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Collected Works of V. I. Lenin - Vol. 16 - From Marx to Mao

Collected Works of V. I. Lenin - Vol. 16 - From Marx to Mao

Collected Works of V. I. Lenin - Vol. 16 - From Marx to Mao

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468 NOTES118119120121122123124125126127The protest at the publication in Vorwärts <strong>of</strong> Trotsky’s articleslandering the R.S.D.L.P. was written during the session <strong>of</strong> theInternational Socialist Congress in Copenhagen. p. 285Tovarishch (The Comrade)—a bourgeois daily newspaper publishedin St. Petersburg from 1906 until 1908 with the close participation<strong>of</strong> S. N. Prokopovich and Y. D. Kuskova. Though formally notthe organ <strong>of</strong> any particular party, it was in fact the mouthpiece<strong>of</strong> the Left Constitutional-Democrats. It also published contributionsfrom Mensheviks. p. 285Le Peuple (People)—a daily newspaper, the Central Organ <strong>of</strong> theBelgian (reformist) Labour Party, published from 1884 in Brussels.p. 285Rabochaya Gazeta (Workers’ Gazette)—a popular newspaper, theorgan <strong>of</strong> the Bolsheviks, published in Paris from Oc<strong>to</strong>ber 30 (November12), 1910 <strong>to</strong> July 30 (August 12), 1912; nine issues appeared.Pro-Party Mensheviks also contributed <strong>to</strong> the newspaper. Itsfounder and leader was <strong>Lenin</strong>, who published more than 10 articlesin it. The Prague Conference <strong>of</strong> the R.S.D.L.P. (January 1912)noted that Rabochaya Gazeta resolutely and consistently defendedthe Party and the Party principle and made it the <strong>of</strong>ficial organ <strong>of</strong>the Central Committee <strong>of</strong> the R.S.D.L.P. (Bolsheviks). p. 289This refers <strong>to</strong> the resolution written by <strong>Lenin</strong> and adopted by theconference <strong>of</strong> the enlarged edi<strong>to</strong>rial board <strong>of</strong> Proletary in June1909: “Otzovism and Ultimatumism” (see present edition, <strong>Vol</strong>.15, pp. 442-46). p. 294<strong>Lenin</strong> quotes F. Engels’s article “Socialism in Germany” (<strong>Marx</strong>/Engels/<strong>Lenin</strong>, Zur Deutschen Geschichte, Band II, 2. Halbband,Berlin, 1954, S. 1140-1141). p. 311The Polish Kolo—a group <strong>of</strong> Polish deputies in the Duma, unitedby the demand for Polish au<strong>to</strong>nomy. In the First and Second Dumas,the leading part in this group was played by the Narodovtsi—Polish Black Hundreds. On all the main questions <strong>of</strong> Duma tacticsthe Polish Kolo supported the Oc<strong>to</strong>brists and the Rights. p. 314Russkiye Vedomosti (Russian Recorder)—a daily newspaper publishedin Moscow from 1863 onwards by a group <strong>of</strong> Moscow Universityliberal pr<strong>of</strong>essors and Zemstvo leaders. It voiced the interests<strong>of</strong> the liberal landlords and bourgeoisie. In 1905 it became the organ<strong>of</strong> the Right wing <strong>of</strong> the Constitutional-Democrats. Afterthe Oc<strong>to</strong>ber Revolution it was closed down. p. 320Golos Moskvy (Voice <strong>of</strong> Moscow)—a daily newspaper, the organ <strong>of</strong>the Oc<strong>to</strong>brists, the counter-revolutionary party <strong>of</strong> the big industrialbourgeoisie and big landlords. It was published in Moscow fromDecember 1906 <strong>to</strong> June 1915. p. 321“M Coupon”—a metaphorical name <strong>of</strong> capital or capitalists inthe literature <strong>of</strong> the eighties and nineties <strong>of</strong> the last century. It

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