Word: outbounded
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Since this is certain to be a drawn-out and perhaps fruitless affair, Illinois Senator Paul Douglas last week pointedly praised a short cut to fairer fares. Fortnight ago two U.S. lines - Lykes Bros, and Bloomfield - quit an Atlantic conference in order to set their own lower outbound rates, and last week some of their European competitors were forced to pull out to match the new rates. Douglas would like the Mar itime Administration to consider with holding subsidies from any American lines that fail to do Lykeswise...
...Grahams returned to Cambridge on Wednesday, Jan. 8, the day before riots in the Canal Zone resulted in suspension of diplomatic relations between the United States and Panama. Barghoorn had planned to leave a few days later, but the disturbances forced cancellation of outbound flights...
...Washington about the differentials. But the Congressional Joint Economic Committee got wind of the matter in May and tipped off Kennedy. The Congressmen -notably the committee's chairman, Illinois' Senator Paul Douglas-were shocked to learn that, for example, the freight for U.S. steel pipe and tubing outbound to Europe is $42.40 a ton, while the inbound rate is $22.62. Scotch whisky moves to New York at a shipping cost of 840 a case; U.S. bourbon heading in the opposite direction is nicked...
...closed-door sessions, Kennedy pretty much convinced his presidential peers that: 1) the U.S. is keeping close watch on vessels outbound from Cuba to other Latin American ports; 2) the U.S. will interfere with any such ships carrying arms or troops; 3) the U.S. will send, to any Central American nations that request it, enough military force to combat Communist subversion...
According to Texas lore, the reason Dallas has one of the nation's busiest airports is that outbound jets are loaded with Texas businessmen heading for Wall Street to borrow money. The two most notable jet passengers from Dallas to New York last week-flying on separate planes to increase the odds that at least one of them would survive the trip-were bound on a different mission. John Dabney Murchison, 39, and his brother Clinton Williams Murchison Jr., 37, flew to Manhattan not as suppliants but as conquerors. In a coup that outdealt even the feats of their...