Text #4190285

Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander in Europe, had no counterpart in the Pacific. From the beginning of the war, rivalry between the Army and the Navy marked the conflict. The two services competed for command, territory, and resources. In the vast Pacific, an ocean dotted with thousands of coral islands, there should have been ample room for both. But interservice rivalries and great distances prevented a single unified commander from being named, until General Douglas MacArthur became Supreme Commander.

—from A Brief History of the U.S. Army in World War II, a other by Center of Military History

Active since February 3, 2019.
508 total characters in this text.

View Pit Stop page for this text

Leaders

View ranks through of 4
Rank Username WPM Accuracy Date
1. im liquid smooth (chakk) 187.47 99% 2019-02-03
2. Sean Wrona (arenasnow) 176.28 99% 2019-02-03
3. eiko (eikomaniac) 158.87 99% 2019-02-03
4. Ian Brandon Anderson (hi_i_... 143.48 98% 2019-02-03

Universes

Universe Races Average WPM First Race
o4do0q2x8u 5 167.63 February 3, 2019