Word: maneuverability
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With these words the Church of England last week set at rest the souls of any of its communicants who were bothered about Britain's alliance with the U.S.S.R. They were written by the Most Rev. and Rt. Hon. Cosmo Gordon Lang, 76, Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of...
North of Tennessee's meandering Duck River, where rolling meadows and woods break sharply into commanding hills, 55,000 U.S. fighting men last week worked at war. A few weeks before, frank General George Marshall had said that the U.S. Army was still in the high-school stage. In...
Gibes & Gusto. Making allowances for inevitable shortages of equipment and for the fact that the maneuver season was just beginning, they saw a realistic, competent job of battle craft.
In general, Winston Churchill drew a picture of Britain fighting what the New York Herald Tribune last week called a "guerrilla war of evasion, attrition, maneuver and retreat"-until such time as Britain's armament catches up with the Nazi striking power. He said:
Its most successful maneuver so far was a full page shot on page 67 of the May 19 issue of Life- a profile of K.T. in black satin trunks and white satin blouse on a California beach, her honey-blonde tresses flowing in the breeze, gazing demurely at the cameraman...