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Word: charterers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Unless modified by statue, charter, or by laws, the powers of the trustees of an educational, religious or charitable corporation in respect to the administration and investment of the corporation's funds are fundamentaaly no different than that of the directors of a business corporation in respect to the administration of the property held by the corporation...

Author: By Steven E. Levy, Wesley E. Profit, and Charles F. Sabel, S | Title: Getting Off Without a Conviction: Harvard's Killings in the Market | 4/19/1972 | See Source »

...first sour notes of Mary Sol (Sea and Sun) were struck in the airports of New York, Boston and other cities, where the charter flights could not accommodate the tribes of ticket holders. Once there, they were harassed by the scorching sun, poison ivy and voyeurs, but the kids remained largely cheerful throughout the festival, waiting in long lines for food, water and toilets. They stripped down and took to the sea, which in turn claimed three lives (two of them Puerto Rican). Although there was less evidence of drugs than usual at youth festivals, one youth was knifed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Woodstock's Last Gasp? | 4/17/1972 | See Source »

...abroad." Priced at 50?, or $7.50 a year, W contains lavish color illustrations and a collage of fashion and gossip dedicated to what the beautiful people of both sexes are saying, wearing and doing. The first issue, well seeded with ads, went to 70,000 charter subscribers, and Editor Michael Coady sees circulation rising to 250,000 as "we start to fill the gap between fashion magazines and daily newspaper coverage of clothes." Although some original material may be added later, W now is a repackaging of WWD, minus the Seventh Avenue trade news but including WWD jargon (certain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Short Takes | 4/17/1972 | See Source »

Even Break. As finally approved after 54 working days, Montana's new charter is a model document. Despite the individual political differences of the writers, it has a nonpartisan, populist character. Mercifully, it is only 12,000 words long, and it sparkles with flashes of human concern from the beginning: "We the people of Montana, grateful to God for the quiet beauty of our state, the grandeur of our mountains, the vastness of our rolling plains, and desiring to improve the quality of life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MONTANA: Fresh Chance Gulch | 4/10/1972 | See Source »

Short Circuit. Under the old charter, the public service commission was dominated by the power companies it was supposed to regulate; the public got short-circuited. Now provision is made for an ombudsman, a consumer counsel who will represent the public in utility-rate cases. In the past, a single state board of education tried to run both the public schools and the six-unit university system; the new constitution creates separate boards and gives the regents full control-without political interference-over the universities. Montana also limped along with a tight constitutional limit on property taxes, which imposed great...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MONTANA: Fresh Chance Gulch | 4/10/1972 | See Source »

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