Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 275, Decatur, Adams County, 21 November 1956 — Page 13
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1956
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Khmschev Unwarned Qn Protocol Niceties
EDITOR’S NOTE: Kenneth Brodney is a former United Press manager In Moscow. He witnessed the change-over from Stalinism to the new collective leadership, and, incidentally, the new availability of the Red bosses. The following dispatch which tells about Soviet Communist Party boss Nikita Krushchev Is based on personal observation. By KENNETH BRODNEY Written For The United Press When Nikita Khrushchev insults all thA»Western ambassadors in Moscow, they know they’ve been given the business from the lop. They knew it twice this week—some sort of a record, even for Khrushchev—and both times they walked out on him in diplomatic huffs. Unfazed, the top man in Russia suggested, “If you don’t like us, don’t accept our invitations — and don’t invite us to come to see you.” , That’s how much Khrushchev worries about the niceties of protocol. But when the short, and squat, pink and pudgy ex - plumber parades majestically under the crystal chandeliers in the grand palace of the Kremlin, you know he owns the place. A Distinctive Position There’s something about being number one out of all the 200,000,000 Russians that writes itself all over a man—despite all the talk about collective leadership. Georgi Malenkov had it when he was premier; but Nikolai Bulganin, who succeeded Malenkov, didn’t inherit that special glow. It passed from the premiership to the first secretary of the Communist Party, the job that used to be Stalin’s, and the job Khrushchev has run since 10 days after the old dictator died on March 5, 1953. Khrushchev only got the title six months later, but he was using the key spot to politic his way to the top from the beginning — just as Stalin had done decades before. Khrushchev has not yet become die all-powerful dictator Stalin was, but he is recognized as “the most equal among equals” in the 11-man presidium of the party, which is the board of directors for the entire Soviet empire. Demands Os Equality The party boss is not shy or modest about reminding his comrades of his superior brand of equality, and they recognize it. It shows in a hundred little ways, if you’re in the press gallery during a session of the Supreme Soviet, or happen to be invited to dinner at the Kremlin < along with about a thousand other people). _' .2.— When other Bolshevik big - wigs make speeches, Khrushchev frequently pays no attention at all. He reads documents, carries on lively conversations with neighbors or if he’s hungry he eats. Like most Russians, Khrushchev is a great soup-lover. He hunches his powerful shoulders over the table, lowers his white - fringed, pink, bald, bullet-head until his pug nose almost touches the plate, and devotes his complete and intense concentration to spooning. But when Khrushchev finally finishes his soup and gets up to speak himself, everybody listens. They don’t talk, and Bulganin doesn’t eat. What Khrushchev seems to be on the team—and it still seems to
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
be a team despite his pre-emi-nence—is the dynamo, the powerhouse of energy and driving willpower, the pusher and the bullroarer. Shrewd, But Not Intellectual Neither foreigners nor Russians underestimate his shrewdness, but he is not the intellectual type, not the hair-splitting theorizer. The son of a miner, he had very little schooling, and his temperament is more likely to lead him to bull-like stubbornness or suddenly giving in, but not to quibbling. Now 62, he’s come almost as far as he can go, but it hasn’t all been smooth sailing. In 1947, when he was at his long-time job of party boss in the Ukraine, discontent and wartime devastation was so bad partisan warfare actually broke out. Stalin sent trouble-shooter Lazar Kaganovich to put out the fire, but Khrushchev got his job back. And again in 1951, in Moscow, he overdid the centralization of collective farms, was forced to confess he’d been flat wrong, but again survived. Now he's in trouble again, with Poland breaking quietly away and
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Hungary in flaming ruins. Some think his personal insults to the Western ambassadors are a sign of nerves. But Khrushchev, still proud of the fact he worked with his hands, is tough, and he’ll fight hard to survive this blow, too. Transfer UTAH Slate PRISON — (IW) —The Board of Corrections moved swiftly to place a prison officer in sole charge of auditing inmate personal accounts after the chief clerk, Paul Cropper, discovered a trustee had transferred $44 from one inmate’s account to that of another. Officials retalited by transferring the trustee to solitary confinement. Trade in Town —De «
Barbara Price and The Golden River Boys Staring Bobby Homan at . . . STATE GARDENS r Middlebury, Ohio THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22 ROUND and SQUARE DANCING
Repaid PITTSFIELD, Mas». (Ml) w A white-haired man visited the public welfare office end placed $5,614.95 in cash on a counter. He explained that he had received an inheritance and wanted to pay back the money given him as old age assistance during the past eight years. A Close One LEWISTON, Me. — (HF) - The closest contest in Maine’s September election was for the office of sheriff of Androscoggin County. There were more than 31,000 votes cast in the race, and official tabulations showed Democrat Raoul Brule edged Republican Hervey 0. McGraw by only three votes. McGraw asked for a recount.
Missouri Fur JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. * (RS) — Missouri trappers and hunters bagged $381,386 worth of furbearing animals during the 1956-56 season, the state conservation commission reported. The pelt harvest amounted to 207,921 skins, with racoon pelts leading with a record of 121,000 pelts marketed. Beaver catches showed a significant increase, with 3,132 reported, compared to 2,333 the previous year.
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