Word: charterers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Charter Flights Agency may be forced to cancel some of its flights to Europe for the summer...
Surprisingly, the nudge for the new fares came from the U.S. nonscheduled airlines. As of last week nine of the biggest, led by World Airways of Oak land, Calif., have CAB permission to charter planes for all-expense, "inclusive tours" outside the U.S. They will be set up by travel agents and sold to all comers at a package price that could be cheaper than the Pan Am plan...
Going Beyond a Charter. Academically, the renaissance of religion at Stanford began in 1962, when Theologian Brown was hired away from Manhattan's Union Theological Seminary as professor of religion. Guided by a 19th century charter that forbade any sectarian instruction in doctrine, the university did not even have a lecturer in religion until 1951. Now the religion teaching staff, operating within the humanities division, consists of four...
...avoid high credit rates, Bergesen has financed the construction of ever bigger ships largely from his own fortune. Many shipowners, needing vast amounts of outside capital for new construction, are forced to commit their unbuilt ships to charter in advance, often at poor rates. Unlike them, Bergesen has flexibility, as he puts it, "to build the right ships at the right time, then fix the right charter contracts." Altogether, his wholly self-owned company earned $13.5 million after taxes last year...
...each morning, while a chauffeured limousine trails behind. Nine years ago, the rivals got an unexpected recruit, when his son Berge Sigval Bergesen repeated a bit of family history: he broke with the family firm, railing that father found it "impossible to retire." Now 48, Berge has his own charter operation called Sigship. Warily staying away from tankers, he specializes in bulk carriers - many of them also leviathans in their class...