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Yeltsin will also have to rethink his strategy. The President can no longer afford to dissipate his energies by constantly squabbling with the parliament. A new posture of conciliation was hinted at last week when Kremlin spokesman Vyacheslav Kostikov publicly allowed that parts of the Liberal Democratic and Communist programs "quite correspond to the social aspects of the President's policies -- that is, the social policy of the state, patriotism, making Russia great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No Reason to Cheer | 12/27/1993 | See Source »

Yeltsin at first said he would challenge the 50% rule but later decided against conducting a parallel referendum with more favorable questions. Meanwhile, Vyacheslav Kostikov, spokesman for Yeltsin, warned that Congress might try yet again to impeach Yeltsin before the referendum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: While The Cat's Away | 4/12/1993 | See Source »

Thus the question of who really rules Russia remains unresolved. The Congress is in no position to take over management of the government's daily affairs, and the President is unlikely to accept such humiliating defeat. The Congress's actions, warned his press secretary, Vyacheslav Kostikov, indicate a "slide back to Soviet communist power." That warning was not entirely verbiage, since most of the Congress Deputies were originally bureaucrats from the Communist Party, trade-union functionaries and directors of state factories and collective farms. They are opposed to basic reform partly out of nostalgia for the old days and partly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Rules Russia? | 3/22/1993 | See Source »

Zharikov's husband, Vyacheslav, 56, whose respiratory illness forced him to take early retirement from his job as a sanitary engineer, cannot draw a pension until he is 60. He says the couple might even have expanded their brood if it weren't for the soaring inflation that has come with market reforms. "We didn't know our life would come to this, that the system would change," he says. The huge five-room flat, for which the family pays 162 rubles a month, is in desperate need of renovation. Nine rickety cots, a small table and a few chairs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brother, Can You Spare a Ruble? | 7/13/1992 | See Source »

Plenty, according to Vyacheslav Tabolin, a Russian authority on pediatrics. He fears a major health crisis is looming for today's undernourished children, because their parents and grandparents suffered from malnutrition. Health officials estimate that only 8.5% of schoolchildren in the first to tenth grades are of a height, weight and build normal for their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: Unmerry Christmas | 12/30/1991 | See Source »

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