Word: russianizing
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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There were other straws in the wind. The effect of the U.S. diplomatic offensive against Russian Communism was nowhere more evident than in France. Russia had accepted the U.S. political challenge by ordering its French followers to revolutionary violence. The violence had failed of its purpose. Once forced into the open as a tool of Moscow, Communism had lost much of its appeal to Frenchmen (see FOREIGN NEWS...
...writer-photographer team that has recently returned from a study of the Russian people spoke Soff-the-record? to the Nieman Fellows last night in Boston...
...average Russian has no other alternative but to suspect us, because of the way Pravda interprets American politics," Steinbeck explained. This fear of American intentions persists, even though the Russians as a whole have been very favorably impressed with the few Americans they have seen, he added...
Asked if he thought the Russian peasant was in poverty today, Steinbeck retorted, "Poor? Conditions are no different from any other sector. Take a tip down south in our own country if it's poverty you're looking...
Pitirim A. Sorokin, professor of Sociology, will expound an original theory of "The Real Roots of Russian-American Tension" to the members of the Social Relations Society, the Graduate Social Relations Colloquim, and all interested persons this afternoon at 4:15 o'clock in Emerson...