EditorialAndras Hegedues, a leading Stalinist and Hungarian Prime Minister from May through October 1956. After two years of exile in Moscow, he returned to Hungary, but fell out of favour when he opposed Soviet inter-vention in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
EditorialAndras Hegedues, a leading Stalinist and Hungarian Prime Minister from May through October 1956. After two years of exile in Moscow, he returned to Hungary, but fell out of favour when he opposed Soviet inter-vention in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
EditorialAndras Hegedues, Hungarian Stalinist and Prime Minister from May through October 1956, photographed shortly before his death in 1999. After two years of exile in Moscow after the Revolution, he fell out of favour when he oppoesed the intervention in Cz...
EditorialPolish elections 1957: Party Secretary Wladyslaw Gomulka leaving the polling station. He is surrounded by well-wishers who approve of his slightly liberal, anti-Stalinist policies. Warsaw, 1957.
EditorialChildren in front of Warsaw's Palace of Culture,a gift by the Soviet Union to the Polish capital. Much criticized because of its Stalinist architecture, it was called the "gangster's wedding-cake". Warsaw,1956.
EditorialAndras Hegedues, a leading Stalinist and Hungarian Prime Minister from May through October 1956. After two years of exile in Moscow, he returned to Hungary, but fell out of favour when he opposed Soviet inter-vention in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
EditorialAndras Hegedues, a leading Stalinist and Hungarian Prime Minister from May through October 1956. After two years of exile in Moscow, he returned to Hungary, but fell out of favour when he opposed Soviet inter-vention in Czechoslovakia in 1968.
EditorialAndras Hegedues, Hungarian Stalinist and Prime Minister from May through October 1956, photographed shortly before his death in 1999. After two years of exile in Moscow after the Revolution, he fell out of favour when he oppoesed the intervention in Cz...
EditorialAndras Hegedues,a leading Stalinist and Hungarian Prime Minister from May through October 1956.After two years of exile in Moscow,he returned to Hungary, but fell out of favour when he opposed Soviet inter- vention in Czechoslovakia in 1968.