Word: surly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...undesignated rank). Since Dec. 1 the Germans had found it necessary to shoot 100 of their soldiers for mutiny. It would take a long time for disaffection to weaken the mighty German Army, but the spirit was spreading. In No. 12 ditch of the cemetery of Ivry-sur-Seine, the bodies of 50 German soldier-suicides lay rotting in the open...
...Manila, a lamb-meek little Nipponese shopkeeper named Hara blossomed out in his wolf's clothing when the Japanese took the city. He was soon walking crisply about town in the uniform of a Japanese Army major and calling himself "Military Governor of the Province of Ilocos Sur." In central Luzon U.S. anti-aircraft gunners found their camouflaged positions revealed to Japanese pilots by mirrors placed in treetops. In all the Japanese beachhead thrusts they showed complete and accurate familiarity with obstacles and terrain...
...handicapped not only by the same kind of machine in Whitehall as existed in the last war, but with an even greater force apparently with constitutional power. . . . Until the staff system is thoroughly overhauled, we shall always be too late in everything we undertake. . . . Secret and swift decision, sur prise and speedy action are essentials of success in the present war. This has been brilliantly illustrated in our campaigns in Africa, but you will not get it while you are dependent for decision and action on the cumbrous machinery of Whitehall. . . . One reason suggested for my dismissal was that...
...most ambitious and highly valued (at least $500,000) items ever to come from the brush of the late great Edouard Manet, perked up the National Gallery's feeble Prench section like a shot of vitamins. Besides the Manet, rated as fine as the Dejeuner sur I'Herbe in the Louvre, Collector Dale's loan contained an assort ment of top-flight Renoirs, Degas and Corots, two Courbets, a superb Fantin-Latour, and important works by such 19th-Century painters as Eugene Delacroix and Jacques-Louis David. That Chester Dale's "loan" might be a permanent...
...Maupassant, which are quite popular in Japan. De Maupassant has been banned before, even in France, for immorality, but some observers thought that the Tokyo censorship was directed not at his descriptions of lovemaking, but at his bitter essay on war in a little-known travel book, Sur...