Alexei N. Kosygin : resilient bureaucrat
|
1971 |
Paloczi-Horvath, George |
Ho Chi Minh : North Vietnamʹs militant uncle
|
1971 |
Rolph, Hammond |
Nikita Khrushchev : dictator who was retired
|
1971 |
Rush, Myron |
Lin Piao : Mao's man
|
1971 |
Lee, Mong-ping |
Liu Shao-ch'i : protagonist in Limbo
|
1971 |
Lee, Mong-ping |
Anastas Mikoyan : indestructible troubleshooter
|
1971 |
Malamuth, Charles |
Enver Hoxha : Pekingʹs vicar in the Balkans
|
1971 |
Logoreci, Anton |
Luigi Longo : Italy's middle-of-the-road tactician
|
1971 |
Caldwell, William S. |
Waldeck Rochet : the Kremlins̕ organization man in Paris
|
1971 |
Delain, Pierre |
Chou En-lai : the "sage of time"
|
1971 |
Lee, Mong-ping |
Leonid I. Brezhnev : professional politician, Soviet style
|
1971 |
Smith jr., Paul A. |
Poland's retrogressive ʺliberalʺ
|
1971 |
Staar, Richard F. |
Gus Hall : Moscow-trained boss of the CPUSA
|
1971 |
Swearingen, Rodger |
Tse-tung Mao : father of Chinese communism
|
1971 |
Swearingen, Rodger |
Sanzo Nosaka : Japan's "lovable" communist
|
1971 |
Swearingen, Rodger |
D. N. Aidit : Indonesian architecht of success and failure
|
1971 |
Kroef, Justus M. van der |
Yumjagiyn Tsedenbal : soviet Mongolian puppet
|
1971 |
Rupen, Robert A. |
Walter Ulbricht : Moscow's man in East Germany
|
1971 |
Wilhelm, Bernhard |
S. A. Dange, E. M. S. Namboodiripad, and Jyoti Basu : divergent leaders of communism in India
|
1971 |
Gupta, Bhabani Sen |
Chiang Ching : Mao's wife and deputy
|
1971 |
Lee, Mong-ping |