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...distorted Soviet accounts was a special half-hour television program conducted by two of Russia's best-known journalists, Leonid Zamyatin, 52, head of the official news agency Tass, a sophisticated man who has spent considerable time in the U.S. (including ten days last May); and Valentin Zorin, 50, a hard-lining television commentator...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOVIET UNION: Kremlin Cover-Up on Watergate | 8/26/1974 | See Source »

...listeners heard was something Nixon's last-ditch defenders in the U.S. would have been embarrassed to offer. The commentators referred several times to the "socalled Watergate affair" without once explaining it or even suggesting that Nixon had done anything to warrant removal from office. Neither Zamyatin nor Zorin ever mentioned the Watergate breakin, the coverup, the indictments of so many Nixon aides, the Nixon income tax imbroglio, the incriminating tapes, the articles of impeachment, or the falsehoods that the former President admitted in his fatal Aug. 5 statement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOVIET UNION: Kremlin Cover-Up on Watergate | 8/26/1974 | See Source »

Diplomats are expected to do their best to get to be au courant with the fundamental developments in art, as in everything else. Therefore Russian Ambassador to France M. Valerian Zorin kept his eyes peeled as he moved through the recent opening of the annual "Painters, Witness of Their Times" show in Paris. Going in the opposite direction was Brigitte Bardot-not exactly the living end, but a sculpture by Mougin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Feb. 22, 1971 | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

...Gaulle took off on a 6,200-mile swing through Russia that was less political than it was crowd pleasing. In Novosibirsk-"the Chicago of Siberia"-fully half of the city's 1,000,000 residents turned out to greet the French leader. Accompanied by Podgorny and Zorin, De Gaulle inspected power plants and electrical-equipment factories, then stalked through Akademgorodok, a seven-year-old academic city of 37,000, which gave him the opportunity to strike again on the anvil of Franco-Russian cultural rapprochement. "How can one forget," he said, "that the great academy I am visiting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Europe: The Grandest Tour | 7/1/1966 | See Source »

...European future. Yet troop presence remains at the very heart of Europe's past history and future development. Both of the world's two great powers have every reason to want their soldiers out of the frigid zones of occupation. In Paris last March, Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin announced: "The War saw Pact nations will either reduce their military forces or even abolish them if a corresponding move is undertaken by the NATO allies in West Europe." Moscow quickly quenched any flaming hopes over that issue by reiterating its hard line on the subject of Viet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Europe: The Grandest Tour | 7/1/1966 | See Source »

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