Word: freer
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Into New York harbor last week sailed the first entire shipload of refugees to enter the U.S. under the Refugee Relief Act of 1953. "We come with gratitude," said Hans Freer, 34, one of 1,243 refugees aboard the chartered U.S. Navy transport General Langfitt. Freer's arrival with his family amounted to a near miracle of deliverance : his wife had been a Soviet slave laborer, he was buffeted about Europe by Nazis and Communists for 15 years, and for a time it seemed unlikely that many refugees would ever reach the U.S. under the 1953 relief act. Last...
...migra tions the world has ever known. Since 1940, more than 5,000,000 newcomers have moved into the Far West; 200,000 are still arriving in California each year. They flow into Los Angeles and the main cities of the Southwest and, in search of more space and freer living, push on through the populated centers and out over the desert...
...production-line tissue cultures, suggested three University of California researchers. Cells from the inner layer (amnion) of the placenta grow at about the same rate as monkey kidney cells and in the same chemical food baths, reported Elsa M. Zitcer and colleagues. Advantages: less danger of sensitization, and freer supply of placentas, since India is sensitive about continued export of the revered monkeys...
Since Congress seems ready to extend the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, U.S. membership in GATT stands a good chance of continuing. But the supporters of freer world trade argue that this is not enough. GATT should be strengthened by a full-fledged agency to administer it. Some nations, e.g., France, have gone along with GATT only because the U.S. is firmly committed to it. If Congress refuses to approve OTC, other nations will regard it as a vote against GATT. They will hesitate to cooperate in any further trade agreements, and the most successful mechanism that has been...
...Cottage-or at least the best reproduction of it a London TV studio could manage. Inside a modest, chintzy living room, a camera settled on the figure of former Prime Minister Clement Attlee, slightly hunched over like a shiny-domed parenthesis. "We want only those restrictions which make life freer for the majority," explained the leader of Labor. ". . . The tiger in his cage is very fed up, but the rest of us are pleased he is behind bars. That is the only kind of restrictions we want." As for peace, of course the Tories...