Amerikai Magyar Értesítő, 1987 (23. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)
1987-11-01 / 11. szám
IV HUNGARIAN MONTHLY November, 1987 After Khrushchev’s revelations about his former boss, some ignorant Poles took him at his word and thought all the wrongs committed by the late Stalin would be corrected. The Soviets were quick to straighten out such reactionary thinking. Until Korea, the Soviets were always on hand with their veto when there was hope for peace and international justice. Having walked out in a huff, they were not in the U.N. when it voted to intervene in Korea. October 23,1956 The dust had barely settled in Poland when the Hungarian people borrowed the idea of a Glorious October Revolution from their Soviet friends. But Lenin had said that revolutions are not exportable. So the great Soviet friend of the Hungarian people crushed, very efficiendy, a stubborn band of “Western agents" fighting with smuggled “Western weapons." Thanks to the tanks of the glorious Soviet Army, peace was restored in Hungary and all was quiet again on the Eastern Front. A large scale cultural exchange was begun to re-educate the Hungarian people. Transportation to the famous Soviet educational system was free, and the trains are sáli rolling. Amidst all this culture, political changes were necessary. Again it became apparent that the Kremlin was full of crooks. So Gorbachev put the Kremlin under new management. HUNGARIAN MONTHLY P.O. Box 7416 Baltimore, MD 21227-0416 U.S.A.