Word: charterers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...letter accused McCann of "leading the forces on Beacon Hill which have sought to do away with the present charter of the City of Cambridge" and thus restore "the old, corrupt ways...
When the six charter members of the Common Market opened up the Treaty of Rome five years ago and invited fellow European nations to participate, they were snubbed. "We really didn't expect anybody else to want to join," said one of the original negotiators. "We were tired, and it was a rainy night, so we just sat down and slapped something on paper." But so staggering has the success of the Common Market been that these provisions for membership are now required reading in the capitals of every nonmember nation in Europe...
...Comptroller of the Currency has traditionally been the very model of pin-striped decorum. Not James J. Saxon, 48. When Saxon took the job last November, he brought with him 27 pages of recommendations for reform. With almost indecent haste, he raised the Government's assessment on nationally chartered banks in order to erase his department's $2,500,000 deficit, opened new regional offices, slashed paperwork 50%, and cut the time required to approve a new bank charter from nine months to 75 days. "Jimmy Saxon," said one top U.S. banker, "is the kind...
...assigned to the Royal Laotian Army, who was captured with three other soldiers in April 1961 and had been kept in solitary imprisonment ever since. Luckiest of the prisoners, by their own accounts, were Edward N. Shore Jr. and John P. Mc-Morrow, civilian pilots for the Air America charter service (which ferried supplies for the previous Laotian regime), and NBC Cameraman Grant Wolfkill, who was a passenger in their helicopter when it crashed 40 miles north of the capital. Unlike the others, the three shared a cell, and had been relatively well treated since last April, when they were...
...trouble raising it) and 125,000 readers willing to pay $1.25 per copy for a monthly blend of history and news. But not enough of the initial subscribers stayed around. Campbell's $1,000,000 ran out quickly, and the 125,000 charter subscribers dwindled to 7,000. Last week, after just four issues, USA*1 gave up the ghost. It merged with another publishing experiment: A. & P. Heir Huntington Hartford's Show Magazine...