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The Minneapolis Star from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 7

Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sept 14, 1965 THE MINNEAPOLIS STAR 7 A TICKETS Continued from Page One KEITH Continued from Page One MORE OPINIONS to say whether he will seek set, that is, one seat for each LEADER IN SERVICE of the four possible games to an I'D LIKE TO REPORT A FIRE the DFL nomination for governor next year. be played here. Orders will be limited to four sets, or a total of 16 tickets. 4. Prices are $48 oer set I I i Secret Parley A secret meeting of party leaders July 31 at Sugar Hills Resort near Grand Rapids, concluded that Rol- of box seat tickets, $32 per set of grandstand reserved, SI and $24 per set left field pavilion.

A $1 handline charge is in effect for each application. I 1 5. Full amount of money for ticket order and handline vaag would have serious difficulty winning re-election today. Several participants in that meeting have said Keith was the man some party leaders have in mind as a replacement. Keith said today he has charge must; be included in each application.

Only cer- titied checK, bank or postal money order or cashier's check will be accepted. never discussed the Sugar Hills conclusions with the' governor. Rolvaag also said he had! no indication from Keith that i the lieutentant governor has changed his mind in any re- spect concernins his assur-i Bl I 4 Checks should be made out to "1965 World Series," not to the Twins. 6. If ticket buyer does not want to risk substitution of a lower-priced seat, he should specify on the order.

There will be no refunds or exchanges once tickets are mailed. 7. The Twins said 2,084 bleacher tickets at $2 apiece will be sold by mail application. These tickets mav be I- 1. ante ne wuuiu scck.

me governor nomination. Asked after the Sugar Hills meeting whether he would support Rolvaag if the governor seeks renomination, Keith said the question "is not pertinent at this time" because Rolvaag has indicated he is still weighing his future. bought individually not in CHARLES NICHOLS, JR. The Myron W. Setzlcr Agency 2637 Park Avenue, Minneapolis Mr.

Nichols is a member of Royal Blue. Membership in this organization, the highest honor attainable by Penn Mutual career underwriters, was awarded to him in recognition of his outstanding service to families and businesses. He helped his clients achieve over 2.000,000 worth of independence and peace of mind through life insurance during the past year, tailoring programs to lit their individual needs. It is a pleasure to commend Mr. Nichols to you.

Charles R. Tyson, President Bnck nf Vour Independence Slnnds Tlin VENN MUTUAL THE PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Indrpondrnrc Square Philadelphia, Pa. Founded 1847 Life and Health Insurance Annuities Pension and Profit Sharing Plans Complete Croup Coveragoi sets ot tour with a limit of four per game per order. The $1 service charge per order applies here too, as well as the Sept. 15 postmark start.

Rolvaag said he does not recall Keith saying anything in their conversation about running for lieutenant governor again. Asked whether he would want Keith as a running mate in 1966, Rolvaag said, "That will be up to the convention." I I Standing-room tickets at $4 each will be sold at the park each day of a game. The World Series will open Oct. 6 in the American League park barring the need for any playoffs in either league. The Series shifts to the National League park after the first two games.

'Dolly' Lands on Cold-war Lap INDIA Continued from Page One By RUSSELL BAKER New York Times Service Washington. Moscow's abrupt decision to keep "Hello, Dolly" off the boards in Russia is bad news. The official interpretation that the show was banned in retaliation against U.S. war policy in Viet Nam is not taken seriously by people who understand relations between modern superstates. These people find it laughable to suggest that Moscow thinks it can give American bombers tit-for-tat by cutting off David Merrick's rubles.

(Merrick is the show's producer.) The "Hello, Dolly" crisis, they agree, is retaliation all right, but not against anything that is happening in Asia. Soviet Communist party leader Leonid Brezhnev today called again for an end to the fighting. The United States is reported ready to cut off massive economic aid to the subcontinent until the Eastern has non-stop jets to Chicago, and the only direct jets to Cincinnati, Louisville. fighting ceases. Shastri met with leaders of his Congress party and rank ing members of the opposi I 1 tion in Parliament.

Many of them have been demanding a stepped-up war against In the words of one war-room thinker, "What we are faced with is the danger of total cultural warfare." The crisis was begun quietly enough last month when Soviet photographic planes flying over Cuba recorded the absence of Bobby Fischer from the Capa- win tttApn Imi irt r-, tv nr Ctanninn matirc- ready urging a five-year prohibition against the Bolshoi Ballet. The voice of sanity behind the scenes belongs to Dr. Hugo Hans, whose seminal work, "Culture Can Turn the Tide," defines 93 brilliantly thought-out steps up the escalation ladder which precede the dreadful step 94, universal cultural war. (Banning pre-dawn Russian classes on educational TV, permitting unlimited export of movie magazines to the Soviet Union, etc.) Dr. Hans points out that in refusing to let Fischer go to Cuba to play chess, the United States, unwittingly perhaps, was escalating to step 22.

the en-eny's national A reasoned response by the Russians would have been a long article in Pravda denouncing baseball as hooliganism. This, he notes, was impossible for a number of reasons. For another, the Russians hadn't read his book and hence did not know the proper response. Instead, they escalated immediately to step 67. the enemy's road Even at this level, Dr.

Hans points out, effective cultural warfare can be waged without intense danger of wiping out all culture. To ban further tours by the Bolshoi, for example, would invite further escalation by the Russians. The reasoned response would be to bed the troupe in sheets full of cracker crumbs, house them in hotel rooms next to convention parties and steer them through a program of rigorously planned activity such as Doris Day movies, visits to the Senate and afternoon TV game shows. Dr. Hans' critics have vilified him for daring to think about ways of making culture an effective weapon of the state.

As the Russians have shown again, however, culture in the era of the superstate is as much an instrument of policy as the ICBM and the secret agent. As Dr. Hans puts it, "You can't make an omelet without cracking a few Pakistan. Informed sources said when it was learned Shastri was considering a cessation of the fighting, opposition leaders demanded that in any agreement India refuse to reopen the Kashmir question and to hold territory it has 1 i seized in Pakistani Kashmir, where the fighting began. Pakistan demands as a price for peace that a plebi scite be held in divided Kash paper cuttings in the ministry of cultural warfare, several commissars reported simultaneously that Fischer, the American chess champion, had been denied American passport permission to attend the tournament.

Here, it seemed, was a quiet, concealed move by the United States to strike a sneak blow against Communist culture. No one anticipated a violent Communist response. Compared to "Hello, Dolly," Fischer is scarcely more than a popgun in the American cultural arsenal. At most, the Soviets were expected to hit back by throwing a couple of touring American engineers out of Dnieperpet-rovsk. In banning "Hello, Dilly," Moscow abruptly confronted Washington with a cultural challenge of the deepest gravity.

The men here who favor lobbing one into the men's room of the Kremlin are al mir to see whether the peo ple prefer Indian or Pakistani rule. -x I 'A 'Aims Achieved' A. M. Thomas, minister of 4 1 i defense production, told Par-liament that India had achieved its objectives in two sectors. These, he said, were on the northern front around the Pakistani cities of Lahore and Sialkot and about 600 miles to the south i in southeast Pakistan.

Disarmament Is Blown to Bits Again I I I Pakistan was claiming in ground fighting termed by New Dehli as the "heaviest in the war. It cen- i tered in the Sialkot area about 250 miles northwest of New Delhi, the Indian capital, "ST" and 150 miles southwest ofi Rawalpindi, the Pakistani capital. A major tank battle! has been raging there. For a while the conference sounded like an extension of influence peddlers in the German elections. Tsarapkin, with dire warnings about Soviet absolute refusal to entertain any German nuclear role in NATO, steered negotiations directly into the German campaign.

Quite unexpectedly, at least here, India and Pakistan started shooting instead of talking. The anomaly of an Indian delegate at the disarmament negotiations under these circumstances showed in a rather macabre way. Most of the participants were eager to know how he felt about internal pressures for India to make its own atomic bomb. With great dignity, he ignored all probing. If these negotiations were not so grave for the future of man, they might well have been dragged into indifferent comic opera.

At one stage the Russians even By SEYMOUR FREIDIN New York Herald Tribune Service Geneva. In a morbid, albeit antiseptic, atmosphere shattered by war in another corner of the world, the 17-nation Disarmament Conference is about to limp into another long recess. Delegates will probably select Thursday as the date to go back to the United Nations and report a rather dismal "no progress" after six weeks' mutual recrimination. It all had resumed rather brightly even though France refused to attend and Red China was conspicuously uninvited. Russia elected to talk again, and optimism surged about the possibilities of a non-proliferation agreement on nuclear arms.

The Americans, under William C. Foster, tried to get down to business. So did Britain, guided by Lord Chalfont, whose allegorical prose lifted this session into I I i i I accepted an tgyptian proposal to prohibit underground tests. It was a loop And they're Whisperjets. occasional literate insights 1 Hearing Aid Accessory IMPROVES HEARING FOR $2 A remarkable new low-cost hearing aid accessory, just introduced, may offer improved performance and comfort to thousands of hearing aid wearers.

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64, of a wretched world tuture without agreement on non-proliferation. That catch-all word means no more atomic arms for anyone. Once Britain and the United States made clear their separate ideas, the veteran Soviet delegate, Semyon K. TsDaraokin. took off on And Eastern Whisperjets also fly you to Atlanta, TampaSt.

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Strangest thing about it, though, was that it had been originally suggested by the Russians themselves in 1961. So they accepted their own proposal, which excludes any form of international inspection. A do-it-yourself inspection plan is the only feasible way out, said Tsarapkin. Then he returned to belabor the West Germans and any plan for them inside a multilateral force or an Atlantic nuclear force. Quietly and clearly, Foster replied that the Soviet Union was not getting down to brass tacks the urgent need for a non-proliferation agreement.

Up spoke elegantly tailored Lord Chalfont. Tsarapkin's proposals and propaganda, Chalfont pointed out, were meant to put the Atlantic alliance in a state of total inertia with nary a thought of changing times and postures. If there was no give-and-take, as ultimately produced the test-ban agreement, there could be no non-proliferation deal. Lord Chalfont said it well and made it ar, too. i an old Russian line the bogey of a nuclear-armed West Germany.

Flushed with energy in their own national election campaign, German politicians jumped into the Geneva conference without thinking. Former Chancel lor Adenauer, sniffing an EASTERN See how much better an oi'lme con sellout on German sharing in an Atlantic deterrent, sounded a local alarm. His own chancellor, Ludwig Erhard, whom Adenauer detests, bravely retorted he trusted the Americans. The German Socialists, sensing their first chance to win, also got in tha act Wriisoeriet is a service mark of Eastern Airlines. Inc.

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Years Available:
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