Word: nikolas
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...Jugoslavian Cabinet, which resigned when Minister of Education Raditch charged Premier Pashitch with aiding his son, Rade Pashitch, to defraud the Government (Time, April 12), was reformed last week by M. Nikola T. Uzunovitch, Minister of Public Works in the last Cabinet. The new Premier is of M. Pashitch's party (Radical), and the new Cabinet is exactly like the last, except that M. Pashitch and Finance Minister Stoyadinovitch have been dropped, while the new Premier holds the Finance portfolio and has entrusted his former ministry (Public Works) to a brother Radical, M. Svuitchitch. The significant fact...
Minister of Education Stefan Raditch smacked down an accusation at Belgrade last week which shattered the rather mythical unity of Premier Nikola Pashitch's coalition Cabinet. M. Raditch charged without mincing that Rade Pashitch, the Premier's son, is a grafter with parental connivance; that he has been mulcting the Treasury since the War by dealing in dishonest contracts...
...Nikola Pashitch, "octogenarian monocrat," became so obsessed with his power to rule the Balkans with an iron hand that his views, somewhat arbitrarily enunciated, were reported to have angered King Alexander, a determined and able ruler. Result: Pashitch, who was then Premier, resigned, having first advised a general election (TIME, July...
King Alexander declined to follow ex-Premier Nikola Pashitch's advice to call new elections. He sent for M. Yovanovitch, President of the Narodna Skupshtina (National Assembly) and asked him to form a Cabinet...
...Nikola Pashitch, who is part Bulgarian, recently celebrated his 80th birthday. For some 55 years he has devoted himself to the service of his country. In 1881 he conceived the idea of a Greater Serbia, became co-founder with the Greek leader, Eleutherios Venizelos, of the Balkan League, and with him hatched many a scheme for extending the frontiers of Serbia and Greece. With the signing of peace in 1918 his dreams were realized. Serbia grew into the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Kraljevina Srba, Hrvata, i Slovenaca), but he found himself faced with opposition from Montenegrins...