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trustees and appointed
Under the proposal the members of the board of trustees of a county college will be appointed ; ;
Two millions were added to what had been set aside for it in Mrs. Meeker's lifetime, and the proviso made that as long as Brian Thayer continued to discharge his duties as administrator of the fund to the satisfaction of the board of trustees ( hereinafter appointed by the bank administering the estate ) he was to be retained in his present capacity at a salary commensurate with the increased responsibilities enlargement of the fund would entail.
Caltech is incorporated as a non-profit corporation and is governed by a privately appointed 46-member board of trustees who serve five year terms of office and retire at the age of 72.
After Frederick Rapp's death in 1834, George Rapp appointed Romelius Baker and Jacob Henrici as trustees to manage the Society ’ s business affairs.
MIT is chartered as a non-profit organization and is owned and governed by a privately appointed board of trustees known as the MIT Corporation.
Rice University is chartered as a non-profit organization and is owned and governed by a privately appointed board of trustees.
At the same meeting of the board of trustees at which Professor Moore was elected president of Williams College, May 2, 1815, Dr. Packard of Shelburne introduced the following motion: " That a committee of six persons be appointed to take into consideration the removal of the college to some other part of the Commonwealth, to make all necessary inquiries which have a bearing on the subject, and report at the next meeting.
Stanley appointed Sheriff John Sweetland and Philip D. Ross ( who would serve in his post an unsurpassed 56 years ) as trustees of the Cup.
An additional 10 Jefferson College trustees were appointed to supervise the new facility from Philadelphia, owing to the difficulty of managing a medical department on the other side of the state.
Ten of the 17 trustees were forced to resign and four new members who lived locally were appointed.
La Cygne was incorporated on January 14, 1870, and a board of trustees was appointed.
In making the grant they stipulated that seven trustees should be appointed to administer this property along the lines provided by the donors.
** District Court appointed five men as trustees of the Town of Buckley.
The system is governed by a Board of Trustees consisting of thirteen members: the governor of Illinois serves as an ex officio member, nine trustees are appointed by the Illinois Governor, and a student trustee elected by referendum represents each of the university's three campuses.
After Beecham's death in 1961 advisers were appointed to assist the trustees, and in 1979 its administration was taken over by the Musicians ' Benevolent Fund.
The Bourne Eau act of 1781 appointed trustees, who were to scour and cleanse the river, and could charge tolls to fund the operation.
The celebrated grammarian William Lilye was the first master, and the company of mercers were ( in 1510 ) appointed trustees, the first example of non-clerical management in education.
He appointed Amos Eaton as the school's first senior professor and appointed the first board of trustees.
Two other seats are appointed by former trustees and not subject to the residents ' vote.
The agricultural school became known as Clemson College ( later Clemson University ) and Thomas Clemson's will appointed Ben Tillman as one of the lifetime trustees of the new agricultural school.
In 1871 the Victorian Government appointed the VRC as trustees of a site of 352 acres ( 1. 4 km² ) of Crown Land, next to the Maribyrnong River, which became known as Flemington Racecourse.
In 1901, Lord Minto donated the Minto Cup and appointed trustees to oversee its annual awarding to the champion senior men's lacrosse team of Canada ( since 1937 the Cup has been awarded to the junior men's champions ).
Three new village trustees joined the board in 2009: 23-year-old Brenten Schuyler Foote ( elected, with the largest vote total of any trustee candidate in all of Orange County ), Ed Char ( elected ) and Mal Stewart ( appointed to Higgins ' old seat ).

trustees and by
In general, it appears that trustees and board members attempt to represent the public interest in their administration of educational policy, and this is made easier by the fact that the dominant values of the society are middle-class values, which are generally thought to be valid for the entire society.
Then there are the trustees and officers of the great educational foundations, who inevitably exert an influence on educational decisions by their support or refusal to support various educational programs, experiments, and demonstrations.
The system itself is governed by a board of trustees, geographically representing its membership.
" The charter required that the makeup of the board of 36 trustees include, 22 Baptists, five Friends, four Congregationalists, and five Church of England members, and by 12 Fellows, of whom eight, including the President, should be Baptists " and the rest indifferently of any or all denominations.
Major additions to the old house were considered in 1849, but by then negotiations were underway to purchase the estate from the trustees of the deceased Earl Fife.
: Commercial estates filed by Canadian trustees in 2011 4775 estates, 3643 bankruptcies and 1132 Division 1 proposals.
On November 29, 1921, the trustees declared it to be the express policy of the Institute to pursue scientific research of the greatest importance and at the same time " to continue to conduct thorough courses in engineering and pure science, basing the work of these courses on exceptionally strong instruction in the fundamental sciences of mathematics, physics, and chemistry ; broadening and enriching the curriculum by a liberal amount of instruction in such subjects as English, history, and economics ; and vitalizing all the work of the Institute by the infusion in generous measure of the spirit of research.
Broadly backed by a diverse array of student groups and many notable faculty members the Committee Against Investment in South Africa held numerous teach-ins and demonstrations through the year focused on the trustees ties to the corporations doing business with South Africa.
Members of the Board of Education, chaired by the President of the board, served as ex-officio trustees.
Dartmouth is governed by a Board of Trustees comprising the College president ( ex officio ), the state governor ( ex officio ), 13 trustees nominated and elected by the board ( called " charter trustees "), and eight trustees nominated by alumni and elected by the board (" alumni trustees ").

trustees and 1801
Since its charter in 1801, the University has been governed by a board of trustees, which now governs the entire USC system.

trustees and act
The trustees of Hillsboro named in the act were Mahlon Hough, Samuel Purcell, Jr., Thomas Leslie, Josiah White, Jr., Edward Cunard, Mahlon Roach, and Thomas D. Stevens.
In case of the death, resignation, removal out of the county, or other legal disability of one or more of the said trustees, it shall be lawful for the remaining trustees, to supply such vacancy, and the person so chosen shall have the same power as if he had been particularly named in this act.
And be it further enacted, that so many of the lots in the said town as are not sold by the said John Kellar are hereby vested in the said trustees, and they, or a majority of them, shall within six months after the passing of this act, sell the lots at public auction, having previously advertised the time and place of such sale at the court house of said county, on three successive court days, and convey the same to the purchaser in fee, subject to the conditions of building a house on each, sixteen feet square, with a brick or stone chimney, to be finished fit for habitation within three years from the date of sale, and pay the money arising from such sale to the said John Kellar, or his legal representatives.
After reaching sales of $ 75 million in 1941, George and Jay established The Hormel Foundation to provide perpetual independence of the company, act as trustees of the family trusts and to start and fund The Hormel Institute, a research unit at the University of Minnesota.
This results in two things ; firstly, the trustees of a charitable trust are far freer to act than other trustees and secondly, beneficiaries cannot bring a court case against the trustees.
The Foundation was to act for charitable, educational, artistic, and scientific purposes, and the named trustees were his long-time friend Baron Radcliffe of Werneth, Lisbon attorney José de Azeredo Perdigão, and his son-in-law Kevork Loris Essayan.
The board of directors for the Canadian Football Hall of Fame act as the Grey Cup's trustees and control its rental for events.
A board of trustees from the local community act as board of governors.
So serious had this deterioration in conditions become, that by the middle of the 19th century the Corporation was bankrupt, and Parliament was called upon to act, vesting by an Act of Parliament much of the town's business in the hands of trustees who were able to refinance the economy by selling land, property and the ancient oyster fishery.
Many corporations call their governing board a board of trustees, though in those cases they act as a board of directors.
In 1943, by special act of the Connecticut state legislature, its trustees were granted an exemption from filing corporate reports with the Secretary of State, which is normally a requirement.
The Reorganization Act created a Board of Regents to oversee the state's colleges and universities and the 26 boards of trustees that had provided oversight over the various institutions before passage of the act.
They oversee every event, operation and campaign within the Union, and also act as trustees.
The patent ( a land grant ) establishing the trustees was an act by Thomas Dongan, the Royal Governor of New York.
One of the side effects of the act to disestablish the Church of Ireland, was that Maynooth's governance and funding changed, leaving only the Bishops on the board of trustees.
In 1883 the most prominent trustee, Sheridan, regarding the ground as the responsibility of the trustees, began to act independently of the NSWCA, resulting in the NSWCA losing control of the ground.
Reid placed £ 1, 500 ( GBP ) with three male trustees, and persuaded a number of her friends to serve on the management committees and act as teaching professors.
Government under the board of trustees continued until an act of the Territorial Legislature on August 5, 1824, created a Common Council of the City of Detroit.
It will be a science in which humans will see themselves as trustees of the Earth ( khilafa ) and they will act with justice ( adl ).
In 1986 it received a " Deed of Grant in Trust " ( or " DOGIT ") which " granted title to 110 000 ha of land which was previously Aboriginal Reserve Land held by the Under Secretary as trustee, to the Community Council to act as trustees of the land for the benefit of the residents.

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