Word: lies
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...great lesson for the future is that success in the art of war depends upon a complete integration of the services. In unity will lie military strength. We cannot win with only backs and ends. And no line however strong can go alone. Victory will rest with the team...
...walls. Foreign correspondents, on a rare sightseeing trip, saw signs of a thoroughgoing restoration project.* The nine gilded, onion-shaped domes of the Cathedral of the Annunciation, stripped of their camouflage paint, shone in the October sun. At the nearby Cathedral of the Archangel (where the Tsars lie buried), and all over the Kremlin's 90 acres, roofs were being fixed and walls painted...
...this: a 13-year-old son to go with her, a country house to close and a town apartment to rent, an incomplete visa, no travelers' checks, nothing packed for a trip of any kind. And once-she-gets off the boat, her route will lie 900 miles across two war-ravaged nations...
...next 100 years lie partly in the hands of the Academy's alumni. They are a powerful group and most of them have spiritually never left the reservation. Of 18,000 who have graduated since the Academy's founding, 15,000 are still alive (only some 2,400 had graduated by 1900). Among them are the commander in chief, U.S. Fleet, the chief of the Navy's Bureau of Personnel, who are directly responsible for Academy policies. (Jake Fitch only administers.) Academy alumni are admirals and captains-the holders of almost all the worthwhile jobs...
...ambitions lie in social work or nursing; she worked in a camp for underprivileged children in Illinois last summer. Didn't that make her socially conscious so that she'd read the Chicago Sun instead of the Tribune? Oh, no, the money for the camp came from the Tribune...