Word: angers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Answer in Anger. As soon as he was in the air, the pilot of the Greek Airlines plane which had waited for Makarios at Nicosia airport radioed the news of the arrest to Greece. In Athens Premier Constantine Karamanlis called together a government council, which decided to recall Greece's Ambassador to Britain and in structed Greece's permanent representative to the U.N. to register a protest with the U.N. As the news traveled through
Passing Fancy? Whoever won in any such contest between thugs of the right and left, the center voices of moderation would be likely to lose. In France, the moderate's voice is getting harder to hear. Every day, as the Mollet government fumbles, Frenchmen die in Algeria, French anger and disgust swells, Poujade's dynamic appeal grows more persuasive to many disillusioned Frenchmen. "It is getting painful to be French," observed Novelist Albert Camus recently...
...week. The West's two great empires-Britain and France-put in a damaging week. Bowing to the inevitable, France conceded a resentful Morocco the independence it might have granted, and thereby earned more gratitude, more than two years ago. Fighting the unthinkable, France watched in anguish and anger as its leaders fumbled and Algeria slipped away, and with it France's inexorably dwindling claim to world power...
...thunderclap of ecclesiastical anger cracked last week around the ears of Gustavo Rojas Pinilla, Colombia's Roman Catholic President. It was set off by the Lenten pastoral letter of Crisanto Cardinal Luque, couched in the measured terms of churchly tradition, yet unmistakably a cry of cold indignation against the recent bull ring massacre (TIME, Feb. 20) in which Rojas' political opponents were maimed and killed by government thugs for having booed his daughter at the bullfights the week before...
...contrast, Herb Adams's Bolingbroke is a character of much power and just though not vengeful anger. His portrayal of the usurper is not the only possible one, but Adams has developed it with assurance and consistency. Equally consistent and even more convincing is Harold R. Scott's portrayal of the Duke of York. His acting is the best in the entire production, and he makes the agony of York's divided loyalty to both Richard and Bolingbroke clear in every line and even the dejected shuffle of his steps. Scott proves that a comparatively minor part can assume major...