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Word: kalinin (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Kremlin equivalent of a third-class funeral, the body was buried behind the Mausoleum in a cemetery reserved for faintly dubious or dimly famous Red heroes-the folksy ex-President of Russia, Mikhail Kalinin, the ardent Stalinist Andrei Zhdanov, the founder of the secret police. Felix Dzerzhinsky, and U.S. Comrade John Reed. Capping the whole macabre comedy, a vase with twelve white chrysanthemums was placed on the new grave of the man who had just been certified over and over again as a mass murderer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Communists: The Body Snatchers | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

This strictly business collaboration between Communist and capitalist-generally out of fashion the past twelve years -was revived last week. Intertex International, a New York agency representing some 40 U.S. firms, signed a contract in Moscow to equip a $30 million textile plant at Kalinin, midway on the main road between Moscow and Leningrad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BUSINESS ABROAD: Spindles from America | 1/11/1960 | See Source »

Getting into the spirit of the thing, one Kalinin house of culture director suggested that the nation's poets and composers hold a competition for the most romantic wedding march, and that each couple get a handsomely bound volume containing homilies by the country's leading Soviet intellectuals. He also wanted peace doves released at each ceremony. But of all the proposals Izvestia received, none hit the mark so squarely as one from Odessa. After complaining about the "colorless and dreary routine" of the registry offices, V. Runanov suggested that every city have "a special building-the best...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: A Palace for the Bride | 11/2/1959 | See Source »

...raring, tearing two-hour speech ostensibly addressed to the electorate of Moscow's Kalinin Constituency, Khrushchev forcefully reminded the world that he could claw as well as slap backs in raucous good fellowship. Angered by the discovery that Britain's Harold Macmillan had come to Moscow with no intention of repeating Neville Chamberlain's performance at Munich, Khrushchev flatly laid down his uncompromising terms on Germany, in such a way as to demonstrate that he was not interested in reasonable accommodations. In doing so, he also inflicted a historic humiliation on Macmillan and paraded his contempt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COLD WAR: An Assist from Moscow | 3/9/1959 | See Source »

...best job in the whole Navy." An unruly plebe at Annapolis, he logged 300 demerits, squeezed out near the bottom of his class ('21). The exuberant Brown spirit chafed at a rash of peacetime desk jobs, boiled over in 1943. "I've got a carrier [the Kalinin Bay], and I'd like a job of work," he told Admiral Raymond A. Spruance. Snapped Spruance: "You've got one." For two years the Kalinin Bay escort carrier steamed through the thick of it, in the Marianas, the China Sea, the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Forty years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: MEN AT THE FRONT | 7/28/1958 | See Source »

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