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Word: dictatorship (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...World War II, Carmelo Jurissevich was a tough-minded and tough-sinewed partisan who fought with Tito against the Germans. But being a Croatian peasant who treasured freedom and hated authority, he had no use for Tito's postwar Communist dictatorship. On the inevitable night in 1949 when Tito's secret police came after him, Carmelo and his younger brother Emil fled to Trieste, only a thump ahead of the knock at the door. From their haven just across the border, Carmelo and Emil set up an overland express, guiding Yugoslavs to freedom. Before the year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: YUGOSLAVIA: The Notorious Bandit | 8/19/1957 | See Source »

Nothing of the sort happens, and Elaine finally leads her Egyptian officer back to London at the end of her typewriter ribbon. Yehia is happy with his revolution (it may be a dictatorship, he concedes, but it is a "dictatorship by Egyptians") and becomes military attaché in London, where he and Elaine melt into a clinch as the organ of a nonconformist chapel thunders through the wall of her flat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Rose in No Man's Land | 8/5/1957 | See Source »

...Paradoxically Khrushchev took full power by denouncing "the personality cult" of Stalinists who (he said) wanted to bring back the hated tyranny; yet it was he who was setting up a one-man dictatorship. Perhaps Khrushchev hoped to avoid a return to the unprofitable nightmare of Stalinist horror. Yet in the deadly Soviet game of power, victory has its own momentum and defeat its own awful logic. The "lose and live" policy, which lasted while the forces of power were in uneasy equilibrium, might not survive now that Khrushchev is in control. The increasing mentions of the "Leningrad Case...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Winner Takes All | 7/15/1957 | See Source »

...that its professional elite would act in its own right only in case of a patriotic crisis of leadership. Nonetheless, for the first time, U.S. agencies in Washington considered it a possibility that three to five years from now, given further convulsions, Russia might move toward a military dictatorship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Struggle & the Victory | 7/15/1957 | See Source »

...surrendered to the Red regime. It taught Greek, Latin, French, German and English-but not a word of Russian. It was for a time the only university to offer sociology, the only place to teach economics that was not, as one professor puts it, "all class struggle and the dictatorship of the proletariat." Though cautious, many professors found ways to get around the Communists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Irony in Poland | 7/1/1957 | See Source »

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