Word: globalizations
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...students of strategy like Harold George have long known, a war is fought primarily by logistics-the. supply and movement of men and materiel. But it is probable that few, if any, of the Army's experts on strategy realized how complicated logistics would become in the global developments of World...
...belong to the college as well as to the Class, but it is the responsibility of the 1944 officers to initiate them as much as of the 1944 Class to support them. Festival rites will be remembered long after hour exams and beer parties are forgotten. And though a global war may make acceleration needful, one can foresee no possible benefit to the Axis if the institution of Class Day is preserved for a Harvard already drastically altered by the shaping hand of war exigency...
...full partner did not quiet the fears aroused in the Far East. For India, there was as usual little comfort in anything that Winston Churchill said. Along with the rest of the world, the peoples in Britain's colonies had every right to read Mr. Churchill's global declaration in context with his earlier statement, for home consumption, that Britain intends to keep and rule her own colonies in her own way, after the war (TIME, March 29). The tone of the Prime Minister's home statement left no doubt that he still does not propose...
...Minimum Agreement." Two decades of a false peace and the impact of global war had changed at least some sections of Senate thinking. The resolution's sponsors, who had sweated over the draft of their document for several weeks and buttonholed many a Senator for his ideas on it, hoped to muster a two-thirds majority...
Madame Luce's--"globaloney" speech, together with Representative Joseph Martin's remarks that "America must rule the air," had created great consternation in Britain. Similarly isolationist forces abroad warned of America's intentions and bitterly attacked her policy of global supremacy as a 1943 version of "manifest destiny"; Lord Londonderry among others urged strong counter-measures. Secretary Knox's plea for American naval bases all over the world was equally unfortunate. Alarm in the New Zealand House of Representatives over such bases forced Prime Minister Fraser to declare formally that he believed President Roosevelt "incapable of a mean action...