Word: redresses
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This cavalier solution would amount to leaving Asia to the Communists, for weak countries cannot fight with dollars, untrained troops, and especially without the active support of the United Nations to redress the disparity in strength. That they who advocate this policy believe that nations either in the process of birth or taking their first steps would risk their national lives by hooting at, say, China when the United States and the UN has discarded them, is a sickening commentary on their approach to foreign policy. Scrapping collective security would only imperil the United States far more than at present...
...Assembly, which fears, with some reason, that a rearmed West Germany cannot be kept indefinitely in contractual confinement. Yet the writing on the wall was plain: if the French failed to ratify the European Army, the U.S. would inevitably rely more & more on Germany, less & less on France, to redress the imbalance of power between East & West. The postwar era of continuous U.S. concessions to French fears, delays and apathy was drawing to a close. The big new fact of Spring 1952 was the resurgence of Germany...
...Assembly had meant to strengthen the rule by requiring pastors to assure themselves of the person's "penitence for past sin and failure" (TIME, June 2), forgot to write the one-year rule into the revised provision. The Assembly will have to wait till next year to redress its mistake...
...real passion came not from Germany, which promises to pay some reparations, but from Israel, which wants redress but does not want the payments to be considered expiation. Many Israelis still carry concentration-camp numbers tattooed on their arms; almost all mourn murdered relatives. The prospect of sitting down with the Germans to discuss a financial settlement seemed degrading. But Israel, financially desperate and short of everything, could not even afford pride and sentiment. Opposition newspapers reprinted old photographs of naked, emaciated concentration-camp victims stacked, like cordwood, for burning, but there was little else...
What, then, are the arguments for eliminating the junior class elections? One is that there are too many juniors and seniors on the Council already--most of the appointed members are upperclassmen--and that eliminating two juniors would redress the balance. Another is that the Council's total membership should not be increased lest it become unwieldy. But the necessity of leaving open channels by which experienced men can be re-elected far outweighs the other considerations. The Council needs more such members, and it should not hesitate to expand itself to get them...