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Word: rastvorov (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...defection of West German Intelligence Chief Otto John to Communist East Germany (see FOREIGN NEWS), the U.S. last week reminded the world that defection is a two-way street-with the heaviest traffic running freedom's way. At a specially summoned press conference, the State Department produced Yuri Rastvorov, 33, the six-footer who was a high-ranking MVD spy in Japan before he fled from the Soviet embassy* and asked U.S. authorities for protection last winter (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISTS: Two-Way Street | 8/23/1954 | See Source »

...Rastvorov phlegmatically faced some 200 correspondents in the State Department auditorium, talked innocuously about his background in fluent but heavily accented English. His mother, he said, secretly had him baptized when he was a baby, but was too fearful even to tell his father. His grandfather was turned off a small farm by the government because he once hired a man to help him get in the crops; the grandfather subsequently starved to death. His uncle was an army doctor who was taken prisoner by the Germans, was put through a three-year "quarantine camp" on his return to Russia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISTS: Two-Way Street | 8/23/1954 | See Source »

...tried hard all my life to believe in this [Communist] system," Rastvorov related, "but I could not . . . After I saw with my own eyes how people live their own lives and how they get along with each other in free countries [I decided] to leave forever a fatherland which [was] a concentration camp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISTS: Two-Way Street | 8/23/1954 | See Source »

...Justice Department announced that Rastvorov would be granted asylum in the U.S. The State Department added that Soviet Ambassador Georgy Zarubin -who had been demanding to know Rast-vorov's whereabouts-had been invited to talk to Rastvorov in the State Department, but the embassy replied that the ambassador was indisposed, and so were all of his assistants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISTS: Two-Way Street | 8/23/1954 | See Source »

Black Smoke. Ever since the execution last year of the MVD's pasty-faced boss, Lavrenty Beria, there have been reports of trouble within the MVD itself. The surrender to the West of an MVD agent, Yuri Rastvorov, in Japan last January, the defection of Khokhlov in West Germany and of the Petrovs in Australia, are the known cases; official Washington sources hint that there are others. Try as it may, Communist propaganda cannot mutter a simple "good riddance" at the defections of such people. They know too much. Evdokia Petrov was not just a spy's wife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Cold Comfort | 5/3/1954 | See Source »

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