Word: molotovs
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Foreign Minister Molotov and the others was given a crystal-clear exposition of U.S. attitudes and intentions. In a dispassionate, soberly frank speech last week, Secretary of State James F. Byrnes told Russia that its own attitude of distrust and its belief in the inevitability of World War III were at the root of the "continued if not increasing tension" between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R...
...called for Russia, on its part, to abandon "false and misleading propaganda" and the arbitrary use of its veto. Finally he called on Moscow to join with the U.S., "veto or no veto, to defend with force if necessary the principles and purposes" of the U.N. Charter. (Foreign Minister Molotov offered no comment...
...astonishingly anonymous-looking U.S. delegation (see cut) had a whole floor at the Pennsylvania. ¶ Senator Connally, with more than 150 other westbound diplomats, was on the Queen Elizabeth, making its first peacetime voyage (see BUSINESS). The most rubbered at and the least gregarious passenger was V. M. Molotov, who was usually surrounded by aides and bodyguards. Both Molotov and Vishinsky bowed deeply whenever they encountered Czechoslovakia's Jan Masaryk. Masaryk was seen reading a detective novel called Uneasy Terms...
Said Lieut. General Sir Giffard Le Quesne Martel, who headed a British military mission to Moscow during the war, in a speech at Bristol: "I think he [Stalin] was banished to the Crimea for a bit and then he came back and found that Molotov and Vishinsky and that...
Polished and primped from stem to stern, she sailed from Southampton last week with 2,200 paying passengers aboard (fares: first class, $365 and up; tourist, $165). Number one among the notables: U.S.S.R. Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov. At Commodore Sir James Bissett's invitation, Molotov took the liner's helm for a few minutes, veered two degrees off course -to the left...