From the kitchen debate with Khrushchev to the opening of China to his resignation, we see Nixon at his highest and lowest.
In the United States, three major television networks broadcast the kitchen debate on July 25.
The meeting was on the eve of the celebrated "kitchen debate" at an American exhibition in Moscow.
In the middle of their exchanges (now famously known as the "kitchen debate"), the pair stopped at the Pepsi kiosk for a sip of Pepsi-Cola.
It provided an appropriate backdrop for Richard Nixon to challenge Nikita Khrushchev in the famous "kitchen" debates.
Excerpts from their kitchen debate were broadcast in both the United States and the Soviet Union.
He was there to open an American exhibition, and it was there that the famous kitchen debate with Nikita S. Khrushchev took place.
A Leisurama prototype, at a 1959 expo in Moscow, sparked the famous "kitchen debate" between Nixon and Khrushchev.
One of the most famous examples is the "kitchen debate" of the 1950's that starred Nikita Khrushchev and Richard Nixon.
Nixon's famous "kitchen debates" with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev included prominent examples of this concept.