Word: charterers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Boston College is the folk school of the Boston Irish-a Jesuit beacon that in the past century lit the lowly immigrant's way from the first landfall to the last hurrah. Now the tiny city school that got its charter in 1863 counts 11,000 students, most of them on a sweeping 200-acre campus in suburban Chestnut Hill. With six graduate and professional schools, coed B.C. is one of the nation's biggest and best Catholic universities. Boston College watered the roots that grew the first Irish-Catholic U.S. President, and last week Himself...
Setting fashions in feminism is the happy fate of the women who head Barnard College, the separate but equal female undergraduate division of Columbia University. Before World War II, Miss Virginia Gildersleeve was the formidable crusader who went on to put a woman's touch on the U.N. Charter. Then came Mrs. Millicent Mclntosh, the all-purpose career woman with five children who proclaimed, "The era of women's rights has merged with the era of women's opportunities." This week Barnard (enrollment: 1,500) inaugurated a new pacesetter, President Rosemary Park, a tiny, witty, lucid spinster...
While his handsome wife Jovanka beamed down from a visitors' box, Tito strode into the hall to the cheers of the crowd and sat gravely through a formal reading of the new charter. Afterward, looking remarkably fit for a man who will be 71 next month, he happily auto graphed copies of the constitution...
...soon vanished-she turned out to be a water nymph-and his fortress crumbled, the fief he founded proved as durable as it is diminutive. It is formally known today as the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg and, though international surveys often omit its statistics entirely, it is a thriving charter member of the European Coal and Steel Community and the Common Market, as well as the smallest country in the United Nations, in whose behalf it sent an armed and eager platoon to Korea...
...years since his last Broadway revue, Danny Kaye has made ten movies, formed his own charter airline service, traveled through some two dozen countries as ambassador at large for the U.N. Children's Fund, gained some weight and lost some hair. As he proved last week at the start of a month-long stand at Manhattan's Ziegfeld Theater, he has kept all of his charm...