Word: jacksons
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...professional soldiers . . . not converted to the new morality," b) the editors of TIME ("Justice Jackson's remarkable definition of the military defendants' status was enough to make all professional soldiers lie awake nights" - TIME, Dec. 10), cease worrying...
...rnberg judges turned from the 21 moody Nazi leaders in the dock to consider the guilt of thousands lower in the "hierarchy of descending Caesars." How many thousands, was the question. U.S. Prosecutor Jackson had said in his opening statement: ". . . We have no purpose to incriminate the whole German people." Somewhere a line had to be drawn...
Only the U.S. prosecution had shown much interest in trying to bring Nazi underlings to justice. There might be rough going for the U.S. attitude, summed up by Jackson's statement that the U.S. would not have participated in the trials without "this or some equivalent plan of reaching thousands of others who, if less conspicuous, are just as guilty of these crimes as the men in the dock...
Sparkplug of UNRRA's present spurt was the Royal Australian Navy's fast-talking, reddish-haired R.G.A. Jackson. He had organized Malta's submarine supply line during the island's blitz. Later, as head of the Middle East Supply Center at Cairo, he had directed the imports of 20 countries. When Herbert Lehman made him senior deputy director of UNRRA, Jackson was given a job bigger but not much different from the one at Malta...
Burly, bump-ahead Andrew Jackson Higgins last week called three of the executives of the Appliance Division of Higgins Industries, Inc. into his office. Calmly he made them a present of the appliance business. While the three men listened with jaws ajar, Higgins dictated a letter to his secretary...