Word: anglo
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Specializing in Anglo-Soviet relations, Ullman will be assistant professor of Government as well as Allston Burr Senior Tutor of Lowell House. His book, Intervention and the War (1961) is the first volume of a two-volume study of Angle-Soviet Relations...
...sprang from the Anglo-U.S. crisis over cancellation of the bug-ridden Skybolt missile, and the U.S. offer to supply Britain and France with the proved Polaris (TIME, Dec. 28). The one Allied leader who unreservedly welcomed the Polaris offer was Harold Macmillan, who by thus keeping a separate nuclear deterrent for Britain had saved his own neck...
...sessions began in a dismal political climate. At issue between President Kennedy and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan. meeting in Nassau last week, were questions that went to the nature not only of Anglo-American amity but also of the entire Western alliance. But as the talks broke up at week's end, the sun was peeking through the clouds...
...most Britons last week, it seemed probable that a British Prime Minister and a U.S. President might never again be able to talk over their mutual problems with frankness and friendliness. On the contrary. John Kennedy was able to persuade Harold Macmillan that the issue at stake was not Anglo-U.S. amity but a costly, contrary contraption that would add no credibility to Britain's deterrent. The Prime Minister came away with Polaris, which is both a proved deterrent and concrete proof of a continuing, exclusive relationship with the U.S. In the 22 months before...
...Anglo-American crisis, said one angry Londoner, was the most serious since Suez. U.S. and British officials argued bitterly, and the British press roared the Lion's wrath. Britain, it was clear, felt that it had been doublecrossed by its closest ally-and all over a missile named Skybolt that has never yet worked...