Word: travelled
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...have been awarded to David M. Bear '65, of Quincy House and Akron, Ohio; Joel E. Cohen '65, of Adams House and Washington, D.C.; Paul Horowits '65, of Lowell House and Summit, N.J.; and Stephen D. White '65, of Adams House and Cambridge. The Sheldon provides $2200 for undesignated travel...
Crackdown on Corruption. Union papers now try to appeal to the whole family by running "ladies' sections." They carry regular columns on cooking, dressmaking, hobbies, social security and travel; the papers of affluent unions run notices for charter flights abroad. As for consumer advice, few commercial papers carry shrewder columnists than Sidney Margolius, whose syndicated pieces tell union members how to spend their union wages. "My wife reads the paper from cover to cover," says a Manhattan machinist. "She's more of a regular reader than...
...court declared for the first time that travel is "part of the liberty of which the citizen cannot be deprived without the due process of law of the Fifth Amendment." According to that decision (Kent v. Dulles), the State Department exceeded its powers when it denied a passport to Artist Rockwell Kent because of his allegedly Communist beliefs. Last year the court voided an act of Congress denying passports to all U.S. Communists (Aptheker v. Secretary of State). In short, travel cannot be restricted for mere belief or association...
Implicit Approval. In appealing for a declaratory judgment, Zemel argued that the Cuban travel ban, laid down by the State Department in 1961 violates both Kent's due-process requirement and the First Amendment right of free speech. Equally basic, argued Zemel, the Constitution (Article 1) gives Congress sole authority to make laws. The 1926 Passport Act vaguely empowered the State Department to grant passports "under such rules as the President shall designate." But Congress has not specifically empowered the President to impose area restrictions in peacetime. Otherwise, said Zemel, the statute is an unconstitutional delegation of Congress...
...citizens and does not penalize individual beliefs. As for the free-speech argument, he said, "the right to speak and publish does not carry with it the unrestrained right to gather information." But what about delegation of powers? Acting under the 1926 law, said Warren, the State Department restricted travel to Ethiopia, Spain and China in the 1930s, and later to many Iron Curtain countries. By not acting, said Warren, Congress implicitly approved such administrative rules...