Word: anglo
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Further, the revolt showed that if the party shies away from extreme internationalism, such as Harold Stassen's proposal for world federation, it need not fall back into the arms of the Chicago Tribune's Colonel Robert McCormick. For the offense of suggesting the practicability of an Anglo-American military alliance (TIME, Sept. 13), Colonel McCormick had formally read Tom Dewey out of the party in an editorial entitled: "Tom Dewey Goes Anti-American." The Colonel had screamed at Tom Dewey: "He has finished the pilgrimage to Downing Street by way of Wall Street. . . ." But Colonel McCormick apparently...
...Italian Government . . . with the object of avoiding further and more grievous harm to the nation, has requested an armistice from General Eisenhower. . . . This request has been granted. The Italian forces will therefore cease all acts of hostility against the Anglo-U.S. forces. . . . They will, however, oppose attack from any other quarter...
...Alexander, chief planner and strategist; Admiral Sir Andrew Brown Cunningham, boss of the Mediterranean fleet; Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, strategist of the air. They made the specific plans, which had to be shared with President Roosevelt, with Prime Minister Churchill, with General Marshall and the Anglo-U.S. staffs in Washington. But the ultimate responsibility was Eisenhower's. And to accomplish his job Eisenhower must lean heavily on his British-American headquarters staff, the unsung heroes who attend to the complex, dull details that are an inevitable and vital part of fighting...
...early Anglo-American-Russian conference...
...Washington announced plans for an Anglo-U.S.-Russian committee to consider Mediterranean issues, possibly administer captured territories...