Hello, I just got my very old tablet working and I need to put it back to factory settings. However, I've got Glory of generals (both the first one and Pacific) installed there and have a lot of progress and one bought and more grinded generals. I'd love to get back into the game since it was a lot of fun but I don't want to start all over again. I'd like to transfer my progress to my current phone. Does anyone know where Glory of generals are installed and where its files are? No amount of Google sync helps and another problem I have is that the usb connector is busted and can only charge, no data transfer. So there's no way I can just take all the data on the tablet and try putting it into my phone.
Vasily Grigoryevich Zaitsev, known in-game as Vasily, is a Soviet general that appears in Glory of Generals 3. Like all generals that are bought from the shop, Vasily can be used by both the Axis and the Allies in Campaign mode.
By this point, Jones was too weak to change into his alter ego, but he regaled Wallace with inspiring stories about his adventures as Glory (the stories paralleled thematic trends in superhero comics). Initially skeptical, Donovan eventually came to believe in the spirit of glory and he was able to tap into the same energies that once powered Jones. He manifested great strength and agility, wings and throwing razors. He left his hospital bed and crushed the gangs that had crippled him. When he returned to the hospital, Jones was in cardiac arrest. To keep his legacy alive, Jones bequeathed his powers to Donovan, whose full mobility was restored. As Donovan becomes the second General Glory, Jones passes away.[1][8]
As a soldier with the either the Ally or Axis forces, you can upgrade bases, heal troops or get promoted to Marshal. Call upon 102 famous generals for help, including Eisenhower, Rommel, Patton and Zhukov.
Stanley Kubrick's "Paths of Glory" (1957) closes with a scene that doesn't seem organic to the movie. We've seen harrowing battlefield carnage, a morally rotten court-martial, French army generals corrupt and cynical beyond all imagining, and now what do we see? Drunken soldiers, crowded into a bistro, banging their beer steins on the tables as the owner brings a frightened German girl onstage.
If the singing of "La Marseillaise" in a bar in "Casablanca" was a call to patriotism, this scene is an argument against it. It creates a moment of quiet and tenderness in the daily horror these soldiers occupy -- a world in which generals casually estimated that 55 percent of these very men might be killed in a stupid attack and found that acceptable.
Become a military general during World War II in this challenging strategy title that will transport you back to the most important event in modern human history. More than 100 iconic generals from that era are here: Barton, MacArthur, Montgomery, Eisenhower, and more. Go to battle on land, sea, and air against the greatest military minds from 1939 to 1945.
General abilities can be active, passive and ultimate. The ultimate ability is only available when General is blessed. When recruited, the general will be blessed immediately. They will also have one more 8 hour blessing available which can be used at any time after the initial blessing expires. Following the free 8 hour blessing, generals can be blessed in the Tavern for 2 days for varying amounts of tablets, depending on the general.
Players begin with the hero. His statistics and abilities can be customized, unlike the generals. The hero is managed by clicking on his portrait in the upper left of the screen, not in the Tavern. You can not change his character model or portrait.
The glory days were gone. The days when pews were full, Sunday Schools bursting at the seams, programs well attended, giving was enough to pay the bills and increasing, when every family had 4.2 kids and a housewife who would devote volunteer time to the church, or keep the house in check while her husband did. Those days were over.
And I think that this is the cross roads that many churches and denominations find themselves at these days. Will the memory of the glory days keep us looking backwards? Will we admit that our desire to bring the young people back, might actually be us saying that we want to be young again?
Adding thanks for finding words that express things. I grew up with the glory days long gone (only YP regular by mid teens with parents the next youngest in the congregation); so never really knew the glory days, and where I was they had long faded from memory and it was the faithful few. But the place I am now serving a lot of this is going on. Again thank you for the words, and will likely share some of this reflection
Two generals exceeded 5.8M power at the same time, but the prerequisite for the Victory Column is not cleared (it is still listed as 1/2).
Is there something other than the apparent number that affects this?
my cleric went the diplomatic route in general (best skills diplomacy and sense motive enforced by feats, she is an eclesiastic investigator for Iomedae)and glory domain rocks when you need good charisma rolls...
258CIVIL WAR HISTORY The book has much to recommend it. The author has done a very good job of sifting through the various regulations issued by the Confederate government dealing with the issue of staffs and shows clearly how theory quickly parted company with actual practice. Bartholomees's organizational approach overthe book's first five chapters is well taken, as it gives us a clear picture of a staff's organization and the duties of each staff officer. This is particularly important when it comes to the major task each of these officers was to some degree engaged in, namely the day-to-day administering of the army's needs. In addition, the author covers staffs at every level, from the lowest (brigade) to the highest (army). The book does have its share of flaws, especially concerning the research. Bartholomees admits in the preface that he limited his research to printed sources and secondary works. Even a short trip to North Carolina, where the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina and the Duke University Library are conveniently located within driving distance ofeach other, would have yielded much useful material. Particularly important are Sandie Pendleton's letters and Francis Dawson's papers, to name but a few. A look at WilliamWhann Mackall's papers would have allowed some briefcomparisons with the Army of Tennessee. The flaws in the research impact the book most in the chapters on staff authority and relations with the commander and the staff in battle. Bartholomees may have underestimated the role that corps staffs played in Robert E. Lee's selection of corps commanders to replace first Jackson, then later Longstreet, Stuart, and Ewell. A speculative argument to this effect can be made plausibly from the contemporary evidence. As for the staff in battle, Bartholomees tends to rely heavily on some very dubious sources, especially Henry Kyd Douglas's memoirs and those of Heros von Borcke, who truly deserves the title of the Confederate Baron von Miinchhausen. Bartholomees opens his book with the caveat that this is not for the casual reader. For the well read student of the Army of Northern Virginia, however, this book is a must, despite its flaws. R. L. DiNardo Quantico, Virginia Pretense of Glory: The Life of General Nathaniel P. Banks. By James G. Hollandsworth Jr. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1098. Pp. xiv, 292. $34-95) He did not have a formal education or family connections. He did not have a personal fortune. Yet he became a major politician, serving first in the Massachusetts legislature and then as governor before serving in the U.S. Congress for ten terms. In Congress Nathaniel P. Banks (18 16-1884), originally a Democrat , broke with his party over the issue of slavery and its expansion. Notably, he voted against the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1 854, even though Democratic party leaders insisted that all party members vote for the measure as a show of BOOK REVIEWS 259 loyalty. Banks did more than bolt the party; he endorsed the antislavery doctrine , later joining the Republican party. In a close vote, Banks became the speaker ofthe U.S. House in 1856 and thus was thrust into the national spotlight in the critical years just before the Civil War. His election signaled the first national victory for the Republican party. He considered a presidential run in 1856 but ultimately did not seek the top post; instead he threw his support to John C. Fremont, who lost to James Buchanan. Further, Banks's job as speaker was terminated, for the Democrats regained control of the House. Banks left the House to run for governor of Massachusetts, an election he won. However, he was getting a reputation as a man who placed expediency over principle. He waffled on too many issues. After accepting a lucrative offer from William H. Osborn, president ofthe Illinois Central Railroad, Banks moved to Chicago in i860, only to see the Civil War begin just months later. Wanting to gain political support for the war, President Abraham Lincoln offered Banks a commission as major general. Only three other Union generals outranked Banks, who even outranked Gen. U.S. Grant until...
The public face of Rumania is characterized by extreme contrasts between very poor and very rich people. The state is near bankruptcy, industry is slow in recovering from many years of madcap rule: politics, tourism and agriculture are in chaos, doctors are seriously underpaid and good health care is only available to the newly rich. World Bank loans have been largely spent on sophisticated hospital instrumentation, but the primary health care barely manages to survive. The capital has seriously suffered from Ceausescu's megalomania and many historic cities show the remnants of past glory. The country sometimes resembles a disorganized beehive. Rumanians try to steer a middle course between bouts of self-pity and their intense wish to become full members of the European Union. They are not averse to play-acting and one should not be surprised to receive a cordial accolade from a medical professor who chairs government committee meetings in full general's attire.
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