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Show w Leaders Longtime Spokesmen, Hyal To Khrushchev Government the eyes of Western diplo-s diplo-s , Leonid Brezhnev, the new 'Mf of the Communist Party, ,seemed to take action and djeak in a responsible way, jys of course within the So- viewpoint. ixei Kosygin, Khrushchev's cement as premier, has been f.,ding spokesman on the So-. So-. side in the dispute with .;a, a quarrel that has tended S:mes to take some of the off U.S.-Soviet relations, or health, and conceivably Spraisal of poor results, were ,ibly the factors behind shchev's fall from power three weeks before he hoped eside over a triumphant cel-:ion cel-:ion of the 47th anniversary "ie Bolshevik Revolution, 'i k i t a Khrushchev, now 70 suffering from high blood We and a recurrent heart "-.ition, appeared to have kept iwn men in power, 'mishchev himself said last k "I am already 69 and 1 f the right to say so. Every. understands I cannot hold 6 for all time the position I now have in the party and the state." This year, presumably with Khrushchev's approval, Brezhnev was moved from the largely ceremonial cer-emonial job of president to a position po-sition of more power in the Communist Com-munist party. The changeover, no matter who initiated it, began casting shadows a year ago. The first clear indication that some major announcement was in the making came Thursday when the newspaper Izvestia canceled its evening edition and reported it would publish simultaneously simul-taneously with Pravda on Friday morning. Khrushchev had not been mentioned men-tioned publicly for two days, a very unusual thing for the bouy-ant bouy-ant premier. Khrushchev was at his Black Sea vacation home Tuesday where he met with French Cabinet Cabi-net Minister Gaston Balewski. Rumors started to fly when Palewski was hurried out of town while the talk was still on. |