Word: ivans
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...comparison is to the law of the high seas-as a pair of massive new books on space law make clear. In both Space Law and Government, by Andrew G. Haley (Appleton-Century-Crofts, $15), and Law and Public Order in Space, by Myres S. McDougal, Harold Lasswell and Ivan A. Vlasic (Yale, $15), maritime law, which has grown out of the common consent and reciprocal needs of seafaring nations, is described as one of the most effective, enforceable varieties of international law. With its emphasis on trade and fisheries, maritime law offers convenient models for legal control of whatever...
...HOPE THEATER (NBC, 8:30-9:30 p.m.). Jason Robards Jr. stars in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, from the recent novel about life in a Russian concentration camp...
...runs. The Newark (N.J.) Star-Ledger rolled an extra 50,000 Sunday copies and sold 20,000. Hearst's evening Manhattan paper, the Journal-American, claimed a gain of 75,000 daily. The New York Times got a 25,000 boost both daily and Sunday. But Vice President Ivan Veit said that the Times's serialization of the Eisenhower memoirs probably accounted for most of that. New York Herald Tribune President Walter Thayer reported a modest circulation rise, but decided not to give a figure. Said he of the refugees from the Mirror: "My guess is that...
...exchanged nationals who had been held on charges of spying. It was the second time the two countries have swapped prisoners in this fashion. The first: Communist Agent Rudolf Abel was traded for U-2 Pilot Gary Powers in 1962. In last week's exchange the U.S. released Ivan Egorov, a Soviet U.N. functionary, and his wife Alexandra, who were arrested last July in New York for espionage. In return, the Soviets let go 24-year-old Fulbright Scholar Marvin Makinen, who was sentenced to eight years in prison in 1961 on photo-taking espionage charges; and Jesuit Priest...
...indiginous creativity that does not necessarily conform to the dictates of socialist realism. Their efforts have been occasionally successful, but the Party's policies towards literature continue to be dominated by political considerations. When Premier Khrushchev decided the publication of the startling novel One Day In the Life of Ivan Denisovitch would be a wise political move, he made it. When it appeared the pressure for intellectual freedom engendered by the publication was growing out of hand, Khrushchev summarily quashed the dissident voices...