Word: staffs
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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That there is new blood in the federal prohibition enforcement staff has been evident in the past few weeks The new blood is undeniably General Lincoln C. Andrews, new Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (TIME...
...Armies are of three kinds," said Major General Sir Frederick Barton Maurice,* military historian and former Director of Operations on the British Imperial General Staff...
...visit by airplane to Morocco of Premier Paul Painlevé, who is also Minister of War, and who was accompanied by M. Laurent Eynac, Under Secretary for Air, and General Jacquemont, chief of the Premier's military staff, overshadowed to a great extent the war news from the Riffian front (TIME, May 11, et seq.). Several Riffian attacks, one along a 60-mile front, were reported, but seem to have been relatively abortive in their effects. A certain amount of concern was felt by the French over the continued infiltrations of Riffian "missionaries" who, behind the French lines, preach...
...honor as extraordinary as it would have been inappropriate. Still reticent, he has met the recognition that sometimes overtakes inarticulate men who have lost themselves in their work and look up, astonished, after many years, to find that they are celebrated. It was he who compelled the staff of the Hospital to attend to "the small things in every single department that could possibly contribute the best work-from the initial diagnosis to the use of the knife." Thrifty, but not businesslike, he has left to his brother the management of their donations and of that discreet but widespread publicity...
Based upon evidence collected toward the end of last year by the Interallied Military Commission of Control (of German armaments), which the Germans call "the Spy Commission," the Allied Governments charged defaults in the military clauses of the Versailles Treaty, ordered the Reich to dissolve the German General Staff (forbidden by the Treaty), to reduce the Army to 100,000 men (the number permitted by the Treaty), to stop recruiting men on short service enlistments (according to the Treaty, enlistments should be for twelve years), to reduce the Green Police to 150,000 (the number permitted in 1920), to cease...