Word: suslov
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Bubnov was luckier than Nikolai Voznesensky, a Politburo member who disappeared in 1949 after his book on economics was denounced by Mikhail Suslov, a member of today's Presidium. Last week Moscow learned that Stalin had personally written the end to the Voznesensky story. It was one word-"execution"-scribbled across Voznesensky's dossier (Khrushchev called it "murder...
Moscow's Pravda had a new editor, L. F. Ilichev, former editor of Izvestia. He succeeded Mikhail Suslov. It became known only when Pravda (Truth) identified Ilichev as its editor in a list of notables. Few (outside the Red hierarchy) know who Ilichev is, or whether Suslov was fired, demoted, promoted or what...
...occasions, has repeatedly printed the names of three men at the bottom of an unvarying list of fifteen top Russians-the others being the twelve known members of Russia's Politburo, headed by Stalin. Nos. 13,14 and 15, who may soon be announced as Politburocrats, are: Mikhail Suslov, 49, newly appointed editor of Pravda, he travels in Europe on Cominform errands. Panteleimon Ponomarenlco, 49, also a member of the party secretariat; chief food stockpiler; former Premier of his native White Russia and billiard champion there. Matvey Shkiryatov, 68, Old Bolshevik (joined in 1906); for 30 years Stalin...
...November meeting of the Cominform in Hungary, Stalin's representative, Mikhail A. Suslov, emphasized that France, as the key to Western Europe's defense, must not be allowed to rebuild its army. French Communists were to concentrate on sabotaging military reconstruction even if such a program cost them dearly in members and political influence...
...Mikhail Suslov, member of the Bolshevik Party's Orgburo...