Word: charterers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Raiders. In a report based on a series of hearings last year, the subcommittee asserted that Saxon's policy of liberal charters for new banks had attracted financial raiders, confidence men and other "unscrupulous and corrupt persons" into banking. The subcommittee was especially critical of Saxon's role in the events leading to the 1965 failure of the San Francisco National Bank, whose charter had been approved by Saxon's predecessor. The McClellan group thought it "inexplicable" that Saxon had withheld information about the bank's perilous condition from the Federal Reserve, which was advancing...
...Council meeting, CCA and Independent councillors alike acclaimed the job Ward has done with minimal funds and assistance. They expressed regret that the Council is powerless under the Charter to rehire him or find him a similar position. It is now up to the new City Manager, Joseph A. DeGuglielmo '29. He can do the City a great service by finding Ward a new position as soon as possible. The youth of the City need a man like Ward, and the City needs some semblance of unity if it is to face more important issues, such as the Inner Belt...
...ship from Bremen, three 170,800-tonners from Kiel, and two of 170,000 from French shipyards. Swedish shipbuilders, whose modern yards last year captured second place from the British in total tonnage built, will deliver in April the 114,000-ton Sea Spirit for charter to British Petroleum...
...Weaver faces the task of coordinating diffuse and disorganized federal programs ranging from sewage-disposal research (under the Public Health Service) and the location of new inner-city schools (Health, Education & Welfare) to the design and route of metropolitan freeways (Bureau of Public Roads). He has no charter to annex other agencies' territories; rather, it will be a matter of deft and exceedingly diplomatic manipulation aimed at finding some semblance of cohesiveness...
...opinion was written by Chief Judge Elbert P. Tuttle, an Eisenhower appointee, who argued that the Georgia legislators had gone beyond their own constitution in barring Bond -without even considering the "grave" question of whether they had violated the guarantee of free speech. Judge Tuttle noted that the Georgia charter listed very specific qualifications for a lawmaker (age, residence, absence of a criminal record). To allow the legis lature to judge a duly elected member by "undefined, unknown and even constitutionally questionable standards," he said, "shocks not only the judicial, but also the lay sense of justice...