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Topic - Nikita Khrushchev

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  • The Washington Times

    TYRRELL: Is it 2016 yet?

    It has happened again. Our gaffe-prone president has filed another blunder on his presidential record. At the dedication of George W. Bush's presidential library, he invoked history with his usual mastery of detail. He placed President John F. Kennedy in Air Force One, "on the flight back from Russia, after negotiating with Nikita Khrushchev at the height of the Cold War."

  • Van Cliburn, pianist and Cold War hero, dies at 78

    For a time in Cold War America, Van Cliburn had all the trappings of a rock star: sold-out concerts, adoring, out-of-control fans and a name recognized worldwide. He even got a ticker-tape parade in New York City.

  • American pianist Van Cliburn performs in Moscow on Sept. 21, 2004, in a concert dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Beslan school massacre. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev)

    Van Cliburn: Renowned pianist dies of cancer at 78

    Van Cliburn, the internationally celebrated pianist whose triumph at a 1958 Moscow competition helped thaw the Cold War and launched a spectacular career that made him the rare classical musician to enjoy rock-star status, has died. He was 78.

  • Van Cliburn, American classical pianist, dies

    Van Cliburn, the internationally celebrated pianist whose triumph at a 1958 Moscow competition helped thaw the Cold War and launched a spectacular career that made him the rare classical musician to enjoy rock-star status, died Wednesday after a fight with bone cancer. He was 78.

  • Inside China: What’s in a fighter jet crash?

    A Chinese-made J-7 fighter-interceptor jet crashed into a civilian residential area earlier this month, injuring four people on the ground.

  • Banned 50 years ago, exhibition reopens in Moscow

    Better known in the West for promising to "bury" the capitalist world, Soviet leader Nikita Khruschev is also remembered by Russians for banning works that didn't conform to the Communist Party's notion that art should be straightforward, realistic and appeal to workers and peasants.

  • BOOK REVIEW: ‘Ike’s Bluff’

    After leaving the White House in 1961, Dwight D. Eisenhower fretted about what future generations would think of his legacy, stating that the peace and prosperity that marked his two terms "didn't just happen, by God." But as Evan Thomas writes in his study of the Eisenhower presidency, "[Ike] had trouble articulating just how that had happened. He never could admit that he had kept the peace by threatening all-out war. His all-or-nothing strategy worked brilliantly."

  • Pet residents of White House focus of book

    President George H.W. Bush had a problem so important he sent a memo to White House staff asking them to take a pledge. His dog, Ranger, was packing on the pounds.

  • Illustration: National security president by John Camejo for The Washington Times

    LYONS: New commander in chief must lead on national security

    The terrorist attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, makes it clear we cannot afford to continue to overlook our many national security issues that have been neglected and must be addressed. Sequestration only compounds the problem.

  • The Washington Times

    FEULNER: Cuban missile crisis, 50 years later

    If the phrase "missile gap" rings a bell, you probably remember one of the most frightening periods of the Cold War era: when the United States and Soviet Russia, 50 years ago this week, came perilously close to launching World War III.

  • Cuban missile crisis beliefs endure after 50 years

    The world stood at the brink of Armageddon for 13 days in October 1962, when President John F. Kennedy drew a symbolic line in the Atlantic and warned of dire consequences if Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev dared to cross it.

  • Merida from the hit Disney Pixar film BRAVE makes her skating debut in Disney On Ice presents Rockin' Ever After. (Feld Entertainment, Inc.)

    Get Out: ‘I Love to Eat’

    As more celebrated (and celebrity) chefs set their sights on the nation's capital for new restaurants, Washingtonians no longer need to go to New York to get a decent meal.

  • LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Obama's economic train is out of coal

    In the waning days of the crumbling Soviet Union, a Russian expatriate I met at a Washington reception told me a story of Soviet leaders Josef Stalin, Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev on a rail journey across "mother" Russia.

  • A bust of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin sits inside a museum dedicated to him in the town of Gori, some 50 miles west of the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, on Monday, April 9, 2012. The museum, which has honored Stalin since 1937, is being remodeled to exhibit the atrocities that were committed during his rule. (AP Photo/Shakh Aivazov)

    Georgia's Stalin museum to focus on his atrocities

    A museum that has honored Josef Stalin in Georgia since 1937 is being remodeled to exhibit the atrocities that were committed during the Soviet dictator's rule.

  • Georgia's Stalin museum to focus on his atrocities

    A museum that has honored Josef Stalin in Georgia since 1937 is being remodeled to exhibit the atrocities that were committed during the Soviet dictator's rule.

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