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...Czech medical students and two of their professors from Charles University in Prague were visiting Harvard until today. On Friday, 34 Soviet students from the Second Moscow Pirogov Medical School arrived with two faculty members. While this is the third year that Soviet students have come to Harvard, it is the first visit by the Czechs...

Author: By Jacques E.C. Hymans, | Title: E. Europeans Visit Med School | 2/4/1991 | See Source »

...group of 25 Soviet medical students arrived yesterday for a 10-day student-run exchange program. The students, from the Second Moscow Pirogov College of Medicine, will host Harvard Med students over spring break in Moscow...

Author: By Alison D. Morantz, | Title: Med. School Looks into Faculty Regulation | 2/1/1989 | See Source »

However, there are comic scenes, and Alexander Pirogov's Boris manages a few of these, though he is habitually massive-browed and troubled. ("Yet happiness eludes my sad, my tortured soul.") In one of the most delightful scenes, his minister, Prince Shuisky, guilefully played by N. Khanayev, reports that the pretender's forces are nearing Moscow. Catching the drift of the wind. Boris remarks that there is no pretender, the pretender Dmitri is the sovereign, "and Shuisky for perjury shall be quartered...

Author: By Jonathan Beecher., | Title: Boris Godunov | 10/1/1956 | See Source »

...While Pirogov and most of the others are loudly verbalizing their predicaments or laying cluttered schemes, I. Koslovsky, as the fool, offers the film's most subtle performance. He appears just twice--first to accuse Boris in a soft, demented idiot's song and then at the end to lament Russia's unrule. Boris Godunov has come and gone, Dmitri has left the land in flames and he, too, will soon be murdered; nothing has changed...

Author: By Jonathan Beecher., | Title: Boris Godunov | 10/1/1956 | See Source »

...Smith exhibits surprising ignorance when he says: ". . . It is very doubtful whether the Russians are capable of conversion, even if we could reach their ears." Oksana Kasenkina, former Soviet schoolteacher, jumped to freedom from the third floor window of the Soviet consulate in New York, Lieut. Peter Pirogov flew his bomber from Soviet Ukraine to the U.S. zone in Germany to seek freedom ... In Mr. Smith's own England lives former Red Air Force Colonel Grigory Tokaev, who also escaped . . . These are only a few of many thousands who have been converted. Half a million of Russian displaced persons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jan. 7, 1952 | 1/7/1952 | See Source »

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