Chilean Leader Salvador Allende Denies Threat of Communism
On September 4, 1970, Salvador Allende became the first Marxist to be democratically elected the leader of a Latin-American nation. Because he received only a plurality of votes, his presidential election had to be confirmed. In an interview about the tallying of votes, Allende takes offense when he is asked a question he considers "slightly impertinent."
Related Speeches & Audio (5)
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Chilean Leader Salvador Allende Denies Threat of Communism
Chilean Leader Salvador Allende Denies Threat of CommunismAudio Clip (1:17)
Audio Clip (1:17)
On September 4, 1970, Salvador Allende became the first Marxist to be democratically elected the leader of a Latin-American nation. Because he received only a plurality of votes, his presidential election had to be confirmed. In an interview about the tallying of votes, Allende takes offense when he is asked a question he considers "slightly impertinent."
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Radio Budapest Reports on the Soviet Invasion of Hungary
Radio Budapest Reports on the Soviet Invasion of HungaryAudio Clip (0:54)
Audio Clip (0:54)
On November 4, 1963, the Soviets launched an attack to quell the Hungarian Revolution, which began on October 23. A Radio Budapest correspondent reads a statement delivered earlier by Hungarian Premier Imre Nagy charging the Soviets with attempting to overthrow Hungary's "lawful democratic government."
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Nixon Reelected to Presidency
Nixon Reelected to PresidencyAudio Clip (1:03)
Audio Clip (1:03)
On November 7, 1972, incumbent President Richard Nixon won a second term in a landslide victory over Democrat George McGovern. In a brief statement from the Oval Office, President Nixon promises to bring "peace with honor" in Vietnam and to usher in a "new era of peace" with the Soviet Union.
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President Charles de Gaulle on the Algerian Crisis
President Charles de Gaulle on the Algerian CrisisAudio Clip (3:31)
Audio Clip (3:31)
The Mutual Broadcasting System presents a simultaneous translation of a speech being delivered to the French people by President Charles de Gaulle on the uprising in the French colony of Algeria. In 1954, Algeria's National Liberation Front began a guerrilla war against France in order to gain independence and establish self-rule.
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U.S. Troops Deployed to Honduras to Battle Sandinistas
U.S. Troops Deployed to Honduras to Battle SandinistasAudio Clip (0:20)
Audio Clip (0:20)
On March 16, 1988, State Department spokesman Charles Redman describes the Sandinistas' primary objective in destroying resistance supplies in Honduras. President Ronald Reagan deployed combat troops to Honduras in an effort to support the Honduran government in its battle against the Sandinistas.
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French Revolution
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