User:Xtzou/index/sandbox 2
"Well, if they go fast enough, maybe some of them can be home by Christmas."
"Well, if they go fast enough, maybe some of them can be home by Christmas."
Well, if they go fast enough, maybe some of them can be home by Christmas.
— General Douglas MacArthur[1]
"As a main objective, one of the units must fight its way rapidly around the enemy and cut off their rear.... Route of attack must avoid highways and flat terrain in order to keep tanks and artillery from hindering the attack operations.... Night warfare in mountainous terrain must have a definite plan and liaison between platoon commands. Small leading patrol groups attack and then sound the bugle. A large number will at that time follow in column." |
Chinese operation principles for the Second Phase Campaign[2][3] |
- ^ a b c Appleman 1989, p. 57 .
- ^ Appleman 1992, p. 720 .
- ^ Appleman 1989, p. 102, 104 .
"The idea behind Cauldron II was that there should be a sufficient thread to link to the previous game, but that it should also present new ideas around the platform genre. A player would then be sufficiently assured that we'd done our best to create a new game, rather than fobbing them off with more of a successful formula."
While no individual can be said to have invented rock and roll, Chuck Berry comes the closest of any single figure to being the one who put all the essential pieces together. It was his particular genius to graft country & western guitar licks onto a rhythm & blues chassis in his very first single, “Maybellene.”
I'm going to fight booze until hell freezes over, and then I'm going to buy a pair of ice skates and fight it some more.
"Praying was a comical folly, hymns were so much wailing at an empty heaven, churches were absurd buildings in urgent need of conversion into something useful, or of demolition. Anyone could write a portentous book and call it scripture".[4] |
— The Rage Against God, chapter 1 |
- ^ Grannell, Craig. "The Making of Cauldron and Cauldron II". Retro Gamer (35). Imagine Publishing: 48–51.
- ^ "Chuck Berry Biography". rockhall.com. Retrieved 2 June 2010.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
time
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Hitchens 2010, p. 9