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Word: ussr (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Stanislous Menshikov, a Soviet economist who is working for the United Nations, visited here with several members of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR, including the director of the Institute of Mathematics and Economics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Soviet Newscaster, Noted Economist Visit With Faculty | 11/4/1974 | See Source »

...dance floor fills with couples reliving junior high sock-hops. Every few minutes a fellow who works nights for Penn Central and is calling in sick to be here, jumps up to imitate Lennon. "Back in the USSR. Yeah! Back in the USSR," he sings, waving an invisible guitar over his head. "Yabadabadaba!" shouts someone as a Magical Mystery Tour Guide throws a box of blurry photos over the balcony. Suddenly, there's a minor re-enactment of mobbing the Beatles; this time it's only pictures. Hands clutch at the paper, as though they were home runs hit into...

Author: By Michiko Kakutani, | Title: Nostalgia for the Pepsi Generation | 8/13/1974 | See Source »

...Soviet musician has been an outspoken defender of artistic freedom in the USSR, and he sheltered novelist Alexander Solzhenitsyn prior to the author's exile...

Author: By Richard J. Meislin, | Title: Wiesner, Ellison, Sills Win Honoraries | 6/13/1974 | See Source »

Even if you decide to skip the mysterious USSR in 1974, or to pass up the bistros of Bulgaria this time around, Let's Go will be a useful companion as you get insulted in the more traditional stops on a European tour. Its different attitude is reflected even on its cover, and Let's Go's hitchhiking hand should be more popular among Europeans this summer than Arthur Frommer's prominent American dollar signs...

Author: By Tom Lee, | Title: Get Going | 4/18/1974 | See Source »

...beginning would be arbitrary. So we may as well start with October 26, 1962, with Barrington Moore, then a senior fellow in the Russian Research Center, telling 1000 people in Lowell Lecture Hall (another thousand had been turned away) that "simultaneous revolutions" in the U.S. and the USSR represented the only "realistic prospect of peace." Moreover, Moore told students alarmed by what they considered dangerous American bellicosity over the Soviet Union's stationing missiles in Cuba that "realistic or moderate" protests like theirs "ran the risk" of suggesting that public opinion influenced American foreign policy. Students should leave "constructive alternatives...

Author: By Seth M. Kupferberg, | Title: A History of the Strike | 4/10/1974 | See Source »

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