Marine Chaplain, 1943-1946Merriam Press, 1998 - 162 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 74
Página 13
... began to freeze on the roads. Anna was waiting for us, and with our fingers crossed we headed back over the glazed highways. When we came to the moun- tain two miles from Greenwood Lake, we began to pass cars which had lost headway and ...
... began to freeze on the roads. Anna was waiting for us, and with our fingers crossed we headed back over the glazed highways. When we came to the moun- tain two miles from Greenwood Lake, we began to pass cars which had lost headway and ...
Página 18
... began yelling , “ Hit the deck ! ” Fortunately my roommate had forewarned me as to the meaning of this somewhat baffling cry . It constituted , indeed , an ill - timed introduction to another Williamsburg characteristic to be mastered ...
... began yelling , “ Hit the deck ! ” Fortunately my roommate had forewarned me as to the meaning of this somewhat baffling cry . It constituted , indeed , an ill - timed introduction to another Williamsburg characteristic to be mastered ...
Página 20
... began his lecture, I was poised over my pad like a correspondent at a convention. But I found it hard going. After about ten minutes, I began to wonder whether the nine years which had intervened since college had dulled my wits. I had ...
... began his lecture, I was poised over my pad like a correspondent at a convention. But I found it hard going. After about ten minutes, I began to wonder whether the nine years which had intervened since college had dulled my wits. I had ...
Página 21
... began by stating that the job was not of his own choosing, and that he was no teacher. He then set out to prove both points. A red-headed Irishman just back from chaplain's duty of the most harrowing variety in North Africa, his ...
... began by stating that the job was not of his own choosing, and that he was no teacher. He then set out to prove both points. A red-headed Irishman just back from chaplain's duty of the most harrowing variety in North Africa, his ...
Página 37
... began to feel definitely more comfortable . That was just the trouble . “ Wickersham , ” the Senior asked , “ how do you like the Navy ? ” “ Very much , ” I blandly replied . “ Do you feel at home in it ? ” “ I'm having the time of my ...
... began to feel definitely more comfortable . That was just the trouble . “ Wickersham , ” the Senior asked , “ how do you like the Navy ? ” “ Very much , ” I blandly replied . “ Do you feel at home in it ? ” “ I'm having the time of my ...
Contenido
11 | |
33 | |
81 | |
Okinawa | 147 |
Iheya Ushirio | 153 |
SaipanYet Again | 205 |
Occupation of Nippon | 235 |
Appendix | 331 |
Prologue 5 | 5 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
aboard aid station amtracs answer appeared arrived asked Battalion beach became began Boondocks chapel Chaplain Mac choir chow Christian Christmas church civilian Colonel Commander Communion congregation deck doctors door Eighth Marines enemy Episcopalian face fact feel fire friends gentlemen going Greenwood Lake Hitoyoshi hospital Iheya Isahaya Japan Japanese jeep Kagoshima Kimura knew Kumamoto Kunishi lain land letter lieutenant looked Marine Corps miles mind months morning mountains Nagasaki naval Navy never night officers Okinawa outfit Parris Island passed Pearl Harbor personnel prostitution Protestant question reached regiment remember replied Roman sack Saipan Sasebo Second Marine Division seemed ship stood Sunday Tanapag Harbor Tarawa tent things Third Battalion thought Tinian tion took train turned V-J Day Waves weeks Wickersham wife Williamsburg wonder word wrote