Word: bevinism
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...members, still bickering over Greece, were having it out in a back room, guarded by red-and-blue Royal Marines. Those who were waiting knew that UNO was in crisis; few suspected how serious the crisis was. (Behind the closed doors Britain's bear-like [250 Ibs.] Ernest Bevin threatened to leave the room and to make Britain leave the Council. They did not know that Russia's sharp, suave Andrei Yanuarevich Vishinsky retorted that he was all ready to withdraw from the Council if the Soviet Union's honor and dignity were further impugned...
...France the press gave equal space to Bevin and Vishinsky-except the Communist Humanité, which gave it all to Vishinsky...
...Russian press and radio gave Bevin short summaries or ignored him; Vishinsky got columns. There was no exception...
After nearly three weeks of maneuvering in the dark, U.S. Delegate Edward R. Stettinius called a Big Five meeting, tossed Lie's name in as a "compromise candidate." Britain's Bevin said it was well worth considering, but he would like to consult his Government. Vishinsky, recalling criticism of long delays while Moscow thought problems over, voted a loud and prompt yes. In the General Assembly only three votes were cast against...
Britain's Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin had bluntly charged that the Polish Government's secret police used wholesale murder in order to intimidate the Polish electorate. The victims were members of the middle-of-the-road Polish Peasant Party, led by Vice Premier Stanislaw Mikolajczyk. Last week U.S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes repeated the charge...