Word: stalinize
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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TIME'S own method of going about the story begins, but does not end, with the official sources. From Moscow, Correspondents Edmund Stevens and Donald Connery cabled reports with a frankness unthinkable in Stalin's day. Washington and London joined in. Then came into play not only TIME'S own Russian-speaking Soviet specialists in New York but a panoply of knowledgeable people in many places, whose estimates in previous Russian situations have proved sound and useful. Our U.N. correspondent talked to a number of delegates with earlier diplomatic experience in Russia. In Boston, our correspondent usually...
...STALIN was on TIME'S cover ten times. With this week's issue, Khrushchev makes his eleventh cover appearance. He has now been on TIME'S cover more than anyone else except Ike, who, as soldier and President, holds the record...
Double, no, treble the guard by his slab To keep Stalin from rising, and with Stalin the past...
...Stalin has not surrendered. He thinks death can be repaired. The Communist youth paper Komsomolskaya Pravda last week gave over a page to eight additional Evtushenko poems, including another anti-Stalinist tirade. By week's end, slightly dazed Russian readers found still another Evtushenko work, this one contributed from Havana, where he is writing the scenario for a movie about Castro's revolution. Couched in the form of a Letter to America, it was a predictable tirade against the U.S. blockade of that "small but courageous island which is becoming a great country." The U.S., charged Evtushenko, first...
Pravda reported that Letter to America had been phoned in by the poet from Cuba. Evidently, like Stalin in his grave, Evtushenko has a telephone-but his is securely connected with the party line...