Word: hartness
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Susan B. Glasser '90 Night Editors: Colin F. Boyle '90 Jonathan S. Cohn '91 Ross G. Forman '90 Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Emily Mieras '90 Tara A. Nayak '92 Joseph R. Palmore '91 Rebecca L. Walkowitz '92 Robert J. Weiner '92 Feature Editors: Melissa R. Hart '91 Spencer S. Hsu '90 Sports Editors: Jennifer M. Frey '90 Michael R. Grunwald '92 Julio R. Varela '90 Photo Editors: William H. Bachman '92 Terry R.R. Roopnaraine '90 Mechanics Editor: Michael L. Gordon...
Susan B. Glasser '90 Night Editors: Colin F. Boyle '90 Ross G. Forman '90 Melissa R. Hart '91 Matthew M. Hoffman '91 Spencer S. Hsu '90 Tara A. Nayak '92 Features Editor: Eric S. Solowey '91 Joseph R. Palmore '91 Sports Editors: Jennifer M. Frey '90 Michael R. Grunwald '92 Michael D. Stankiewicz '91 Julio R. Varela '90 Photo Editors: William H. Bachman '92 Terry R.R. Roopnaraine '90 Gavin R. Villareal '90 Business Editor: Henry Sicignano III Mechanic: Michael L. Gordon...
Pete Rose and Gary Hart must be related...
...invaded or not, and a number of historians agree. "Even if he didn't invade us, he could have put resources into the war at sea . . . and starved us out," says Howard. "There's very little chance that we would have been able to survive." The strategist B.H. Liddell Hart, in History of the Second World War, applied the term "slow suicide" to Churchill's policy of fighting on. "By refusing to consider any peace offer," he wrote, "the British government had committed the country to a course that . . . was bound, logically, to lead through growing exhaustion to eventual collapse...
...settlement that let him keep his gains? He had predicted such a possibility in the fall: "The recognition that neither force is capable of annihilating the other will lead to a compromise peace." Stalin actually began sending out peace feelers as early as October 1941, and, according to Liddell Hart, Foreign Ministers Molotov and Ribbentrop finally met secretly in 1943 to seek a settlement. But the Germans wanted a new boundary on the Dnieper River, which would have given them more than 130,000 sq. mi. of Mother Russia, while the Soviets, having withstood the Nazis' deepest penetration and inflicted...