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Charity and Welfare
* Malaysian Lord Ayyappa Charity and Welfare Organisation
* Malaysian Lord Ayyappa Charity and Welfare Organisation
The Blue Cross National Animal Welfare Charity is based at Burford.
* Rooff, Madeline ( 1972 ) A Hundred Years of Family Welfare: A Study of the Family Welfare Association ( Formerly Charity Organisation Society ) 1869 – 1969.
One of the major collections is that of the Charity Organisation Society, now known as the Family Welfare Association which was formed to make sure that charitable organisations did not overlap with each other in terms of what they were trying to achieve.
Jane Lewis, The Voluntary Sector, The State and Social Work in Britain: The Charity Organisation Society / Family Welfare Association since 1869 ( Aldershot: Edward Arnold, 1995 )
The Charity Organisation Society was renamed Family Welfare Association in 1946 and still operates today as
Pritchard has been nominated for numerous animal welfare awards including the Dodds Charity Champion Award for Animal Welfare.
Wong became extensively involved in community work ; amongst other things, he founded the Chinese Catholic Community, co-founded the Chinese Charity Foundation and served as chair of the Chinese Migrant Welfare Association.

Charity and from
It hosted the FA Cup Final from 1920 to 1922, has held ten FA Cup semi-finals ( most recently in 1978 ), ten FA Charity Shield matches ( the last in 1970 ), and three England international matches, the last in 1932 ; it was also the venue for an unofficial Victory International in 1946.
Although the fund provided Wheelock ample financial support for the Charity School, Wheelock had trouble recruiting Indians to the institution, primarily because its location was far from tribal territories.
Now in its 27th year, the event is moving from its established country of France to Holland, calling this year's event the ' Hayling to Holland Charity Cycle Ride ' with 130 riders and support crew.
Dalglish became player-manager of Liverpool in 1985 after the resignation of Joe Fagan, winning a further three First Divisions, two FA Cups and four FA Charity Shields, before resigning from Liverpool in 1991.
Charity walks range in length from two mile ( 3 km ) or five km walks to as far as fifty miles ( eighty km ).
* Five nuns from the Religious Sisters of Charity in Ireland become the first women of religion to set foot on Australian soil.
As is customary for Church documents, the title is taken from the first words ( incipit ) of the decree: " of Perfect Charity " in Latin.
The trustees of Elizabeth Allen ’ s Charity, which had been established by her will dated 10 February 1725, gave financial assistance to save it from a state " very ruinous and unfit for habitation ".
The first white settlement in present-day Barbour County was established in 1780 by Richard Talbott — along with his brother Cotteral and sister Charity — about three miles ( 5 km ) downriver from the future site of Philippi.
* Chatsworth House Trust page from the Charity Commission – includes links to annual reports
Kevin McDonald, Foley's castmate from The Kids in the Hall, made a guest appearance as the knife-wielding Throwdini in the episode " Stupid Holiday Charity Talent Show " during Season 4.
Northwood and Pinner Cottage Hospital was built in 1926 as a memorial to the First World War, using donations from the Ruislip Cottagers ' Allotments Charity.
In 1907 the Sisters of Charity of Our Lady Mother of Mercy established a small hospital across from Saint Joseph ’ s Church.
* A ferry service runs from mid-May thru mid-October from Au Gres to Charity Island, which is ten miles ( 16 km ) to the east in the middle of Saginaw Bay.
* Charity ambulance – A special type of patient transport ambulance is provided by a charity for the purpose of taking sick children or adults on trips or vacations away from hospitals, hospices or care homes where they are in long term care.
* 1897 – 125 people die during a film screening at the Charity Bazaar in Paris after a curtain catches on fire from the ether used to fuel the projector lamp.
They had one daughter, Mary Frances ( née Anna Mary Bush ), who was adopted in 1938 from the New York Foundling Hospital, run by the Sisters of Charity of New York.
On 4 February 2003 ( after being suspended since April 2002 ), Masri was dismissed from his position at the Finsbury Park mosque by the Charity Commission, the government department that regulates charities in England and Wales.
Geraldine Peacock, CBE was Chief Charity Commissioner ( as previous chairs of the Commission have been known ) from 2003 to 2006, and Chair-designate from 8 July 2004 to 2006.
EPIC is registered as a non-profit Public Charity, and receives most of its funding from organizational and individual contributors, as well as through grants and the sale of its publications.
* 125 people died during a film screening at the Charity Bazaar in Paris after a curtain catches on fire from the ether used to fuel the projector lamp.

Charity and Family
Cooke supported the Cursillo Movement, Christian Family Movement, and Charismatic Renewal, and was instrumental in bringing the Missionaries of Charity to New York.
On stage, she is also known for the role of Nickie in the revival of Sweet Charity, the role of Velma Kelly in the revival of Chicago ( for both of which she won Tony Awards ) and for the role of Morticia Addams in The Addams Family musical.
The use of the term " Mayflower Declaration " as a statement of the CPA's Principles must be regarded a controversial because the Mayflower Family Centre ( of which, at the time of the declaration Alan Craig was Director ) was a Community Centre registered with the Charity Commissioners.
*" Charity Care in Wisconsin Hospitals " from the Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services website ( accessed June 16, 2008 )
She was a founder member of the Charity Organisation Society ( now the charity Family Action ) which organised charitable grants and pioneered a home-visiting service that formed the basis for modern social work.
Founded as an academy in 1885 by the Franciscan Sisters of Christian Charity, the college achieved four-year college status in 1935 and was then called Holy Family College.
The Family Life Foundation of Willowdale -- a registered Canadian Charity -- then chaired by the Rev.

Charity and History
" ( Tyler, A History of Amherst College ) One of the hallmarks of the new college was its Charity Fund, an early form of financial aid that paid the tuition of poorer students.
* Relief Society, Charity Never Faileth: History of Relief Society, 1842-1966, Deseret Book: Salt Lake City, 1966.
* History of the Brothers of Charity

Charity and English
* 1974 – Dani Behr, English singer and actress ( Faith Hope & Charity )
Published originally in Italian in 1848, the founder of the Society of Charity Rosmini's seminal work Costituzione secondo la giustizia sociale " The Constitution under Social Justice " was translated into English in 2006 by Alberto Mingardi.
The Football Association Community Shield ( formerly the Charity Shield ) is English football's annual match contested between the champions of the previous Premier League season and the holders of the FA Cup at Wembley Stadium.
Lord Dartmouth was a large donor to and the leading trustee for the English trust that would finance the establishment of the Indian Charity School, in Lebanon, Connecticut by Eleazar Wheelock to educate and convert the Indians.
English dance band Freemasons's music video for their 2008 single When You Touch Me was also inspired by the frug dance scene from Sweet Charity.
* Pod Childrens Charity, an English non-profit organisation who provide live entertainment for children in hospital and hospices
The Bonadventure could only disengage after an English fireship, the Charity commanded by Captain Simon Orton, set itself alight and frightened off the attacking Dutch vessels.
Later an English victory tune " The Dutch Armado A Meer Bravado " declared: " Fortune was pleasant when she lent the Dutch our ' Charity ' a thing they wanted much ".
The English lost only one ship, the captured Great Charity mentioned above.
He is one of the most successful English players of all time, having won eight First Divisions, four League Cups, five FA Charity Shields, four European Cups, one UEFA Cup and one UEFA Super Cup during his eleven years at Liverpool.
In jurisdictions which have retained the English cy-près doctrine but do not have an equivalent state body to the Charity Commission ( or in relation to foreign charities ' assets in the United Kingdom ), charity trustees may seek the approval of the Court to their entry into cy-près arrangements to avoid later accusations of breach of trust.
The Sisters of St. Benedict were responsible for teaching languages ; the Sisters of Charity, science and music ; the Felician Sisters, mathematics ; the Sisters of Mercy, English ; the Sisters of St. Joseph, social studies ; and the Vincentian Sisters of Charity, business.

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