Word: visa
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...themselves if the moon were not once again blue. For Duel, Norwegian Author Ronald Fangen's first, book to be brought out in the U. S.. shone with an unmistakably Dostoevskian light. Like his great prototype. Author Fangen is a foreigner but his translated words need no visa. The world he writes about is the same world of which most U. S. readers feel themselves citizens, a country inhabited not by brain-fevered intellectuals but by human beings whose hearts are troubled. Klaus Hallem turned out to be a country doctor while his old classmate George Roiter...
...news, tears filled her expressive eyes. Waving her Greek passport at the Turkish immigration officers she demanded to go ashore to Insull's aid. Her passport did not have a Turkish visa and they refused. Desperate, she tried to push past them at the ship's rail. One of them seized her shoulder. She wrenched to get away, toppled backwards, slid over the rail into the harbor. She came up blowing the foul water from her mouth. A sailor with a boat hook fished her out. They carried her prostrate and drenched back to her cabin...
...citizen? No, he was a British citizen who had resided 40 years in the U. S. How long had he been away? Seventeen months. Did he not know that an alien who left the country for more than six months must have a consular visa to return? Messrs. Johnson and Ryan angrily intervened. They protested, they waved their extradition papers, they pointed at President Roosevelt's signature, they refused to let Inspector Als have their prisoner...
...George Xeros. Popp & Xeros had a lengthy conference with Premier Tsaldaris. Promptly Greek public opinion switched right around. Public opinion, said the Premier, now had the very greatest sympathy for this harassed old gentleman. He would be allowed to proceed as soon as he had acquired a proper police visa for his traveling papers and the ship he had chartered had filed proper clearance papers...
...done a great many things to surprise the world. . . . Frank- lin Roosevelt is the first President to recognize that the masses have a right on the table of life, and he's only just begun." Few hours later the State Department authorized its Toronto Consul General to visa her passport into...