Word: bohlen
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Smiling with goateed charm, Premier Bulganin shook hands with them all. He kissed a little girl, and beckoned the guests to wander at large through cool woods and beside ornamental lakes, photographing whatever they desired. He himself helped U.S. Ambassador Charles Bohlen's daughter catch three fish, and he played with Italian Ambassador Di Stefano's ten-year-old son. Lunch was served under a canvas canopy in the open air. A military band played and a Red army bugler called the guests to table...
...embassy in Moscow, and on the elm-shaded lawn, children darted while their parents sipped champagne. Suddenly, all unheralded, a squad of stocky men in baggy dark suits, all doing their best to look affable, marched into the garden and greeted the hostess, Mrs. Charles E. Bohlen, wife of the U.S. Ambassador. Beaming at their head was round-polled Nikita Khrushchev, 61, First Secretary of the Russian Communist Party. With him was an imposing array of politburocrats: goateed Premier Nikolai Bulganin, smiling professorially; First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, the clever Armenian who masterminds Soviet trade policy; Old Bolshevik Lazar Kaganovich...
...first time that the rulers of Communist Russia had accepted an invitation to attend the U.S. Independence Day party. Ambassador Bohlen was away in Washington, briefing President Eisenhower for the Geneva conference, so Khrushchev bore down on Walter N. Walmsley Jr., Bohlen's deputy, and loudly announced: "I have a little speech to make...
Former President Harry S. Truman and Charles E. Bohlen '27 will probably receive honorary degrees from the University at the Commencement Exercises and address the Alumni at its luncheon on Thursday, June 16. Both Truman and Bohlen were unavailable for comment on the possibility of their selection...
...sure the sun will be shining when they leave." The sun of Soviet officialdom beamed from the moment the Austrian plane touched down. The Austrians were wined, dined and feted, and the bonhomie spilled over in all directions. At a reception given by Molotov, U.S. Ambassador Charles Bohlen offered a toast to the speedy restoration of Austria's independence; Molotov declared it a good toast, and drank. So did Premier Nikolai Bulganin. Austrian Foreign Minister Leopold Figl boldly proposed one "to the end of the occupation of Austria-ten years is long enough." Without blinking an eye, the Russians...