Word: angered
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...Eisenhower forces had another occasion last week to raise their voices in pain and anger. From Washington, the Republican National Committee sent eleven disputes over delegates back to Republican state committees for decision. Basis for the action: a party rule which says that arguments about district seats must be settled by state conventions or committees, and that only delegate-at-large contests can be considered at the national level. The horrified Ikemen pointed out that their complaint, in practically all cases, has been that Old Guard Taftmen controlling state organizations are trying to freeze out Eisenhower delegates. The committee...
...leitmotif that plays repeatedly throughout the book is Chambers anger and distress that all "the best people" heaped muck on him and sided with Hiss. The author wastes no opportunity to demonstrate the presence of the socially elite in the Communist camp. He frequently singles out Harvard which he appears to regard as an exclusive sanctuary for the rich and well born...
...reactions of Venice's art lovers ranged all the way from bewilderment to outright anger. "Art is a religion," growled 85-year-old Giuseppe Cherubim, dean of Venetian painters. "If it were up to me, I would do as Christ did when he kicked the profaners out of the temple. These paintings are made with water and idle talk." But idle or not, spatialism was the talk of Venice. During the first week, 4.000 crushed in for a look at the atomic fireballs and glowing pinholes...
Switching abruptly from an easy, bantering manner, the President, with rising anger, had launched a bitter attack on political opponents. The opposition tactics of some Congressmen on military appropriations, he snapped, "are right down the alley that Mr. Stalin wants to go." At the height of his angry denunciation, he made this announcement of his future plans: "Whether I am in office or not . . . I am still going to continue this fight with everything I have got. . . I am going after these fellows hammer & tongs." As a private citizen, he said, he would carry his fight to the people, "going...
...Schneider, the patient, amiable No. 2 barber at the shop in Paris' suburban Rue Chevreuse, was a man slow to anger. The first time he found his luncheon rice spiced with crushed electric-light bulbs, he put it down to accident. The following week his good wife Madeleine once again garnished the rice in his lunch box with glass, and added a few carpet tacks. Léon began to wonder, and asked his boss about it. "I don't meddle in other people's affairs," said the boss...