Washington's Constitution Avenue was full of the expectation that most of the great fleet would be in commission by the end of 1945. Unofficially, Navy officers said that this chart of deliveries was, if anything, on the conservative side...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NAVY: 40 More Tin Cans | 12/30/1940 | See Source »

...that Italy might fall out of the war, that internal dissatisfaction might force a separate peace. What, militarily, would the collapse of Italy mean for the British cause? It would not keep German bombers from the Isles. It would not necessarily mean that Britain could remove its entire Mediterranean Fleet for duty elsewhere (uncertain is the disposition of the rest of France's Navy, of Spain's not negligible fleet). But collapse of Italy would certainly relieve pressure, freeing troops, planes and some ships...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STRATEGY: Britain's Best Week | 12/23/1940 | See Source »

...about the most decorations. Everything the R. A. F. could get off the ground went out-from slick new Hurricanes recently brought East, to heavy old Glosters. vibrating like aerial pianos. Just as the Germans did on May 10 in the Low Countries, the R. A. F. and the Fleet Air Arm blinded the enemy. British squadrons bombed airfields from Sidi Barrani right to Tripoli. For hours the Italians could only guess what was happening. At the same time the British Fleet swung in to bombard Maktila, Sidi Barrani and the Italians' road to the rear. The Italians were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTHERN THEATRE: Battle of the Marmarica | 12/23/1940 | See Source »

...rout was terrible. While British mechanized columns pruned and hacked, the R. A. F. poured bombs and machine-gun lead on motor transport, camps, supply depots, airdromes, and on the soldierly runners. The fleet moved along, throwing everything but the gun turrets at the coastal road. At Bardia some vessels edged in just a half mile from shore and pumped their biggest shells into the town. The fleeing Italians abandoned everything, leaving large supplies of tinned food, oil, water, Chianti, mules, lorries, truckloads of documents, new tanks, guns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTHERN THEATRE: Battle of the Marmarica | 12/23/1940 | See Source »

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