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  • aiaple one • .At. Waeh.illgtoa a ua 1 who ueed to be a judge in Kann.a Ci\7 and 'lfho had a Iii.nor politiOll as a Captain 1n t.h• tac1ag lo• Stalin, an aged and di ■ u.aed tir■t rld War, battler agalnat. th• dupotiaa at a tol'lll.er Cea
  • visit to Moscow, his talk with Stalin. Of course the man went to . Moscow and talked with Stalin. We think a man charged with the responsibility of being a member of the Sel1kte Foreign Affairs Committee should have made this trip, man
  • be Prime M.1n1at r so.m.e 4a7. I waa go1a& to R~sala , to the pres• • " ~ K.w>wina van said , Nell Stalin to open up the oowitr7 Bevan el.ao ma4e it olear that the gover.oment was aoin& to bu1l4 homes aD4 would exeroia• whate•er power was neoe s sary
  • &-to you. I vau1 CS,• But Amorioe w s not .- At Chicego, .A&erlcs. throug).l the .·orld conditions demsnd th.et .no othor narce Domoore.tio Party. 1n c. del!IO()ratio vey. will tc!)ll Bitlor, Stalin, be prese,at.ed. that tb ·r e i& only encl !!ue
  • with Stalin. He's the guy that can tell anybody anything any time and "out ot the horse's mouth". He now has cast himself. He is young and good-lookin&, an accepted pinko, beloved by the bankers, the industrialists, the Protestants and the Catholics
  • . Not many hour:; after t:-. .: :: ·:-=-sidcnt's procla­ m:icioa, comr: ::.: : :·Jcr had been re­ stored, and ct~ 7: ::.::ral troops were then ,,·ichdr:!·..-:... t;s ( !\Iessage to Stalin Paying Tri·-:::·..:.:~ to Russia on the Second AnniYersary
  • . :\ot many hours after t:-_.! =:-:-;:5ident's procla­ mation, com_:::::..:: ::-::er had been re­ stored, and t1---= ? :.::.::ral troops were then withdra·..-::... C?v1essage to Stalin Paying Tri:-~:~ to Russia the Second Anniversary of the Y
  • wide will the valley be in 1944 as a democracy marches to the polls? One who has seen Mussolini dissolve the Italian parliament, and one who has seen Hitler address a dying Reischtag , and who has seen Stalin speaking to representatives at Moscow, needs
  • against the people of the Ukraine, to force their submission to Stalin's controls. Over six million people perished. This murder of six million Christians was carried out by Nikita Khrushchev. So do not fool yourself that the Enemy will be any less
  • -:U,_000card-carrying mem­ bers, is a tightly organized conspiratorial group modelled on the Soviet Communist party o! the Stalin era~ The party was founded in secret tn September 1947, after preparatory- indoctrination in the classic. Mar.xist, "study
  • they overthrew the Czar. Then the murdering of the Czar and his family. Some 15,000 Polish Officers were massacred at Katyn Forest because they resented the Soviets taking over their land. The crimes of Stalin are too numerous to put down. I once read the story
  • in the 1950 1 s, that Soviet Communism is the same under Soviet Party Chief Brezhnev as it was under the tyrannical dictatorship of Khrushchev and Stalin. -- There is once again blood on the Iron Curtain and another nation's death piled on the debris
  • . This issue has its base in deep nationalistic, cultural, and historical yearnings. At the same time, the growth of the UN, the intensification of the cold war, the shift in Soviet attitudes after Stalin, and the various changes and vicissitudes which Pakistan
  • Marxist­ Leninist principles. ·This thesis 'Was. usetul to Stalin and his ro·l lowers. It contributed importantly to ths discipline of their movement. It left millions or sincere Marxists with the reeling that there was no real altemative between
  • has not pushed de­ stalinization strongly and completely and has shown little if any incli­ nation to liberalize its internal policy although it issued a broad amnesty in September 1964. It has also been slow in implementing the policy of "peaceful
  • , but wound up protecting aggression. Kosygin said that he had been -3- Stalin's deputy for 12 years. He had served in Leni.Jagrad. He would never forget the time when arm in arm we resisted Fascism. we could agree on some of these moves now. He
  • for thi..a mnority might .An ...odot.t o evel.t The capt i on.a "Dulles and ffl,.-&. " ·, ii'All. -.~aam of Dullea and 11-ra. · • .Roosevw. t 4 i ghtly undemea: h, looke eeow18 Dull ates u W.U Stl" ore the Mike 8hoot11'l& a Stalin at Thia 1
  • their countri es of the Czech liberal reforms . 3 . The Czechs were printing, for the first time, supressed accounts of the horrors of the Stalin regime. The Kremlin leaders were acutely embarred. 4. The Czechs were requesting financial backing from the USSR
  • . In Russia, Khrushchev treated me with respect, because I sat next to Stalin when he was at the lower end of the tableo Kosygin met me first when he was an assistant to Mikoyan at a time when I was negotiating with Stalin. I know Harold Wilson from his days