(See Cover)
A minor revelation took place last week. The end of the Moscow Conference provided it. At last even the dullest U.S. citizen was made to realize the exasperating difficulty and the aggravating exhaustion of dealing with the Soviet Government. The realization marked the end of another phase of U.S. foreign policy. Now the question became: "What does the U.S. do next?"
Secretary of State George Marshall had returned from Moscow reciting the story of the Soviet effort to seize the economy of Central Europe, of the Soviet Union's negation of every U.S....