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Word: travelling (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...German Expressionist Drawings provides an opportunity to view Expressionism in the terms in which it progressively defined itself. Sixty-five drawings from Mr. Bergen's collection, selected by the Art Galleries of Notre Dame University, are presently on exhibit at Harvard University's Busch-Reisinger Museum and will subsequently travel to SUNY at Binghamton, Cornell University, and the University of Houston. Hanging around in academic circles seems appropriate to a collection which is scholarly in the best sense of the word; which culls from the stereotype the accurate insights hidden beneath connotations and vagueness. In focusing on the drawings executed...

Author: By Eleni Constantine, | Title: Chronicles of a Crossing | 6/13/1977 | See Source »

...with Heckel's Bathers by the Alter River (1913), one sees that the stylistic traits are the same, though Heckel created his own notion of primitive society out of a jumble of African and South Pacific objects he found at hand in Germany, while Pechstein had the chance to travel to the South Seas and observe a native culture personally...

Author: By Eleni Constantine, | Title: Chronicles of a Crossing | 6/13/1977 | See Source »

...33rd anniversary has also meant a boom year for travel agents, who are besieged with mourners eager to visit the spot where their relatives died. According to one Tokyo agency, 100,000 Japanese have already flown to Luzon in the Philippines this year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: The Last Sayonara | 6/13/1977 | See Source »

...fees of $100,000 from ITT. His law firm got $220,000 from ITT for various services involving Avis. In addition, Smith and one of his law partners have also been paid retainers of $6,000 a year as Avis directors, plus expenses for them and their wives to travel to meetings in Europe. Fuqua contends that Avis, the only major car-rental firm that is not a subsidiary of a larger corporation, would be strengthened by the merger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ANTITRUST: Fighting for the Wheel | 6/6/1977 | See Source »

When Jimmy Carter allowed the ban on American travel to Cuba to lapse last March, no one was happier than cigar aficionados. They had been deprived - legally, at least - of the pleasures of Cuban stogies since 1962, when the embargo on trade with Fidel Castro's island was imposed. A smoker is now free to ask a Cuba-bound traveler: "Hey, going to Havana? Pick me up a couple of boxes of Montecristos." But lately many Americans returning to the U.S. from points outside Cuba laden with Havana's best have been rudely awakened by customs inspectors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Smoke Signals | 6/6/1977 | See Source »

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