Word: adzhubeis
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...another-and hinting that they would like to do more talking and smiling. Off to Paris went White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger for a meeting with Mikhail Kharlamov, press officer of the Soviet Foreign Ministry. And into Washington, at President Kennedy's invitation, flew Aleksei Adzhubei, editor of Izvestia and son-in-law of Premier Nikita Khrushchev...
...Adzhubei and his wife Rada broke off a South American tour to answer the President's invitation, got the full Kennedy treatment in Washington. They lunched with the Kennedys on pheasant and wild rice, were welcomed to the President's press conference, and were introduced to Caroline Kennedy, who had in tow her dog Pushinka, a gift from Premier Khrushchev. Adzhubei had a private talk with Kennedy that was described only as "wide-ranging," "candid" and "not uncordial"; Jackie Kennedy took Rada on a tour of the White House nursery. The Adzhubeis also took a meal with...
President Kennedy last week received unexpected support for the recent charge, made in his interview with Izvestia Editor Aleksei Adzhubei, that Soviet efforts to communize the world are the chief threat to peace. Izvestia derided the President's statement as a "cock and bull story," but Red China's official newspaper, People's Daily, promptly set the record straight. The Communist bloc would never stop "supporting the revolutionary struggles of the oppressed nations and people," said People's Daily, and anyone who thinks otherwise is living "an idiot's daydream...
...Nukes. Early in the talk, Adzhubei made the point that the Soviet Union is still bitter toward Germany from World War II: "In the heart of every Soviet citizen, in the soul of every Soviet citizen, coals are still burning from the last war." Toward the end of the interview. Adzhubei tried to score a debater's point against Kennedy by asking him to assume that he was a Soviet naval officer and a veteran of World War II who was watching West Germany rearm. Said Adzhubei: "What would your attitude be?" Said Kennedy: "If I were a Soviet...
...policy on Cuba, clouded since the invasion fiasco in the Bay of Pigs, could be seen a little more clearly last week. To begin with, said President Kennedy, the U.S. is not resigned to Castro; he is still a "threat to peace," the President told Izvestia Editor Alexei Adzhubei. Until Castro holds "free and honest elections," he "cannot claim to represent the majority of the people...