Home  
0
0

Contact Us

Feedback Form

About Us

Web Links

Visit this group

Ponzi Capitalism and the Deepening Moral Crisis

The Roller Coaster: The Communist Party in the 1940s

Rebuilding the Labor Movement in the 21st Century, an Interview with Scott Marshall

Police Escalate Attacks on First Amendment Rights

Public Option: Worth the Fight

Our Socialist Inheritance and Future

Past, Present and Future: The Politics of Reform in the Era of Obama

Needed: Constitutional Amendment for the Right to a Earn a Living Wage

Why Should Grassroots Liberals Consider Marxism?

Is That Specter Really Collapsing?

Carlo Tresca: The Dilemma of an Anti-Communist Radical

The Brief, Revolutionary Life of Joe Hill

Movie Review: Giải phóng Sài Gòn

Review: Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

Poetry, November 2009

/Archives - Dates and Topics /2004 – online Print | Send to friend

American Youth To Study Medicine in Cuba



click here for related stories: Cuba solidarity

Executive Director of Pastors for Peace, Rev. Lucius Walker, sent a letter this week to all American students enrolled in medical studies in Cuba informing them that the US government will allow the continuation of these scholarships, in spite of recent travel restrictions.

"As far as we know," he said, "this is the only exception that has been made so far to the Bush administration’s draconian new restrictions on travel to Cuba."

"The arrangement is that 28 members of the US Congress are writing a joint letter to the State and Treasury Departments on behalf of all the medical students —current students as well as future enrolees. The State and Treasury Departments, for their part, have announced that they will grant travel authorization so that all the enrolled students will be able to legally continue their studies, and to legally travel to and from school," according to Lucius Walker.

He also informed that all students should expect to receive written confirmation of this arrangement within the next two weeks, adding that new students will be traveling on August 25, as previously announced.

Walker described the arrangement as an "important victory" and thanked a number of people and organizations that made it come about.

In the letter to the young Americans of the Latin American Medical School scholarship program, he thanked –first of all- the students themselves, their parents, friends and supporters; members of the Congressional Black and Hispanic Caucuses; and "the specific intervention of Secretary of State Colin Powell."

"We owe a special debt of gratitude to Reps. Barbara Lee (D-CA) and Charles Rangel (D-NY), and to their staff members, who have worked tirelessly to help us achieve this historic victory," Walker added.


» Find more of the online edition.





blog comments powered by Disqus
Take a Stand
( 10/01/2003 18:49 )


newcatcher@cpusa.org