In the fall of 1959, Nikita Khrushchev became the first Soviet premier to visit the United States. Khrushchev said he was “curious to have a look at America” and had been trying to get an invitation ...
Like millions of Americans in the summer of 1959, Harriet Van Horne, a New York City newspaper columnist, saw the famous impromptu Moscow "Kitchen Debate" between Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and ...
WASHINGTON, Sept. 15, 1959 (UPI) - Following is the text of President Eisenhower's welcoming remarks to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev:"Mr. Chairman, I welcome you, your family and party to the ...
The Cold War on MSN
“We will wave as we pass you” - Khrushchev’s threat
In 1959, an unplanned argument between Nixon and Khrushchev erupted inside a model American kitchen in Moscow. What began as ...
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Iowa briefly became the warmest spot in the Cold War 50 years ago, when a farmer from Coon Rapids and the leader of the Soviet Union talked corn and farm equipment. Iowans and ...
(See Cover) I saw at close hand the faces of millions . . . —Dwight Eisenhower in his homecoming speech The faces of people reflected the biggest news about the world in 1959. The faces belonged to ...
As a Time magazine bureau chief, he was pivotal in the publication of revelatory taped interviews with the ousted premier that had been smuggled out of the Soviet Union. By Sam Roberts On Sunday, Xi ...
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