Word: panyushkin
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Dates: during 1947-1947
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Hopes. The newsmen were waiting on the liner's aft veranda deck, shivering slightly in the 39° cold, when Panyushkin, hatless and inconspicuous in a long blue overcoat, hove into sight in tow of a Cunard pressagent. When he spotted the group, he fled to a lower deck. The reporters followed, and cornered...
...slender Alexander Semenovich Panyushkin, 42, Soviet Russia's new ambassador to the U.S. (TIME, Nov. 3). Ambassador Panyushkin was one of 1,164 passengers aboard the luxury Cunarder Mauretania. As far as the newsmen were concerned he might have been the only...
...think American newspaper attacks on the Soviet had been unfair? He couldn't say anything about that. "But you do hope to promote better relations between the two countries?" Panyushkin's answer: "Everything is possible under...
Bread. Shipmates had noted that Panyushkin, who suffers from stomach trouble, had carried his own black bread and Russian white wine, that he had caviar with his dinner and that he was a good tipper (amounts unspecified). When newsmen got through with him, Ambassador Panyushkin was taken in charge by a State Department representative, the Russian Consul General and six Soviet attach...
That night he was met in Washington's Union Station by handsome Stanley Woodward, White House and State Department chief of protocol, who welcomes every new chief of mission to Washington. Three days later Panyushkin presented his credentials to Acting Secretary of State Robert A. Lovett, conversed twelve minutes with him. Facing reporters once again, he was asked about the state of U.S.-Soviet relations. "It is a duty of all ambassadors," he replied, through an interpreter, "to try to have normal reciprocal relations...