Word: khrushchev
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...handling of the Berlin situation also lacks depth. One article merely summarizes the events of the summer. The other provides a good, but hardly novel synthesis of Khrushchev's position. In short, the authors address the apathetic and blissfully ignorant ("The Berlin crisis arose at the beginning of last summer and has dominated the news since.") But at its current price of ten cents, Tocsin's forum will never reach beyond a very select minority. All undergraduate pamphleteers would do well to remember that they are writing for a relatively well-informed audience. Goading the masses is not a proper...
Hoxha has since exterminated or imprisoned about 3% of his fellow countrymen, and has become brash enough to take on Nikita Khrushchev himself. This year he kicked out all Soviet military missions and closed down the Russian submarine base at Valona. The Russians are now replaced by Red Chinese, who seem to represent the kind of an ally Albanians like best-one that is 3,000 miles away...
...much long-term damage will be done? Radiation health experts are still debating, but all agree about one thing: if Khrushchev explodes his threatened 50-megaton test as the climax of the Soviet series, radiation all over the earth will start an inexorable climb toward a much higher and more dangerous level than it has ever reached before...
...Coming Shake-Out. "Mr. Khrushchev has hitherto made the market for the aerospace business," says Martin Co.'s Chairman George Bunker, "but now it is here to stay." Even if the cold war were to end next week, the U.S. would almost surely find itself committed to expanding its exploration of space...
...Russia could, after all, hardly be complete without its survey on the subject of surpassing American milk and butter production. Yet since agriculture is Mr. Hindus' forte, his remarks on farming often prove quite interesting. He notes, for example, that the Soviet milkmaid has "by the grace of Khrushchev, ...been lifted to the status of a new heroine on Soviet farms." For spending her entire day at pitching hay to at most twenty-five cows, milking them, and cleaning their stalls-what to an American farmer are mere morning and evening chores-the milkmaid receives, before bonuses, over twice...