Word: anglo
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Vengeance hung over the whole trial, he said. "And vengeance is seldom justice. ... In these trials we have accepted the Russian idea of the purpose of trials-government policy and not justice-which has little relation to our Anglo-Saxon heritage. ... I pray that we do not repeat the procedure in Japan...
...votes, added to the clamor. (Yugoslavia, for example, sounded more intransigent than the Kremlin on the subject of Trieste.) Russia, which had not liked the idea of a 21-nation conference in the first place, had used it as a rostrum from which to warn the world against Anglo-U.S. domination, and to accuse the U.S. of profiting at the expense of war-torn Europe. But if temperamental optimists had been disappointed in Paris to date, Jimmy Byrnes's insistence that the small nations be called in had accomplished something: the record had been kept clear; the right...
...drive a wedge between the U.S. and Britain by making a honeyed special appeal for smoother Anglo-Russian relations...
...Living Church, Anglo-Catholic Episcopal weekly, foe of the proposed plan of union, liked what had happened at Philadelphia. It found the convention's "request" that clergy and laity study church unity for the next three years "all to the good." Said the Living Church: "The important thing is that, while this particular avenue of approach to the Presbyterians is closed, the approach itself remains open. It is to be hoped that, with the air cleared, discussions may proceed in an atmosphere of complete frankness and understanding. . . . [And] when, in the fullness of time, reunion with another Christian body...
This is a skillfully written account of an Anglo-French field-hospital unit-but its chief value is what it has to add to public 1 nowledge about the aloof and baffling General Charles de Gaulle...