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Word: orientals (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...airlines-Pan American, TWA, American, Northwest Orient, Continental, United, National and World Airways-have ordered 70 of the big planes. Other orders have come from Lufthansa German Airlines, Japan Air Lines, BOAC, Air France, Alitalia, Irish International Airlines, KLM and Air-India. Most of the carriers prefer a first-and tourist-class seating that allows for 350 to 362 passengers. To Boeing, which had originally planned the 747 as a military transport that would be similar to Lockheed's successful C-5A, this almost negates the whole idea of the nine-abreast economy airliners. To prove the point, Boeing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aviation: A Lot of People For a Lot of Plane | 6/16/1967 | See Source »

Devotion to Mother. As a Navy commander in 1945, Scott was among the first Americans to enter Tokyo, later made several more trips to the Orient, finally realized that his real love was not Japanese art but its Chinese "mother." His devotion has never wav ered. "The Chinese art," he says tenderly, "is more sophisticated, more subtle." And in all of China's history, he adds, no period can equal "the lively T'ang Dynasty" (618 to 906), the "golden age" that he chronicles in his latest book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: The Man from T'ang | 6/2/1967 | See Source »

...prop wash. In the four years after his marriage, he embarked on two world-swinging trips to explore aviation routes, the first across Canada and Alaska to Japan and China to dramatize the Great Circle course to the Far East (written up by Anne in North to the Orient), and the second across the North Atlantic to Europe and back across the South Atlantic (again recorded by Anne in Listen, the Wind!). The report he submitted to Pan Am embodied the same pragmatic realism he had shown in equipping the Spirit of St. Louis, and helped change the shape...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: LINDBERGH: THE WAY OF A HERO | 5/26/1967 | See Source »

...Dependence. Britain wants to hold onto Hong Kong to protect its vast investments and to retain a Far Eastern headquarters for British banking and trade interests. It also does not know how it could gracefully withdraw from Hong Kong under the present circumstances without totally losing face in the Orient. In recent years, Red China has been building up its influence in the Crown Colony, and Britain has been too afraid of offending its overpowering neighbor to do anything about it. As a result, about one-fifth of the colony's Chinese, who make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hong Kong: Mao-Think v. the Stiff Upper Lip | 5/26/1967 | See Source »

Findley -- representative from Abraham Lincoln's 20th District -- proposed an exchange of diplomatic, cultural, journalistic and tourist missions between "the two giant nations of Occident and Orient." But he asked for continued checks on Chinese "military or subversive threats and pressure...

Author: By Richard D. Paisner, | Title: Findley Becomes First Republican in Congress Urging Ties with China | 5/8/1967 | See Source »

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