Word: travelled
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...program pays for the Scholars' tuition, and provides each student with $4000 for living expenses and an additional travel allowance. The awards are made for one year, but may be renewed for a second. During the second year the stipend is reduced...
...captive citizens of Eastern Europe don't want to defect! Can they travel without leaving families and property behind? Where in Eastern Europe may they fill out application blanks for immigrant visas? Doesn't TIME know that last year West European governments v/ere unable to arrange for employment of unemployed Polish workmen because no one would guarantee that the Poles would return to Poland? Doesn't the fact that millions of people may not buy one-way tickets arouse indignation...
...Kiss of Judas." The U.S. has been trying for several years to open new channels into China-by approving trips there for journalists in 1957 and more recently by granting travel permits to doctors, scientists and scholars. The Communists have invariably rebuffed such overtures. Since December the Ad ministration has been conducting a complete reappraisal of its China policy. So far, the inclination has been toward further attempts to relax tensions, possibly even including cancellation of the U.S. embargo on nonstrategic trade with the Chinese. When a high-powered West German consortium recently notified Washington that it had contracted...
...Schwartz, the President was unmistakably concerned lest the resignation further alienate the party's liberal wing, already unhappy with Johnson's Viet Nam policy. As administrator of the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, Schwartz had worked for a relaxation of curbs on immigration, travel and the admission of refugees. He quit, he said, after learning that he was the intended victim of a planned State Department reorganization eliminating his 17-man bureau. Actually, it was no secret that certain department officials had vigorously opposed Schwartz, particularly on his liberal visa policy for foreigners visiting...
...will mean nothing next to the margin he will amass in winning re-election in 1970--something like two million votes. All Presidential Candidate Kennedy needs from his "home base" is its convention votes, plus evidence of his personal vote-getting ability. Robert Kennedy should find it possible to travel the road to the White House without ever learning his way around the crooked back hallways of Albany...