Word: bulganins
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Reading only the first and last paragraphs and leaving the rest to be read out in Hindi by a sweating interpreter, Bulganin and Khrushchev used the forum for a combined 90-minute assault on the Western democracies. "The spirit of Geneva causes indigestion to certain persons," cried Khrushchev. "Certain circles in some states are still trying to follow the notorious policy ... of threats by atomic weapons...
...exhibition of Indian folk dances, Bulganin and Khrushchev clambered to the stage to embrace the dancers. Khrushchev waved his arms like a conductor as they chanted, "Indians and Russians Are Brothers!" Bulganin, tiring in the fast pace of the month-long good-will tour, was happy to play straight man for his buddy: "Oh, that Khrushchev! What a man! What will he do next?" Not Alone. At Bareilly, in Uttar Pradesh, 51 girls dressed in saffron robes and blowing conch shells, sprinkled bushels of rose petals on the travelers, after Soviet secret police first ran hands through the baskets...
...academy, commanded by Lieut. General K. S. Thimayya, Sandhurst-bred leader of the neutral repatriation commission in Korea, flew only Indian flags. Marshal Bulganin, traveling as "plain Mister," sensed the soldierly restraint, but it was lost on the ebullient Khrushchev...
...visitors were conscious of overworking their welcome, however, it did not show in their jaunty display of confidence. Though Bulganin had said on arrival in India that he was certain East-West differences could be settled, by last week's end Khrushchev was singing a different tune. Perhaps the time is not "ripe" for the settlement of some of the issues discussed at Geneva, he told the Indian-Soviet Cultural Society. "We can wait...
...wind is not blowing in our faces. We can wait for better weather." He did not explain that the Communists have no intention of waiting supinely while nature makes the weather. They had come to India not only as traveling salesmen, but also as rainmakers. One member of the Bulganin-Khrushchev party brought with him a letter of instructions (from Pravda Editor Dmitri Shepilov) now being secretly circulated among the leaders of India's estimated 60,000 Communist Party members. It refers to Jawaharlal Nehru as "our unconscious ally," outlines Communist strategy for swaying Nehru close to Soviet economic...