Word: angered
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...Peace. The people responded with anger and dismay. In Milan, despite Premier Badoglio's ban against public assemblies, they gathered in shattered streets and cried: "We got rid of one tyranny; now we must remove another." In Rome crowds shouted "Peace!" and knelt to pray with Pope Pius XII who came from the Vatican to see the raid damage...
Heart and Arthritis. A pain above the stomach is sometimes diagnosed as a symptom of angina pectoris, peptic ulcer or gastritis, when the ailment actually is arthritis. If the pain does not come from fast walking, stair-climbing or anger, heart trouble can be ruled out; if there are no symptoms connected with eating, ulcers also are eliminated...
...week's end, Vatican Radio again went on the air. "The Holy Father is very willing to believe that the bombs were not intentionally dropped on the basilica. . . . His words were not intended to incite to anger and hatred, but ... it must be emphasized that Rome is indeed something without equal. ... It would have been possible to make Rome an open city. . . . The Holy Father is also not unaware that other towns have suffered terribly . . . that injuring of the mystical body of Christ weighs heavier than the destruction of stone houses...
...Senators' anger arose with the appearance of Pearson's Washington Merry-Go-Round column headlined: GILLETTE IS CHOSEN BY FARLEY TO BEAT ROOSEVELT IN 1944. The burden of Pearson's story was that James A. Farley had met with anti-Fourth Term Senators (including Missouri's Bennett Clark, Georgia's Walter George, Virginia's Harry F. Byrd, et al.) to choose a candidate to win the Democratic nomination from Franklin Roosevelt in 1944. The man they settled on, said Pearson, was Iowa's handsome, white-thatched Senator Guy M. Gillette...
...member of the armed forces stationed in North Carolina. It was with amazement and anger that I read the ad in your June 14 issue in which the State of North Carolina . . . insinuates that non-native-born workers are not as patriotic...