Word: centralize
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Central Committee announced that Zhukov had been dropped forthwith from the Presidium. "The secretariat of the Central Committee has been instructed to provide him with other work...
Other Work. After a week of ominous silence, the Central Committee delivered its verdict in the ritualistic phrases of Communist inquisition: "Comrade Zhukov has violated the Leninist party principles . . . pursued a policy of abolishing the leadership and control of the party over the army and navy . . . proved to be a politically unsound person, inclined toward adventurism...
Sharing the Blame. The jackals were soon at work. In the Central Committee itself, reported Pravda, many of Zhukov's oldest and closest military comrades-among them Marshals Timoshenko, Rokossovsky and Sokolovsky-"pointed out the serious shortcomings of Zhukov's work . . . unanimously condemned his wrong, unpartylike behavior." Marshal Ivan Konev suddenly discovered that Zhukov shared the blame with Stalin for Soviet reverses early in World War II, did not deserve much credit for the Stalingrad victory, had hindered more than helped at the conquest of Berlin. All in all, Konev concluded, "it would be absurd to affirm Zhukov...
Nine months ago, in the township of Harere, on the outskirts of Salisbury, capital of the Central African Federation, little Elias first mounted the pulpit-a Pepsi-Cola crate. The six-year-old boy was handsome, dignified; he exuded authority and wore shoes. His mother, in a flowing white robe, stood behind him chanting softly and clasping her hands. About them gathered a crowd of naked children, zoot-suited men and women in gaily-colored print dresses. Little Elias threw back his head and closed his eyes. "Hear my word!" he cried in Shona, a native dialect. "It was your...
...best-kept secrets in U.S. business history burst into the open last week. After months of top-level discussion that leaked neither to Wall Street, the U.S. Government or even many of their own officers, the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York Central-the nation's two biggest railroads-announced that they are considering a merger that would be the biggest corporate marriage ever. Said Pennsy President James M. Symes and Central President Alfred E. Perlman: "Preliminary studies and discussions indicate that substantial benefits to all concerned may result from such a merger...