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Word: leninism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...chief administrator of Stalin's domestic and foreign policies was the NKVD,* a huge secret bureaucracy with absolute powers which grew out of Lenin's Extraordinary Commission (Cheka). The Cheka was a picked group of Bolshevik revolutionaries whose duty, during the 1918-1920 Civil War, was to instill Marxism in soldiers, workers and peasants and to liquidate anti-Bolshevik activity. Stalin made the NKVD the "inner temple" of Communism, and its dedicated, anonymous thousands of operators not only controlled the police, espionage, security and surveillance agencies, but by dominating innumerable inspection, control, auditing and credentials committees and commissions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: The Quick & the Dead | 7/22/1957 | See Source »

...Khrushchev family: dumpy, grey Mrs. Khrushchev, almost never seen at public functions, who once wistfully complained to a U.S. diplomat's wife that she did not go to the theater "as much as she would like to." The Khrushchevs have a downtown apartment in Moscow, a house in Lenin Hills of the boxy type favored by Nikita, nicknamed a Khrushchobka by builders, a dacha in the Crimea. In Moscow also are his son and two daughters, Nadia and Rada (of whom he once jokingly said, "They keep me from paying taxes"): one daughter married to roly-poly Alexei Adzhubei...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: The Quick & the Dead | 7/22/1957 | See Source »

...doctrine, expounded by Marx, Lenin and Stalin, is an all-embracing one, Conant said, one which allows no other and which was first advanced for the proletariat so that it might win its great battle against capitalist domination...

Author: By Frederick W. Byron jr., | Title: Conant, Fischer, Counts Stress Learning Communist Concepts | 7/18/1957 | See Source »

...fought harder, more steadfastly or more tragically to stem the forces advancing along the Lenin-mapped route than Chiang Kaishek, and no leader in the free world knows those forces better, or has known them longer. Out of his bitter knowledge comes this book, subtitled A Summing-Up at Seventy.* It is extraordinary, among other things, for what it is not. It is neither bitter nor angry; it wastes no time on past glories or on recriminations. It is a coldly impersonal study of what went wrong in China and what ought to be done now. The book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

...grimmest ironies is that the Communists' lying assurances of their devotion to peace, democracy and progress have always found eager believers, while the Reds' truthful pinpointing of their own goals has been blandly ignored. Until it was too late, only a handful of people ever took seriously Lenin's statement that "the shortest route from Moscow to Paris is via Peiping and Calcutta." Yet who can today deny that he meant just what he said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

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