Word: malenkov
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...Among Prophetess Dixon's successful long-range auguries: Franklin D. Roosevelt's death in the spring of 1945, Truman's re-election in 1948, Bulganin's displacement of Malenkov as U.S.S.R. Premier, the Eisenhower landslide in 1952, and Ike's illness in Denver last fall...
...office calls on senior Soviet functionaries. Three of his Russian hosts once cornered Pearson at a Canadian Embassy luncheon and demanded to know why Canada refuses to sell Russia strategic aluminum, copper, and nickel. Pearson smoothly replied that the metals are in short supply. "Where?" demanded ex-Premier Georgy Malenkov. "In Russia," smiled Pearson...
Though less dramatic than the confession (of incompetence) which announced Georgy Malenkov's fall from Premier last February, Molotov's error was the more heinous for being ideological. At that same time Molotov had said: "Side by side with the Soviet Union, where the foundation of a Socialist society has already been built, there are people's democratic countries which have so far taken only the first, though very important, step towards Socialism." Molotov's error lay in the use of one word: foundation. Said he in his confession: "This mistaken for mulation leads...
...still held in a position of trust. Some diplomats felt that his official resignation was not far off, perhaps after the Big Four foreign ministers meeting at Geneva. Others guessed he might keep the trappings if not the power of office for some time to come. After all, Georgy Malenkov is still around. It was the manner of Molotov's decline which interested the onlookers most, for all the slaphappy cordiality of Soviet leaders, there was still some high-level weeding going on in the Soviet garden...
Bark Instead of Bite. In last week's campaign windup at a Communist strong hold near Djakarta, a pretty 24-year-old girl intensely pleaded the Masjumi line: "The Communists stabbed us in the back . . . The welfare of our people depends on Allah, not on Malenkov or Mao Tse-tung." A crowd of 2,000 barefooted workers and women listened impassively cheered lustily. But a larger crowd a mile away cheered, too, when a Communist speaker harangued against "Dutch imperialism," and accused the Masjumi of selling out Indonesia to the U.S. Similarly...