Word: nikita
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...Russian Foreign Office has assured diplomats that Premier Nikolai Bulganin and First Party Secretary Nikita Khrushchev are taking a needed rest from their official duties this month at their Black Sea villas. But out of Warsaw last week came reports of a speech Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan recently made to Moscow University activists. One of the party's severest disciplinary judgments, "condemnation with a warning," has been pronounced upon Bulganin, said Mikoyan, for the Premier's vacillating stand last June, when, at the request of the Malenkov-Molotov-Kaganovich "anti-party"' group, he chaired a meeting...
...pressagent. Socialist campaign slogans consisted for the most part of scare posters designed to show that Adenauer was leading Germany to atomic war. "Who Chooses CDU Risks Atom Death!" shrieked one Socialist poster. In Bremen, CDU workers countered with posters that said bitingly: "Who Chooses SPD Chooses Ollenhauer." Nikita Khrushchev had done Adenauer the great favor of pointing out, two weeks ago in Berlin, that Russia was determined to keep Germany divided, thereby destroying Ollen-hauer's thesis that it was der Alte's obduracy that prevented reunification...
...Friendship, friendship, friendship!" chanted the 130,000 East Germans on signal from their Communist cheerleaders, "The friendship of our two peoples is one of the great achievements of our time," cried Nikita Khrushchev, and his voice boomed through the loudspeakers to the factory workers, government employees and militiamen herded in ranks into East...
...Nikita Khrushchev had had a stolid and passive reception everywhere in East Germany, and his ire began to come up. After calling Hitler "the hangman of the international workers' movement," Khrushchev addressed himself directly to Konrad Adenauer, as if the West German Chancellor were in his audience. Why, he demanded, should Adenauer's government have now revived, at trade talks in Moscow, the question of repatriating the 60,000 to 90,000 Germans left behind in Russia in World War II? Said Khrushchev: "We have long since come to agreement on repatriation of prisoners of war, and this...
...sole ruler of the Soviet Union. You should interview the entire group involved in our collective leadership." So wrote Nikita Khrushchev last week to Cairo's government-supported newspaper Al Messa. Then he obligingly returned answers to all the newspaper's questions, dutifully signed with 14 Presidium names headed by Khrushchev, Bulganin, Zhukov, Voroshilov and Mikoyan...