"REALLY MAGNIFICENT"
Mr. Nash's Comment
"Really magnificent" was the comment made by «»e D?P u*y Prime Minister (Mr. Nash) today on the speech of Mr. Churchill. Nothing could be finer than his W ay of expressing determination to hold what we have won, ana to go right through, said Mr. Nash. His review of world events from 1941 could not have been surpassed, and his references to the complete understanding between Great Britain and the United States were invaluable at this moment, nothing was more important ithan that the English-speaking peoples should understand one another, because that, he concluded, was the prelude to complete understanding between all nations.
reaching work his Majesty's Government were concentrating all the energies that could be spared from the actual struggle with the enemy.
The policy of waging war until victory would be incomplete and, indeed, spoiled, if it were not accompanied by a policy of food, work, and homes .m the period following the victory for every man and woman who fought ana won. '
RELATIONS WITH U.S.A. Mi\ Churchill recalled that the year 1944 was also election year in the United States, and he said he was sure he spoke for the people on both sides of the Atlantic when he said that the supreme duty of them all, British and American alike, was to preserve that good will which now existed throughout the English-speaking world and thus aid the armies in their grim and uncertain task. Even if provocative, malicious, and untrue things were said, there should be no angry, rejoinder. If facts had to be stated, let them be stated without heat and bitterness. They had to give the men in the field the best chance—that was the thought that must dominate. —
Not only the fortunes of this fearful war, but also the happiness of future generations depended upon the fraternal associations of Great Britain and the United States, both within and without the larger world structure that would Jbe erected to secure the peace of mankind.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 114, 10 November 1943, Page 5
Word Count
335"REALLY MAGNIFICENT" Evening Post, Volume CXXXVI, Issue 114, 10 November 1943, Page 5
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