Word: angered
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Novelist Dennis will give no comfort to those who simply want to cling to familiar values. He laughs at everybody, including ex-Communists and the church. But he writes neither in sorrow nor in anger and achieves not so much a traditional novel as a rather special entertainment, with intellectual vaudeville acts now and then stopping the story cold. In the end, the Identity CIub breaks up in unseemly haste when a cop drops in for a look around. The blazing, devilish farce is over, a nightmare so cleverly contrived and keenly written that the reader who looks only...
Tomorrow's Consequence. Trembling with anger, dapper Antoine Pinay climbed back to the Assembly rostrum. "Twice I have warned the Assembly of the consequences of a violation of the Charter. An assault of passion and demagogy has led the Assembly to disregard the recommendations of its General Committee . . . My government refuses to accept any intervention of the U.N. . . . My government will consider as null and void any recommendation which the Assembly might make in this connection...
...Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, Pinay telephoned Paris to report his action to Premier Edgar Faure. "You did the right thing by walking out," said Faure. He gave Pinay fresh orders, and next day they were carried out: Pinay and his staff flew home. There, to show France's anger at the Soviet vote in the Assembly, Faure and Pinay immediately agreed to postpone their scheduled visit to Russia. The Cabinet decided to keep its delegation out of the Assembly session, but not quit the U.N. entirely...
...across North Africa, helped Alexander take Italy, more recently presided in London over Britain's crackdown on the Communists in Malaya and the Mau Mau in Kenya. That a soldier of his rank and record should be dispatched to little Cyprus alarmed some Greeks and aroused many to anger. The official Radio Athens, reflecting the continuing Greek irritation over the U.S. vote against U.N. debate of the Cyprus matter, reacted with an anti-American twist: "For every Cypriot [Harding] kills or imprisons, free Greece will hold neither Eden nor Harding responsible, but Mr. Dulles, unless he repents...
...Cabinet went so far as to summon the army's Chief of Staff to brief it on the consequences of quitting NATO-only to arrive at the obvious decision that Greece, for all its anger, would hurt itself most by giving up its only defense against Communism...