Citations:post-Soviet

after the formation (not dissolution) of the Soviet Union

 * 1922, The Social Welfare Forum: Official Proceedings [of The] Annual Meeting [/Forum] [of the National Conference of Social Work of the United States], page 469:
 * Too much should not be made of it, in view of statistical uncertainties above detailed, but the largest shift in the whole of Table III is in the case of Russia. Only 26.1 per cent of natives of Russia were naturalized in 1910, but in 1920 the percentage was 15.6 higher. It would be interesting to know how much was pre-Soviet and how much post-Soviet, and a tabulation by year of arrival and year of naturalization would disclose it. But while the more recent southeastern European immigration is moving toward the naturalization court at a pace proving an increasing desire to be absorbed into American citizenship the mass of southeastern Europeans of voting age, as yet unnaturalized, closely approaches the whole population of the nation of 1790. The figures are shown in  Table IV.


 * 1933, The Magazine of Wall Street, volume 53, page 64:
 * His clever work is now bearing fruit with recognition by the United States in the offing and other major nations may be expected to follow suit. He is entitled to a pat on the back by Mr. Stalin. Naturally, pre-Soviet and post-Soviet debts will be discussed. President Roosevelt has naively suggested that we would like to slide down Russia's cellar door and play in the Soviet backyard. He is thinking, doubtless not only of Russian markets but of ways and means of doing a little practical bill ...