Word: anglo-saxon
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...five swift hours freezing orders crackled in from all parts of the Anglo-Saxon world. Now no Japanese could spend a dollar more than $500 monthly per person in the U.S., move a ship out, sell a pound of silk-without a specific Treasury license. Importers Mitsui, for instance, could still buy oil from Standard Oil on dollar credits exchanged through the South American branches of National City Bank, for instance-but only with a license. Hints came down that the license business at the Treasury would be as indefatigably polite as Japanese statesmanship, but also just as reluctant...
...America had a creative period (1770-1860) arising from her first colonization. . . . Probably a second period of 'manifest destiny' is just around the corner. . . . If the Anglo-Saxon fails to rise to the challenge, the French-Canadian and possibly the hillbilly will...
...takes his Soviet military figures from War Commissar Klimenti Voroshilov and other Soviet sources, Russia's military strength is almost twice as great as Germany's. The future of the world depends upon Russia and the U.S. Russia, he says authoritatively, would like to join the Anglo-Saxon powers in trimming Hitler's wings. There is only one catch-to reassure Russia after the perfidy she has suffered at the hands of other Governments, it would be necessary for the U.S. to plunge in first...
...western world: the U. S. and the winner. If Germany wins, the U. S. must come to terms or to blows with a German-dominated New Order. If Great Britain wins with U. S. aid, the U. S. will have the right and the duty to participate in an Anglo-Saxon New Order. The outlines of Germany's New Order are already clear: serfdom for everybody except the people who run Germany. Those of the Anglo-Saxon New Order are not clear...
...Minister Yosuke Matsuoka took Cordell Hull to task for saying that the invasion of Manchuria was the first step in the destruction of world peace (TIME, Jan. 27). "The Manchurian affair," said talky, U. S.-educated Mr. Matsuoka (Oregon, '00), "was not the cause but the result of Anglo-Saxon interference in the Far East." As the Diet met to vote the Konoye Government unprecedented powers and an unprecedented $1,611,432,400 budget (not counting war expenses), the Foreign Minister found himself on his feet most of the time. He said everything he had ever said before about...