Word: forwarded
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Moors to penetrate through the deep ravines between the positions and isolate any one of them from the remainder whenever they feel so inclined; 3) the innumerable advanced posts of the front line, containing small garrisons which must be kept constantly supplied with fresh food and ammunition. Taking these forward means the frequent employment of strong convoying columns, which always are open to attack from a lurking enemy lying in wait in rocky fastnesses where it is impossible to locate them by means of airplanes; 4) malaria and dysentery...
...remember seeing Hecht in his own house, a figure of some domesticity, with his wife and children; relating rapidly anecdotes gleaned from a rather grotesque variety of facts which he has gathered from years of constant, voracious, exotic reading. He was really a person of much charm. I looked forward to his first novel. Erik Dorn was a disappointment to me. It had passages of power; but its vulgarity and carelessness overbalanced them. Gargoyles I liked even less. Hecht is a brilliant, flaunting, ironic and not yet so very stable figure. What he does in the future seems...
...major operation but would be completed before our fleet had left Hawaii. As Captain Mizuno Hironori, formerly of the Japanese Navy Department, pointed out a few weeks ago in the Chuo Koren* (Tokyo), the maintenance of a war strength of 42 divisions by the Japanese army looks forward to the possibility of capturing the Philippines in the event...
With his enthusiasm for Dickens, which gave birth to a delightful volume, Mr. Dickens Goes to the Play, is linked his enthusiasm for the Army and the doughboy, which occasioned The Command is Forward, and his unqualified admiration of Mrs. Fiske, which gave the world Mrs. Fiske?Her Views on Acting, Actors and the Problems of the Stage. To these three volumes we may add a recent collection of essays, Shouts and Murmurs...
...late President on most policies. It is true that he will not have the opportunity to consolidate his power by as many appointments as a newly elected President. He may, however, give old issues a new twist. He may take a decisive stand on an old question, bringing it forward as a leading issue...