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1976Year Cologne Chamber Orchestra: D Henahan rev

Helmut Muller-Bruhl conducts; Michael Beroff and Ransom Wilson perform Music: Cologne Visitors

1972Year The ninth annual tourna ment in memory of Akiba Rubinstein, held recently at Polanica Zdroj, Poland, re sulted in a tie for first be tween two international mas ters&#8212

Helmut Pfleger of West Germany and N. Spiridonov of Bulgaria, both of whom scored 9½ points out of 15. Chess: 2 International Masters Tie For First in Polish Tourney

1953Year It had been a favorite winter vegetable in his house for as long as he could remember, Helmut Ripperger wrote us. The author of six highly original cook books had disagreed with our recent observation that salsify was a culinary curiosity. News of Food

Helmut Ripperger Recalls the Marketing and Home Cooking of an Earlier Day Here

1973Year INNSBRUCK, Austria, Jan. 24 (AP)&#8212

Helmut Schmalzl led an Italian sweep of the first three places in the International Ski Federation giant slalom race for men today. Schmalzl had runs of 1 minute 56.3 seconds and 1:51.64 for a total of 3:47.94 over the 1.8‐kilometer course with a vertical drop of 420 meters and 66 gates on each run. Italians Post 1, 2, 3 Sweep In Innsbruck Giant Slalom

1976Year BONN, Oct. 3&#8212

Helmut Schmidt has always been a lonely man, driven by ambition and a cool, Protestant North German self‐esteem that has often repelled the clubby politicians in his own party. In the past two‐and‐a‐half years as Chancellor, he has been driven by necessity and logic and pragmatism, not by the warm idealism of his predecessor Willy Brandt—respected but not really loved. Only Mr. Schmidt's steel‐gray hair betrays his age. His trim, short figure and his chiseled features make him look younger than his 57 years. He speaks flat, colloquial English so well that it is hard to believe he taught himself the language, after the British occupied his native city of Hamburg in 1945. A Cool and Private Chancellor

1983Year As counsel to the President in the Carter Administration, Lloyd N. Cutler, now a Washington lawyer, was privy to the role that news deadlines play in policy decisions in the White House. Here are excerpts of his remarks on that subject in a taped television interview with C-Span, the public affairs cable channel: I was surprised by how much the substantive policymaking decisions in the White House are affected by press deadlines and, in particular, by the evening television news. So that if something happened, let us say, on a Monday, or somebody strongly criticized the President or the Russians did something

Helmut Schmidt made an unfavorable comment about the President or one of his programs, everything stopped! Whatever you'd been working on as the great priority of the next morning you had to put aside in order to reach a decision about how the President or someone else would respond in time for the television evening news. THE EVENING NEWS: A 'GALVANIZING FORCE'

Released under the MIT License.

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