May, 1945. Despite knowledge at the very highest of levels that they may not need to bother, American forces on the ground begin organizing plans for Operation Olympic, the American invasion of Kyushu. On May 4, 1945, in the early morning hours, 200,000 Americans leave Norwich, sailing hard and quick for West Flanders in the beginning of the largest naval invasion in history. For all that she misses him, Juan is a rapidly fading memory; they both knew how things were, and if he got himself shot, it was his own fault. Thoroughly disgusted with the blatant corruption of the Nationalists and the slightly questionable aspects of the Communists, Schlesinger has found himself reading fiction exhaustively, looking for some sort of escape from the banal trap most of the world is. Scott Lazarowitz on libertarian politics, and a Voluntaryist concern. The P-51 pilots are rested and ready, with full guns and full gas tanks; the Luftwaffe crews have been flying all night, are low on fuel, and had their armaments stripped nearly bare for the long flight. When the bell rings for a sighted enemy aircraft at 2:15 AM, most citizens of Wakkanai don't bother to move to their shelters (most people don't have them anyway), but every soldier in the area gets to their beachside bunkers.
As many of the reinforcements arriving in Sicily are American, Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery authorizes a plan to get them out of his way, so that the fighting can be carried on by British troops under British command; the invasions of Sardinia and Corsica, to be carried out by Franco-American troops. But she's found her niche in the city, learned to speak moderately good English in the two years she's been there, and won great fame in the Latin areas of the city playing the Madonna in a Spanish-language musical last Christmas. He finally assembles a small Christmas tree out of a tiny, scraggly tree he found loose on a hillside, mutters "I've killed it!" as it keels over, and goes out on his date with local girl Sophia Petrillo. With virtually the entire active New York City-area air force out of the way, Remer is feeling confident as New York City comes into view around 7:45 AM, many of the American antiaircraft gunners have never hit a moving target (save for veterans) and his squadron can strike and go as they please. Despite the greater success of the German armies, Hitler's drug addictions have proceeded apace, and the man largely sequestered in the Berghof is not the champion of 1939, or even 1943. Lots of people take note of the Fuhrer's apparant mortality, everyone from Hermann Goering to Reinhard Heydrich to the Army Chief of Staff for Italy, Claus von Stauffenberg.
It's an unpleasant Christmas for PFC Charles Schulz; Sicily is a rather rugged place at the best of times, made worse when one is far from home and serving in a tiny village in the middle of nowhere, that looks nothing like long-gone Minnesota. February also sees the beginnings of President Taft's cabinet shaping up; Henry Stimson is back in Washington (somewhat reluctantly) at State, now serving under his fifth President. Want Thomas Jefferson Back? The Americans were going back to the Continent. Italy is a sunny place to be for the German Army, despite the terrific fighting going on in besieged Sardinia, not that far off-shore. He isn't going to go down like the stupid yids did in 43, shot down like dogs in their ghetto, no, he's going to be the leader of Poland when all this is over. The SS officer isn't a particularly able pilot, but he does have loyal crews, men on loan from Reinhard Heydrich as part of his deal with Hermann Goering. Many authorities on the Malay language have maintained that in derivatives the accent moves forward on the addition of a suffix from the penultimate of the root to the penultimate of the derived word.
Those who wish to see the arguments on both sides of this question will find it fully discussed in a paper on " The Evohition of Malay Spelling," in No. This vocabulary has been prepared for use in connection with my "Practical Malay Grammar." It was originally intended to incorporate with the Grammar an English-Malay and a Malay-English Vocabulary, each containing some three or four thousand words, but in view of the fact that most people require a vocabulary containing as large a number of words as possible and are subjected to much disappointment and annoyance when they find that their vocabulary does not contain just the very word which they require, it has been thought better to publish the vocabularies separately and to make them as complete as is consistent with the low price at which such works are expected to sell. For the most part the same words are used, but the idiom is different, and would require a more thorough elucidation than could be given in the introduction to a vocabulary.
Komentar
Posting Komentar