Word: molotovs
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...since Stalin's death three months earlier had the men at the top seemed so jittery. Suety Georgy Malenkov nervously eyed dour old Vyacheslav Molotov, his longtime rival for Stalin's favor and now his partner, along with Lavrenty Beria, in the triumvirate chosen to run Russia. Even bouncy Nikita Khrushchev was unwontedly subdued. Only prim, beady-eyed Beria, Russia's top cop, seemed unconcerned. Of all the men in the conference room and an adjoining office, only Beria was ignorant of the meeting's real purpose...
...Soviet Union now concluded its test series? This brought forth the whimsical Khrushchev: "We stop in the evening and start in the morning." He was asked what would happen to Vyacheslav Molotov, who last week grimly left Vienna for home-and seemed on the verge of being expelled from the Communist Party, together with other "antiparty" heretics. This summoned up the confident Khrushchev. Said he airily: "Molotov belongs to the past...
Blackest of All. Old Stonebottom Vyacheslav Molotov, senior member of the anti-Khrushchev clique ousted from power four years ago, was denounced as the blackest villain of all. After his exile as Ambassador to Outer Mongolia from 1957 to 1960, the ex-Foreign Minister had been given a respectable sinecure as Soviet delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna. During the past year, Molotov had become a familiar Viennese sight as he strolled through the Belvedere Gardens or sipped coffee at cafes. But instead of minding his pleasant business, the unrepentant Stalinist a few weeks ago dispatched...
Nothing but the truth, probably. But Khrushchev, trying to make the West believe he's a nice fellow, does not find that kind of truth palatable right now. So everyone on the Moscow stage denounced Molotov and agreed that he had never been any good, anyway. Back in 1937, reported Party Control Chairman Nikolai Shvernik. Molotov had been so "extremely cynical'' that when his car accidentally skidded off a Siberian road, Molotov demanded and got the conviction of a group of guiltless persons on charges of attempted assassination...
...denounce Nikolai Bulganin, who was straightman in the touring company of Khrushchev and Bulganin until his 1958 demotion. Bulganin, in the audience as a delegate, seemed to wake from a slight doze at the mention of his name and made a few notes. The other anti-party villains-Molotov (relatively safe in Vienna), Kaganovich, Malenkov, Pervukhin, Saburov and Shepilov -seemed like candidates for dismissal from the party, prison or worse...