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Considered The Father Of Revolu-[: Ise-tung's Theories. It was the role of nist theoreticians to graft socioeconomic ogical concepts onto the military con-) of guerrilla warfare. While Lenin con-'', in this regard in his article, Partizan-Vomo (1906; Partisan Warfare), Mao ffig can be considered the father of revolu-[ guerrilla warfare. He was the perfecter ditional elements of this form of war-originator of its new dimensions, and jsizer of the old and the new. His prin-I writings in this field are: Yu-chi Chan K; Guerrilla War) and Lun Ch'ih Chiu |(1938; On the Protracted Conflict). B placed guerrilla warfare in the larger tot a three-stage insurgency against a regime that is militarily superior in conventional strength.
RIDERS TO THE SEA, by John Milling- j ton Synge, is the most nearly perfect trapf!- * in one act in modern literature. The very sir pie plot is based not on the traditional confi:: of human wills but on the hopeless struggle.: man against the impersonal but relentless cruei; of the sea. It has taken from Maurya fouroi her six sons, their father, and their father's father.
Because of his influence as a poet and moralist, Guittone is considered a forerunner of Dante, although Dante was critical of Guittone's writing style, which he considered pedestrian. Guittone died, probably in Florence, in 1294.
GUIZOT, ge-zcV, Frangois (1787-1874), French political leader and historian. Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot was born in Nimes, France, on Oct. 4, 1787. The son of bourgeois Protestant parents, he was forced to emigrate to Geneva with his mother after his father was guillotined in 1794. He was educated there and in Par where the family moved in 1805. |
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